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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Stevens v The Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) [2017] EWHC 2839 (Admin) (10 November 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2017/2839.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 2839 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MRS JUSTICE MCGOWAN
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YASMIN SIMPSON STEVENS |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS |
Respondent |
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Mr Simon Heptonstall (instructed by the CPS Appeals and Review Unit) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 21st June 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice McGowan:
i) Driving whilst disqualified contrary to s. 103(1)(b) of the Road Traffic Act 1988
ii) Driving having consumed over the prescribed limit of alcohol contrary to s. 5(1) RTA 1988
iii) Failing to stop when required by a Police Constable contrary to s. 163(3) RTA 1988
iv) Driving whilst uninsured contrary to s. 143 RTA 1988
v) Dangerous driving contrary to s. 2 RTA 1988.
CASE STATED
i) Was our decision to find the disclosure obligations had been complied with and so refuse a further adjournment Wednesbury unreasonable?
ii) Did we err in the application of the test of duress under R v Bowen 1996 2 Cr App R 157?
BACKGROUND
FIRST QUESTION: DISCLOSURE
SECOND QUESTION: DURESS
a) The Appellant had been involved in an abusive relationship with Mr Powell in which he exhibited controlling and coercive behaviour.
b) Mr Powell had a history of violent offences in the domestic setting.
c) The Appellant was shoved into a car by Mr Powell who had taken cocaine. She was wearing only a dressing gown and a pair of knickers.
d) Police attention was drawn to the car due to the manner of driving.
e) The car was stopped after a high-speed chase.
f) The Appellant drove dangerously to escape the police at the behest of Mr Powell although as the driver of the car she could have halted the vehicle.
g) The reason the Appellant drove at speed was because she believed if she did not Mr Powell might kill or seriously injure her. He was punching her and grabbing the wheel as she drove.
h) The Appellant did not tell police at the scene or at the police station that she was under duress.
i) The Appellant did not mention to her mother whom she phoned from the police station that she was under duress.
j) The Appellant had bought the car despite already being disqualified from driving and admitted in her ABE interview that she had driven whilst disqualified before this offence.
k) The Appellant admitted in police interview to consuming alcohol before driving and of being a disqualified driver.
l) The Appellant had not always reacted as a reasonable person would to threats made by Mr Powell in the past. On one occasion when Mr Powell had threatened to gas the house with her children in it, she had not responded to this threat and stayed at work.
m) The Appellant did not consider the specific behaviour of Mr Powell that led to these offences to be a serious incident in the context of many others.
n) We did not find that a reasonable person with the defendant's beliefs, history of domestic abuse, age and situation would have done what she did.
ARGUMENT: DISCLOSURE
ARGUMENT: DURESS
ANALYSIS: DISCLOSURE
ANALYSIS: DURESS
i) The mere fact that the accused is more pliable, vulnerable, timid or susceptible to threats than a normal person are not characteristics with which it is legitimate to invest the reasonable/ordinary person for the purpose of considering the objective test.
ii) The defendant may be in a category of persons who the jury may think less able to resist pressure than people not within that category. Obvious examples are age, where a young person may well not be so robust as a mature one; possibly sex, though many women would doubtless consider they had as much moral courage to resist pressure as men; pregnancy, where there is added fear for the unborn child; serious physical disability, which may inhibit self protection; recognised mental illness or psychiatric condition, such as post traumatic stress disorder leading to learned helplessness.
iii) Characteristics which may be relevant in considering provocation, because they relate to the nature of the provocation, itself will not necessarily be relevant in cases of duress ... .
iv) Characteristics due to self-induced abuse, such as alcohol, drugs or glue-sniffing, cannot be relevant.
v) Psychiatric evidence may be admissible to show that the accused is suffering from some mental illness, mental impairment or recognised psychiatric condition provided persons generally suffering from such condition may be more susceptible to pressure and threats and thus to assist the jury in deciding whether a reasonable person suffering from such a condition might have been impelled to act as the defendant did … .
vi) …
vii) In the absence of some direction from the judge as to what characteristics are capable of being regarded as relevant, we think that the direction approved in Graham without more will not be as helpful … . In most cases it is probably only the age and sex of the accused that is capable of being relevant. If so, the judge should, as he did in this case, confine the characteristics in question to these.