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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> McCormack -v- Judges of the Circuit Court [2007] IEHC 123 (17 April 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2007/H123.html Cite as: [2008] 1 ILRM 49, [2007] IEHC 123 |
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Judgment Title: McCormack -v- Judges of the Circuit Court Composition of Court: Charleton J. Judgment by: Charleton J. Status of Judgment: Approved |
Neutral Citation Number: [2007] IEHC 123 The high court judicial review [2005 No. 556 J.R.] Betweenkevin McCormack Applicant and the Judge of the Circuit Court and the Director of Public Prosecutions Respondents JUDGMENT of Mr. Justice Charleton delivered on the 17th day of April, 2007 1. On Sunday 4th of July, 2004, Renata Bubeniene drove into the city centre from Lucan and parked her car. As she was walking along Amiens Street, a young man came along and yanked her handbag out of her possession and ran away towards Buckingham Street. She reported the crime to Store Street Garda station and described the culprit. As it happened, the applicant had been seen by Garda Wayne Kelly, some fifteen minute before this incident had occurred, on Amiens Street. The clothing of the applicant matched the description given by the victim. Shortly after the complaint, the applicant was seen by the gardaí and, fitting the relevant description, he was arrested. He was cautioned in accordance with the Judges’ Rules and taken to Store Street Garda station. There, he was detained pursuant to s. 4 of the Criminal Justice Act, 1984, and was required to undergo two periods of interviews by gardaí. These were conducted in accordance with the Criminal Justice Act, 1984 (Electronic Recording of Interviews) Regulations 1997. The accused denied the offence. On being charged, he was granted bail and the case was set for trial before the Circuit Criminal Court. The trial has not yet taken place. 2. On 20th June, 2005, Kevin McCormack was given leave by the High Court to commence an application for judicial review. In these proceedings he seeks to restrain the respondents from trying him on the offences with which he is charged. His grounds are that the gardaí failed to properly conduct and make a written record of the interviews they had with him while he was briefly in custody when arrested on this matter; and that his right to a fair trial has been seriously undermined by reason of the failure of the gardaí to preserve all closed circuit television footage taken from security cameras in or around the place where the crime occurred. 3. The Video The applicant argues that the video evidence of the two Garda interviews with him discloses a “disgraceful situation”. In the video recordings, it is claimed, derogatory comments are made about the accused and about his solicitor. The questioning of the gardaí, it was alleged, was littered with profanities. To make matters worse, I was told, one of the gardaí used the time when he should have been concentrating on interviewing the accused to practice playing yo-yo. A legal issue also emerged. It was said that an accused person on arrest has an entitlement to be given a chance to make his case; and that the unstructured and chaotic nature of this interview deprived the accused of an opportunity to make on video his answer to the charge of handbag stealing. His case in defence was, his counsel told me, that he was indeed in Amiens Street in or around the relevant time but that, by the time the offence had been committed, he had gone to his granny’s house to have dinner; in consequence, he did not commit the offence. 4. It might be regarded as unusual for an accused, even in the form of an applicant for judicial review before the High Court, to claim that the gardaí should give him an opportunity to present his defence. The rule in criminal cases is that the accused, subject to some very limited exceptions, is not obliged to make any case in defence of a criminal charge and the prosecution, in general, are not entitled to know what the defence case is unless a statutory exception applies, such as that related to the notification to an alibi. There is a growing practice, however, of persons arrested for crime to use the opportunity of being questioned in Garda custody to deny the offence. Sometimes the statements made will be entirely self-serving but may, nonetheless, subject to the discretion of the trial judge as to the admissibility of confession evidence, be presented as part of the prosecution case. In The People (D.P.P.) v John Clarke [1995] 1 I.L.R.M. 355, the trial judge hearing a murder case, had told the jury that a mainly ex-culpatory statement made in Garda custody by the accused, was not evidence as to fact, but merely evidence of what had been said to the gardaí. The Court of Criminal Appeal, relying on The People (A.G.) v. Crosbie (1961) 1 Frewen 231, held that a statement of the accused, once put in evidence by the prosecution, is to be treated as evidence of the facts stated. I quote at p. 367:-
6. Must all of these be repeated in evidence in front of the jury? Where the alleged victim apparently comes at the first opportunity that reasonably presents itself and complains freely that he or she has been raped or sexually assaulted, it is usually only the first complaint that is admitted in evidence; and that solely to show the consistency of the case being made by the complainant. This rule is an exceptional one and it only applies in sexual assault type cases. To allow the repetition of the complaint, under the doctrine of recent complaint, as it is known, would be to infringe the rule against self-corroboration. It is difficult to know how an accused’s statement should be subject to any different rule if admitted in evidence. The control of this, in the interests of fairness, must be a matter for the trial judge. 7. In The People (DPP) v. John Lawless (Unreported, Court of Criminal Appeal, 29th November 1985), the accused argued, at a time prior to the enactment of the Criminal Justice Act, 1984, (Treatment of Persons in Custody in Garda Síochána Stations) Regulations, 1987, that he had not been brought before a court and charged at the first reasonable opportunity. This occurred, it was argued, because the gardaí, instead, used the opportunity of having him in custody, upon his arrest in apparent possession of heroin, to put to him the material recovered from the sewer leading from the flat from where he was arrested in order to obtain a reaction; possibly amounting to an admission. McCarthy J., at p. 8 of the judgment rejected an argument that the accused should have been brought before a court, instead of being questioned, and stated as follows:
9. When one turns to the video, one also realises that the factual matrix contended for is absent. Firstly, the Garda is not playing with a yo-yo, or even practising yo-yo. What appears is that one of the two gardaí is swinging his arm, to and from his forehead and, then, backwards and forwards along the ground for a short period of the interview while his colleague is attempting to write down the somewhat breathless answers of the accused. At one particular point he may be playing with a piece of rolled up paper. That does not matter. Secondly, the accused is in fact given an opportunity to make a case and does so. The accused tells the gardaí, explicitly, that it is not his style to snatch handbags from ladies; that he has an alibi because he was in his granny’s for dinner; and that it does not matter that he was later picked out in an informal identification procedure because he did not commit the crime. All of this may be said in a piecemeal way but, when you put it together, it is all there. 10. Since the time when members of police forces were required, pursuant to the Judges’ Rules, to attempt to write down an accused person’s answer to an accusation, it has always been complained that this was done through a filter of “Garda prose” or that what was said is not accurately reflected in the written document; people, in general, speaking about seven times faster than they write. Now that tape recordings of interviews are available it has to be expected that interviews recorded on video will be either chaotic, laconic or otherwise reflect the real circumstances of conversation between people who may be under pressure of accusation, of work or of life. That is what these videos, in fact, reflect. I do not regard the language used, with the occasional profanity, as being beyond the norm that one would hear in this city at any time of the day or night. I do not think that saying that “any solicitor will advise a client to remain silent” degrades anyone. Nor do I regard the interview as being unstructured. In fact, it occurs to me that the gardaí were doing a good job of attempting to keep the accused to the point in his answers and of dealing with the material which it was necessary for them to deal with in the course of the interview. So, there was no opportunity lost to the accused supposing he wished to avail of it, and supposing he was entitled to it, and there was no abuse of his rights. Of course, the written note gets only some of what was said. The relevant rule requiring a written note is soon to be changed and, in any event, it was never the law that absolutely everything had to be written down by gardaí conducting an interview. 11. Lost Evidence The sworn evidence of Garda Wayne Kelly was that he went to every relevant closed circuit television system that might have had a potential view of the handbag snatching incident and recovered the tapes. These were all viewed by himself and his colleagues in a Garda station. The incident was not captured, he has sworn, on any of the cameras. 12. An argument can arise at trial that the failure to preserve relevant evidence may cause a serious risk that a fair trial of the accused may never take place, notwithstanding appropriate rulings and directions to the jury by the trial judge. This is not such a case. If there is an issue as to whether Garda Kelly was telling the truth that he conducted his duties by acting reasonably and practicably to gather and preserve evidence that is matter for the trial judge. It is also a matter that can legitimately be used by the accused in cross examination. 13. In the course of his judgment in McFarlane v. The DPP [2006] IESC 11 at p. 17 Hardiman J. quoted with approval the following passage from McGrath on evidence (Dublin, 2004) at p. 691:-
15. Jurisdiction of This Court This court has no jurisdiction to decide issues of admissibility at trial by way of an application for judicial review. Trial judges, whether in the Central Criminal Court, the Circuit Criminal Court or the District Court have the same responsibility in that regard. Their function is to apply the rules of evidence and to exercise judicial discretion in accordance with the relevant balance which the law requires in particular instances. The High Court has absolutely no function in deciding issues as to the admissibility of evidence, by way of an application for judicial review, in advance of a trial; Byrne v, Grey [1988] I.R. 31. This is so even though a discreet legal issue arises as to the validity of a warrant; Berkley v. Edwards [1988] I.R. 217. Those issues are to be disposed of in the court of trial. It is different if an issue as to delay causing a serious risk of an unfair trial. Denham J. in D.P.P. v O’C (P) [2006] IESC 54 said:-
17. The jurisdiction of the High Court to prohibit a criminal trial should be exercised with great caution. In D.C. v. DPP [2005] IESC 77, Denham J. stated:
19. The questions raised in this judicial review are ones correctly to be resolved by the law of evidence. The issues have nothing to do with the supervisory jurisdiction of the High Court. |