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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> L, R. v (Admissibility of Confession Evidence) [2024] EWCA Crim 544 (30 April 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2024/544.html Cite as: [2024] EWCA Crim 544 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Royal Courts of Justice |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE HILLIARD
HER HONOUR JUDGE LUCKING KC
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REX |
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- v - |
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L (admissibility of confession evidence) |
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REPORTING RESTRICTIONS APPLY Sexual Offences (Amendment) Act 1992 |
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Mr P. Morley appeared behalf of the Crown.
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Crown Copyright ©
LADY JUSTICE WHIPPLE:
Facts
The Confession Evidence
"APPELLANT: Right, okay ... I'm asking for your forgiveness and I'm sorry for what I did.
COMPLAINANT: What did you do?
APPELLANT: Well the things that you said.
COMPLAINANT: Where you raped me and physically and sexually abused me.
APPELLANT: ... this is hard, hard but your Mam's asked us to phone you right, I've said ...
COMPLAINANT: Yeah to own up to the disgusting stuff that you've done to me yeah.
APPELLANT: I've just said I'm sorry and I'm asking for your forgiveness and I want you and your Mam and the family to move on. I'm dead and I'm out of your life.
COMPLAINANT: And you admit that you physically and sexually abused me?
APPELLANT: Well I've just said that haven't I. I'm sorry and I'm asking for your forgiveness.
COMPLAINANT: I need you to say it.
APPELLANT: I admit it.
COMPLAINANT: I need you to say it.
APPELLANT: I've just said it ... I admit it.
COMPLAINANT: Say it.
APPELLANT: I'm sorry I admit umm that I abused you. I don't know what else.
COMPLAINANT: Physically and sexually … it's just telling the truth. I need closure so that I know, you know what you did.
APPELLANT: And where does it go … from there.
COMPLAINANT: From here I can move on from you and then I can have my brother and mother back and I can then finally be rid of you.
APPELLANT: Right and that's the end of it. It doesn't go any further from here.
COMPLAINANT: No I don't want this to go out. Why do you think I've kept quiet all this time because I'm ashamed of it.
APPELLANT: ... I'm sorry for physically and sexually abusing you and I ask for your forgiveness."
The Judge's Ruling
"You have heard recordings of phone calls from the 4th of May of 2021, which passed between [the appellant], [the complainant] and [the wife]. You have transcripts of the first and fourth conversation. During the fourth conversation [the appellant] admits physically and sexually abusing [the complainant]. The prosecution rely on that confession, and invite you to find that it honestly reflects [the appellant's] sexual abuse of [the complainant] during her childhood. The defence invite you not to rely on the confession and say that it was an unreliable confession because of the circumstances in which it was made. The defence say that [the appellant] was persuaded to make the confession because his wife asked him to do so. They say he was placed under duress by his wife to make a false confession of persistent rape of their daughter when she was a child. He thought if he admitted the allegation, it would not be reported to the police ... If you conclude that the confession was, or may have been obtained as a result of oppression, or as a result of what [the wife] said to him, which was likely to make it unreliable, you should give no weight to the confession and disregard it in coming to your conclusions in this case."
Grounds of Appeal
Law
"(2) If, in any proceedings where the prosecution proposes to give in evidence a confession made by an accused person, it is represented to the court that the confession was or may have been obtained -
(a) .....
(b) in consequence of anything said or done which was likely, in the circumstances existing at the time, to render unreliable any confession which might be made by him in consequence thereof, the court shall not allow the confession to be given in evidence against him except in so far as the prosecution proves to the court beyond reasonable doubt that the confession (notwithstanding that it may be true) was not obtained as aforesaid."
"44 ... The real issue is whether the magistrate was, bearing in mind the limited scope of the review which this court should undertake, entitled to conclude that the prosecution had proved beyond reasonable doubt that the applicant's confessions (notwithstanding that they might be true) were 'not obtained as aforesaid', in other words, were not obtained in consequence of anything said or done likely in the circumstances existing at the time to render unreliable any confession so made."
"46 ... This does not in my view mean that the subject matter or nature of the confession can be disregarded. A confession will commonly occur in the context of investigations or questioning, may be under caution, relating to a specific offence ... The test in section 76 cannot be satisfied by postulating some entirely different confession. There is also no likelihood that anything said or done would have induced any other confession. The word 'any' must thus, I think, be understood as indicating 'any such', or 'such a', confession as the applicant made. The abstract element involved also reflects the fact that the test is not whether the actual confession was untruthful or inaccurate. It is whether whatever was said or done was, in the circumstances existing as at the time of the confession, likely to have rendered such a confession unreliable, whether or not it may be seen subsequently - with hindsight and in the light of all the material available at trial - that it did or did not actually do so.
47 ... Section 76, although it includes some judgmental elements, involves an essentially fixed scheme. Once it is represented to the court that the confession was or may have been obtained as stated in section 76, then it is for the prosecution to prove if it can that it was not so stated; and, if the prosecution fails to prove this, then the confession must be excluded: Paris (1993) 97 Crim App R 99."
Conclusion