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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Murray, R v [2003] EWCA Crim 27 (24 January 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2003/27.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Crim 27 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE DOUGLAS BROWN
and
MRS JUSTICE HALLETT
____________________
R | ||
-v- | ||
Anne Marie MURRAY |
____________________
Patrick Thomas QC and Timothy Hannam for the Crown
Hearing date: 16th December 2002
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Kennedy:
Facts of Offences.
First Offence.
Second Offence.
Third Offence.
The Indictment.
At the trials.
"In fact you may very well accept that he did not commit quite as many as that if the dates are right because he was in prison at the time they were committed."
The judge then went on to point out what Paul Jarvis hoped to gain from his co-operation with the police, and the risks he ran, before warning the jury in clear terms that Paul Jarvis was an accomplice on whose evidence it would be dangerous to convict unless that evidence was corroborated. He explained what he meant by corroboration, and said that there was none in the cases against Cooke, Gall (who was charged in counts 5, 6 and 7 of the indictment) and Lynch. There was however, the judge said, evidence which was capable of amounting to corroboration so far as this appellant and one other defendant, Thelma Wellington, were concerned. In the case of this appellant that potential corroboration related only to count 15, the attempted robbery of Mrs McGowan. According to Paul Jarvis the appellant and Mrs McGowan had been friends for years. That was not in dispute, apparently they had once worked together on the buses, and thus the appellant was able to provide the robbers with important information. She told them that Mrs McGowan drove a red Mercedes, the registration number of which contained the letters FOX. She also told them that Mrs McGowan banked at the Allied Irish bank, and that she visited the bank regularly on a Friday morning to collect the wages for her husband's firm. When Mrs McGowan gave evidence she was able to confirm the accuracy of the information which, according to Paul Jarvis, he and his fellow criminals received from the appellant, and she was also able to confirm that the information would have been available to the appellant. So the fact that Mrs McGowan was robbed outside the bank, on a Friday, after she had collected the wages, and when she was getting into her red Mercedes car by men, one of whom at least had access to the appellant, and who identified the appellant as the source of information was, as the judge said, a matter which the jury was entitled to take into account, and to decide for themselves whether it amounted to independent evidence which tended to confirm the evidence of Paul Jarvis, or whether it was just a coincidence.
In the Court of Appeal.
Decisions in other cases.
(1) Four officers involved in the case of Edwards (namely DCI Brown, DC Shaw, DC Woodley and DC Quinn) had also been involved in Dandy and others at Birmingham in November 1987. In that case it appeared that interview notes had been re-written to incorporate implied admissions which did not exist in the original notes.
(2) On 12th October 1988 DCI Brown had been reprimanded, a fact not previously disclosed.
"The account given by Jarvis contained all sorts of details which really can only have come from someone who was there or from the police."
It was then suggested by the respondent that Paul Jarvis may have burgled the house on another occasion, but there was no evidence of any other burglary, and Lynch in his re-trial was convicted on the uncorroborated evidence of Paul Jarvis. But what Lord Lane CJ described as "the crux of the problem" in the Lynch case was the strange history of the machete-type knife used at the Black Horse public house and at a previous robbery. It was allegedly found in Lynch's bedroom at the time of his arrest. It then disappeared and was not exhibited at the trial. Counsel for the appellant Lynch submitted that it was 'lost' because it did not match the weapon two feet long which the victims of the offences had described. Six months after the end of the trial the weapon taken from Lynch's house reappeared. It was a butcher's knife about 15 inches long and it was put through the letter box at the home of DC Shaw. The trial judge told the jury to disregard the evidence in relation to the knife, but both appeals were allowed.
"The evidence of Morgan and the evidence of McKay was, in our judgment, clearly tainted by reason of the close contact between each of those participating supergrasses and the officers who can no longer be regarded as credible.
The general impact upon this enquiry of the findings of McKinnon J in the civil proceedings in Treadaway, and the decisions of this Court, quashing the convictions of Twitchell and Treadaway, is such as to reinforce the lack of safety of these convictions. "
"Once the suspicion of perjury starts to infect the evidence and permeate cases in which the witnesses have been involved, and which are closely similar, the evidence on which such convictions are based becomes as questionable as it was in the cases in which the appeals have already been allowed."
But, as Mr Thomas contends, each case has to be considered on its own facts, and we return now to the facts of this case.
Agreed facts and concessions.
Submissions and conclusions.