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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Makin, R v [2004] EWCA Crim 1607 (23 June 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2004/1607.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Crim 1607 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM the Crown Court sitting at Newcastle-upon-Tyne
His Honour Judge Lancaster
T20020368
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE LEVESON
HIS HONOUR JUDGE METTYEAR sitting as a judge of the Court of Appeal Criminal Division
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R |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Stephen Christopher Makin |
Respondent |
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Mr S Jackson QC for the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Hooper:
"2. It is submitted that the Defendant is a victim of a setup by a participating informant who had gone beyond the role of an investigating officer and had induced the defendant to participate in the commission of the offence which he otherwise would not have committed. In the circumstances it is the defendant's case that he was at all times acting under the influence of an agent provocateur." (page 144 of volume 1)
In paragraph 3 the defence statement enlarged upon the background to the seizure on 23 October 2002. It referred to Foster's alleged refusal to cooperate and continued:
"It is submitted that the delivery was a controlled delivery and that the defendant was set up by a participating informant that had gone beyond the role of a passive informant."
"The Defendant, Stephen Christopher Makin, proposes to plead guilty to Counts 1 and 3 of the Indictment before the Court on the following basis:-
The Defendant was approached by person, or persons, unknown none of whom have been arrested or charged in these proceedings, and asked to provide transport and storage facilities for the relevant containers on 22nd September and 23rd October 2001.
He was provided with funds to facilitate the arrangements and received separate payment for his services through receiving a proportion of the cigarettes from each load.
He was asked to arrange for the containers to be taken to the storage facility (yard) from where as far as he knew the goods were to be transported onwards. The arrangements for onward transportation were to be made by other parties.
The Defendant had no direct link with parties in Europe and was not concerned with that aspect of the transportation of the containers to the United Kingdom."
"On the third day of the trial, the Crown made a further PII application in the light of what I was told was new material then in its possession, and of course Mr Jackson, quite properly, was aware of his obligation which continued about disclosure. The defendants, Mr Foster and Mr. Snioszek, knew about the application. Mr Makin and Mr Graham didn't. The Crown's view was that it was not necessary to give them notice as their position was not affected by the application in the light of the Defence statements and the basis of plea. When that application was made, again I did not order disclosure of any material. The Crown considered the situation generally, as I understand it, and decided not to proceed against Mr Foster and Mr Snioszek and offered no evidence against them. By that time, if my memory is right, I think they had been put in charge of the jury, and in the light of the Crown's position I directed the jury to enter not guilty verdicts in respect of the two defendants, Mr Foster and Mr Snioszek. The effect of that procedure and that process has brought the current applications in front of me now.
Essentially, on behalf of both defendants, it has been submitted that it looks rather suspicious because, particularly in the case of Mr Graham, it is said that his position was not so different from Mr Foster's, with whom he was closely bound up, submits Mr Duffield, and he says that the reality is that the defendant Mr Graham should be allowed to vacate his plea. Mr Metzger, in effect, takes his view. His client essentially does not trust the Customs and Excise and the way in which they conduct investigations. He doesn't trust that they are always open about disclosure. Mr Metzger is aware of past cases where there have been some disclosure difficulties which have resulted in trials collapsing, and he submits that whatever the Crown, whatever the information the Crown had in relation to Mr Foster and Mr Snioszek should accrue to his benefit so that he can reconsider his position, be properly advised as to whether or not he wants to be tried on the indictment by a change of plea or whether the Defence can properly say to the court that the court's process has been abused, and he says because one is dealing here with information that the Defence don't know the court has to be extra vigilant when considering matters such as this.
I start with this point. First of all, the process of the court is important. The principle of open justice is a principle which has to be honoured in the public interest. Often in cases such as this, as the Court of Appeal observed in the case of Doubtfire, there are conflicting public interests which compete against the principle of open justice, and often a court has to deal with matters which the defendant is not fully aware of beyond the fact that an application has been made to a Judge about some material which it is thought it is in the public interest he should not see. I am very conscious that whenever the Court has to look at such material it has to bear in mind the interests of a defendant at all times and keep reviewing the defendant's interests in the light of any information which a Judge receives which the defendant is not privy to, and in looking at this application, as I have said, I am fully aware of that.
In the course of their submissions, counsel for both defendants referred me to the case of Early, and the head note, as I have got in front of me now, makes this point; that "It is a matter of crucial importance to the administration of justice that prosecuting authorities make full relevant disclosure prior to trial and that prosecuting authorities should not be encouraged to make inadequate disclosure with a view to defendants pleading guilty. When inadequate disclosure was sought to be supported by dishonest prosecution evidence then the Court of Appeal would not be slow to set aside the pleas of guilty following such events. I see the force of that point and of course honour it in full.
But there was an earlier decision of the Court of Appeal made in two cases called Mullen and Toher, where this general principle was enunciated by the Lord Chief Justice, Lord Woolf, that "freely entered pleas of guilty would not be interfered with by the Court of Appeal unless the Prosecution's misconduct was of a category that justified this, that a plea of guilty was binding unless the defendant was ignorant of evidence going to innocence or guilt and that ignorance of material which went merely to credibility of a Prosecution witness did not justify reopening a plea of guilty."
Now, pausing there, a number of questions seem to arise. Firstly in this: was the Prosecution guilty of any misconduct? In my view the Prosecution has not been guilty of any misconduct. Secondly, was there evidence which was not disclosed which went to innocence or guilt? In my view there is no material that would go to those matters in relation to these defendants, and of course it is not suggested here that any Prosecution witness has been guilty of perjury, and I bear that in mind. So, it seems to me that, looking at those matters, and bearing in mind the general considerations that I have already alluded to, that these pleas were freely entered on the basis on which they were entered and there is nothing in the Prosecution's conduct which would cause those to be doubted, and in those circumstances it seems to me that the applications to vacate the pleas should be refused and accordingly I refuse to allow the defendants to vacate their pleas of guilty. I would add this: that there is ample material to show that they are both guilty of the offences to which they have pleaded guilty."
"The Crown doesn't want to get drawn into answering hypothetical questions, and I don't see, with respect, that there is an obligation on the Crown to do.
"In the context of Mr. Makin's pleas, the Crown were obviously acutely conscious of the timing of the receipt of the information and looked carefully at his plea and what he was saying, and the Crown concluded that in the light of what he was saying in terms of his plea, an issue of disclosure did not arise in respect of Makin or Graham."