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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 >> R. v Clark [2006] EWCA Crim 231 (03 February 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2006/231.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Crim 231 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE NELSON
SIR JOHN ALLIOTT
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R E G I N A | ||
-v- | ||
NIGEL PAUL CLARK |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MISS R COLLINS appeared on behalf of the CROWN
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Crown Copyright ©
"I'm not hundred percent that it was the fifth, but I can remember making the disclosure."
She was then asked the following question:
"Okay, it certainly was not straightaway, it was not in the first time you went into or were placed under hypnosis and what I want to ask you about it, when you made the disclosure to the therapist, really why it took quite a long time for you to do that?
A. Because my sub conscious mind wouldn't reveal."
"During my childhood and adult life I've always known that what Nigel Senior did to me was wrong. But I attempted to deal with it by attempting to forget what had happened to me. For this reason I told nobody about what had happened to me. I still feel ashamed about what happened to me and now that I am married with children of my own I do not want to cause any distress to either my parents, husband, children or family by revealing what had happened to me."
"An expert's opinion is admissible to furnish the court with scientific information which is likely to be outside the experience and knowledge of a judge or jury, if on the proven facts a judge or jury can form their own conclusions without help then the opinion of an expert is unnecessary."
It is of course essential for it to be based on proven facts.
"Hypnosis is not, as some people imagine, a key to the memory. It has no power to recover otherwise inaccessible material; what is lost (or perhaps never stored) cannot be accessed by hypnosis, or any other technique. What hypnosis does do is facilitate the processes of imagination and suggestibility. People vary in their responsiveness to hypnosis but, for a person who is susceptible, events imagined during a session feel extremely real. The reality is such that the person come to accept the images as memories of real past events: a false memory has been formed."
In our judgment, that passage, if accepted or if the jury might have thought it was correct, is the answer to the submission made by the prosecution that his report is based on the false premise that A had all remembered these events. It seems to us that, if this memory had been a false memory engendered during the course of the physiotherapy sessions there is a possibility, at any rate, based on Dr Naish's evidence that she would have regarded it thereafter as a genuine and real memory.