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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 >> Coleman & Anor v R [2007] EWCA Crim 2318 (10 October 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2007/2318.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Crim 2318 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE PITCHERS
and
MR JUSTICE TREACY
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George Romero Coleman Thomas Petch |
First Appellant Second Appellant |
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- and - |
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The Queen |
Respondent |
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E Fitzgerald QC and Brian Mark (instructed by Michael Purdon) for the Second Appellant A J Robertson QC (instructed by the Crown Prosecution Service, Cleveland) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 23rd July, 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Moses :
Introduction
The Facts
"The defendants, and others, were concerned in a so-called 'turf war' concerning the supply, distribution and sale of drugs to prostitutes in Teeside and Middlesbrough. The prosecution case was that at the beginning of August 2001, two men, Jonathan Crossling…and his brother Jason Crossling… believed that Craig Dalziel… had been robbing prostitutes of the drugs in their possession...Accordingly, they decided to kill him, to punish him and to deter others. In order to carry their plan into effect they recruited a team, which included these defendants.
During the weekend of 4th/5th August 2001, the Crossling brothers, in the course of their search for Dalziel, visited the house at 4 Fallows Court, Newport, a "crack house" frequented by drug users and prostitutes. They there learned that Dalziel might be at either of two other houses, one was another haunt of prostitutes and drugs abusers at 45 Errol Street, premises owned and managed by one Michael Moody.
On the evening of 5th August, Claire Burgess, a prostitute, had picked up a client, this was Kalvant Singh (the victim of the murder) whom she intended to take back to 45 Errol Street. The defendant Coleman spoke to her as she did so; he made plain that he was looking for Dalziel; he asked her to leave the front door unlocked when she went there, obviously so that he (Coleman) and others could later burst into the room. Claire Burgess then took Singh back to an upstairs back bedroom at 45 Errol Street, where – having taken drugs – they both eventually fell asleep. She was later woken by the sound of footsteps running up the stairs and voices shouting, "Where is he?" (or words to that effect). She gave evidence that the Crossling brothers then burst into the room; each had some sort of weapon hidden up their sleeves. Jonathan Crossling attacked Singh; a struggle ensued which culminated in Singh being pushed through the glass of the closed bedroom window and falling onto the concrete yard below. In the fall, he received fatal injuries. The autopsy established that Singh had been kicked or punched before being pushed through the window.
Claire Burgess was forced to leave the room by Jason Crossling; she ran downstairs. She saw Moody being severely beaten. She saw the defendant Petch ram Moody's head into a fish tank; the impact caused the plate glass tank to shatter, leaving glass embedded in Moody's neck. Whilst this was going on, Coleman was waiting outside in his car, ready to drive them off. Moody suffered severe injuries including multiple fractures to the face; he was, in fact, lucky to survive; the attack upon him led to the defendants' conviction upon the charge of causing grievous bodily harm with intent on Count 1. Dalziel was the intended victim of the violence but it was also clear that the intention underlying the joint venture was to obtain drugs by whatever means including the use of serious violence.
Coleman then drove Jonathan Crossling, Petch and another to 60 Southfield Road, Middlesbrough. Here, still looking for Dalziel and for any drugs that the occupants might have had in their possession, they kicked or forced open the doors to various bed-sits and subjected a number of people to severe assaults. As at 45 Errol Street, Coleman never engaged directly in any of the violence but he was there [as] a 'facilitator' – as the judge called him – encouraging the others by his presence. Paul Ward (the victim of Count 4, again laid as wounding with intent), had a Samurai sword repeatedly thrust at him by Jonathan Crossling, while the defendant Petch punched him about the head, causing a deep cut to his right eye. Jonathan Crossling and Petch then forced open the door of a room occupied by Andrew Jessop (the victim of Count 5, laid as wounding with intent), they poked him in the stomach with the Samurai sword. This did not result in a wound to Jessop's stomach, but the blade was reversed and he was struck across the head with the handle causing a deep wound to the scalp. All the men then left the address together.
In the early hours of Tuesday 7th August, Jonathan Crossling and the defendant Petch returned to 4 Fallows Court, where Crossling started an argument with Paul Thompson (the victim of Count 6, laid again as wounding with intent); the defendant Petch grabbed Thompson's pony-tail and Jonathan Crossling began kicking him in the face; Thompson managed to struggle from the flat pursued by Crossling and Petch, who continued to kick him about the head, face and body. The attack was witnessed by a neighbour and the police were called. Thompson refused to make a complaint to the police in the first instance; he was treated in hospital for bruising to his face and body and a gash to the back of his head."
Both Coleman and Petch were convicted of causing grievous bodily harm with intent and Petch was, in addition, convicted of three counts of wounding with intent.
"It was the intention underlying the joint venture to obtain drugs by whatever means including the use of serious violence."
Disparity
"The law does not permit the court to take an overall view of the situation retrospectively and, in the interests of even-handedness, to declare the convictions of the appellants unsafe."
Intention to Kill
"It was the intention underlying the joint venture to obtain drugs by whatever means including the use of serious violence."
That does not permit an approach in setting the minimum term based on an intention to kill on the part of either Coleman or Petch.