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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Preddie, R. v [2011] EWCA Crim 312 (09 February 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2011/312.html Cite as: [2011] EWCA Crim 312 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE OPENSHAW
THE COMMON SERJEANT
His Honour Judge Barker QC
(Sitting as a Judge of the CACD)
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R E G I N A | ||
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KEITH PREDDIE |
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WordWave International Limited
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Mr I McLoughlin appeared on behalf of the Crown
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This judgment is in five parts, namely:
Part 1. Introduction,
Part 2. The Facts,
Part 3. The Criminal Proceedings,
Part 4. The Appeal to the Court of Appeal,
Part 5. Conclusion.
Part 1 Introduction
"3.1 A record shall be made of the suspect's description as first given by a potential
witness. This record must:
(a) be made and kept in a form which enables details of that description to be accurately produced from it, in a visible and legible form, which can be given to the suspect or the suspect's solicitor in accordance with this Code;
....
3.2 In cases when the suspect's identity is not known, a witness may be taken to a particular neighbourhood or place to see whether they can identify the person they saw. Although the number, age, sex, race, general description and style of clothing of other people present at the location and the way in which any identification is made
cannot be controlled, the principles applicable to the formal procedures under paragraphs 3.5 to 3.10 shall be followed as far as practicable. For example:
(a) where it is practicable to do so, a record should be made of the witness' description of the suspect, as in paragraph 3.1(a), before asking the witness to make an identification;
(b) care must be taken not to direct the witness' attention to any individual unless taking into account all the circumstances, this cannot be avoided. However, this does not prevent a witness being asked to look carefully at the people around at the time or to look towards a group or in a particular direction, if this appears necessary to make sure that the witness does not overlook a possible suspect simply because the witness is looking in the opposite direction and also to enable the witness to make comparisons between any suspect and others who are in the area;
...
(d) once there is sufficient information to justify the arrest of a particular individual for suspected involvement in the offence, e.g., after a witness makes a positive identification, the provisions set out from paragraph 3.4 onwards shall apply for any other witnesses in relation to that individual. Subject to paragraphs 3.12 and 3.13, it is not necessary for the witness who makes such a positive identification to take part in a further procedure;
(e) the officer or police staff accompanying the witness must record, in their pocket book, the action taken as soon as, and in as much detail, as possible. The record should include: the date, time and place of the relevant occasion the witness claims to have previously seen the suspect; where any identification was made; how it was made and the conditions at the time (e.g., the distance the witness was from the suspect, the weather and light); if the witness's attention was drawn to the suspect; the reason for this; and anything said by the witness or the suspect about the identification or the conduct of the procedure."
Having set out the relevant provisions of the Code, we must now turn to the facts.
Part 2. The facts
"There were two males, one possibly mixed race or Asian wearing grey trousers and grey hooded top. The second a black male with a maroon top and braided style ponytail."
However, the two officers did not record in their notebooks or their statements anything about Mr Shoaib identifying the two suspects at the time when the police car pulled up and PC Johnson and PC Poppy assisted in effecting the arrest.
Part 3. The Criminal Proceedings
""I called the police and gave a description from outside the Airman Pub and at some point they said: 'We've got'" - when the police arrived - "'we've got two people and they look like you describe.'" And they drove off for 40 seconds approximately and he was asked: "Are these the two people?" I said: 'Yes. I recognise them.'
"I saw two young men surrounded by policemen. A police" - this is in cross-examination - he was asked again, quite rightly, the police constable said or the police constables, we do not know who it was, said: "Are these the two men who attacked you?" "And I said: 'Yes,' after having looked at them. I was in the car; the two were on the pavement. I took my time. I looked at the dress and height. I looked at them for about 35 seconds. They were" - do you remember, he pointed out - "they were about eight to 10 yards away. It was cold, it was not raining. There was quite good street lighting." And when pressed, he said: "I could've got the right people; I could have got the wrong people, but I was convinced about this defendant and I do not agree" - when he was accused of making a mistake by defence counsel, quite properly - "I do not agree I made a mistake.""
Part 4. The Appeal to the Court of Appeal
"Code D is intended to be an intensely practical document, giving police officers clear instructions on the approach that they should follow in specified circumstances. It is not old-fashioned literalism but sound interpretation to read the Code as meaning what it says."
In paragraph 23 of his speech, Lord Bingham commented as follows on the effect of breaches of the Code:
"It was readily and rightly accepted for the appellant that even if the failure to hold an identification parade was (as we have concluded) a breach of Code D 2.3, it does not necessarily follow that the evidence of Mr Tabussum's identification should have been excluded. That would depend on an exercise of judgment under Section 78 of PACE, taking account of all the circumstances of the case. But it was argued that in the circumstances here the appellant had been denied a fair trial and his conviction should be considered unsafe. The starting point of this argument was the recorder's ruling (correct in the light of R v Popat, but wrong in the light of our decision) that there had been no breach of paragraph 2.3. From this it had followed that the Recorder had never exercised her judgment whether evidence of Mr Tabassum's street identification should be admitted or not, that the appellant's counsel had been denied the opportunity to cross-examine the police investigating officer on his decision not to hold an identification parade and that the jury had not been directed on the breach of the code and the possibility of prejudice to the defence of the appellant."
"The difficulty .... is that, at the time when witness and suspect were permitted to view one another, the safeguards built into the statute and the Codes of Practice were simply not being observed. This was a clear case in which the victim should not have been directed towards the suspect."
Henriques J went on to say that this was a case in which there should have been no confrontation. Instead, the victim and the suspect should have been kept apart, and an identification procedure should have been carried out later at the police station in accordance with Code D. The court thereafter ruled that the identification evidence should not have been admitted, and that therefore the conviction should be quashed.
Part 5. Conclusion