![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> RR, R. v [2019] EWCA Crim 866 (09 May 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2019/866.html Cite as: [2019] EWCA Crim 866 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE SPENCER
MR JUSTICE MORRIS
____________________
R E G I N A | ||
v | ||
R.R. |
____________________
Epiq Europe Ltd Lower Ground, 18-22 Furnival Street, London EC4A 1JS
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Alaric Bassano appeared on behalf of the Crown
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
"... the Crown's case, which was plainly accepted by the jury, was that you were attempting, through these messages, to have pressure placed on the complainant via members of your or her extended family. In particular, you messaged the complainant's brother, again over an extended period of time, and when he failed to respond to you, you messaged him with pleas and comments such as 'This is not the time for silence'. You said: 'Everybody's life is going to be such a mess if you don't step in. Do you not understand your role as a brother?' Also in a later series of messages, you said that the reason you were contacting him was to pass on messages to the complainant. You asked him to come to the UK and you promised to bear all the expenses of any visit that he made. You also sent messages reminding him that you had always been helpful to him in the past and that it was important to make her (that is to say the complainant) understand that the police and the court would not lose anything but that you would be destroyed. To SA, the wife of the complainant's brother, you texted that it was her husband's job to set things right."
"I have to say that I take the view that it was a deliberate and sustained offence, and the pressure that you sought to apply was subtle; there may have been no threats of violence expressed, but you sought to use your cultural background in an equally effective manner in order to pervert the course of justice."
"This offence is committed if the Crown can prove each of the following three elements, namely: (1) that the defendant carried out an act or a series of acts, (2) that those acts had a tendency to pervert the course of justice, and (3) that it was intended by the defendant to pervert the course of justice.
Now, the particulars to count 3 as set out in the indictment which you have specify that the act or the series of acts alleged here was the contact made by the defendant via social media with the complainant's family and other work colleagues in an attempt to persuade the complainant to reconcile with him, thereby bringing the criminal investigation, meaning this prosecution, to an end.
For the purposes of this trial, the criminal investigation leading to the prosecution of the defendant for rape does amount to a course of public justice, that is the way it is described in the indictment.
The defendant says he is not guilty of this offence and, whilst he admits sending all of the messages which you have in your jury bundle behind tabs 4 and 5 and which plainly amount to a series of acts, he says that his intention was nothing more than wholly innocent in the sense that, although he wanted his family life to continue as before, he had no ulterior intent in seeking for the complainant to be persuaded to withdraw her allegations.
And so you will see what I have now set out are the questions you should ask yourself in arriving at your verdicts in relation to count 3. Again, deal with them in the order in which they are set out here.
Question 1, ask yourselves, 'Are we sure that the defendant carried out a series of acts as alleged, that is to say sent text and other messages?' And, as I have said, this is admitted, so you can move to question 2.
Ask yourselves, 'Are we sure that they had a tendency to pervert the course of justice, that is to say a tendency to bring the criminal prosecution for rape to an end?' If your answer is 'No', your verdict would be not guilty. If your answer is 'Yes', move on to question 3.
And question 3 is as follows, 'Are we sure that the defendant intended these messages to bring the criminal prosecution for rape to an end?' If your answer is 'No', your verdict will be not guilty. But if your answer is 'Yes', your verdict will be guilty."
"I was trying to express my feelings, and I did intend that these things, or some of these things, should be passed on to my wife. But I never asked them to get her to withdraw the charges because I know dropping the charges is a big offence."
"1. Can we ask if the decision on the first two counts [i.e. the counts of rape] will impact on the decision on the third count?
2. Could you be found guilty of perverting the course of justice based on a charge that he may not be guilty of?"
The judge discussed the note with counsel. He said he thought the answer to the first question should simply be 'No' and the answer to the second simply 'Yes'. Counsel for the appellant submitted that no more explanation than that was required because "to answer that will take some time and it could answer it in a way which may unintentionally influence them ... I think that is probably the safest ... because otherwise we get into all sorts of interpretations". Mr Bassano for the Crown agreed.
"Well, I can answer them both very simply.
Question 1, 'Can we ask if the decision on the first two counts will impact the decision on the third count?' No. I told you, you consider each count separately because the evidence is different.
Question 2, 'Could you be found guilty of perverting the course of justice based on a charge he may not be guilty of?' The answer is 'Yes', and I don't propose to say any more."
"The learned trial judge erred in law in failing to direct the jury to consider the propriety of the ends and means employed by the appellant in assessing whether the acts tended to pervert the course of public justice and/or were intended to do the same."
"... we would not consider that the offence of attempting to pervert the course of justice would necessarily be committed by a person who tried to persuade a false witness, or even a witness he believed to be false, to speak the truth or to refrain from giving false evidence.
... we think that however proper the end the means must not be improper. Even if the intention of the meddler with a witness is to prevent perjury and injustice, he commits the offence if he meddles by unlawful means.
Threats and bribery are the means used by offenders in the cases, and any pressure by those means -- or by force, as for example by actually assaulting or detaining a witness -- would, in our opinion, be an attempt to pervert the course of justice by unlawfully or wrongly interfering with a witness. If he alters his evidence or will not give it 'through affection, fear, gain, reward, or the hope or promise thereof' (in the words of the oath which used to be administered to the foreman of a grand jury), the course of justice is perverted, whether his evidence is true or false and whether or not it is believed to be so by him who puts him in fear or hope."
Later, at page 392-393, Stephenson LJ continued:
"We have already given our opinion that some means of attempting to influence witnesses are outside the limits of this particular offence. But subject to the qualification that the means must be unlawful or improper, such as force or a threat of force, a reward or the promise of a reward, we accept his general submission that an intentional interference with a witness is enough.
There may be cases of interference with a witness in which it would be for the jury to decide whether what was done or said to the witness amounted to improper pressure, and so wrongfully interfered with the witness and attempted to pervert the course of justice, and it would be not only unnecessary and unhelpful but wrong for this court or the trial judge to usurp their function. The decision will depend on all the circumstances of the case, including not merely the method of interfering, but the time when it is done, the relationship between the person interfering and the witness and the nature of the proceedings in which the evidence is being given. Pressure which may be permissible at one stage of the particular proceedings may be improper at another. What may be proper for a friend or relation or a legal adviser may be oppressive and improper coming from a person in a position of influence or authority. But it is for the judge to direct the jury that some means of inducement are improper and if proved make the defendant guilty, and this was such a case. A jury should be directed that a threat (or promise) made to a witness is, like an assault on a witness, an attempt to pervert the course of justice, if made with the intention of persuading him to alter or withhold his evidence, whether or not what he threatens (or promises) is a lawful act, such as the exercise of a legal right, and whether or not he has any other intention or intends to do the act if the evidence is not altered or withheld."
"A court before which a person ('the defendant') is acquitted of an offence may, if it considers it necessary to do so to protect a person from harassment by the defendant, make an order prohibiting the defendant from doing anything described in the order."
Subsection (3) provides:
"Where the Court of Appeal allow an appeal against conviction they may remit the case to the Crown Court to consider whether to proceed under this section."
"You continue to blame your wife and I am concerned about what I read in the pre-sentence report: that you are said to harbour deep and abiding resentment towards her which the probation officer fears will become amplified after sentence and that you will continue to present an active risk to your wife. The report says you are driven by a sense of injustice and betrayal such that you will continue to seek her out, to try to find information about her work and her personal life. In my view, therefore, it is appropriate to consider the inherent safeguards of a restraining order, and I take those words directly from the comments made by the author of the pre-sentence report.
In my view, the provisions of section 5 of the Protection from Harassment Act apply to your case by virtue of section 5A. I am entitled to make the restraining order and I do so. In making such an order I want to make it clear that it is not my intention to prohibit proper contact in the future between you and your children, but the order that I make is that you should be prohibited from contacting your wife and your children (S and S) by any means: whether by direct contact by yourself or by indirect contact through third parties, and that includes, but is not limited, to contact by social media, telephone, letter, text or otherwise on the internet. The order, however, does not prohibit the following: namely, contact with the complainant through a solicitor or other court-appointed official concerning the former matrimonial property or applications or discussions about contact with the children; secondly, any contact with the children which may be permitted by a Family Court exercising its proper jurisdiction under the Children Act. It is my view that the restraining order should remain in force 'until further order' of this court."
Epiq Europe Ltd hereby certify that the above is an accurate and complete record of the proceedings or part thereof.