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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 >> BWM, R. v [2022] EWCA Crim 924 (05 July 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2022/924.html Cite as: [2022] EWCA Crim 924, [2022] 4 WLR 116, [2022] WLR(D) 500, [2023] 1 Cr App R 11 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT BRADFORD
His Honour Judge Burn
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE SWEENEY
and
HIS HONOUR JUDGE ANDREW LEES
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REGINA |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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BWM |
Appellant |
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Nick Adlington (instructed by the Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 23 June 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Males:
Section 45
"(1) A person is not guilty of an offence if –
(a) the person is aged 18 or over when the person does the act which constitutes the offence,
(b) the person does that act because the person is compelled to do it,
(c) the compulsion is attributable to slavery or to relevant exploitation, and
(d) a reasonable person in the same situation as the person and having the person's relevant characteristics would have no realistic alternative to doing that act."
The basic facts
The proceedings
The applicant's account of being trafficked
The psychiatric report
"In my opinion, his mental health problems by way of depression and PTSD are likely to have been directly caused by [the applicant] being trafficked and forced to work in a cannabis factory. His mental health problems are also likely to have been caused by his account of being prevented from leaving, having threats made against him and his family, being physically beaten and sexually abused."
The application to adduce new evidence
(1) documents leading up to and including the 2015 and 2018 negative Conclusive Grounds Decisions;
(2) documents leading up to and including the 2021 positive Conclusive Grounds Decision;
(3) the applicant's further witness statements to which we have referred; and
(4) the applicant's medical records and psychiatric report.
"The decision of the competent authority as to whether or not a person has been trafficked for the purpose of exploitation is not binding on the court, but, unless there is evidence to contradict it or significant evidence that has not been considered, it is likely that courts will respect the decision."
The section 45 defence
The applicant's guilty plea
"19. A defendant who pleads guilty is making a formal admission in open court that he is guilty of the offence. He may of course by a written basis of plea limit his admissions to only some of the facts alleged by the Crown, so long as he is admitting facts which constitute the offence, and Asiedu did so here. But ordinarily, once he has admitted such facts by an unambiguous and deliberately intended plea of guilty, there cannot then be an appeal against his conviction, for the simple reason that there is nothing unsafe about a conviction based on the defendant's own voluntary confession in open court. A defendant will not normally be permitted in this court to say that he has changed his mind and now wishes to deny what he has previously thus admitted in the Crown Court."
Abuse of process
Conclusion