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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 >> Ali Naqvi, R. v [2024] EWCA Crim 958 (09 July 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2024/958.html Cite as: [2024] EWCA Crim 958 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
On appeal from Snaresbrook Crown Court
(His Honour Judge Falk)
The Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Lord Justice Holroyde)
MR JUSTICE BRYAN
MRS JUSTICE THORNTON DBE
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R E X | ||
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ALI NAQVI |
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Lower Ground Floor, 46 Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1JE
Tel No: 020 7404 1400; Email: [email protected] (Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE HOLROYDE:
"The Crown's case is that he stripped her naked and was trying to touch her vagina. It is immaterial that he may not have succeeded, because if he was applying force to her by holding her down and stripping her naked in the circumstances where his purpose was to touch her vagina, then applying the definition of sexual activity above, you may have little difficulty in concluding that the assault was a sexual one."
"Have the Crown made you sure that the [applicant] was sexually assaulting [C] by removing her clothing and trying to touch her vagina?"
"Can we clarify. The indictment does not state details about 'by removing her clothing and trying to touch her vagina', as described in the legal directions. Please clarify."
After a lengthy discussion with counsel, the judge said this to the jury:
"So, my answer to your question is: You need to be sure there was a deliberate touching in circumstances that were sexual, and if you find that he was either – if you are sure that he was deliberately touching her and removing her clothing, and holding her and removing her clothing, or holding her and trying to touch her vagina or both, then the offence would be made out, but you must be sure of those elements. The [applicant's] case, so that you know … is that none of this ever happened, what he did was – well, she took her own clothes off, and the most he did was trying to protect her from injuring herself. If either of those might be right, then of course he is not guilty."
The jury thereafter convicted the applicant on both counts.
"For count 1, the starting point where I put this on the guidelines is six and a half years. It is aggravated to eight years to take account of the aggravating features and the facts of count 2 but it is mitigated down to seven years for your lack of previous convictions, your sharp decline in health, the delay and the personal mitigations that I have referred. Count 2 will be 21 months but that will be concurrent."
The judge accordingly imposed concurrent terms of seven years and 21 month' imprisonment.
"15. … In considering the question of prejudice to the defence, it seems to us that it is necessary to distinguish between mere speculation about what missing documents or witnesses might show, and missing evidence which represents a significant and demonstrable chance of amounting to decisive or strongly supportive evidence emerging on a specific issue in the case. The court will need to consider what evidence directly relevant to the appellant's case has been lost by reason of the passage of time. The court will then need to go on to consider the importance of the missing evidence in the context of the case as a whole and the issues before the jury. Having considered those matters, the court will have to identify what prejudice, if any, has been caused to the appellant by the delay and whether judicial directions would be sufficient to compensate for such prejudice as may have been caused or whether in truth a fair trial could not properly be afforded to a defendant."
"… As a matter of principle, in the administration of justice when there is trial by jury, the constitutional primacy and public responsibility for the verdict rests not with the judge, nor indeed with this court, but with the jury. If therefore there is a case to answer and, after proper directions, the jury has convicted, it is not open to the court to set aside the verdict on the basis of some collective, subjective judicial hunch that the conviction is or maybe unsafe. Where it arises for consideration at all, the application of the 'lurking doubt' concept requires reasoned analysis of the evidence or the trial process, or both, which leads to the inexorable conclusion that the conviction is unsafe. It can therefore only be in the most exceptional circumstances that a conviction will be quashed on this ground alone, and even more exceptional if the attention of the court is confined to a re-examination of the material before the jury."