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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> London Borough of Lewisham v D & Ors [2010] EWHC 1238 (Fam) (17 February 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2010/1238.html Cite as: [2010] Fam Law 794, [2011] 1 FLR 895, [2010] EWHC 1238 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge
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London Borough of Lewisham |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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D and others |
Respondents |
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Mr. Dorian Day for the First Respondent
Mr. Neil Bullock for the Fifth Respondent
Ms Samantha King for the Seventh to Tenth Respondents (children by their
Children's Guardian)
Mr. Tom Little for the Commissioner of the Police for the Metropolis
Hearing dates: 16th and 18th February 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Introduction
(a) R
(b) A
(c) B
(d) J
The background
(a) Three counts of assault (section 1 CYPA 1933);
(b) One count of wilful ill-treatment (section 1 CYPA 1933);
(c) One count of common assault.
"if [the first Respondent] declines to provide such sample, the [First Respondent] shall by 12 noon on the 24th December 2009 file and serve a position statement setting out her objections to providing a DNA sample."
(a) In the 'first stage', the Court would consider whether the material already obtained in the family proceedings of the children's DNA should be disclosed to the police.
If that application were granted, and the DNA samples and associated reports were indeed disclosed,
(b) In a 'second stage' the Court would consider (if anyone should so apply) whether (after the police had brought the evidence of the DNA of the children and the DNA of the mother together) it would or should direct the police to disclose the resulting evidence of such a 'matching' exercise.
(a) A portion of the DNA evidence relevant to the older 3 children obtained within the family proceedings (at the hearing I gave leave to the MPC to amend the application to include J; Mr. Bullock for the Fifth Respondent, without instructions did not oppose the application to amend) sufficient to be able to make their own analysis;
(b) the resulting DNA profiles of the children;
(c) the DNA comparison report.
The law
'Where—
(a) Fingerprints … or samples are taken from a person in connection with the investigation of an offence, and
(b) subsection (3) below does not require them to be destroyed,
the fingerprints … or samples may be retained after they have fulfilled the purposes for which they were taken but shall not be used by any person except for purposes related to the prevention or detection of crime, the investigation of an offence or the conduct of a prosecution…'
'Where—
(c) the reference to crime includes a reference to any conduct which –
i) constitutes one or more criminal offences (whether under the law of a part of the United Kingdom or of a country or territory outside the United Kingdom); or
ii) is or corresponds to, any conduct which, if it all took place in any one part of the United Kingdom, would constitute one or more criminal offences;
and
(d) the reference to an investigation and to a prosecution include references, respectively, to any investigation outside the United Kingdom of any crime or suspected crime and to a prosecution brought in respect of any crime in a country or territory outside the United Kingdom.'
[42] Can a family court order that D's [in fact the victim of criminal assault in that case] blood sample or the DNA profile derived from it be used for a purpose not within the meaning of s 64(1A) of PACE 1984? The purposes to which samples may be put are described in ss 64(1A) and 64(1B)(c) of the Act. They are specific and narrow. They were considered by the House of Lords in R (S) v Chief Constable of the South Yorkshire Police; R (Marper) v Chief Constable of the South Yorkshire Police [2004] UKHL 39, [2004] 1 WLR 2196, [2004] UKHRR 967.
[43] In Marper it was argued that the words 'for purposes relating to' were capable of permitting uses other than those stated (see para [30]). Marper involved the legality of taking and retaining DNA samples and profiles. The appellants appealed against a decision refusing an application for a declaration that s 64 of PACE 1984 as amended was incompatible with Arts 8 and 14 of the Convention. Lord Steyn rejected the argument and construed the words in issue as relating solely to each of the three defined uses in s 64(1A) rather than as an invitation to construct other uses not defined by Parliament.
[44] Either Art 8 of the Convention is not engaged where a sample is retained for one or more of the three purposes set out in s 64(1A) of PACE 1984 or if it is, the three purposes fall within the qualifications permitted by Art 8(2). The House held that the Act's provisions were human rights compliant precisely because the purposes were strictly limited and in that context Lord Steyn emphasised that the purposes were to be strictly construed. Accordingly, the use of retained DNA samples for any purpose other than that related to the specified uses in the Act would be contrary to the clear wording of the Act and inconsistent with the public policy that underpins the Act. Furthermore, in my judgment, the prohibition on other uses is a proportionate interference having regard to that public policy.
[45] If PACE 1984 is human rights compliant ie its provisions are a proportionate pursuit of a legitimate aim within the qualifications to the right and those purposes are to be strictly construed, then there is no question that the prohibition on use of retained samples must extend to their use in family proceedings which are not within the three purposes set out in s 64(1A) of PACE 1984.
[46] Accordingly, it is not necessary to 'read down' the provisions of PACE 1984 to make them human rights compliant. The establishment of parentage by the use of samples seized and retained by the police is not a purpose authorised by Parliament. Each of the incompatibility arguments raised before this court is flawed. I hold that the provisions of PACE 1984 do apply to D's blood sample and the DNA profile derived from it and I decline to declare that the provisions of the Act are incompatible with Art 8 of the Convention. Accordingly, there is no power in this court to order disclosure of this sample and the application is dismissed."
[my emphasis]
Arguments in favour of disclosure
Arguments against disclosure
"I am the mother of R, A and B…
I am not agree (sic) to the DNA testing. I believe that the Local Authority is going one step too far in insisting on this testing when they have all the necessary documentation to show maternity of these children. Moreover I do not fully trust the Local Authority in these proceedings … I am mistrusting as to what they will do with the DNA tests."
(a) The primary submission was that I should really look at the 'first stage' and the 'second stage' together. Given that in due course an application is likely to be made within the CA 1989 proceedings for the police to disclose the evidence relevant to the results of the 'marriage' of the DNA samples (I add here for the record that such an application is indeed intended), I should reject the MPC's application now. If I grant the application, it is likely to lead to this Court at the second stage ordering the disclosure of the Mother's DNA evidence into the family proceedings in a manner which would otherwise be prohibited by section 64;
(b) The mother does not trust the social services, who she says have wrongly taken her children into care; she does not trust anyone with the DNA
(c) It is not a necessary or proportionate exercise to disclose the DNA of the children to the police in this way;
(d) The Police's case in relation to potential child trafficking charges is weak.
Discussion
"Awareness of the fact that disclosure can now be made to the police in prescribed circumstances without the permission of the court…" would have made a difference to the Judge's assessment in that case…
"[21] …where the police apply, they are seeking a sharing of information between the two justice systems which are working side by side in cases involving the protection of children. The disclosure is to responsible professionals who will use the material for the purpose for which it is shared, namely criminal investigation and possible prosecution. The criminal justice system has its own responsibility and powers to protect the vulnerable"
"it is important in this kind of situation that the family court and the Crown Court work together in co-operation to achieve the proper administration of justice in both jurisdictions" (para.43)
"…there is the powerful public interest in ensuring the proper administration of criminal justice, the public interest in ensuring, so far as possible (and, I would add, without unnecessary let or hindrance by the family court), that the innocent are not wrongly convicted and, more to the point in the present case, that the guilty are rightly convicted and appropriately sentenced."
On the issues arising in this case, I am entirely satisfied that this public interest is engaged.
1 Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life, his home and his correspondence.
2 There shall be no interference by a public authority with the exercise of this right except such as is in accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national security, public safety or the economic well-being of the country, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others.
(a) necessary for the prevention of crime, or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others
and
(b) proportionate
for the disclosure to take place.
Safeguarding the information
Conclusion