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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Cameron v HM Advocate [2011] ScotHC HCJAC_29 (29 March 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2011/2011HCJAC29.html Cite as: [2011] ScotHC HCJAC_29, 2011 SCL 633, 2011 GWD 14-328, [2011] HCJAC 29 |
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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
|
|
Lord Justice ClerkLord OsborneLord Marnoch
|
[2011] HCJAC 29Appeal No: XC431/10OPINION OF THE LORD JUSTICE CLERK
in
APPEAL AGAINST CONVICTION AND SENTENCE
by
ALAN CAMERON Appellant;
against
HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE Respondent: _______
|
For the Appellant: J Scott, Sol Adv, M Anderson, Adv; Capital Defence, Edinburgh
For the Crown: A Prentice QC (Sol Adv), AD; McKenna, Adv; Crown Agent
29 March 2011
Introduction
[1] In May 2010 at the High Court at Livingston the appellant was tried
on three charges. Charge (1) was as follows:
"(1) between 29 November 2007 and 11 December 2007, both dates inclusive, at 1/4 Royston Mains Place, Edinburgh you ALAN CAMERON did assault Heather Joanne Stacey or Egan or Williamson, formerly residing there, by means to the Prosecutor unknown and did cause her injury as a result of which she died there and you did murder her.
[2] Charge (2) libelled an attempt to pervert
the course of justice in thirteen specific respects, which related to the
appellant's alleged actings in the course of about a year after the death of
the deceased, all of which he was said to have done with intent to prevent the
police and the procurator fiscal from conducting an investigation into the
death and to avoid detection, arrest and prosecution in respect of charge (1).
Charge (3) was a charge of theft of money, in about the same period, from
various branches of the post office by the use of the deceased's post office
card and PIN number.
[3] The appellant was convicted on all three
charges. He was sentenced on charge (1) to life imprisonment with a punishment
part of 25 years. He appeals against conviction on charge (1) and against the
sentence on that charge in respect of the punishment part.
The evidence
The deceased
[4] The deceased was aged 44. She was the
appellant's girlfriend. She was unemployed and lived alone in a block of local
authority flats at the locus libelled. The appellant regularly visited her
there. She had a history of alcohol abuse. In 2006 and 2007 she had several
emergency admissions to hospital after drinking binges. The last of these was
in June 2007. Catherine Reid, her project worker, described her as being
vulnerable. She said that the deceased was anxious and depressed, that she had
a number of physical problems, and that she had had difficulties with a violent
ex-partner. She could function without alcohol but drank if things got too
much for her. Several witnesses who dealt with her in 2007 spoke of her more
positively. They said that she was well-presented, took good care of her flat,
had plans for the future and was intent on regaining contact with her
children. Her adult daughter, Danielle Williamson, said that the deceased
would binge-drink but could go for years without drinking.
[5] There was conflicting evidence about the
deceased's condition in late 2007. Catherine Reid said that on 19 October 2007 the deceased told her
that she had gallstones and was on strong painkillers. She sounded as if she
was under the influence of alcohol or possibly painkillers. On 26 October she
telephoned Miss Reid and said that she was still unwell. Her daughter said
that she last saw her in October 2007. She was sober and did not seem ill.
Jane Rattray, a solicitor, met her on 20 November 2007 and saw no signs of a
drink problem. Two neighbours, Elizabeth McGuire and Margo Goudie, saw her
looking tired and unwell.
The appellant
[6] The appellant was aged 53. He had a flat
in the Moredun area of Edinburgh. He was being pursued by the City of Edinburgh Council for rent arrears. On 19 October 2007 an order for recovery of
possession was made. An acquaintance, Margaret McKenzie, who had worked with
mentally handicapped adults, described the appellant as being vulnerable and a
bit of a fantasist. Several witnesses spoke to his having on occasions falsely
claimed that his wife or one of his children or a friend had died.
Relations between the appellant and deceased
[7] Several witnesses described how the
appellant spoke fondly of the deceased and was proud and happy about their
relationship. He showed photographs of her to colleagues and friends. He appeared
to be supportive of her, assisting with domestic chores and showing concern
about her health and her drinking. In early November 2007 the appellant and
the deceased visited her mother and stepfather and announced that they were
engaged. There were suggestions that the appellant might have been jealous of
other men.
The deceased's death
[8] The last known contact from the deceased
appears to have been on 29 November 2007, when she spoke on the telephone to
Catherine Reid. She was upset and sounded as if she might be drinking.
[9] The date of death is not known. Dr Andrew
Whittington, a forensic entomologist, said that in his opinion the insect life
on the deceased's remains indicated that she had died in late 2007. In his
police interview the appellant said that she died in early December 2007.
Moving the deceased's body
[10] Dr Whittington's opinion was that the
deceased's body had been kept indoors and that it had lain in the small bedroom
of her flat from soon after her death throughout most of the period prior to
the deposition of her remains. Secondary activity of insects had
occurred in most of the other rooms. A larger secondary accumulation of
insects in the main bedroom suggested that the body, body parts, soiled
clothing or household items might have been temporarily housed in the main
bedroom, probably at quite a late stage of decomposition.
The deceased's Post Office account
[11] It was accepted by the defence that on
various occasions between 10 December 2007 and 20 October 2008, the appellant unlawfully
used the deceased's post office card and PIN number to obtain a total of
£4,965.88 from various branches of the Post Office.
The text message to Catherine Reid
[12] It
was also accepted by the defence that on 11 December 2007 the appellant sent a text
message to Catherine Reid that purported to be from the deceased.
The appellant travels to Thurso
[13] The appellant spent Christmas 2007 with his
friends Dennis and Margaret MacKenzie in Thurso. According to the evidence, he
was distressed and jittery when he arrived. He told Dennis MacKenzie that he
had split up with the deceased. He seemed besotted with her. He told Margaret
MacKenzie that the deceased was spending Christmas with her family. He
appeared to be having telephone conversations with the deceased. After one of
them he told Margaret MacKenzie that the relationship was finished. She
thought that he was stressed, but was back to his usual self by Boxing Day.
When she asked him what was wrong, he said that it was woman trouble. To Ruth
Gunn, with whom he stayed in Thurso, he also referred several times to
telephoning the deceased.
The Social Fund award
[14] It was a matter of admission that the
appellant, knowing that the deceased was already dead, submitted an application
in her name to the Department of Work and Pensions for a Social Fund award of
£600, that this sum was paid into the deceased's post office account and that
the appellant withdrew it.
The pretence that the deceased was
still alive
[15] The
deceased's neighbours regularly saw the appellant at the deceased's flat
throughout 2008. In early January he told Elizabeth McGuire that the deceased
was living with him in his own flat. Later, when she asked after the deceased,
he maintained the pretence that she was still alive. The deceased's neighbour
Brian Meek asked the appellant two or three times how the deceased was. He
said that she was looking after her mother, or that she had been drinking and
was unfit to travel. His colleague Megan Nolan saw him apparently arguing with
the deceased during a telephone conversation.
The Council's actions
[16] The deceased's housing benefit stopped on 1 July 2008. Elizabeth Milne, a
housing officer, called at the deceased's flat several times to verify her income.
She left cards and sent follow up letters. The deceased did not respond. In
October and November 2008 the Council wrote to her threatening legal action for
non-payment of rent.
The appellant's demeanour
[17] By late 2008 the appellant was working in a
store in Newhaven. There he displayed behaviour that suggested that he was
under stress. He claimed, falsely, that his daughter had had a car accident
and died of a heart attack. He became moody and bad-tempered, and would burst
into tears. He pushed Megan Nolan aside when she tried to comfort him. In
December 2008 another colleague, Maureen Baillie, detected a distinctive smell
from the bottom of his trousers. She had worked in a nursing home. The smell
reminded her of elderly patients who were receiving treatment for gangrene
involving maggots. In late 2008 Elizabeth McGuire saw the appellant. He
looked tired and drawn.
The involvement of Brian Meek
[18] Just
before Christmas 2008 the appellant telephoned Brian Meek and said that the deceased
was having trouble with her former boyfriend. He asked Mr Meek to go
downstairs to her flat and check whether anyone had been looking for her. Mr
Meek went downstairs and noticed that there was a thread hanging over the
deceased's front door. It appeared to have been placed there. If the door had
been opened the thread would have fallen off. The appellant had not mentioned
this. On looking at the door Brian Meek concluded that no-one had been in the
flat.
The repossession of the deceased's flat
[19] The
Council obtained an order for recovery of possession of the deceased's flat.
Miss Milne arranged for a joiner to accompany her to the flat on 15 December 2008 to change the locks. The
flat was generally tidy and appeared to have been abandoned. There was a
pungent and unpleasant smell.
The disposal of the deceased's remains
[20] On 31 December 2008 the deceased's head was
found in a carrier bag in bushes on Hawthornvale Path. The bag had first been
observed by dog walkers just before Christmas. It had not been there on 15
December when the path was cleaned. Other remains were found between 1 and 19 January 2009 at locations in Granton. The appellant accepted that he put
them there. Some of the remains could have lain there since early to mid
November 2008. Ninety per cent of the deceased's remains were recovered.
[21] Police officers examined the rubbish bin
allocated to the deceased's flat. There was an overwhelming smell of decaying
remains. Inside there was a black bin liner with stained bed clothing and
other items.
The appellant's reaction
[22] Megan
Nolan said that at Hogmanay 2008 the appellant told her that a head had been
found near the shore. He was completely calm, as if he was talking about the
weather. On
New Year's Day David Docherty, a customer of the store, said to the appellant "I see they found a heid
in a bag."
The appellant replied "Did they?" and shrugged. He also told Dennis Mackenzie that
a decomposed head had been found. He thought that it had come from a tomb, and
did not seem bothered.
The appellant's police interview
[23] When the appellant was
detained and interviewed, he denied that he had assaulted or murdered the
deceased. He admitted that he had disposed of her body. He claimed that he
had left her flat to buy food and returned to find that she had died. He had
been speaking to her 20-25 minutes earlier. She had had a good drink in her
when she died. She had been on a downward spiral of alcohol abuse, she was
bedridden and incontinent, though not drunk, all the time. He had panicked
because he had an outstanding non-appearance warrant on a charge of breach of
the peace; and had not attempted to resuscitate her or telephone the emergency
services. He had moved her body two or three days later from the main bedroom
to a smaller one, but could not explain why. He had gone away but had returned
in March 2008 to find that the body was still in the flat. From March to July
he had lived in the flat until he obtained accommodation from the Salvation Army.
He had regularly checked that no-one had found the body, because what had
happened was beginning to hit home. He denied that he had told people that she
was still alive. When the Council wrote to say that the flat was to be
repossessed, he had decided to take the body away. He denied that he
dismembered it. He said that it had come apart when he moved it. He told lies
during the interviews. For example, he claimed to have been in London when post office records
showed that the card had been used in Edinburgh. He could not explain why he had lied.
The medical evidence
[24] Professor
Anthony Busuttil and Dr Ralph Bouhaidar carried out post mortem examinations of
the deceased's remains. Because of the advanced state of decomposition
the cause of death could not be ascertained. There were no obvious injuries. The
hyoid bone was not fractured, although that did not exclude the possibility of
strangulation. Diazepam and paracetamol were present in minute
concentrations. Cutting marks on the deceased's leg bones were likely to have
been inflicted after death. As decomposition advanced it would eventually have become
easy to pull the body apart.
[25] Professor Busuttil had experience of cases
of sudden death where there were no signs detectable at post mortem. There
were a number of possible causes. In at least one per cent of cases the cause of death
could not be ascertained. In those cases the deceased's history might indicate
what had happened. Alcoholics might die suddenly. At certain levels alcohol
was poisonous and could cause death. After regular drinking a sudden
withdrawal could cause convulsions and lead to death. Convulsions could kill
over hours but sometimes, when the problem was acute, death could occur in
minutes. Sudden death after excessive drinking was uncommon. It would be more
usually a process observable by others and taking hours or days. The deceased's medical
records were consistent
with quite serious alcohol problems. If death was caused by alcohol
withdrawal, decomposition might prevent pathologists from finding that out.
[26] Dr Julie Dalgleish was the deceased's
doctor. She had last seen her on 28 September 2007. The deceased had been
well dressed. Her hair was tidy and she was made up. Dr Dalgleish did not
remember any smell of alcohol. There was no sign of a severe problem but the medical records disclosed
several emergency admissions associated with binge drinking, including alcohol
withdrawal syndrome and seizures. Dr Dalgleish thought there had been signs that
the deceased was doing quite well and was trying to put binge drinking behind
her. She was not aware of any risk factors that might have led to the
deceased's sudden death.
[27] Professor Susan Black, a forensic
anthropologist, said there had been unsuccessful attempts to separate the
deceased's right femur from the lower leg above the knee and to sever the left
femur both at the hip joint and above the knee joint. It was most likely that
the implement used had had a fine thin serrated blade and had been
unsuitable for this purpose. Therefore a considerable effort had been needed,
with repeated passages across the bone. Some of the cuts were deep and showed
sustained efforts. The cuts were clearly post mortem. She could not say if
they had been made soon after death or a considerable time later.
Decomposition increased the ease with which a body could be dismembered without
cutting. There would be no reason to cut up a body if it had decomposed to
such an extent that it could be pulled apart.
The submission of no case to answer
[28] At
the end of the Crown case the solicitor advocate for the defence made a
submission of no case to answer on the ground that there was no evidence
entitling the jury to convict the appellant of murder, or even assault, since
one of the facta probanda, namely that the deceased was killed, was not
supported by sufficient evidence in law. The trial judge repelled the
submission.
The trial judge's directions on
murder and culpable homicide
[29] In
his charge to the jury, after defining the crimes of murder and culpable
homicide, the trial judge said:
"In this case as you know there is no medical evidence which entitles you to say that a particular act or acts were carried out by the accused. You are asked to infer in very general terms, that somehow or other the accused was guilty of murder. And you are asked to infer that from the steps taken after the event. So if you are satisfied that the steps showed that somehow or other the accused was responsible (inaudible) for the death of the deceased, how would you choose between murder and culpable homicide? How would you know which one it was? If you are satisfied that because he did all these things he must have killed her somehow or other.
One way of looking at it might be, it is a matter for you, that the more determined and immediate and prolonged the steps were, the more serious you might infer the crime was. That is one way you might want to approach it. If you look at the steps which were taken and you have heard the evidence about that, and you can infer what, why would he do that? Would you do these things if you were guilty of culpable homicide? It is a very serious crime but not as serious as murder. Or did the steps themselves show a mind, which is so guilty that it must have been a very serious crime? It must have been the crime of murder, because the steps taken are such as to allow me to infer that it must have been that very serious thing which he did. So you look at the evidence (inaudible) and how extreme were these steps, and from that can you extrapolate (inaudible) as it were to infer what it must have been which happened. That is how the Crown, I think, approached the case and ask you to do. And that is a decision which you will have to make.
As I say if [the solicitor advocate for the accused] rightly points out, there is no assistance really to be derived at all in from any medical evidence at all. And there are no eye-witnesses other than of course the accused himself who says that it simply did not happen.
Now, ladies and gentlemen, I cannot really assist you in how you go about that. You have heard what the Advocate Depute has had to say. He has set out in his address the various factors which he says entitle you to draw the conclusion beyond reasonable doubt that the accused was guilty of murder. I have defined that for you. I have defined culpable homicide for you, if you did not think that the inference could be so extreme as to allow you to convict of murder, but nonetheless you thought he had killed her. It is a matter entirely for you. But you have to be satisfied that at least he assaulted her. If he did not even do that, if you must ask about that, then that is an end of the case. It is as simple as that."
Submissions for the appellant
[30] The
solicitor advocate for the appellant submitted that the trial judge erred in
repelling the submission of no case to answer. The Crown had failed to
establish any sufficient link between the appellant and the deceased's death.
The Crown case relied on speculation rather than on reasonable inference from
established facts. Such an approach was unjustified (Broadley v HM
Adv 2005 SCCR 620). Evidence of an accused person's behaviour after a
death was relevant only on the question of mens rea (Dickson, Evidence,
paras 86-94, 108; Gardiner v HM Adv 2007 SCCR 379). It could not
be used to prove that a crime had been committed. The suggestion to the
contrary in Beggs v HM Adv (2010 SCCR 681) was obiter and
was unsound. To assume that a guilty act had occurred because of evidence of
an apparently guilty mind was a circular exercise. The present case was
distinguishable from Beggs v HM Adv (supra) where
the deceased had suffered a violent sexual assault shortly before death and
dismemberment had occurred shortly thereafter. The trial judge had left open
the possibility of a conviction for culpable homicide. That highlighted the
difficulty, if not the impossibility, of using post mortem actions to determine
whether a homicide had occurred and, if so, whether it was murder or culpable
homicide. The appellant's reaction to the death had to be seen in the context
of his vulnerability. The evidence of the deceased's alcohol withdrawal
syndrome and related seizures provided a possible alternative cause of death,
which the Crown had not excluded.
Submissions for the Crown
[31] The
advocate depute submitted that it was of the nature of circumstantial evidence
that it had to be looked at as a whole (Al Megrahi v HM Adv 2002 SCCR 509; Campbell v HM Adv 2008 SCCR 847). It was for the jury
to decide which of the possible explanations for the death they accepted (Al
Megrahi, supra; Fox v HM Adv 1998 JC 94). Here
the evidence of the appellant's post mortem actions was sufficient to support a
charge of murder. There was not merely a concealment of an unexplained death
but an active course of conduct to prevent its cause from being ascertained.
The concealment was maintained for over a year. The appellant pretended that
the deceased was still alive and obtained financial gain. There was evidence
of possible motives in the appellant's jealousy and financial problems.
Logically, the unsuccessful attempts at dismemberment must have occurred closer
to the time of death than the subsequent separation of the limbs. The
appellant's actions had been extreme. They were relevant to establishing that
he had murdered the deceased.
Conclusions
[32] The
case against the appellant was entirely circumstantial; but that does not mean
that the Crown case was necessarily the weaker for that. In many cases, a
multiplicity of items of circumstantial evidence, some apparently of neutral
significance when seen in isolation, may, when seen together, present not only
a sufficiency of evidence but a convincing and compelling case. That is why
the analogy with the strands of a cable, which is referred to in some of the
text books, is helpful to our understanding of the nature of a circumstantial
case (cf Walker and Walker, Evidence, 3rd ed para 5.9.3).
[33] On that view, the question is therefore
whether the circumstantial evidence, looked at as a whole, is capable of
yielding the inference that the appellant killed the deceased. In my opinion,
it is. The starting point is that on the date of the death the appellant was
with the deceased in her flat; that on his own account he was with her only a
matter of minutes before her death; and that he did not suggest that anyone
else had been in the flat at the relevant time. He alone knew of the date and
circumstances of the deceased's death. When the deceased died, he did not
contact the emergency services, or any of the deceased's family, or take any
steps to arrange a funeral for the body. Nor did he notify the Council as the
deceased's landlords.
[34] Instead, he concealed the body and moved it
from the main bedroom to a smaller bedroom. He then embarked on a course of
deception in which he led others to believe that the deceased was still alive;
for example, by sending the false text message to Catherine Reid; by having
simulated telephone conversations with the deceased; and by leading various
friends and neighbours to believe that she was still alive.
[35] There was also evidence justifying the
inference that at a time when he alone knew where the body was, and at a stage
before advanced decomposition had set in, the appellant had attempted to
dismember it.
[36] According to the appellant's statement to
the police, he lived at the flat from March to July 2008 and thereafter
regularly checked that no-one had found the body. This was supported by the
evidence of Brian Meek regarding the incident at Christmas 2008. A possible
inference from that evidence was that the appellant had placed the thread over
the door as a tell-tale. Then, when he had kept the body concealed for over a
year and when the repossession of the flat became imminent, he removed the body
and disposed of the remains at various places in the Granton area.
[37] There was also the unlawful obtaining of
money due to the deceased by the appellant while her death was known only to
him.
[38] According to Dickson (loc cit) and Gardiner
v HM Adv (supra), evidence of an accused's actings after the
death is relevant to the question of mens rea; but I do not consider
that its relevance is confined to that. In my opinion, such evidence can be
relevant also to the prior question whether the accused killed the deceased (cf
Beggs v HM Adv, supra). Taking all of this evidence
together, I consider that the jury were entitled to conclude that the appellant
killed the deceased.
[39] If I am right in that view, then the actings
of the appellant in this case were sufficient to justify the conclusion that he
both killed the deceased and did so with the mens rea necessary for a
conviction of murder (cf Gardiner v HM Adv, supra,
at paras [149]-[152]).
[40] In the present case, it has been suggested
on behalf of the appellant that on the evidence of the deceased's medical
history, which I have summarised, it was as likely that the deceased died of
natural causes as that she was murdered and therefore that there was no case to
answer. For the reasons that I have given, I do not accept that that argument
is valid. Still less, therefore, do I accept the submission for the appellant
that there was any onus on the Crown positively to exclude the possibility of
death by natural causes. In my opinion, in the face of the
circumstantial case, and in the absence of defence evidence, the question was
whether the case was proved beyond reasonable doubt. Other possible interpretations
of the Crown evidence would have a bearing on that question.
[41] So far as I can see, it was not suggested to
the jury that they should convict of any lesser offence than murder. It has
not been suggested in this appeal that the court should substitute a conviction
for culpable homicide. The defence position at the trial and at the appeal was
to argue for an acquittal and nothing less.
[42] Nevertheless, the trial judge directed the
jury that the verdict of culpable homicide was open to them. My own view is
that that direction was both unnecessary and inappropriate. I think that a
reasonable and logical conclusion on the evidence was that the appellant
murdered the deceased. On the other hand, I can see no basis on which a
conviction for culpable homicide could be justified since it would have been a
matter of the merest speculation whether there were circumstances which
justified a conviction of the lesser crime. There could be such circumstances
in a case of this kind if, for example, the appellant's statement to the police
or the evidence at the trial had provided a foundation for a conviction of
culpable homicide. But there is no such foundation in this case and the
solicitor advocate for the appellant did not suggest that there was.
The appeal against sentence
[43] The
solicitor advocate for the appellant submitted that a punishment part of
25 years would normally be imposed only in the worst cases of murder,
involving torture, the use of firearms or the killing of a child or a police
officer (Walker v HM Adv 2002 SCCR 1036; HM Adv v
Kelly 2010 SCCR 103). As the Crown could not establish how the deceased
died, there was no basis for treating this case as one of the worst, even in
light of the other charges. The appellant had been convicted in the High Court
in 1995 of sexual offences against children and sentenced to five years'
imprisonment, but those were non-analogous offences and did not provide a basis
for the punishment part imposed.
Conclusions on sentence
[44] In
my opinion, the punishment part was excessive. It appears that the trial judge
was influenced by the appellant's actings after the death. Those actings were
the subject of charges (2) and (3) on which the appellant was convicted and
sentenced. I cannot see how the sentence imposed on the murder charge can
properly be influenced by subsequent events constituting separate crimes on
which separate sentences have been imposed. In my opinion, in our uncertain
state of knowledge of the circumstances in which the appellant killed the
deceased, we have no warrant for the imposition of a punishment part of such
severity. The appropriate punishment part should be in the range that is
normal in cases of murder in which there are no unusually aggravating
circumstances. In my view, a punishment part of 14 years is sufficient in this
case.
Disposal
[45] I
propose to your Lordships that we should refuse the appeal against conviction
and sustain the appeal against sentence to the extent of substituting a
punishment part of 14 years.
APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
|
|
Lord Justice ClerkLord OsborneLord Marnoch
|
[2011] HCJAC 29Appeal No: XC431/10
OPINION OF LORD OSBORNE
in
APPEAL AGAINST CONVICTION
by
ALAN CAMERON Appellant;
against
HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE Respondent: _______
|
For the Appellant: J Scott, Sol Adv, M Anderson, Adv; Capital Defence, Edinburgh
For the Crown: A Prentice QC (Sol Adv), AD; McKenna, Adv; Crown Agent
29 March 2011
[46] I agree with your Lordship in the chair.
There is nothing I wish to add.
APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
|
|
Lord Justice ClerkLord OsborneLord Marnoch
|
[2011] HCJAC 29Appeal No: XC431/10
OPINION OF LORD MARNOCH
in
APPEAL AGAINST CONVICTION
by
ALAN CAMERON Appellant;
against
HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE Respondent: _______
|
For the Appellant: J Scott, Sol Adv, M Anderson, Adv; Capital Defence, Edinburgh
For the Crown: A Prentice QC (Sol Adv), AD; McKenna, Adv; Crown Agent
29 March 2011
[47] I agree
entirely with your Lordship in the Chair and have nothing to add.