R, Regina v: CACD 4 Apr 2008

The defendant appealed his conviction for rape, saying that the complainant’s evidence had wrongfully been allowed to be given over a remote video link. Provisions to allow such means of giving evidence had been intended to be phased in only as training allowed. No notice had been given to apply to the court which had used this to allow the special measures direction.
Held: The appeal failed. The Commencement Order had been passed. The Crown Court is one court, not a series of courts, and there was no express arrangement to limit the power to particular sittings. The judge had the power to make a special measures direction, notwithstanding the fact no notification of availability had been given under section 18(2) which was simply an administrative provision designed to help the court, but it in no way affected the power of the Crown Court to make a special measures direction under section 27 in any proceedings at any time after the provision was commenced by the Commencement Order.

Judges:

Lord Justice Thomas

Citations:

[2008] EWCA Crim 678, [2008] 2 Cr App Rep 10, [2008] 1 WLR 2044

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Youth Justice and Criminal Evidence Act 1999 18(2)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedRegina v Bedwellty Justices Ex Parte Williams HL 18-Sep-1996
A decision at committal to return an accused for trial is susceptible to judicial review where committal was based solely on inadmissible evidence or was based on evidence not reasonably capable of supporting it. The committal was quashed.
The . .
CitedRegina (Britton) v Croydon Crown Court 2000
The Crown Court is a single court. . .
CitedClarke, Regina v; Regina v McDaid HL 6-Feb-2008
An indictment had not been signed despite a clear statutory provision that it should be. The defects were claimed to have been cured by amendment before sentence.
Held: The convictions failed. Sections 1(1) and 2(1) of the 1933 Act which . .
CitedRegina on the Application of S v Waltham Forest Youth Court, The Crown Prosecution Service, The Secretary of State for the Home Department Admn 31-Mar-2004
There was no inherent power to allow a defendant to give evidence by live link, on the ground that Parliament had sought since 1988 to provide exclusively for the circumstances in which live link might be used in a criminal trial. . .
CitedAttorney General’s Reference (No 3 of 1999) (Lynn) HL 15-Dec-2000
A DNA sample had been wrongfully retained after the suspect had been acquitted, and the sample had been used in a later investigation to identify him. A subsequent sample had been taken, and the result of that second test had been used as evidence . .
CitedPolanski v Conde Nast Publications Ltd HL 10-Feb-2005
The claimant wished to pursue his claim for defamation against the defendant, but was reluctant to return to the UK to give evidence, fearing arrest and extradition to the US. He appealed refusal of permission to be interviewed on video tape. Held . .
CitedRegina v Soneji and Bullen HL 21-Jul-2005
The defendants had had confiscation orders made against them. They had appealed on the basis that the orders were made more than six months after sentence. The prosecutor now appealed saying that the fact that the order were not timely did not . .

Cited by:

CitedDiane, Regina v CACD 9-Jul-2009
Whether the judge had been right to admit evidence given by telephone only from a witness in Belgium.
Held: The appeal succeeded. Parliament authorised in sections 30 and 31 that witnesses who are present in the United Kingdom could be heard . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Criminal Practice

Updated: 27 March 2022; Ref: scu.266465