Judgment Approved by the court for handing down. | R v. BKR Note Reporting Restrictions |
ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT WOOLWICH
T20197234 Royal Courts of Justice
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL
Before:-
LORD JUSTICE EDIS
MR JUSTICE MORRIS
and
HIS HONOUR JUDGE LUCRAFT KC
Sitting as a judge of the Court of Appeal Criminal Division
Between :
THE CROWN | Appellant |
- and - | |
BKR | Respondent |
Paul Jarvis (instructed by CPS London, RASSO Unit) for the Prosecution
Corinne Bramwell (assigned by the Registrar) for BKR
Hearing dates : 28 June 2023
Approved Redacted Judgment
for Publication Prior to Trial
WARNING: reporting restrictions apply to this case. Reporting restrictions prohibit the publication of the applicable information to the public or any section of the public, in writing, in a broadcast or by means of the internet, including social media. Anyone who receives a copy of this transcript is responsible in law for making sure that applicable restrictions are not breached. A person who breaches a reporting restriction is liable to a fine and/or imprisonment. For guidance on whether reporting restrictions apply, and to what information, ask at the court office or take legal advice.
The provisions of s.71 of the Criminal Justice Act 2003 apply to these proceedings. By virtue of those provisions, no publication may include a report of these proceedings, save for specified basic facts, until the conclusion of the trial unless the Court orders that the provisions are not to apply.
The Court hereby orders, further to section 71(3) of the Criminal Justice Act 2003 that the provisions of section 71(1) shall not apply to these proceedings in the Court of Appeal to the extent that the content of this redacted judgment may be published prior to trial.
The provisions of the Sexual Offences (Amendment) Act 1992 apply to the offences in this case. Under those provisions, where a sexual offence has been committed against a person, no matter relating to that person shall during that person’s lifetime be included in any publication if it is likely to lead members of the public to identify that person as the victim of that offence. This prohibition applies unless waived or lifted in accordance with s.3 of the Act. It has not been waived and applies to all complainants involved in proceedings against this Respondent.
Lord Justice Edis :
In this case the judge stayed the prosecution as an abuse of the process of the court. The prosecution now seeks leave to appeal to this court for an order setting that stay aside so that the trial can proceed. It is accepted that the procedural requirements of s58 of the Criminal Justice Act 2003 have been complied with and that this court has jurisdiction to entertain the application. We grant leave and will now deal with the appeal.
It is not necessary to set out in any detail the facts of the offence alleged against the Respondent (BKR). However, it is necessary to give a history of the two sets of proceedings he has already faced, and their outcomes.
BKR was……, and was convicted ………of four counts of sexual assault and two counts of fraud. Each of the four sexual assault counts alleged an offence against a different complainant. ……….He was sentenced to eight years’ imprisonment …….In those days he was entitled to be released at the halfway point, and he was released……..
As a result of press reporting of that trial, further …..[people] made complaints of similar offences of sexual assault against them. He was charged with nine further counts of sexual assault ……..he entered guilty pleas to seven of the nine counts, and not guilty pleas to offences relating to two of the complainants. A trial of those two counts was fixed……….. It did not take place then because of the suspension of jury trials at the start of the Covid-19 pandemic.
………..
A further hearing took place……... Afterwards [the judge] placed a widely shared comment on the DCS. The note reads:-
Defendant, Prosecution and Defence advocates, and self (in chambers to prevent audio feedback), by video due to coronavirus pandemic.
Count 3: Defendant arraigned and pleads Not Guilty.
[prosecution offers no evidence] and verdict of Not Guilty entered accordingly.
Count 6: ………….
Court invites Prosecution to re-consider whether it should proceed with Count 6, bearing in mind:
(a) I am reserving this case to myself, am going to proceed to sentence on Counts 1, 2, 4, 5, 7, 8 and 9 in the near future, and I indicate that, even if the Defendant is eventually convicted on Count 6, this will not add to his overall sentence;
(b) There is likely to be a long delay before a trial of Count 6 is possible, as a result of the ever growing backlog of cases awaiting trial due to the coronavirus pandemic;
…………
It is clear that the judge was concerned about the impact of the suspension of jury trials on waiting times for trials, and concerned to ensure that court resources were expended only on trials which were in the public interest. In the Summer of 2020, all Crown Court judges shared those concerns.
The ……..Judge ……..sentenced BKR to 3 years’ imprisonment concurrent on each of the seven counts to which he had entered guilty pleas. The CPS indicated that they intended to proceed with the trial on count 6 and the trial was listed……. The trial did not take place then because the defence requested that it should not. It was re-fixed and started ……….but the jury was discharged on the third day because the judge found that there had been a disclosure failure in relation to material relating to the complainant’s civil claim. There is an outstanding issue as to costs between the parties and we have not considered what occurred at that trial at all, and express no view about it.
……….., in response to some comments made by…….., ……the trial judge ……., Christina Smith, a District Crown Prosecutor attached to the London South Rape and Serious Sexual Offences Unit, wrote a letter in these terms:-
I am a District Crown Prosecutor on the Rape and Serious Sexual Offences Unit, London South and I write to confirm that this case has been reviewed following the comments made by Your Honour on [date].
Your Honour will be aware of the background to this matter and the facts of the case before the Court so I will not rehearse them. This case has been reviewed on public interest grounds on various occasions and in considering this decision, reference has been made to the Code for Crown Prosecutors (the Code).
In reviewing this case the Crown have borne in mind paragraph 4.10 of the Code which states that ‘It has never been the rule that a prosecution will automatically take place once the evidential stage is met. A prosecution will usually take place unless the prosecutor is satisfied that there are public interest factors tending against prosecution which outweigh those tending in favour’
In considering the public interest factors set out in paragraph 4.9 of the Code, regard has been had to 4.14 a) to g):
4.14a How serious is the offence committed?
…………..
4.14b What is the level of culpability of the suspect?
…………..
4.14c What are the circumstances of and harm caused to the complainant?
…………...
4.14f Is prosecution a proportionate response.?
The Crown has had regard to the cost to the CPS and the wider criminal justice system, especially where it could be regarded as excessive when weighed against any likely penalty. The Crown have concluded that the costs of proceeding to trial on this matter are marginal given that the case was to be tried in any event.
Consideration has also been given to the potential penalty and we are aware that if convicted of this count, no further penalty will be imposed by the Court. In effect, this would mean that a nominal penalty, albeit a custodial sentence, would be imposed but not such as would affect the overall sentence in accordance with the totality principle as outlined by the Sentencing Council Guidelines on Offences Taken into Consideration and Totality. This is accepted by the Crown.
However, the Crown submit that whilst no further penalty will be imposed it is important that justice for the complainant is also seen to be done by the recognition of the Defendant’s wrongdoing being formally recognised by the Court and to ensure that public confidence in the administration of justice is upheld.
Whilst there was a change of circumstance when the Defendant pleaded guilty to offences involving other complainants, this does not alter the fact that the points noted above still apply.
Accordingly, the Crown concludes that it remains in the public interest to proceed with the trial.
………[the trial judge] put a widely shared comment on the DCS dealing with various things, and including this:-
Defendant warned that he is not to assume that the trial Judge is bound by the observations about sentence of previous Judges, if he is convicted.
…………………, …… the new trial judge placed a widely shared comment on the DCS as follows:-
I wish to record my profound concerns that I am expected to spend 7 days trying this utterly pointless case about which 3 of my colleagues have recorded their similar concerns as to the intransigent attitude of the CPS
I am now the fourth to do so.
I will not start the trial process on Monday (I still have a defence speech and summing up to finish in any event) until a senior prosecutor attends court and explains to me just why the CPS justifies the time and public money to be wasted on his pointless exercise. No wonder the backlog is as big as it is.
I endorse …….the view- there will be no additional penalty if he is convicted and I will consider costs against the CPS if not
………..
……[The new trial judge] uploaded a document on to the DCS which set out her reasons for holding this view, which she summarised in the last paragraph:-
I am strongly of the view that this case does not satisfy the public interest test and that the Prosecution owes a duty to say even more at this stage that the case should not continue.
On the same day, ………a letter was sent by the CPS to [the] Judge……., again signed by Christina Smith. It read:-
I am one of the legal managers within the Rape and Serious Sexual Offences Unit, London South. Your Honour has asked for a senior prosecutor to attend court on …….to explain why the CPS are proceeding with this prosecution.
I am aware of the history of this case, and I hope that I will be able to address your concerns. Unfortunately, I cannot attend Woolwich Crown Court in person. I can be present via a CVP link which I hope will satisfy your requirement for tomorrows hearing.
This case has been reviewed on various occasions and the CPS remain satisfied that according to The Code, there is sufficiency of evidence, and it is in the Public Interest to proceed as we have a willing victim who has suffered abuse at the hands of the Defendant.
I hope that Your Honour will give the Crown an opportunity to clarify why proceedings are to continue on this matter.
………an event [then] occurred in court which the judge indicated was not a hearing. She said:-
This is not a public hearing because this is, as it were, a meeting between myself and a representative of the Crown Prosecution Service. It is, therefore, not a public meeting and the Press and the public are not invited to join.
There followed a conversation, which has been transcribed, between the judge and Ms. Smith which began with a discussion about whether it was appropriate to refer to the complainant as a “victim” when the trial had not yet taken place. The judge referred to her document in which she had set out her view of the public interest and asked Ms. Smith for her response. Ms. Smith referred to the Code for Crown Prosecutors with its well-known two stage “full code test”. The first stage is the evidential test, which was clearly met, and the second stage is the public interest test, which was the subject of disagreement between the CPS and the judge. Ms. Smith’s observations focussed on this second part of that test, and she said that she had considered whether it was in the public interest to continue the prosecution. She said that the Code required the CPS to consider the seriousness of the offence and that a case of this kind was serious enough to pursue and she also said that the reviews of cases required by the Covid-19 pandemic did not change the position because of that factor. She emphasised that the offending had had a serious impact on the complainant who was willing to continue to support the prosecution and to give evidence. When pressed about the judge’s main concern, namely that the trial would consume substantial public resources and would not result in any additional sentence, Ms. Smith said this:-
The Crown did consider the non-recent and nominal penalties and the reason we said that whilst no further penalty may be imposed, it’s important that justice for the complainant is also seen to be done by recognition of the Defendant’s wrongdoing being formally recognised to ensure public confidence that the administration of justice is upheld. Finally, in relation to the delays because of Covid – those concerns were the fact that it wouldn't have been a priority listing and there would be a further delay for this matter to be listed but we are in a position now where we do have the trial listed and we were in a position that it was hoped that the trial was going to be starting today – yesterday or today. So, I just want to clarify that point and I apologise if I’ve come over saying – being belligerent about the defence, which I didn’t intend to.
Ms. Smith was not on oath and not questioned formally by anyone. Both counsel then made comments at some length about what Ms. Smith had said and about the history of the proceedings. At the end of that discussion, there was a hearing in open court. The judge set out her thoughts on the situation in some detail, but was careful to say that this was not a judgment and that a formal process would be required. A date was fixed for an application by the defence for the proceedings to be stayed as an abuse of the process of the court and directions for skeleton arguments given. That hearing took place …..[and] the judge announced that she would stay the proceedings as an abuse of the process of the court and gave summary reasons. She handed down a perfected ruling ………giving full reasons.
This appeal is brought against that decision.
The submissions to the judge and her ruling
Counsel for BKR invited the court to stay the prosecution on the ground that in the particular and unique circumstances of the case it would offend the court’s sense of justice and propriety and would bring the criminal justice system into disrepute. This is what is known as an application to stay under the second limb as identified in R v Horseferry Road Magistrates ex parte Bennett [1994] 1 AC 42 at 74G. Where we refer to the “second limb” or “limb two” in this judgment, that is what we mean. We will refer to that foundational decision as “Ex. p. Bennett”. On behalf of BKR it was submitted that there had been unreasonable disregard for and unjustified and inexplicable disapplication of existing prosecutorial policy and guidance to the extent that it amounted to an abuse of the process of the court and was oppressive and vexatious (counsel referred to R v A [2012] 2 Cr. App. R. 8 (at [76-86]) and DPP v Humphrys [1977] AC 1 (at [46]).
It was submitted that the Crown had failed in its duty to apply the CPS Code of Crown Prosecutors, by not keeping changing circumstances under review and, more specifically, by not considering the following competing factors.
BKR pleaded guilty to seven of eight counts on the indictment (the prosecution offered no evidence on the ninth count);
BKR received an 11 year term of imprisonment and had served the custodial element in two tranches;
BKR was on the Sex Offenders Register for life;
…………………..;
The cost of a trial necessitating ……witnesses giving evidence over seven to 10 days was substantial;
There were approximately 70,000 outstanding Crown Court cases in the backlog; and
BKR had waited [a long time] ……….for his trial (since arrest) –it was submitted that the Crown substantially contributed to the delay.
The prosecution submitted that the seriousness of the charge in the proceedings warranted the court exercising its judicial discretion to allow the case to proceed. The complainant was supportive and was willing to attend court to give evidence in the proceedings. She deserved to have her case tried by a jury. The Covid-19 pandemic was not considered to be a “change in circumstances” under the Code.
In oral argument, Counsel for the prosecution submitted that:
The CPS had taken into account the matters to be considered by the Code for Crown Prosecutors and had followed the Code, but BKR simply did not agree with the decision.
The CPS had been asked to review and reconsider the matter and had done so on every occasion.
On each review, the public interest in pursuing the matter had remained the same, namely:
The seriousness of the offence;
The level of culpability;
The assessment of harm to the community.
The above factors had been considered and answered in a way that was not vexatious, oppressive or otherwise an abuse of the process;
The fact BKR had been in prison twice was not sufficient a reason to stop further action;
The likelihood that a conviction would not lead to any greater sentence was not of relevance;
On the matter of Covid-19, there had been a review of all the cases and the present case would have been part of the review.
The Ruling
The Judge delivered a lengthy ruling in which she set out the submissions she had received, making comments about their merits along the way. She did not consider that the delays which had occurred were relevant to her approach to an application to stay the proceedings as an abuse of process of the court of the kind she was considering. While summarising the submissions, she made it clear that she was dealing with an Ex p. Bennett second limb application and said this:-
The fairness that I am asked to rule on is the process of trial going on at all and not to the way in which any such trial would be fair in its conduct. The second limb engages separate and perhaps more abstruse concepts, e.g. ‘offend the Court’s sense of justice and propriety, undermine public confidence in the criminal justice system’. The judiciary accept a responsibility for the maintenance of that and it embraces a willingness to oversee executive action and to refuse to countenance behaviour that threatens either basic human rights or the rule of law. At the heart lies perhaps what is more simply expressed as the concept of fairness, the law. I quote in extenso ‘In the second category of case the Court is concerned to protect the integrity of the criminal justice system’. Here, a stay will be granted where the Court concludes that in all the circumstances a trial will offend the Court’s sense of justice and propriety per Lord Lowry in R v Horseferry Road Magistrates ex parte Bennett [1994] 1 AC 42 at 74G, ‘or will undermine public confidence in the criminal justice system and bring it into disrepute, per Steyn L in R v Latif [1996] 1WLR 104 at 112F cited in the judgment of Lord Dyson in R v Maxwell [2011] 1 WLR 103.
In the judge’s view, the case was not about the delays on either side or the problems which had delayed the case. She did not seek to rely on attributing blame for these various failures. The judge’s concern with the case was the matter of sentence at the end of any trial. Any trial would be held after a long period of time since the first complaint. The six other counts on the indictment were dealt with appropriately with six concurrent sentences. No challenge had been mounted either as to the excessive nature of the sentence, and more pertinently, no challenge to its inadequacy. The totality of 11 years reflected serious sexual assaults on 11 occasions.
The judge observed that the usual course of events for such cases was disrupted in July 2020 by the Covid-19 pandemic. ……………..
There were cases where the public interest demanded further trials in order to underline the unacceptable nature of such actions, for example the protection of prison officers. However, they were limited in number and the judge did not regard the present case as falling within that limited category.
The judge said that it was uncontroversial that the rights of the complainant, who may or may not ultimately be a victim, were important, relevant and needed careful sensitive consideration. She then examined the situation of the complainant in a passage to which we will return at the end of this judgment.
The judge concluded her ruling with this passage:-
“Finally, I come to the context of this case, the continuing effect of Covid and the CPS’s own guide specifically drafted to deal with perceived problems. It is extraordinary that the initial stance by the prosecution is that Covid is not a change in circumstances. It is one of the biggest and most challenging changes to the criminal justice system of recent times. I need do no more than refer to that guidance and say that this case is a paradigm example of the need to address the effects of pursuing cases such as this in a system in which thousands of Defendants and victims are still waiting significant periods for their day in court and have ‘their story told’. Instead, the CPS have chosen this case to continue, a case which will achieve nothing by way of further sanctions or protection of the public. I have addressed this case throughout through the medium of the code and the guidance and have borne well in mind the prosecution’s submission to the effect that this is not judicial review by the back door. I have concerns as to just what considerations have been given to matters on which I am assured have been looked at, reviewed and decided upon.
“The question that this Court can and must determine is whether with all the careful and proper consideration, as a result, a decision to pursue a trial is one not merely unpalatable to the Defendant but which offends the Court’s sense of fairness. Does it offend because it discloses no reason to proceed beyond an apparent desire to satisfy [the complainant’s] desire for her day in court? Does it offend because it discloses no reason to proceed beyond securing conviction, and does it offend because it does so to the detriment of thousands of other cases in the face of its own guidance? I answer unhesitatingly and with certainty that this is vexatious and oppressive. It is unfair and should be stayed as an abuse of the process of this Court. That is dated today’s date.”
Grounds of Appeal
The prosecution say that the decision to stay the proceedings involved an error of law;
in the approach to the test being applied; and
in her identification of the factors that she considered to be relevant to the application of that test, with the result that she exceeded the bounds of her power.
Grounds of Opposition
BKR submits that:-
There was no error of law, and no such error is identified by the applicant.
The Judge applied the correct test in accordance with limb 2, namely, whether in all the circumstances a trial would offend the court’s sense of justice and propriety or would undermine the public confidence in the criminal justice system and bring it into disrepute (R v Maxwell [2011] 1 WLR 1837, para. 13)
The Judge was scrupulous in her approach to the application of the test.
These arguments were developed with skill before us by Mr. Jarvis for the prosecution and Ms. Bramwell for BKR. We will not summarise their arguments, but we will deal with the main points below.
The Relationship Between the Prosecution and the Court
The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) was established by the Prosecution of Offences Act 1985 and that Act imposes substantial duties for the conduct of prosecutions on the Director of Public Prosecutions under the superintendence of the Attorney General. The Attorney General is accountable to Parliament. By section 10 of the Act the Director of Public Prosecutions must publish a Code for Crown Prosecutors. This gives guidance to prosecutors when deciding whether to bring or continue proceedings.
In DPP v Humphrys [1977] AC 1, a case cited to the judge, Lord Salmon said this:-
I respectfully agree with my noble and learned friend, Viscount Dilhorne, that a judge has not and should not appear to have any responsibility for the institution of prosecutions; nor has he any power to refuse to allow a prosecution to proceed merely because he considers that, as a matter of policy, it ought not to have been brought. It is only if the prosecution amounts to an abuse of the process of the court and is oppressive and vexatious that the judge has the power to intervene. Fortunately, such prosecutions are hardly ever brought but the power of the court to prevent them is, in my view, of great constitutional importance and should be jealously preserved. For a man to be harassed and put to the expense of perhaps a long trial and then given an absolute discharge is hardly from any point of view an effective substitute for the exercise by the court of the power to which I have referred.
In R.v H(S) [2010] EWCA Crim 1931 the Court of Appeal expressed the classic approach to judicial involvement in prosecution decisions to charge or continue proceedings. Leveson LJ, giving the judgment of the court, said this at [60]:-
We must make it clear that we do not suggest that a judge has no right to express his views about a proposed prosecution or about the way in which the CPS should exercise the discretion vested in it by Parliament. There is a long tradition of judges doing just that and of the CPS reconsidering the position when they do; in our experience, both at the bar and on the bench, proper and appropriate respect has always been paid to any expression of judicial views. Judge Shorrock, however, went beyond moderately expressing his views. He sought, quite wrongly, to impose them in a way that paid no attention to the fact that it is the CPS in which the statutory discretion is vested. He did so because of his view about the use of resources and it is to that topic that we now turn.
Abuse of Process
The power of a criminal court to stay a prosecution as an abuse of the process of the court is an important one, but it is not unlimited. Its existence and scope was the subject of disagreement between the judges in Humphrys, but that was settled in Ex p. Bennett subsequently. It has since been developed and refined by the Privy Council and the Supreme Court. Ex p. Bennett explains that there are two species of abuse of process (or “limbs”) which justify a court ordering a stay of criminal proceedings. The first is that a fair trial is not possible. There is little that needs to be said about that. If the court concludes that the trial under consideration will not be fair, then it will prevent it from happening. The second limb therefore does not arise unless the defendant, charged with a criminal offence, will receive a fair trial. It seems clear that something out of the ordinary must have occurred before a criminal court may refuse to try a defendant charged with a criminal offence when that trial will be fair.
In R v. Norman (Robert) [2016] EWCA Crim 1564 Lord Thomas of Cwmgiedd, giving the judgment of the court, summarised the position in this way:-
Abuse of process
21 It is well established that the court has the power to stay proceedings in two categories of case, namely (i) where it will be impossible to give the accused a fair trial, and (ii) where it offends the court’s sense of justice and propriety to be asked to try the accused in the particular circumstances of the case (R v Maxwell [2010] UKSC 48; [2011] 1 WLR 1837, per Lord Dyson SCJ at para 13). We are concerned with the second category. It is not suggested that the defendant’s trial was in any way unfair.
22 Within the second category fall cases where the police or prosecuting authorities have been engaged in misconduct in bringing the accused before the court for trial. In such cases the court is concerned to protect the integrity of the criminal justice system. A stay will be granted where the court concludes that in all the circumstances a trial will offend the court’s sense of propriety and justice (per Lord Lowry in R v Horseferry Road Magistrates’ Court, Ex p Bennett [1994] 1 AC 42, 74G) or will undermine confidence in the criminal justice system and bring it into disrepute (per Lord Steyn in R v Latif [1996] 1 WLR 104, 112F).
23 This involves a two-stage approach. First it must be determined whether and in what respects the prosecutorial authorities have been guilty of misconduct. Secondly it must be determined whether such misconduct justifies staying the proceedings as an abuse. This second stage requires an evaluation which weighs in the balance the public interest in ensuring that those charged with crimes should be tried against the competing public interest in maintaining confidence in the criminal justice system and not giving the impression that the end will always be treated as justifying any means. How the discretion will be exercised will depend upon the particular circumstances of each case, including such factors as the seriousness of the violation of the accused’s rights; whether the police have acted in bad faith or maliciously; whether the misconduct was committed in circumstances of urgency, emergency or necessity; the availability of a sanction against the person(s) responsible for the misconduct; and the seriousness of the offence with which the accused is charged. These are merely examples of factors which may be relevant. Each case is fact specific. These principles were reaffirmed by the Privy Council in Warren v Attorney General for Jersey [2011] UKPC 10; [2012] 1 AC 22, in which the Board upheld a refusal to stay a prosecution for serious drugs offences where the police had acted unlawfully in foreign jurisdictions and deliberately lied to the foreign authorities, the Attorney General and Chief of Police, in order to obtain incriminating recordings of conversations in a car without which no prosecution would have been possible.
It will be noted that four decisions of the House of Lords, Privy Council or Supreme Court are cited as authority for these propositions. The then Lord Chief Justice was not seeking to develop the law: he was stating it. The court decided that the Metropolitan Police had not misconducted themselves in the way alleged, but that even if they had the level of seriousness of such misconduct fell short of what would require the proceedings to be stayed. Describing the balance which the law requires a court to draw in determining an application for a stay in an Ex p. Bennett second limb case, Lord Thomas said this at paragraph [40]:-
The sole ground for a stay is that despite his ability to have a fair trial, despite the powerful public interest in serious crime being prosecuted and public officials standing trial for corruption, and despite the public harm caused by his conduct which is an ingredient of this offence, the conduct of the police was so egregious that his prosecution offends the court’s sense of propriety and justice or undermines confidence in the criminal justice system so as to bring it into disrepute. The conduct of the MPS in this case comes nowhere near justifying such a conclusion.
The Supreme Court in R v. Maxwell [2010] UKSC 48, [2011] 2 Cr. App. R. 31 were considering an appeal against an order by the Court of Appeal Criminal Division for a retrial following the quashing of a conviction for murder on the ground of misconduct by the police in the investigation of the crime. Although there are differences between the statutory test for an order for retrial and the common law test for a second limb abuse of process, there were parallels. Lord Dyson, with whom Lord Rodger and Lord Mance agreed, conducted a review of that common law test. It is narrower than the test “what do the interests of justice require”, see paragraph [21]. This decision adopted the “settled law as expounded by Lord Steyn in Latif” see [16]. At [13]-[14] Lord Dyson said:-
……….In the second category of case, the court is concerned to protect the integrity of the criminal justice system. Here a stay will be granted where the court concludes that in all the circumstances a trial will offend “the court’s sense of justice and propriety” (per Lord Lowry in R. v Horseferry Road Magistrates’ Court Ex p. Bennett (1994) 98 Cr. App. R. 114 at 135; [1994] 1 A.C. 42 at 74) or will “undermine public confidence in the criminal justice system and bring it into disrepute” (per Lord Steyn in R. v Latif [1996] 2 Cr. App. R. 92 at 100; [1996] 1 W.L.R. 104 at 112).
14. In Latif at 101 and 112, Lord Steyn said that the law in relation to the second category of case was “settled”. As he put it:
“The law is settled. Weighing countervailing considerations of policy and justice, it is for the judge in the exercise of his discretion to decide whether there has been an abuse of process, which amounts to an affront to the public conscience and requires the criminal proceedings to be stayed: R. v Horseferry Road Magistrates’ Court Ex p Bennett (1994) 98 Cr. App. R. 114; [1994] 1 A.C. 42 . Ex p. Bennett was a case where a stay was appropriate because a defendant had been forcibly abducted and brought to this country to face trial in disregard of extradition laws. The speeches in Ex p. Bennett conclusively establish that proceedings may be stayed in the exercise of the judge’s discretion not only where a fair trial is impossible but also where it would be contrary to the public interest in the integrity of the criminal justice system that a trial should take place. An infinite variety of cases could arise. General guidance as to how the discretion should be exercised in particular circumstances will not be useful. But it is possible to say that in a case such as the present the judge must weigh in the balance the public interest in ensuring that those that are charged with grave crimes should be tried and the competing public interest in not conveying the impression that the court will adopt the approach that the end justifies any means.”
Later in the judgment, Lord Dyson considered a decision of the Court of Appeal in R v. Grant [2005] 2 Cr. App. R. 28. In that case, the Court held that a prosecution for murder should be stayed where the police had engaged in unlawful covert surveillance of privileged consultations between the defendant and his lawyers. The product of that surveillance was not adduced in evidence and there was no evidence to suggest that it had any impact on the trial process at all. Lord Dyson said in Maxwell at [28] “like Lord Brown, I have considerable reservations as to whether that case was correctly decided.” Lord Brown dissented in the result, along with Lord Collins, but the criticism of Grant was unanimous.
The Privy Council in Warren and others v. Attorney General for Jersey [2012] 1 AC 22 carried out an important analysis of this jurisdiction, relying on and developing the analysis in Maxwell. Lord Dyson gave the judgment of the Board with which all the justices agreed. This involved a decision about whether the second limb requires some unfairness to the defendant. It does not. Lord Dyson said:-
The Board does not accept this criticism of R v Grant. The second category of case where the court has the power to stay proceedings as an abuse of process is, as already stated, one where the court’s sense of justice and propriety is offended if it is asked to try the accused in the particular circumstances of the case. It is unhelpful and confusing to say that this category is founded on the imperative of avoiding unfairness to the accused. It is unhelpful because it focuses attention on what is fair to the accused, rather than on whether the court’s sense of justice and propriety is offended or public confidence in the criminal justice system would be undermined by the trial. It is confusing because fairness to the accused should be the focus of the first category of case. The two categories are distinct and should be considered separately.
Grant was nevertheless wrongly decided. There was serious misconduct by the police, but on a balancing exercise which included the fact that it had no impact on the trial at all the trial judge’s decision to refuse a stay was plainly open to him and should not have been reversed on appeal. This means that grave executive misconduct will not necessarily be sufficient to result in a stay. One question raised in the present case is whether it is necessary.
In this case, the prosecution was stayed as an abuse of process because the prosecution insisted on proceeding with a case which the judge described as “pointless” in her first widely shared comment on [date]. There was a realistic prospect of conviction, and the trial would be fair. The judge thought that the process was pointless because no additional sentence would be imposed. If prosecutorial misconduct is required for a stay in limb two abuse cases, then this case would appear to involve quite a low level of executive misconduct if indeed it could properly so described at all. The passage in Latif where Lord Steyn observed that an infinite variety of cases might arise and that general guidance would not be useful suggests that there are no hard rules. But the nature of this jurisdiction is founded on the public interest in maintaining public confidence in the criminal justice system and preventing it from being brought into disrepute. The court’s sense of justice and propriety is engaged. The abuse of process must amount to an “afront to the public conscience”. See paragraphs [22] and [23] of Warren set out above, and the collection of extracts from Ex p. Bennett and Latif there cited. It is not the law that any decision to prosecute by a Crown Prosecutor with which the judge does not agree amounts to a sufficient affront to the court’s sense of justice to enable the court to stay the proceedings.
The need to identify some executive misconduct in most limb two cases requires consideration of three further cases, all decided by the Court of Appeal Criminal Division. The first is R v. Rangzieb Ahmed [2011] EWCA Crim 184, decided before Warren and Maxwell. Lord Justice Hughes, giving the judgment of the court, said:-
There is no doubt about the jurisdiction to stay for abuse of process. It applies where the trial process will be internally unfair (Attorney-General’s Reference No 1 of 1990 (1992) 95 Cr App R 296), but it is not limited to such cases. It may be exercised also where, by reason of gross executive misconduct manipulating the process of the court, the defendant has been deprived of the protection of the rule of law and it would as a result be unfair to put him on trial at all. That was clearly established by R v Horseferry Rd Magistrates Court ex p Bennett [1994] 1 AC 42 and R v Mullen [1999] 2 Cr App R 143. In both cases the defendant had been kidnapped abroad and brought into this jurisdiction by an unlawful rendition, to which the British authorities were party. In both those cases, however, there was a clear link between the abuse of power on the part of the executive/prosecution and the trial; the trial was the very object and result of the unlawful abuse of power. Thus, in those cases it is properly said that not only is the misconduct of the executive an affront to the public conscience, but also, and critically, that the trial itself is such an affront. The first is not a sufficient ground for a stay, but the second is; the jurisdiction does not exist to discipline the police or other executive arms of the State (although of course it will incidentally do so), but rather to protect the integrity of the processes of justice. In R v Grant [2005] EWCA Crim 1089; [2005] 2 Cr App R 28 at 409 the police had deliberately and unlawfully eavesdropped on and recorded privileged conversations between a suspect and his lawyer. This court held that a stay should be imposed in consequence even without there being any product of the listening giving rise to evidence relied on at trial. We are bound by that decision, albeit that it appears to represent some extension of the jurisdiction…….. We also accept that the jurisdiction to stay may, in certain circumstances, be invoked where to try a defendant would involve a breach by this country of a specific international obligation not to do so: see for example R v Uxbridge Magistrates Court ex p Adimi [2001] QB 667, considered in R v LM & others [2010] EWCA Crim 2327. In those cases also, however, there was the clearest link between the trial itself and the international obligation; to undertake the former involved a direct breach of the latter. It does not at all follow that in every case in which it is suggested that there has been a breach by the UK of an international obligation in respect of an individual, that individual becomes exempt from prosecution, and (if guilty) punishment, for an offence which he has committed.
The reason for citing this passage, which has been overtaken in two respects by Warren and Maxwell, is the emphasis on the importance of a class of case where the executive is proposing to prosecute a defendant in breach of a specific international obligation not to do so. This is instructive when considering the next two decisions of the Court of Appeal, which arise in the context of the United Kingdom’s international obligations not to prosecute victims of Modern Slavery. In R v. AAD, AAH & AAI [2022] EWCA Crim 106 the Court of Appeal reviewed the history of the abuse of process in the modern slavery context, and found that the jurisdiction to stay such cases continued notwithstanding the enactment of a statutory defence in section 45 of the Modern Slavery Act 2015. The court cited this extract from R v M(L)[2011] EWCA Crim 2327; [2011] 1 Cr. App. R. 12, Hughes LJ giving the judgment of the court:-
“……..The treaty obligation which we are considering under art.26 is not an obligation to grant immunity, but rather an obligation to put in place a means by which active consideration is given to whether it is in the public interest to prosecute. We accept that the power to stay for "abuse" exists as a safety net to ensure that this obligation is not wrongly neglected in an individual case to the disadvantage of the defendant.”
We make it clear that the occasions for the exercise of this jurisdiction to stay ought to be very limited once the provisions of the Convention are generally known, as by now they should be becoming known. Moreover, the jurisdiction to stay does not mean that the court is entitled to substitute its own view for that of the prosecutor upon the assessment of the public policy question whether a prosecution is justified or not. The power to stay is a power to ensure that the Convention obligation under art.26 is met. The Convention obligation is to provide for the possibility of not imposing penalties on victims for their involvement in unlawful activities to the extent that they have been compelled to do so. Thus the Convention obligation is that a prosecuting authority must apply its mind conscientiously to the question of public policy and reach an informed decision. If it follows the advice in the earlier version of the guidance, set out above, then it will do so. If however this exercise of judgment has not properly been carried out and would or might well have resulted in a decision not to prosecute, then there will be a breach of the Convention and hence grounds for a stay. Likewise, if a decision has been reached at which no reasonable prosecutor could arrive, there will be grounds for a stay. Thus in effect the role of the court is one of review. The test is akin to that upon judicial review.
The decision in AAD, AAH & AAI was followed and explained in the third decision which requires consideration, R v. AFU [2023] EWCA Crim 16. The court in that case rejected a suggestion that AAD, AAH & AA was promoting a fundamentally different approach to that adopted previously by the courts when determining whether or not there has been an abuse of process. Carr LJ, giving the judgment of the court, said at [117]:-
The court in AAD was not saying that the review is to be carried out strictly on public law grounds. Rather, it referred to assessment by way of review on grounds "corresponding to public law grounds". This echoes the statement in R. v LM at [18] where the court stated that the test was "akin to that upon judicial review". Nor was AAD breaking new ground in terms of the approach to be adopted when considering whether there has been an abuse of process.
The relevance of these decisions to the present case is because they explain the nature of a review in the Crown Court “akin to judicial review” which might properly lead to a stay of proceedings as an abuse of the process of the court. At [110] and [115] of AAD, AAH & AAI Lord Justice Fulford summarised the question being decided in this way:-
Does it remain possible, therefore, following the introduction into law of the defence under section 45 (see [64] above), for a defendant to argue (whether at trial before the judge in the absence of the jury or on appeal) that the prosecution was an abuse of process by reason of a failure on the part of the prosecution to apply its own policy guidance.
The question, therefore, is whether this residual jurisdiction (in practice only to be exercised in very limited circumstances, as all the authorities indicate) survives the introduction of the 2015 Act.”
The court was inclined to resist suggestions that this jurisdiction was special or unusual, but did so in terms which emphasise its context. Paragraph [117] says this:-
“Moreover, although the abuse of process jurisdiction in this context has sometimes been described as "special" or "unusual" that is, in our judgment, only really so, in substance, just because of the context. (We say this subject to our comments below at [137] on [17] of L(C)). After all, any abuse of process argument has to take into account the context: and here such context necessarily includes the international obligations relating to VOTs and to the very sensitive issues arising with regard to VOTs.”
What perhaps underlines this conclusion is that the court did not find it necessary to engage in detail with the usual test for Ex p. Bennett limb two abuse of process. It summarised that test at [111] as:-
“to the broad effect that it [arises if] it is unfair and oppressive that a defendant should be tried”.
This summary is not wholly consistent with the decisions of the House of Lords, Privy Council and Supreme Court referred to above. The reference to unfairness may at first sight be at odds with paragraph [35] of Warren. The word “oppressive” appears in some of the authorities, but Ex p. Bennett, Warren, and Maxwell taken together show that the test for limb two abuse involves consideration of other factors beside the impact on the defendant. Those factors were described by Professor Andrew L-T Choo in Abuse of Process and Judicial Stays of Criminal Proceedings 2nd ed (2008) in a passage cited in Warren at [24] and described by Lord Dyson as “a useful summary of some of the factors that are frequently taken into account by the courts when carrying out the balancing exercise referred to by Lord Steyn in R. v. Latif:-
“The courts would appear to have left the matter at a general level, requiring a determination to be made in particular cases of whether the continuation of the proceedings would compromise the moral integrity of the criminal justice system to an unacceptable degree. Implicitly at least, this determination involves performing a “balancing” test that takes into account such factors as the seriousness of any violation of the defendant’s (or even a third party’s) rights; whether the police have acted in bad faith or maliciously, or with an improper motive; whether the misconduct was committed in circumstances of urgency, emergency or necessity; the availability or otherwise of a direct sanction against the person(s) responsible for the misconduct; and the seriousness of the offence with which the defendant is charged.”
At [120] of AAD, AAH & AAI the court dealt with the decisions concerning the availability of judicial review of decisions to prosecute. They said this about the availability of a judicial review type of remedy in the Crown Court:-
“This aligns with the principle, summarised helpfully in Blackstone's Criminal Practice 2022 at [D2.22] that, generally speaking, a decision to prosecute is not susceptible to judicial review in the Administrative Court because it may be challenged during the trial process itself, most particularly by an application to stay the proceedings on the grounds of abuse of process. As the editors observe, arguments relating to abuse of process may and should be raised in the course of the criminal trial itself save in wholly exceptional circumstances.”
In our judgment it does not follow from the proposition that judicial review of decisions to prosecute is only rarely available because there are processes available in criminal trials that those processes must be expanded so that they offer a public law remedy as if judicial review were available widely. The test for limb two abuse is clearly established on the highest authority, including in the particular context of international treaty obligations, and it is not open to the Crown Court to broaden its jurisdiction to include all public law remedies in the ordinary domestic criminal case where it wishes to quash a decision to prosecute with which it disagrees. The Crown Court process affords remedies to a defendant which are either derived from the common law or statute. The availability of these remedies has an effect in limiting the scope for judicial review in this context. It does not follow that these remedies precisely duplicate judicial review in the ordinary case. The particular context of modern slavery cases does require an examination of the basis of decisions to prosecute where they may involve a breach of an international treaty obligation, and where also they may involve a failure to respect a conclusive grounds decision which may involve a judicial decision on appeal to the First Tier Tribunal. Other cases, lacking those features, do not.
Decision and discussion
In this case there is no doubt that the judge was quite entitled to express her views on the proper application of the public interest test. We would suggest that many Crown Court judges, faced with the backlog of serious and important cases waiting to be tried, would probably agree with her that this prosecution was not in the public interest. Each member of this court, if sitting at first instance, would have taken steps to ensure that the decision to continue with the case had been taken at an appropriately senior level and after proper consideration of the Code for Crown Prosecutors.
However, it does not follow from this that the continued prosecution was an abuse of the process of the court. The powers of the court to stay a prosecution as an abuse of process are a very important part of the jurisdiction of the criminal courts, but they are limited and a stay is an exceptional remedy. The courts must exercise care and restraint in their use, particularly where the issue is a decision to prosecute a case to trial. That decision is entrusted by Parliament to the CPS and it is, in the ordinary case, no part of the function of a judge to say who should be prosecuted and who should not be.
In our judgment, the proper analysis of the judge’s decision should start from a clear finding that this kind of case does not involve misconduct by the executive of the kind which might fall within the second limb of abuse of process as defined by the House of Lords in Ex p. Bennett. The CPS has reached a decision after consideration of the Code with which the judge strongly disagreed. The basis of the decision was set out in the letter of [date], and repeated by Ms. Smith on [date]. There is no suggestion of bad faith, or deliberate abuse of power. Neither can it be said that the CPS has simply ignored its Code. We have set out quite extensive citations from the leading decisions in order to identify the kind of conduct which might lead a court to stay a prosecution for abuse of process on this ground. To adopt the words of Lord Thomas quoted at [34] above, “The conduct of the [CPS] in this case comes nowhere near” justifying a conclusion that the prosecution offends the court’s sense of propriety and justice or undermines confidence in the criminal justice system so as to bring it into disrepute.
If the case does not disclose misconduct of the relevant type, is there a route to a finding of abuse of process by a process “akin to judicial review” as applied in AAD, AAH & AAI in the modern slavery context? As explained at [43] above decisions to prosecute which place the United Kingdom in breach of an international treaty obligation may fall within the Ex. P. Bennett second limb. The unlawful extradition or rendition cases, such as Ex. P. Bennett itself and R v. Mullen [1999] 2 Cr App R 143 involve serious misconduct by the executive for this reason. R v. M(L) [2011] EWCA Crim 2327 is referred to at [43] above and was cited with approval by the Court of Appeal in AAD, AAH & AAI, as identifying what that court described at [115] as a:-
“..residual jurisdiction (in practice only to be exercised in very limited circumstances, as all the authorities indicate).
It is clear from the extracts from R v. M(L) cited above that the origin of the power to stay is the Council of Europe Convention on Action Against Trafficking in Human Beings 2005, ratified in December 2008 ("the CE Convention"), and the EU Directive 2011/36 on Preventing and Combating Trafficking in Human Beings ("the EU Directive"). Hughes LJ put the matter with complete clarity at [19]-
“The power to stay is a power to ensure that the Convention obligation under art., 26 is met.”
Lord Judge in the subsequent decision in R v. N; R v. Le [2012] EWCA Crim 189 at [16] confirmed the point in a passage also cited with approval in AAD, AAH & AAI at [114]:-
"In any case where it is necessary to do so, whether issues of trafficking or other questions arise, the court reviews the decision to prosecute through the exercise of the jurisdiction to stay. The court protects the right of the victim of trafficking by overseeing the decision of the prosecutor and refuses to countenance any prosecution which fails to acknowledge and address the victim's subservient situation, and the international obligations to which the United Kingdom is party…”
In the present case no question of any breach of any international treaty obligation arises. In our judgment, the decision in AAD, AAH & AAI should not be read as conferring a jurisdiction comparable to that of the administrative court in judicial review in all cases to review on public law grounds the charging decision which has been made. Hughes LJ in R v. M(L) put the general position at [15]:-
“The availability of the ultimate sanction of a stay of proceedings on grounds of abuse was common ground before us, and is thus accepted by the Director of Public Prosecutions. We do not disagree that it is, in certain limited circumstances, available, but the limitations upon the jurisdiction must be understood. Criminal courts in England and Wales do not decide whether a person ought to be prosecuted or not. They decide whether an offence has been committed. They may, however, also have to decide whether a legal process to which a person is entitled, or to which he has a legitimate expectation, has been neglected to his disadvantage.”
We therefore hold that the exercise on which the judge embarked was one which was not properly open to her. She engaged in a review of the decision-making process of the CPS in circumstances where no reasonable judge could find that it was capable of constituting misconduct of the kind which justifies a stay of a prosecution as an abuse of process in the second limb of Ex. p. Bennett.
The judge gave a careful and considered ruling. Her decision focussed on the fact that no additional penalty would be imposed in the event that the defendant were convicted after a trial on the single remaining outstanding count. She considered that a conditional discharge was the likely outcome, and that a seven day trial was not justified in those circumstances. She said that this was the result of the decision to sentence for the offences where the defendant had pleaded guilty in advance of the trial for the outstanding count. This was the reverse of the normal practice. It was appropriate because of the delays caused by Covid-19. She said that this was the “serious central and obvious objection to this trial proceeding”. She concluded that the CPS had failed to address it or to give it weight. She described their reasons for continuing as “rather troubling”. These were that the offence was serious and the interests of justice required that the complainant should be given the opportunity to have her allegation tried and determined by a jury. This would provide some public recognition of the wrong she says she suffered. She would be able to “tell her story”. In dealing with this approach, the judge moved on to a passage which appears to question the motives of the complainant who she describes as “an enigma” who had not made her complaint soon after the alleged event. …………….. It is not entirely clear what role this passage played in the judge’s reasoning. She made no finding that it was irrational for the CPS not to take these matters into account in deciding where the public interest lies and there is no basis on which such a finding could be justified. These reflections on the complainant and her motives were, therefore, irrelevant but yet they seem have been given some weight. Why otherwise mention them?
Prosecutors are required to consider seven factors identified at paragraph 4.14(a)-(g) of the Code. The first of these is the seriousness of the offence and the second is the culpability of the suspect. There is no doubt that this allegation passes those tests comfortably. The third (sub-paragraph (c)) and sixth (sub-paragraph (f)) factors are those most material to the decision in this case:-
c) What are the circumstances of and the harm caused to the victim?
The circumstances of the victim are highly relevant. The more vulnerable the victim’s situation, or the greater the perceived vulnerability of the victim, the more likely it is that a prosecution is required.
This includes where a position of trust or authority exists between the suspect and victim.
A prosecution is also more likely if the offence has been committed against a victim who was at the time a person serving the public.
It is more likely that prosecution is required if the offence was motivated by any form of prejudice against the victim’s actual or presumed ethnic or national origin, gender, disability, age, religion or belief, sexual orientation or gender identity; or if the suspect targeted or exploited the victim, or demonstrated hostility towards the victim, based on any of those characteristics.
Prosecutors also need to consider if a prosecution is likely to have an adverse effect on the victim’s physical or mental health, always bearing in mind the seriousness of the offence, the availability of special measures and the possibility of a prosecution without the participation of the victim.
Prosecutors should take into account the views expressed by the victim about the impact that the offence has had. In appropriate cases, this may also include the views of the victim’s family.
However, the CPS does not act for victims or their families in the same way as solicitors act for their clients, and prosecutors must form an overall view of the public interest.
f) Is prosecution a proportionate response?
In considering whether prosecution is proportionate to the likely outcome, the following may be relevant:
The cost to the CPS and the wider criminal justice system, especially where it could be regarded as excessive when weighed against any likely penalty. Prosecutors should not decide the public interest on the basis of this factor alone. It is essential that regard is also given to the public interest factors identified when considering the other questions in paragraphs 4.14 a) to g), but cost can be a relevant factor when making an overall assessment of the public interest.
Cases should be prosecuted in accordance with principles of effective case management. For example, in a case involving multiple suspects, prosecution might be reserved for the main participants in order to avoid excessively long and complex proceedings.
The judge appears to have considered that the final bullet point in paragraph (c) should have led the prosecutors to give the complainant’s views less weight than they did, and to conclude that the fact that no significant penalty would be imposed on conviction was the dominant consideration which should have prevailed over the others.
Finally, the judge was strongly critical of the decision of the CPS that in this case Covid-19 was not a significant change of circumstances. Ms. Smith in her observations to the court on [date] had dealt with this by saying, in effect, that if the judge had simply tried the case when it was listed before her for trial, it would have been over before she stayed it as an abuse. For that reason, she took the view, on what would have been the second day of that trial, that Covid-19 was not a reason to discontinue the case following the judge’s intervention.
At paragraph [27] above, we have set out the judge’s concluding paragraphs in full. She is not to be blamed for concentrating on the fairness of the decision which had been taken or in using the words “vexatious and oppressive” as if they encapsulated the test she was required to apply. Despite the care with which Lord Dyson JSC in Maxwell at [35], cited at [39] above, had explained that concentrating on fairness to the defendant when considering an application to stay proceedings under the second limb in Ex. p. Bennett was apt to confuse, subsequent courts have continued to use this word in this context, and have also used the phrase “vexatious and oppressive”. These words focus on the impact of the decision to prosecute on the defendant, whereas the relevant factor for this kind of abuse is the impact on the court and the system of justice. Impact on the defendant may be relevant, but it will only be one factor in the balance which has to be struck. If the judge had focussed on the question of whether the CPS had committed such misconduct in the decision to continue with this prosecution that “the court’s sense of justice and propriety is offended or public confidence in the criminal justice system would be undermined by the trial” she may have reached a different conclusion.
It is to be noted that, ………………..no one has suggested that the proposed trial would have been an abuse of process had it been possible to follow the normal course of events, so that sentencing for all counts took place after the trial of the single count which was denied. It is unlikely that a conviction would have added greatly to the sentence in that event, given the number of other serious offences for which sentence was to be passed. There would have been no credit for the plea in relation to this count, but the overall impact on the total sentence would have been either small or nil.
For these reasons the judge’s conclusion that the continuation of the prosecution was an abuse of process cannot be sustained and this appeal succeeds. ………….
We have taken a more restrictive approach to the jurisdiction to stay proceedings as an abuse than the judge did. It does not follow that we disagree with her concern as to the proportionality of the decision to continue the prosecution in these circumstances. She was quite entitled to express her views about that and to seek an explanation of the approach of the CPS. In return she was entitled to expect that “proper and appropriate respect” should be paid to her views. This is the process described by Leveson LJ in the extract at [31] above. Proper and appropriate respect, in a case of this kind where the judge’s concern was with the allocation of scarce and stretched resources, would include an explanation of the approach which was taken to the factor identified in the Code at 4.14(f): proportionality. That explanation should also have regard to the overriding objective in CrimPR 1.1(2)(h)(iv) which requires participants to deal with cases in a way which takes account of the needs of other cases. In this situation, the CPS decision means that 7 days of court time will be devoted to this case, which could otherwise be used to try other serious sexual offences. The waiting times for such trials are long because of the well-known stresses on the system.
It appeared to us that this case required a further review by the CPS. It is no longer the case that resources have already been set aside for the trial, as was true on [date] where all parties were ready for a trial and it could have started then. We therefore required the CPS to review the position afresh in the light of the events which have happened, and to provide a written explanation of its decision in relation to this case. That explanation was supplied after the judgment had been distributed in draft and subject to embargo in the usual way. It is appropriate that decisions on the public interest should be taken in a transparent way so that the public can judge whether its interest is being served. It would be a retrograde step if the CPS ceased to pay proper and appropriate respect to the views of trial judges. Part of that process involves providing explanations where they are requested by a judge which explain the decision which the judge is concerned about.
We are grateful to the CPS for reviewing the case. In the letter to the court, Mr. Kris Venkatasami, Deputy Chief Crown Prosecutor, RASSO Unit and Pan-London Complex Casework Unit CPS London South, concludes that the evidential part of the Full Code test is met, and goes on to consider the public interest part of the test. He says:-
Turning to the public interest, there are seven factors set out in paragraph 4.14 of the Code for Crown Prosecutors that I am required to consider. The factors set out in paragraphs 4.14(a) to 4.14(e) have been addressed in previous reviews carried out by prosecutors in this case on the invitation of different of judges at Woolwich Crown Court, and I agree with the conclusions those prosecutors have reached about how those factors should be weighed in the balance when coming to a conclusion as to the public interest in continuing with this prosecution.
As to paragraph 4.14(f), this factor invites the prosecutor to consider whether a prosecution is proportionate to the likely outcome of the case in the event of a conviction, bearing in mind the cost of pursuing a case to trial and the needs of other cases that are also awaiting trial, as reflected in the overriding objective in CrimPR 1.1(2)(h)(iv). I am aware that a number of judges at Woolwich Crown Court have commented that in the event of the defendant being convicted of this count, it is likely he will receive what has been described as a nominal penalty. Those comments will not bind any future sentencing judge, but for the purposes of my review I have assumed that upon conviction the sentencing judge will indeed impose a nominal penalty upon the defendant. In these circumstances, it could be said that a prosecution is not proportionate in this case because the likely outcome will be no further punishment for this defendant and therefore court resources could be better directed towards trying other cases where the defendant will face a substantial penalty on conviction.
However, paragraph 4.14(f) itself stresses that the public interest is not to be determined by reference to that factor alone. Prosecutors are reminded that it is essential for them to consider all of the factors in paragraph 4.14 and arrive at a balanced conclusion as to the public interest. Even if the considerations in paragraph 4.14(f) point towards the public interest in the continuation of this prosecution not being met, in my view those considerations are outweighed by the factors in paragraphs 4.14(a) – (e).
For all the reasons as set out in the previous and most recent review, I remain of the view that it is in the public interest for this prosecution to continue.
That is a decision which the CPS has made, and it is plain that the Code has been considered and applied. The proceedings, which will now continue, are not an abuse of the process of the court. The fact that members of the judiciary at Woolwich Crown Court, and the members of this court, do not agree with the CPS on the public interest is neither here nor there once that conclusion is reached.
We will direct that the proceedings should take place at a court in London other than Woolwich because members of the judiciary there have expressed their views so clearly (as they were entitled to do) that the complainant in this case may be concerned that her allegation will not be tried in a way which is fair to her. We are quite confident that this concern would be misplaced and that she would be treated properly by the judges at that very strong Crown Court centre, but in order that this case should now have a fresh start, we will direct that the Presiding Judge for London should allocate this trial to a court other than Woolwich.