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Irish Court of Criminal Appeal |
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Outcome: Grant application 13 THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEAL [CCA 147/99] IN THE MATTER OF AN APPLICATION PURSUANT TO SECTION 9 OF BETWEENTHE CRIMINAL PROCEDURE ACT, 1993 THE PEOPLE (AT THE SUIT OF THE DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS) RESPONDENT AND NORA WALL APPLICANT JUDGMENT of the court delivered this 16th day of December, 2005, by Kearns J.
On 10 June, 1999, the applicant was convicted by the Central Criminal Court of rape contrary to common law and of indecent assault contrary to common law as punishable by s.10 of the Criminal Law (Rape) Act, 1981. On 23 July, 1999, the applicant was sentenced by the Central Criminal Court to imprisonment for life for the offence of rape and to 5 years imprisonment for indecent assault. On 27 July, 1999, the applicant brought a bail application before the Court of Criminal Appeal, at which point senior counsel on behalf of the respondent conveyed to that court the respondent’s consent to the granting of leave to appeal, and further consented that the appeal be allowed and that a retrial be directed. This startling turn of events was referable to (a) the inadvertent calling as a witness on behalf of the prosecution, Patricia Phelan, a person whom the respondent had specifically directed should not be so called at the trial and (b) matters regarding the complainant, Regina Walsh, which had not been disclosed to the lawyers representing the applicant prior to trial. On 22 November, 1999, counsel for the respondent indicated to the court of criminal appeal that the respondent was not proceeding with an application for a retrial. Counsel for the respondent further indicated that the respondent “fully and ungrudgingly” accepted that the applicant was entitled to be presumed innocent of all charges preferred against her. The court accordingly quashed the conviction of the applicant and the sentences imposed in respect thereof.
The Application before the Court Section 9 of the Criminal Procedure Act, 1993, (“The Act”) provides as follows:- “9. —(1) Where a person has been convicted of an offence and either—
(ii) the Court or the court of re-trial, as the case may be, has certified that a newly-discovered fact shows that there has been a miscarriage of justice,
(ii) the Minister for Justice is of opinion that a newly-discovered fact shows that there has been a miscarriage of justice,
The Applicable Legal Principles From an examination of the existing jurisprudence, the applicable legal principles appear to be as follows:-
The Newly-Discovered Facts
“In subsection (1) "newly-discovered fact" means—
( b ) where a conviction was quashed by that Court on appeal, a fact which was discovered by the convicted person or came to his notice after the conviction to which the appeal relates or a fact the significance of which was not appreciated by the convicted person or his advisers during the trial.” (1) Regina Walsh - history of previous allegations, her psychiatric history immediately prior to the making of the complaints against the applicant and her reliance on ‘flashbacks’, so described by her, to retrieve these alleged incidents from her past (a) That the complainant, Regina Walsh, had previously alleged that she was raped in London by a black man, in respect of which allegation she had made no complaint to the police. (b) That the complainant, Regina Walsh, had previously had a violent relationship with her then boyfriend Tommy Mulcahy, in the course of which she was beaten and abused, as a consequence of which she was twice admitted to hospital, but in respect of which she made no complaint to the police. (c) That the complainant, Regina Walsh, had made a complaint of assault against her aunt June O’Brien to the Garda Siochana in Waterford in 1996, which complaint was withdrawn by her some days after making same. (d) That the complainant, Regina Walsh, had made three complaints to the Garda Siochana of assaults upon her by one Carol Tracey, who was never traced and in respect of which complaints no proceedings took place. (e) That the complainant, Regina Walsh, had taken an overdose of tablets in 1996, as a consequence of which she was admitted to St. Declan’s Ward, Ardkeen Hospital, Waterford, under the care of one Dr. Sheppard, for psychiatric assessment and treatment immediately prior to her making the complaints the subject matter of the prosecution of the applicant. (f) That had the direction of the respondent been followed the only evidence in the case against the applicant would have been that of the complainant, Regina Walsh, whose recollection of events was admitted to be solely the product of ‘flashbacks’ and who had no full memory or recall in the matter. (2) Patricia Phelan - the calling of a witness deemed to be unreliable despite the respondent’s specific direction not to do so - non-disclosure of the unreliability of the witness. (g) That on the 24 April, 1997, the respondent had directed, for reasons as yet undisclosed, that one Patricia Phelan ought not to be called as a witness for the prosecution upon the trial of the applicant. Patricia Phelan had, on the 10 January, 1997, made a statement to Garda Sinead Connolly, then of Kilkenny Garda Station, purporting to corroborate the complaints made by Regina Walsh, by giving an eye-witness account of the alleged participation by the applicant in the alleged rape of the complainant. (h) That the said Patricia Phelan had made prior complaints involving indecent assault and/or rape to the Garda Siochana against Harry Phelan, her late uncle, and also against one Michael Fitzpatrick. (i) That the prosecution by the respondent of the said Michael Fitzpatrick for rape and indecent assault upon the sister of the said Patricia Phelan and for indecent assault upon the said Patricia Phelan was restrained on the grounds of delay in judicial review proceedings heard in the High Court before McCracken J., in the course of whose judgment, doubts were expressed concerning the credibility of the evidence offered by the said Patricia Phelan. (j) That the said Patricia Phelan had made prior complaints to the Garda Siochana against one Joe Maguire that he had ripped off her shirt and assaulted her, and these complaints were later withdrawn by her. (k) That Garda Sinead Connolly, then of Kilkenny Garda Station, who was responsible for taking the aforementioned statement of Patricia Phelan on 10 January, 1997, in pursuance of the investigation of the complaints made by Regina Walsh against the applicant, was also a member of the Garda Siochana responsible for investigating the foregoing complaints by Patricia Phelan against Harry Phelan and Michael Fitzpatrick. (l) That the respondent herein was a party to the aforementioned judicial review proceedings in Fitzpatrick v DPP, of which the Chief State Solicitor had carriage on behalf of the respondent and in which the prosecution of Michael Fitzpatrick on foot of complaints by Patricia Phelan had been restrained by McCracken J. (3) Regina Walsh and Patricia Phelan - false statements in evidence (m) That the said Patricia Phelan after the trial, conviction and sentence of the applicant, had voluntarily made contact with Sr. Mona Killeen, who had been a lifelong friend and supporter, and admitted to her and subsequently to members of An Garda Síochána also, that she had lied in her statement and in her evidence upon the trial of the applicant, in saying that she had witnessed the involvement of the applicant in the alleged rape and sexual assault of the complainant, Regina Walsh, when she had not. (n) That the complainant, Regina Walsh, had connived in the said deception by the said Patricia Phelan. Form of the Hearing Having regard to the agreement expressed on behalf of the respondent that this was an appropriate case in which the court should issue a certificate under the Act, the court decided in the first instance to proceed by means of an outline of the facts to be presented by counsel for the applicant in the presence of Patricia Phelan. That outline having been completed, the court then invited Mr. Comyn to consult with Patricia Phelan, who was identified to the court and who remained present in court throughout the recitation of the facts, to enquire if she wished to give evidence in contradiction of anything stated by counsel. Mr. Rogers having completed his outline of the facts, the court then rose to enable this consultation to take place, following which Mr. Comyn advised the court that Patricia Phelan wished only to confirm that the outline of facts was accurate and to further confirm her statement made to the gardaí on 2 April 2001. In the course of that statement, Patricia Phelan had stated :-
“Evidence of Patricia Phelan
In the course of his outline of the facts to this court, Mr. Rogers also drew the court’s attention to similarities in detail which emerged in the statements furnished by the complainant and Patricia Phelan, suggesting connivance to a significant degree between the two girls. He further adverted to the fact that Garda Sinead Connolly was a garda officer common to both this particular prosecution, and the prosecution of Michael Fitzpatrick, wherein McCracken J. had expressed doubts of his own about the credibility of Patricia Phelan as a witness.
Conclusion of This Court In acceding to the application of the applicant herein, the court does not find it necessary to distinguish in terms of gravity between the various newly-discovered facts which the court is satisfied show that there has been a miscarriage of justice in this case. The prosecution which did take place inasmuch as it involved the tendering of corroborative evidence by a witness known to be unreliable was thus, in that format, a prosecution that should not have been brought. There was further a most unfortunate breakdown in communications or systems failure between the respondent’s office, that of the Chief State Solicitor, the Garda Siochana and prosecuting counsel which the court is satisfied constituted a serious defect in the administration of justice brought about however unintentionally in this instance by agents of the State. It is now also accepted by the respondent that there had been significant non-disclosure in this case, including (a) the information that Regina Walsh had made, but not pursued, an allegation of being raped in England and (b) the non-disclosure of Regina Walsh’s very proximate and material psychiatric history. It seems to this court that the applicant was further prejudiced during the course of her trial by evidence of which the defence had no prior notification, namely, that Regina Walsh recalled the alleged episodes of rape by reference to ‘flashbacks and/or retrieved memory’. There was no scientific evidence of any sort adduced to explain the phenomenon of ‘flashbacks’ and/or ‘retrieved memory’, nor was the applicant in any position to meet such a case in the absence of prior notification thereof. As previously indicated, this court does not find it necessary on the agreed facts of this case to elaborate a hierarchy of the newly-discovered facts which either singly or cumulatively amount to a miscarriage of justice. Virtually all of the newly-discovered facts are facts of significance which confirm the court in its view that there has been a miscarriage of justice in this instance. The court will therefore grant the certificate sought in this case.
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