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PACE

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PACE Confessions – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PACE


1
PACE
  • Confessions

2
Confessions
  • Under the old common law, confessions were not
    admitted per se, as they would be involuntary,
    if it was shown that it was derived as a result
    of a threat or a promise by a person in
    authority.
  • R V Smith (1959)
  • as per Lord Parker CJ,
  • even the most gentle, if I may put it that way,
    threats or slight inducements,..may amount to
    involuntary confessions.

3
Confessions
  • R v Smith (1959)
  • Facts A sergeant major had put the whole
    company on parade and told them that no one would
    be allowed to move until one of them gave details
    about which of them had been involved in a fight
    resulting in a stabbing.
  • Held the court held that this would amount to
    an involuntary admission that should not have
    been admitted.

4
Confessions
  • R v Zavekas (1970)
  • Facts A conviction was quashed where it had
    resulted froman improper promise by the police.
    The suspect was supposed to be on an
    identification parade, and they were waiting
    sometime to have this arranged.
  • The police promised him that he would be realised
    and allowed to go home if he had made a
    confession statement.
  • He did so.
  • Held The court refused to allow the evidence of
    the admission as it was involuntary.

5
Statute -Confessions
  • In practice it was difficult for the courts to
    determine whether the statements were made
    'involuntarily, looking at some of the cases we
    have seen so far, it is evident.
  • Voluntary meant one's own free will....this was
    difficult to determine.
  • Statutory Provision for Confession to overcome
    the difficulties and anamolies in the common law
  • S 76 PACE 1984

6
Statute -Confessions
  • S76 (1) PACE general rule
  • In any proceedings a confession made by an
    accused person may be given in evidence against
    him in so far as it is relevant to any matter in
    issue in the proceedings and is not excluded by
    the court in pursuance of this section.

7
Definition -Confessions
  • S82 (1) PACE Interpretation definition of
    confession
  • confession includes any statement wholly or
    partly adverse to the person who made it, whether
    made to a person in authority or not and made in
    words or otherwise'

8
Confession not allowed if
  • S76 (2) PACE confession would not be admitted -
    exception
  • ..If the confession was or may have been obtained
  • a) by oppression of the person who made it or
  • b) in consequence of anything said or done which
    was likely, in the circumstances at that time, to
    render unreliable, any confession which might be
    made by him in consequence thereof.
  • The prosecution has to prove that the confession
    was not obtained as above,(not withstanding that
    it may be true) beyond reasonable doubt.

9
Confession not allowed if
  • What is oppression ?
  • S76(8)
  • Oppression, includes 'torture, inhuman or
    degrading treatment, and the use or threat of
    violence.

10
Confession not allowed if
  • The judge decides whether the confession was
    obtained, contrary to S 76 (2) (a) (b).
  • This is done in a trial within a trial voir
    dire
  • So that the Jury will not hear the whole of the
    evidence(confession) before the issue of
    admissibility of the evidence is decided.
  • R v Liverpool Juvenile Court ex p R (1988)

11
Confession not allowed if
  • Generally cases show that courts have been
    reluctant to find and exclude confessions on
    grounds of oppression where it is not clearly so.
  • R v Miller (1986)
  • Facts a paranoid schizophrenic had confessed to
    a killing which was obtained after hours of
    questioning.
  • The CA held, despite medical evidence showing
    that he had gone into hallucinations as a result
    of the protracted questioning, that the evidence
    was obtained properly.

12
Confession not allowed if
  • Generally cases show that courts have been
    reluctant to find and exclude confessions on
    grounds of oppression where it is not clearly so.
  • R v Fulling (1987) CA
  • Held It was not oppression, for the police to
    tell the defendant that her lover had been having
    an affair with another woman, which so affected
    her that she made a confession.
  • The court gave oppression its dictionary meaning
  • the exercise of authority or power in a
    burdensome, harsh, or wrongful manner, unjust or
    cruel treatment of subjects inferiors etc,..the
    imposition of unreasonable or unjust burdens.

13
Confessionunreliable 76(2)(b)
  • ..in consequence of anything said or
    done...renders unreliable.
  • R v Goldenberg (1988)
  • Held the words, anything said or done refers to
    words or acts done by someone other then the
    accused, and something external to the person
    making the confession and to something which is
    likely to have some influence on him.

14
Confessionunreliable 76(2)(b)
  • R v Heaton (1993)
  • Facts appellant convicted of manslaughter of
    his 26 day old son. He had shaken the child hard
    to quieten him.
  • The police interviewed him both without and later
    with a solicitor present.
  • Some voices were raised. Questions were repeated.
    Inteview lasted about 75 mins.
  • There was no evidence to show that the police
    were hostile or oppressive.
  • Held appellant cannot rely on S76(2)(a) or (b).

15
Improperly or illegally obtained evidence
  • Common law used to exclude evidence that was
    improperly or illegally obtained merely because
    it would be unfair to the defendant.
  • See R v Sang (1979) HL
  • The court admitted evidenced obtained from a
    police informer (agent provocateur) who also
    induced the accused to commit a crime, so that he
    may be arrested and questioned for the main
    offence.
  • The court admitted the evidence and said that
    only evidence whose prejudicial effect outweighs
    the probative value would be excluded and not
    just all improperly obtained evidence would be
    excluded.
  • also , Kuruma son of Kaniu v R (1955) PC

16
Improperly or illegally obtained evidence
  • S78(1) PACE 1984 improperly obtained evidence.
    (exclusion of unfair evidence)
  • ...The court may refuse to allow evidence on
    which the prosecution proposes to be given if it
    appears to the court that, having regard to all
    the circumstances, including the circumstances in
    which the evidence was obtained, the admission of
    the evidence would have such an adverse effect on
    the fairness of the proceedings that the court
    ought not to admit it
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