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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Aslam v R. [2011] EWCA Crim 2797 (01 December 2011) URL: https://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2011/2797.html Cite as: [2011] EWCA Crim 2797 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CENTRAL CRIMINAL COURT
HHJ STEPHENS
T20107162
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE EDWARDS-STUART
and
RECORDER OF HULL HIS HONOUR JUDGE METTYEAR
(SITTING AS A JUDGE OF THE COURT OF APPEAL CRIMINAL DIVISION)
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IMRAN ASLAM |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE CROWN |
Respondent |
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MR. C. AYLETT QC and MR. B. FITZGERALD appeared for the Respondent.
Hearing date: 24th November 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Hooper :
The Fircroft Road attack was the culmination of a series of skirmishes between two rival gangs of young men in the Tooting area that took place over the course of the night in question. The witness, CCTV and telephone evidence demonstrate the following approximate chronology:
9pm: The Chicken Cottage Incident -
A quarrel took place between Hammad Bhatti and Hassan Mir. Hammad Bhatti went back to his father's shop in Earlsfield and thereafter a group of his associates assembled in the family's white Mercedes van, which then headed in to Tooting. Meanwhile, a group of Hassan Mir's associates began to gather in Tooting in the Foulser Road area.
10.15pm: The Foulser Road Incident -
The white van pulled up on the Upper Tooting Road by Foulser Road and the occupants got out. They chased a number of Hassan Mir's group down Foulser Road and smashed the rear windscreen of Aazam Butt's green VW Polo, before getting back into the Mercedes van and driving off down the Upper Tooting Road. They remained in the Tooting area. Hassan Mir's group remained in the area around Foulser Road and Dafforne Road.
10.40pm: Trinity Road - The Meeting with Zak Uddin -
The Mercedes van stopped on Trinity Road and some of the occupants engaged in a conversation there with Zak Uddin. The conversation was captured on CCTV from a passing bus at around 10.42pm (see Exhibit 1 p4a, showing stills from the bus). During this meeting, at 10.41pm, a call was made from Uddin's phone to Omar Butt (call 342 on the combined call schedule at p18 of Exhibit 3). CCTV from the Upper Tooting Road showed Omar Butt amongst Hassan Mir's group at around this time. A number of the group were assembled around the junction of Dafforne Road and Upper Tooting Road (see Exhibit 1 p5-9).
10.45pm: The Dafforne Road Incident -
The Mercedes van drove down Trinity Road and turned right down the Upper Tooting Road. As it passed Dafforne Road, it was attacked by members of Hassan Mir's group, including Mir himself, Usman Butt and Noor Kayani. The van drove off down the Upper Tooting Road (see the CCTV stills of the incident in Exhibit 1 p10-12). Following the incident, the Bhatti group returned to the shop (where Brian Glover was replaced in the van by Zak Sharp), then on to the Bhatti family home, before driving in to Tooting again shortly before midnight. In the intervening period, Hassan Mir's group continued to assemble in the area around Foulser Road, Dafforne Road and the Upper Tooting Road (see CCTV stills in Exhibit 1 p13-28).
12.05am: The Noyna Road Incident -
Shortly before the fatal attack, the Mercedes van stopped just inside the junction of Noyna Road and the Upper Tooting Road, as did Aazam Butt's green VW Polo. A skirmish took place between those from the van and Hassan Mir's group. The Bhatti group got back into the van, drove up Noyna Road to Glenburnie Road, shortly before driving down Fircroft Road towards the Upper Tooting Road. CCTV stills show Noor Kayani and Kashif Khan running in the direction of Noyna Road at 12.05am, and Hassan Mir walking back towards Foulser Road at 12.07am.
12.10am: The Fircroft Road Incident
As the van arrived at the junction of Fircroft Road and the Upper Tooting Road, a large group ran across from Foulser Road and started to attack the van and then its occupants. A variety of weapons were used: Knives, screwdrivers, bats, a hammer, planks of wood and other makeshift items. Mohammed Ali was attacked outside number 14 Fircroft Road. Hayder Ali was then attacked, leaving a trail of blood from outside number 14 to outside number 24, where he finally fell to the ground. Both brothers died from stab wounds caused by long thin blades. The attackers fled the scene before the arrival of the police, leaving dozens of weapons scattered around the scene, including two similar knives, exhibits ETK/7 and ETK/35. ETK/7 bore the blood of Hayder Ali, as well as DNA from Usman Butt (see Exhibit 1 p37-56 for the location of the exhibits recovered from the scene).
In June 2006 Zak Uddin was interviewed again and asked about a weapon he was seen holding on CCTV. He admitted possession of this weapon only when confronted by the CCTV and said that he had taken it off someone for safekeeping. It was clear from the interview that the police expressed fundamental doubts about the truth of his account, repeating the possibility that he had set the whole thing up and pointing out his widespread involvement on the evidence.
Telephone evidence demonstrated that he had been in contact with both the van group and the Tooting group. His car was seen in Trinity Road meeting with the van group an hour before the killing and he was seen in conversation with the Bhattis. He was in ongoing contact and attempted contact with the van group at the critical stages before the attack in Fircroft Road. There was a clear basis for believing that he had encouraged the two groups to meet and then had participated in the fatal attack.
During cross-examination on behalf of the appellant Zak Uddin confirmed that he had known himself to be a suspect when he went to the police station and believed he was one of the main suspects for the killings. He had met with the van group an hour and a half before the events in Fircroft Road and was aware the police thought he had set the attack up (98E).
He agreed that he had lied in interview about the school he attended to make his story sound more convincing. He had reason to lie because of the weight of the evidence against him (98F).
Uddin agreed that he had known at the time of interview that he was suspected of having set up the murders (99B) in Fircroft Road, standing over Hayder Ali at the time of the murder and had Hayder's blood on his shoes. He was the last person to leave the scene from the Tooting group and thought the members of the van group might have named him as a stabber. Prior to the incident he had been on the Upper Tooting Road, making calls to Azam Butt and members of the van group. Whilst his dealings with Butt followed by events in Trinity Road were mere coincidence, he was aware at the time of interview that there might be considered a strong body of evidence against him (99C-101F).
Uddin confirmed that he had manipulated his account to the police so that they did not think he was involved. He had a grudge against Imran Aslam for sleeping with his girlfriend (101F) and so wanted to get him into trouble. Very little of what he told the police was a truthful account and it was Uddin's unequivocal evidence that nothing he said to the police could be trusted by the jury. His only concern was to protect himself (101F).
Crucially it transpired, based on CCTV and telephone evidence, that Uddin was far more heavily implicated than his interviews revealed. For example, he made telephone contact with Quadeer Khan, who was the driver of the white Metro said to have been used to bring the group's van to a halt about twenty minutes later, at approximately 11:45pm. He was in close association with Hassan Mir, Usman Butt and Noor Kayani throughout the evening. Equally, on his own account, he left the scene in a car with Hassan Mir, met Quadeer Khan at home, had Hayder Ali's blood on his shoes and was in telephone contact with Hassan Mir afterwards (99D).
Mr Justice Edwards-Stuart:
Q. So you did not come back until after the retrials had been sorted out?
A. That's correct, yes.
Q. Yes. Did you in fact know, Mr Aslam, that both Hassan Mir and Usman Butt were blaming you for the stabbings, did you know that?
A. I found out a little, yes.
Q. You did find that out?
A. Yes.
Q. When did you find that out, please?
A. This is once the convictions had taken place in the first trial.
Q. All right, so after they had been convicted, you found out that they were saying that you had been responsible for the stabbings?
A. That's correct, yeah.
Q. Yes. That is why, Mr Aslam, you did not come back until after the cases of Hassan Mir and Usman Butt had been sorted so they might still have the opportunity to blame you in your absence. That is the truth, is it not?
A. No, it's not.
Q. You only came back once you realised that there was no prospect of your ever having to stand in the dock alongside them, and that is the truth of it, is it not?
A. No, it's not.
Q. What, even though he has told the police back in April 2006, that he actually saw you stab Hayder Ali, you bear no ill feeling towards Uddin?
A. I ran off to Pakistan because I was scared. He went to the police and made up as much lies as he could because he was scared.
Q. I mean, is it the case that anyone who is scared makes up anything about anyone else; including, for example, Hassan Mir and Usman Butt, when they went into the witness box and said that you had stabbed the two boys: is that what happens? People just blame whoever is not there?
A. Well, it's the easiest way of doing it, yes.
"In my judgment, Mr Aylett should have given some indication to defence counsel of his intention to introduce references to the matters which he did put in cross-examination and in particular to what Hassan Mir and Usman Butt had allegedly said on earlier occasions, particularly in the witness box. I for one have no idea about such matters, not having conducted any of the earlier trials. Furthermore, Mr Aylett could have been reminded of what had actually been said and not stated the matter incorrectly as he did. Having said that, I have concluded that there is no high degree of need to discharge this jury at this critical period in the fourth week of this trial. The matters which are of concern, not only to Mr Dein but to the Court, can properly and, in my judgment, adequately be dealt with in the summing up in such ways I decide, having heard from counsel in due course. Whether it is in anyone's interests not least the Defendant's to refer to these matters at this stage whilst the Defendant is still giving evidence I shall take advice from counsel now and I invite any thoughts on that matter."
He then gave Mr Dein a little time to reflect on the position and to respond to the judge's request.
"First of all, in the course of Mr Aylett's cross-examination he put to Mr Aslam that something had allegedly been said by Hassan Mir and Usman Butt during their trial, the first trial. You should ignore that and put it completely out of your minds. They have not been witnesses and whatever they may or may not have said is not evidence in this case in any shape or form and I will give you a formal direction on that in my summing-up in due course, but I wanted to say that at this stage just in case any of you were wondering about that and how you should approach it."
He then went on to direct the jury in relation to the appellant's absence from the dock and his refusal to give further evidence.
"Now, any specific suggestion put by Mr Aylett in cross-examination was based on inaccurate information as he readily and properly accepted. If you remember what he said specifically, ignore it, because it is not evidence, and in fact it was incorrect. So I shall not even remind you of what he said, but put it out of your mind if you do remember the specific suggestion he made. But that, he submitted to you, would not weaken his overall suggestion that the reasons Mr Aslam gave in cross-examination for not coming back were nonsense."
i) That the matters put in cross-examination were inaccurate.
ii) That the prosecution had accepted that they were inaccurate.
iii) That the prosecution had told the jury to ignore it.
iv) That they were not evidence.
v) That the jury should put them out of their minds.
The Recorder of Hull:
(a) At the time of the murder the appellant was 23 years old. Mir was 18 and Butt 17.
(b) Both Mir and Butt were sentenced on the basis of them being secondary parties to the murder. This does not apply to the appellant.
(c) They were sentenced on the basis that they did not have an intent to kill. In sentencing MacKay J. said: "that there was no intent to kill on the part of those members of the group, yourselves included, as opposed to those who actually did the stabbing". The appellant was clearly convicted on the basis that he was one of those who stabbed Hayder Ali and the learned judge was entitled to conclude, as he did, that the appellant intended to kill.
Note 1 Two similar Victorinox knives, ETK/7 and ETK/35, were found at the scene. The stab wound to Mohammed Ali was caused by a long narrow knife with a single edge. All of Hayder Ali’s stab wounds could have been caused by ETK/7. Undisputed expert evidence was given of the connection between the knives and the meat trade. Both had been ground in a similar way until the blades were very thin. Two similar Victorinox knives, for use in the meat trade, were found at the appellant’s home address when it was searched in 2007. Whilst they were almost new, they had been sharpened in the same way as ETK/7 and ETK/35. The appellant Aslam had a particular connection to the meat trade. His father ran a business called Al Halid Meats from an abattoir in Milton Keynes in 2006, providing meat to the Brixton and Tooting areas of London. Aslam worked with him. [Back]