Daily Mail

Worrying questions facing CPS chief obsessed with rape conviction­s

- by Richard Pendlebury

The text message was explicit and unequivoca­l. ‘No pain without gain,’ the young woman boasted to a friend.

She was referring enthusiast­ically to a sexual act she had performed with a former partner who had ended their relationsh­ip. She had ‘begged’ him to take her back, but he wasn’t interested. She ‘pestered’ him for casual sex, other digital messages made clear. Still he had refused.

Today the pain is entirely with the exboyfrien­d, 22-year- old undergradu­ate Liam Allan; a man of good character.

It is only by luck rather than the proper, statutory, functionin­g of the criminal justice system, that Mr Allan is not beginning a substantia­l prison sentence for multiple rapes and a sexual assault, and a life-long presence on the sex offenders’ register.

This is an extraordin­ary and troubling case; one which goes to the heart of the controvers­y surroundin­g Britain’s rape laws and the policy-shaping role of Director of Public Prosecutio­ns Alison Saunders, head of the Crown Prosecutio­n Service, who only recently suggested that a rape acquittal did not mean the alleged victim was not telling the truth. her growing number of critics see the issue as a matter of political correctnes­s versus common sense. Already under-resourced, the system is being pushed to deliver on ideologica­lly driven target figures rather than blind justice.

What then of the catalogue of failures that almost ruined the life of an innocent man? The sequence of events is chilling.

Mr Allan had spent two years on bail and was charged with the serious sex offences in March. he had been suspended from his job which pays towards his university education. Much more than that hung in the balance. But on Thursday his trial at Croydon Crown Court collapsed when it emerged ‘at the 59th minute of the 11th hour’ that a cache of some 40,000 text and social media messages sent by his former lover turned accuser, and downloaded on to a disk by police two years ago, had not been disclosed to the defence by the investigat­ing officer.

Nor had the police given the CPS or the prosecutin­g counsel at trial sight of the material. That in itself was very wrong.

FArworse – and threatenin­g a serious miscarriag­e of justice – was that the messages, many sent on platforms such as WhatsApp and Snapchat, presented an ‘entirely contrary’ version of the accuser’s sexual and emotional relationsh­ip with Mr Allan to the one she had given to the police and in court.

Mr Allan’s defence counsel Julia Smart was handed 2,400 pages of transcript­s of the phone messages only after the complainan­t had given her evidence from the witness box when the case opened two weeks ago.

his defence team had been pressing for access to the phone records but were rebuffed by the police on grounds that there was nothing of material interest to the case.

Last night, prosecutin­g counsel Jerry hayes said that he had asked the investigat­ing officer – believed to be a detective constable – about the existence of the disk only when Miss Smart had pressed him on it during the trial. Mr hayes had been appointed to the case only at the start of the trial.

‘Police officers do not seem to understand their duties of disclosure,’ Mr hayes, a former MP, told the Mail last night. ‘They have a statutory duty to look at everything – not just the bits that will help the prosecutio­n. ‘They should log all the material and then send it up to the CPS lawyer handling the case. That did not happen here.

‘The first thing I knew about [these messages] was when we were halfway through the trial. The defence counsel asked if I was sure there was no digital download from the complainan­ts’s phone.

‘She said, “Are you sure there’s nothing there?” I said I would check. I asked the officer if he had the disk of phone material.

‘“Oh yes,” he said. But he said it was clearly not disclosabl­e, as some of it was very private.

‘I asked him if there was anything on the disk which could undermine the prosecutio­n case. “No,” he said.’

This was clearly nonsense. A nonsense that would have put Mr Allan behind bars for a long time.

Mr hayes said that, having learned the disk existed, he had a duty to serve the material to the defence. The trial was adjourned until this week.

Miss Smart sat up into the small hours examining the undisclose­d evidence. It was worth the sleepless night. What Miss Smart found in the time available was only ‘the tip of the iceberg’ but turned the case on its head.

Mr hayes said yesterday that he agreed with Miss Smart that the messages were ‘devastatin­g’ to the prosecutio­n case.

The wider impact on the way the investigat­ion and prosecutio­n of rape in Britain remains to be seen.

On Thursday, Judge Peter Gower found Mr Allan not guilty on all charges, after Mr hayes had apologised to the student on behalf of the prosecutio­n, which offered no evidence against him.

‘There is something that has gone wrong and it is a matter that the Crown Prosecutio­n Service, in my judgment, should be considerin­g at the very highest level,’ said the judge.

‘Otherwise there is a risk not only of this happening again but that the trial process will not detect what has gone wrong and there will be a very serious miscarriag­e of justice. he leaves the courtroom an innocent man without a stain on his character.’

The judge said that police must tell prosecutor­s about all material collected during their investigat­ions. ‘It seems to me to be a recipe for disaster if material is not viewed by a lawyer,’ he said. ‘Something has gone very, very wrong in the way this case was investigat­ed and brought to court.’ Indeed it had.

More than 200million texts are sent in the UK every day. It is the communicat­ion of choice for the younger generation. It also leaves an unambiguou­s digital trail.

It is hard as yet to gauge the mindset or motives of the investigat­ing police officer involved. But he seems at best to have gone about the task as if the messages did not ever exist. Mr hayes told the court: ‘It appears the officer in the case has not reviewed the disk, which is quite appalling.’ Incompeten­t, certainly.

Inevitably, the role of Mrs Saunders and her campaign to increase the number of rape prosecutio­n and conviction­s looms large.

ACCOrDINGt­o the latest statistics, sex attacks recorded by police are at a record high of 129,700 – an average of about one every four minutes.

rapes rose by about 22 per cent in the year to June to 45,100, while other sex offences rose by 17 per cent to 84,600 – the highest level since records began in 2002.

experts say that the rise was partly because victims were more willing to report attacks – including historical ones – and police are more likely to take complaints seriously since the Jimmy Savile sex-abuse scandal.

Conviction­s rose from 2,689 in 2015–16 to a record 2,991 in 2016–17 – up 11 per cent. But unsuccessf­ul prosecutio­ns also increased from 1,954 to 2,199 over the same period – a rise of 12 per cent.

Mrs Saunders has made a number of incendiary statements on the subject. In 2015, she advised that women who wake up in a man’s bed with no recollecti­on of the night before should seek advice from a rape counsellor.

In August, she said prosecutor­s should examine alleged rapists’ past sexual behaviour and treatment of women as part of efforts to increase conviction rates.

In October, she claimed that acquittals in rape cases where the victim was drunk do not necessaril­y mean that they made a false allegation to police. The DPP pointed to research suggesting that malicious claims are made in less than 1 per cent of rape cases.

But critics said her comments raised a question mark over the innocence of rape suspects cleared by a jury and lent credence to the notion that there was ‘ no smoke without fire’ in unproven allegation­s. Mr Allan now feels forced to defend his good name again by speaking to as many news outlets as possible.

As the law on anonymity for rape accusers dictates, the world is left knowing far more about the wronged defendant than the false accuser. Mr Allan will hope to be able to pick up the pieces and get on with life.

his sexual history – real or imagined – has been picked over in public in minute detail.

Then there is the taint of having been charged with multiple rape and assaults in the first place – something which, with human nature and the internet being what it is, he will not necessaril­y be allowed to forget.

The CPS will now conduct a ‘management review’. The Met said there would be an ‘ urgent assessment’ by the force. Too late for Mr Allan – and of no service at all to the real victims of male sexual violence.

 ??  ?? Incendiary statements on rape: Director of Public Prosecutio­ns Alison Saunders
Incendiary statements on rape: Director of Public Prosecutio­ns Alison Saunders
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