The Crown Case
25Before addressing the grounds put forward in Bilal Skaf's application it is necessary to describe the Crown case. The following summary is taken from the 2004 Conviction Appeal at [3] to [48] which was based upon the evidence given by Miss C at the 2002 trial. It conveniently identifies the particular conduct said to have constituted the charges on the indictment:
"3 The complainant boarded a train at Belmore, intending to go to Lidcombe. She was sitting reading when approached by a group of five young males. The Crown case was that these men were:
Mohammed Skaf, the appellant
H, a pseudonym for a person whose name has been suppressed
Tayyab Sheikh
Mohammed Sanoussi
Mahmoud Sanoussi
4 Mohammed Skaf was described by the complainant as wearing a yellow jumper and having a really big nose and curly short hair with blond streaks. He sat in front of the complainant and engaged her in friendly conversation. Having ascertained that she had tried marijuana he asked her if she wanted to smoke some with them. She agreed to do so and to continue with the men to Bankstown Station. She told them that her name was "Amanda", which was untrue.
5 During the train ride some of the males touched her suggestively. In Ms T's words, the man in the yellow jumper had "tried to touch me a few times... but I didn't really think that much of it... I remember him in particular saying that I had nice legs".
6 Closed circuit television at Bankstown Station provided video evidence corroborating the arrival of the group and assisting identification to some degree. The complainant is seen on the platform with five males, the male in the yellow jumper holding his arm around her as they walk off the platform in a group.
7 The complainant sent a mobile text message to her friend Leah Nightingale and told her to call her. When Leah rang back, the complainant made it sound as if she was talking to her sister, that their mother had been in an accident and that she had to go home. The complainant said that she was starting to feel nervous and that she wanted an excuse to go home without antagonising the men. The other males "had sort of gotten a bit more gropey, they were trying to touch me a lot more and I was starting to get a bit nervous about them" [reference omitted].
8 The male in the yellow jumper took Ms T's phone and started speaking to Leah. He told her "I'll have her home in ten minutes" and hung up on her. He then placed the phone down the front of his pants. The complainant asked for her phone back and was told "No. I'll give it back to you after we've smoken".
9 The complainant's friend Leah corroborated this evidence about the disguised phone call and the complainant's nervous or panicky state [reference omitted]. She said that she was told by the male speaker "Listen bitch, your sister will be home in ten to twenty minutes." He refused to let Leah speak to the complainant and hung up. When Leah phoned back the phone was switched off. By this time three of the five males had moved away. The complainant remained with the male in the yellow jumper (Mohammed Skaf) and a male with badly streaked hair. They walked her to the nearby Marion Street car park.
10 The male in the yellow jumper went into the toilet block for a couple of minutes. He came back out and said "You're up". The male with the streaked hair had been talking to the complainant in the meantime and he had asked her if she did threesomes: she told him "No, I don't do things like that".
11 The complainant followed the male in the yellow jumper into the toilet block. He took her mobile phone out of his pants, held it up in the air and said "You won't get your phone back until you fuck me". She replied "Fuck the phone, I'm going home" and she tried to get out. She pushed the door to get out, but did not realize that it opened the other way. She heard voices from the outside and assumed that the other males had been holding the door closed.
12 The male reached for her shoulders and she dodged him to get away and found herself further away from the door. She was now near the toilet. The male approached her and pushed her up against the tiled wall, turned her around and pulled down her skirt and underwear. This was the basis of Count 1 against Mohammed Skaf - detain for sexual advantage.
13 The male told her "I'm going to fuck you Leb style". He put on a condom (which had been purchased when he had entered a pink building housing a sex shop on the way between the station and the car park).
14 Mohammed Skaf stood behind her, pinning her up against the wall and penetrated his penis in her vagina. At the time she heard the other males outside. When he finished it seemed to the complainant that he was not allowed to get out of the cubicle without communicating (in Lebanese) with the men on the outside. This assault, in the company of others, was the subject of Count 2 against Mohammed Skaf - aggravated sexual intercourse without consent.
15 The complainant was thereafter subjected to a series of sexual assaults in the toilet from the males she had met on the train, with the exception of H. During this time she heard her mobile phone's ring tone. The male in the yellow jumper had earlier placed it back in his pocket [reference omitted].
16 The assaults in the toilet (after that involving Mohammed Skaf) first involved an incident in which two males entered the toilet block. The complainant was lifted down from the toilet seat by one of them, who pulled down her skirt and underwear, pushed her up against the wall and placed his finger into her vagina. He then wore a condom and placed his penis into her vagina. After this, the man alleged to be Mohammed Sanousi entered as the complainant was fixing herself up. She had fallen to her knees. He said "you're in the position to suck my dick" and he put his penis into her mouth. She tried to pull away. He grabbed her hair and moved her head around his penis all the way down her throat which made her gag. When this male left, the one with the "badly streaked hair" returned. He sat on the toilet, opened his legs and pulled down his pants. He grabbed the complainant and forced his penis into her mouth. She was still in a kneeling position.
17 Evidence was led that H, Tayyab Sheikh, Mohammed Sanoussi and Mahmoud Sanoussi had also been charged and were being dealt with in other proceedings.
18 The evidence of these other sexual assaults in the toilet was led without objection and was not the subject of any cross-examination. It was obviously relevant to the issue of consent as regards what followed, and debatably as regards what preceded it [reference omitted].
19 The complainant was left on her own inside the toilet. She cried. She then got dressed, washed herself and walked outside. A dark-skinned woman in her early thirties approached her and asked if she was OK. The woman asked if she had any money. Believing that the woman was offering help, the complainant gave her $20 expecting her to call a taxi. The woman told the complainant "You know this is a bad area, you should have known better". She put her arm around the complainant and led her to a nearby area where there were a group of males outside a black car. The complainant noticed the male with the large build (H) and a couple of males who had been with her earlier. Two of the males then left with the woman. Mohammed Skaf was also there. The complainant asked him where her phone was and he said that "his mate George had it and that he would come back with it in a few minutes". He left and did not return [reference omitted].
20 Thinking that she was safe, the complainant got into the black car containing two previously unencountered males and H. The complainant described it as a black two door hatchback that looked new. She thought she would be taken to the police. There was talk about retrieving her phone. H left the car and spoke to Mohammed Skaf, returning with the complainant's SIM card. He said that they could not get her phone back. As the black car drove off from the area, the complainant saw the male in the yellow jumper (Mohammed Skaf) and the male in the orange jumper (Mohammed Sanoussi) sitting in a hot food shop. The black car was driven from the Marion Street car park to Bankstown Trotting Club, stopping en route to buy food at McDonalds. It was near to dusk when they got to the Trotting Club.
21 H committed a further sexual assault on the complainant near a shed in the deserted car park. After this, the black car reappeared and its driver told the complainant that he would take her home. She trusted him and got into the front passenger seat. He then forced his finger into her vagina. Later he required her to climb into the back seat where he undressed her and had forced penile vaginal sex. After this another man who had been a passenger in the black car got into the back seat and had forced oral sex.
22 The complainant tried to get out of the car after she had fixed herself up. Someone held the door closed and told her "wait in here" [reference omitted].
23 The complainant then saw a red car drive into the car park of the Bankstown Trotting Club. There were four males in that car. The complainant had not seen them before. The driver and passenger from the black car went up to the males in the red car and they appeared to talk to each other. The driver of the black car returned and opened the passenger door to let the complainant out saying "You're going with these guys. They're going to take you home".
24 The complainant got into the red car believing what she had been told. She got into the middle of the back seat. It was the Crown case that the men in the red car were:
Mahmoud Chami (the driver and, for this the Crown relied mainly on Chami's admission in his ERISP of 13 October 2000). He was described by the complainant as having short, cropped hair, bushy eyebrows, bulging eyes and he was wearing a big black jacket.
Mohamed Ghanem (the front passenger, and for this the Crown relied on the complainant's subsequent identification of Ghanem from a photoboard). He was described by the complainant as having his hair in a pony tail which had curls and was blondish at the ends and he was wearing a Hawaiian shirt and bone coloured cargo pants.
Bilal Skaf (the back passenger, sitting to the left of the complainant, and for this the Crown relied on the complainant's subsequent identification of Bilal Skaf from a photoboard). He was described by the complainant as calling himself "Sam", with dark eyes, short dark hair, bushy eyebrows and he was wearing a grey Adidas jumper. The complainant said that she remembered "something about gold, a gold necklace or gold" [reference omitted]. He was often referred to as "Adidas Sam" in later evidence.
A fourth unidentified male (the back passenger, sitting to the right of the complainant). He was described by the complainant as having short curly hair with blonde or gold on the tips and wearing a grey Nike jumper. He also called himself Sam.
25 The red car was driven to a townhouse complex where it stopped for a few minutes while the driver got out and entered a house. The house was subsequently identified by the complainant as being opposite Chami's house. Count 3 charged Chami, Ghanem and Bilal Skaf with detaining for sexual advantage. This count spanned the luring and detaining of the complainant in the red car in the circumstances set out below.
26 As the complainant was being driven in the red car the two males sitting on either side of her in the back seat started to touch her. They touched her upper thighs and legs and her left breast. Count 4 charged Bilal Skaf with aggravated indecent assault in relation to the touching of her breasts. They also grabbed her hands and put them around each of their exposed penises and moved her hands up and down. They prevented her from pulling her hands away. Count 5 charged Bilal Skaf with an aggravated act of indecency in relation to this incident.
27 The two Sams then started pulling up her skirt and took turns in putting their fingers into her vagina. Afterwards they both did it together at the same time. Count 6 charged Bilal Skaf with aggravated sexual intercourse without consent.
28 The complainant was crying during these assaults. She was scared that the men would rape her and thought that they would take her home if she did what they wanted. The complainant said that the front passenger was turning around and watching the activities of the two men beside her.
29 The car was then driven to a service station not far from the townhouse complex. The front passenger (Ghanem, on the Crown case) got out. The complainant attempted to climb out of the car from the front seat. The driver (Chami) grabbed her left shoulder and pushed her down. He opened the glove box and "took a weapon and held it to my head". The complainant felt "cold metal" and thought it was a gun, though she did not see it. The driver told her "don't move bitch or you're dead". He then put the weapon back and the front passenger returned to the red car.
30 The complainant was then driven to an industrial estate in Chullora. Everybody except the driver got out of the car. The two males who had been sitting in the back seat held the doors so the complainant could not get out and the driver got into the back seat. It was dark by this time.
31 The driver of the red car unzipped his pants when he sat next to the complainant in the back seat. She said "You're not going to do it too?" and he said "Fuck me". He put a condom on his penis, pushed the complainant on to her back and pulled up her skirt. He pulled down her underwear, spread her legs open and had penile vaginal intercourse with her. She was crying at the time. Count 7 charged Chami with aggravated sexual intercourse without consent. During this incident the complainant recalled that a blanket was placed over the car.
32 The driver got out and the male with the pony tail who had been the front passenger came inside the red car. The male said "he wanted a little bit of head before he fucked" and he pulled down her shoulders so that she was almost on all fours. He grabbed her hair and forced her face towards his penis. She tried not to let it go in her mouth and he pulled her even harder and put his penis into her mouth. She bit down on it and he slapped her across the top of her head. He grabbed her hair and forced his penis further down her throat and she started to gag. Count 8 charged Ghanem with aggravated sexual intercourse without consent.
33 This male then pushed the complainant's head back. She sat back up in a kneeling position. He made her sit on him and he had vaginal sex. She was crying at the time and she believed that a condom was used. Count 9 charged Ghanem with aggravated sexual intercourse without consent. The complainant recalled looking at this male's face, and she remembered that he "was actually good looking" [reference omitted].
34 When that male left the car the unidentified "Sam" wearing the grey Nike jumper came inside and forced his penis into her mouth.
35 The male called "Sam" in the grey Adidas jumper (Bilal Skaf, on the Crown case) then came into the car. The complainant was crying and he pushed her legs open, straddled her and placed his penis into her vagina. Count 10 charged Bilal Skaf with aggravated sexual intercourse without consent.
36 The male with the pony tail came back via the left side of the car. The complainant was sitting in the middle, crying. He grabbed her shoulders and forced her onto all fours. He unzipped his pants and forced his penis into her mouth. Count 11 charged Ghanem with aggravated sexual intercourse without consent.
37 Not long afterwards, this male yelled out "How about a threesome" and the male called "Sam" in the grey Adidas jumper reentered the car and put his penis into the complainant's anus while she was on all fours. At the same time the male with the pony tail had his penis in her mouth. Count 12 charged Bilal Skaf with aggravated sexual intercourse without consent in relation to this incident. [Upon this count the jury did not agree upon a verdict]
38 The Crown originally indicted Ghanem on a further count (Count 13) of aggravated sexual intercourse without consent in respect of the incident referred to in the previous paragraph. Since however the complainant explained in her evidence that when the male with the pony tail had yelled out "how about a threesome" his penis had remained in her mouth throughout that time, the judge later directed a verdict by direction on Count 13 because the offence in Count 11 had not ceased.
39 The complainant said that throughout the sexual assaults in the red car she heard mobile phones ringing and people talking on the phone [reference omitted]. Around this time she saw a black car arrive. She said it was "a black car, similar to the first", but was not sure whether it was the same car as the one previously involved [reference omitted]. There were three males in it along with the male in the yellow jumper who had first met the complainant on the train and who had also sexually assaulted her in the toilet block (Mohammed Skaf, on the Crown case). She heard the ring tone of her phone, which was a particular song by Eminem [reference omitted]. This evidence was used to corroborate the Crown case that Mohammed Skaf arrived at the industrial complex in the black car. (He admitted his presence at the Marion Street toilet block, but disputed that he was at the industrial complex.)
40 The complainant got out of the red car, which was then
driven away towards the driveway of the industrial estate where it was hosed down. The black car was parked where the red car had previously been. The complainant attempted to leave and started walking past the red car. She was hosed down by someone from the red car and ended up soaking wet [reference omitted]. She started crying and the males laughed. The complainant managed to reach the street but was caught by one of the "new people" and was led back to the industrial estate. By the time she had been walked back she noticed that the red car and its occupants were gone.
41 The male in the yellow jumper came up to her, put his arm around her and led her away from the remaining group of males. He said "I have to talk to you" and she was taken to an area where there was a pile of sacks. Count 14 charged Mohammed Skaf with detain for advantage.
42 This male told the complainant to "Suck my dick again bitch", and she did as she was told because she was scared of getting hurt. She was still crying. (Count 15 charged Mohammed Skaf with aggravated sexual intercourse without consent.) (The complainant volunteered that she had not had oral sex with the male in the yellow jumper at the toilet block [reference omitted] but she adhered to the evidence that the same man was involved in the two separate assaults. This was material relied upon by Mohammed Skaf to challenge the complainant's identification of him as the male in the yellow jumper at the industrial estate.)
43 After this, the complainant grabbed his penis hard and told him to give her back her phone because she wanted to call someone to get her out of there [reference omitted].He called out, "Get the gun, get the gun". Another male (one of the new people not recognized by the complainant) said "Get her phone back".
44 There were other sexual assaults by occupants of the black car.
45 The complainant was told to get back into the black car, which had been driven over to the area with the sacks. She complied. Just before the car pulled out of the driveway, the person in the yellow jumper came up to the driver's side window and passed her mobile through to the person who had just assaulted her. He was seated next to her in the back of the car. He handed the phone to her and told her to put her SIM card in it, which she did. He asked for her phone number because he was going to ring her the next day. He told her to give him the right phone number because he was going to try it there and then to see if her phone rang. She did as she required and the number was successfully tested as she was driven to Lidcombe station [reference omitted]. Mohammed Skaf's mobile phone was found to contain the complainant's number listed in it, showing her name as "Amanda", the name she had given on the train.
46 The complainant was then driven to Lidcombe station and was told not to call the police. After being left she started to receive calls on her mobile. One was from her friend Leah, who came to pick her up with Leah's mother. It was now between 10 and 11pm.
47 Before she was picked up she heard her mobile phone ring several times. She "knew it was them" [reference omitted] and didn't answer, except for one call, which came from H to whom she had given her number earlier in the evening [reference omitted]. After she was picked up, Leah answered the calls, some of whom were men asking to talk to her and Leah was heard telling them abusively not to contact her.
48 The complainant did not go to the police until the next day because she was too distraught." (emphasis in original)
26To this summary it should be noted that in November 2000 the police were investigating Mohammed Skaf in relation to these incidents. Around this time, Bilal Skaf provided the police with a statement that he, Bilal Skaf, had been home all day on 30 August 2000 and that his brother Mohammed had been home for most of the evening in question including between 4pm and 5pm and around 8.15pm (2004 Conviction Appeal at [72]). Count 16 charged Bilal Skaf with perverting the course of justice by making this (false) statement and count 17 charged him with the same offence for inciting their cousin, Susan Bakry, to make a false statement corroborating Bilal Skaf's alibi for his brother. As I have stated Bilal Skaf pleaded guilty to both counts.
27At the 2002 trial Mr Ghanem's case was that he had been wrongly identified and had an alibi. He gave evidence to that effect. Mahmoud Chami's case was that he only had oral and not vaginal sexual intercourse with Miss C and had a mistaken belief that she consented. He did not give evidence. Mohammed Skaf asserted that he had consensual sex with Miss C in the toilet block in the Marion Street carpark and denied that he was the man in the "yellow jumper" who assaulted her at the Chullora industrial estate (2004 Conviction Appeal at [52] and [55]). I describe the Crown case against him and the evidence supporting it in more detail in the Mohammed Skaf Application at [11] to [27].
28Bilal Skaf did not give evidence at the 2002 trial. He contended that he had been wrongly identified by Miss C (2004 Conviction Appeal at [54]). It is necessary to describe further aspects of the Crown case against him. The Court of Criminal Appeal stated that there were four "major items of evidence" in the Crown case against him (2004 Conviction Appeal at [95] to [99]).
29First, there was the evidence of Miss C which is in part summarised above and which included a "photoboard" identification of Bilal Skaf. The investigating police compiled a number of photoboards, each with fifteen photographs of young men of "Lebanese" appearance. On 15 November 2000 Miss C identified Bilal Skaf from one of these boards (2004 Conviction Appeal at [62]). Although this evidence was objected to at the trial none of his grounds of appeal attacked its admission. Instead he complained about the reliability of the identification of him by Miss C under the rubric of contending that his conviction was unreasonable. The Court of Criminal Appeal rejected this complaint stating (at [341] to [342]):
"341 ... The jury had the video-recording of the whole process. The complainant looked at the photoboard and said 'Number 15 sort of looks familiar' in relation to the person she called 'Sam 2'. Detective Porta asked her how sure she was and she said 'I'm not 100% sure ... but he looks a hell of a lot like the person I identified as Sam 2' [reference omitted]. His eyebrows stood out to her. In her evidence she explained that she was not 100% sure because it was not a very good photo [reference omitted].
342 There was also the additional evidence implicating Bilal Skaf to which we have already drawn attention."
30Second, the Crown relied on the false statement of Bilal Skaf made to the police about his being home all day on 30 August 2000 and which was the subject of count 16 as evidence of a consciousness of guilt on his part. Over objection the trial judge instructed the jury to that effect. The Court of Criminal Appeal dismissed Bilal Skaf's challenge to the trial judge's ruling (2004 Conviction Appeal at [304] to [314]).
31Third, there was evidence that Bilal Skaf "used his phone from the area of Chullora industrial estate at the critical time (shortly after 9pm)" (2004 Conviction Appeal at [98]). This was described in the Crown case statement which was extracted by the Court of Criminal Appeal in the 2004 Conviction Appeal at [117] as follows:
"In respect of 0414 076 468 (the mobile phone of Bilal Skaf):
A call was made from within the 21168 sector at 6:44pm (to "H" on 0404 227 642).
A call was made to "H" from another sector (28633) at 6:59pm. This was from the Centenary Drive cell.
A call was made from within the 21163 sector at 8:33pm (to Vodafone), though in cross-examination Simmons said that the network may have taken this call on the 900 frequency even though the caller was within the 21168 sector because the duration of the call was short and the network may not have had time to react and place the call on the 1800 frequency.
At 9:02pm there was a text message sent to Ali Skaf on 0415 889 122.
Calls were made from within the 21168 sector at 9:02pm and 9:09pm (to Ali Skaf on 0415 889 122) and at 9:58pm and at 10:37pm (to Nina on 0404 076 763, who was listed in his phone as his girlfriend).
At 9:24pm there was a call to 9703 1468 (the house of Bilal and Mohammed Skaf) from the Chullora cell. This was in sector 22752, which was the same sector in which Ghanem and Chami resided. The Crown relied on this to show that he was involved in dropping his co-offenders home.
Calls were made from within the 21163 sector at 10:17pm and 10:44pm (to Mohammed Skaf on 0415 681 064) and at 10:45pm (to Nina on 0404 076 763).
..."
Sector 21168 served calls made to or from the Chullora industrial complex. Sector 21163 served calls made to or from an area that included Valentia street which was the location of the home of Bilal and Mohammed Skaf (2004 Conviction Appeal at [115] to [116]).
32Thus calls were made from Bilal Skaf's telephone from within the mobile phone cell that serviced the Chullora industrial complex at at least 9.02pm, 9.09pm, 9.58pm and 10.37pm. The above description suggests that a similar call was also made at 9.24pm, although it is not clear.
33Fourth, there were intercepts of incriminating telephone calls made by Bilal Skaf in the period October to November 2000 (2004 Conviction Appeal at [99]). Two conversations involving Bilal Skaf are particularly telling. In one of them Bilal Skaf issues instructions to Tahir Sheikh (the brother of Tayyab Sheikh) as to what to tell the police as to his brother's movements on that day, but adds "That's all you have to remember, don't tell 'em where I was, just watch what you say" [emphasis added].
34In another conversation on the same day with Susan Bakry, Bilal Skaf tells her what to say to the police. She said to him "they're gunna fuck you hard" and he replied "[They can't catch me] no way [they can catch me]" (bracketed words in Arabic; emphasis added).
35As I will explain these third and fourth aspects of the case against Bilal Skaf are critical to the outcome of this application. The recorded conversations constitute powerful admissions that Bilal Skaf was, in some manner, involved in the sexual assault on Miss C. In combination with the third matter this material is very strong evidence that Bilal Skaf was at one of the scenes where sexual assaults were committed against Miss C, namely the Chullora industrial estate, at the time she said that they were committed. Thus, at the very least, it powerfully corroborated Miss C's evidence to the extent that she identified Bilal Skaf as one of the perpetrators and the location of the assaults upon her by him and others.