Failure to give directions on consciousness of guilt
83 The Crown case at the trial was that the jury would be satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that the Crown had negatived provocation. It was submitted, inter alia, that the jury would totally reject the account given by the appellant as to the events which gave rise to the stabbing of the victim because, so it was submitted, any objective analysis of the appellant's evidence demonstrated that he was a liar.
84 The Crown firstly relied upon the interview conducted by Sgt Karras at the hotel in the early hours of 19 February 2000 which included the following:
"Q: Did you have a shower?
A. Yes, before the police came I had a shower and put the clothes on.
Q. Why did you have a shower?
A. Because of blood.
Q. Why did you stab this woman?
A. I can't remember.
Q. Why was the lady standing or lying on the bed?
A. I can't remember.
Q. Where did you get the knife?
A. I bring it for the woman, she asked me to bring the knife."
85 The appellant subsequently participated in a record of interview during the course of which the following was stated:
"Q. What was the conversation about?
A. We were, we stayed until midnight, there was nothing, she went to sleep and I went to sleep. Because I was in bed, she went to the toilet, she came back and she was saying that she was joking with me, she was playing with the knife, swinging it. I tried to get the knife off her, she hit me on my finger.
Q. Is that the finger on your left hand, the one with the bandage on it?
A. Yes.
Q. That's the finger you were talking about, yes, OK. What happened after that?
A. I don't know what happened. I took the knife and I found her on the floor, she was dead on the floor after two hours. I called my son and I asked him to call the police to tell them what happened with me. The police came. The police came and they said, what's happened? The knife was still in my hand and I told them that I, that the woman is dead.
86 Later in the record of interview, the following was recorded:
"Q. Were you laying down?
A. When I turned around I thought she was coming to sleep with me. Suddenly I saw her playing right away with the knife. The first one was on here, indicating to, if I could continue during the second time, and she said she was joking but the cut was serious and I took the knife off her and I stabbed her.
…
Q. And when Rebecca, when you say Rebecca came out and started waving the knife around where was she?
A. She opened the fridge and as I said I don't remember what she had beer, water or something … then she came straight to me. I thought that she was coming to me. She started playing with the knife, she hit me here, and then she hit me on the other finger.
Q. You're indicating your finger, your right index finger as well as the left one, is that correct?
A. But then I will - she hit me on the other finger, then all of a sudden I saw myself taking the knife off her. I don't know what happened after that.
Q. But before you just said you stabbed her.
A. After she hit me, yes, I did stab her.
…
Q. OK, before she fell on you. When you say you thought she was joking and playing around with the knife what was she saying, what gave you the impression that she was joking?
A. I said, why do you have the knife in your hand? She said I'm kidding, joking with you. I told her to put it back in the bag. She said yeah, yeah, all right.
…
I took the knife and then she fell on me because her knee hit my shoulder, my shoulder is hurting, and then I didn't know what happened, I told myself that I killed her.
…
Q. All right. Where did you stab her, sir, where?
A. I don't know, when I woke up I didn't know why I did that and I covered her with a sheet.
87 In 2001, at his first trial, the appellant gave the following evidence:
"Q. 2001 you were asked: Why did you try to take the knife off her?
A. In order to keep the knife away from me and her just I thought about but she didn't let me, she didn't give me a chance to…
Q. So what happened?
A. This is what happened, like I told you I hit her, I stabbed her and I got up from the floor and I found her next to me.
Q. How were you, at the time she was attacking you with the knife how were you feeling, what was in your mind?
A. All I was, all I had in my head was to get the knife away from her hand but I couldn't do that.
Q. Why did you want to get the knife away from her hand?
A. In order to put it aside.
Q. Put it aside?
A. So, in order for me to get it away from her and me."
88 In the course of the retrial in 2004, the appellant gave the following evidence in chief:
"Q. What happened next?
A. When she came back she said 'every time I spend some moments with you or time with you together some of your children call us and disturb us.' I tried to talk to her calmly because she was getting a little bit edgy and I didn't want her to be edgy. I said 'come and sit next to me on the bed and lets talk it over'. She come and sat next to me and wanted to make love again. I said 'I can't do it anymore because I am very tired. If you wait until the morning we can have another go at it. Let's have a chat together and let's put it off until the morning but not necessarily at this moment.' She got up and she was swearing.
Q. What was she saying?
A. She said 'your mother is a slut. I am going to fuck your mother. All your children are sluts and hopeless' and she went to a table. There were fruit and vegetables on the table. She used a cucumber on her vagina and on her rectum. I got up and said 'please stop doing that.' When I pushed her the cucumber fell to the floor. And she was - she was, at the moment screaming and shouting and swearing at my mother and my children and she had the cucumber that she wanted to use. I said 'this cucumber is better than you.' She said 'this cucumber I need to use it on your daughter because she has her birthday the following day. Because her husband cannot sleep with her and I want to use it on her. I want to use that cucumber on her because she is a slut.' The cucumber fell to the floor. I knelt to get hold of it. She hit me with her foot on my shoulder. I got up, I said 'why are you hitting me for?' She said 'I want to kill you, you son of a bitch.' She grabbed the knife and she attacked me. As I was retreating I fell on the bed. She jumped on top of me. She said 'I want to kill you, you son of a bitch, I want to kill you, I want to kill you.' That was the last thing I know.
…
I swear to God that - my whole body was burning I couldn't even take a breath because I was so upset and insulted."
89 The submission of the Crown at the second trial was that the jury would be satisfied that after consideration of the evidence of the appellant and a comparison of that account with earlier accounts his evidence at the trial was fabricated. Attention is drawn by the appellant to the address of prosecuting counsel which included the following:
"It's my suggestion to you that the only real issue in this case is whether the accused has raised evidence to suggest that he was provoked into stabbing her.
You will recall I cross-examined the accused, not only had he said or claimed that Rebecca used those words and did what he claimed she did with the cucumber, I reminded him that in 2001, in addition to those claims, he said other things were running through his mind. And you will recall I went through the exercise of reminding him of the questions he was asked back in 2001 and the answers he gave. Well, he had put forward that he had had two different states of mind at the relevant time.
You will be satisfied after careful examination of the evidence that the accused has fabricated the words and gestures he claimed Rebecca used towards him.
In relation to my submission to you that the accused has been telling you lies about, when he has been trying to put forward this part of the defence.
He has also, I suggest to you in the interview he had with the police, and you have the videotape before you, and the interview with Detective Karras, he lied to police, in particular to his claim that Rebecca was waving a knife around in the lead up to the stabbing.
I suggest to you what happened afterwards he realised how ludicrous how unbelievable that version was. And what he did, he took advantage of the fact his son Ahmed had phoned him about 11.00 pm on the evening of 17 February 2000 in the hotel room to invent the story he has now put forward. He has used that phone call as being a trigger for his asserted claims of Rebecca using these insulting words towards members of his family. Totally different version what he had given to the police.
He has invented that story, I suggest to you, Rebecca using these insulting words and gestures, in the hope of escaping a murder conviction and securing for himself a manslaughter conviction.
You recall, and I am not going to take you through it, I reminded him of questions he was asked in 2001 and the answers he gave which suggested he had a little bit more of a memory for what had occurred, at least back then. He had this, I suggest, convenient amnesia as to what took place.
He tried to suggest yesterday that he lost consciousness. I think Detective Karras asked him some specific questions about that and his answers were, in effect, no.
Well, he didn't want to tell you what happened. I suggest he does know what happened, what took place at the time. He doesn't want to tell you because if he was to tell you the truth it would implicate him.
His version in this courtroom has certainly shifted from the version he gave police."
90 In the course of his summing up, the trial judge said, before taking the jury to the relevant evidentiary passages:
"The Crown, you will recollect, argued that you would totally reject the account given to you by the accused as to the events which gave rise to the stabbing of the deceased because the Crown argues that an objective analysis of the accused's evidence demonstrates that he is a liar. And the Crown in that regard argued that when you looked at the various accounts given by the accused from the time of his apprehension to the evidence he gave before you that the discrepancies which occurred in that evidence are such as to give rise to you finding that the accused is not a witness of truth."
91 His Honour later stated that:
"The Crown says that when you look at what he said in the past, what he says now you wouldn't accept him."