By human rights lawyer Barbara Hewson: Of course, rape is a terrible crime and
gang-rape is one of the worst things that human beings can do to another
person.
So, had four young men who were arrested
after a group sex session at a student ball been found guilty of sex crimes,
they would have been jailed for many years.
But the case against the quartet collapsed
this week after detectives were accused of 'cherry-picking' evidence to support
the prosecution, while 'airbrushing' anything that suggested the men were
innocent.
Lawyers for the four students (who had been
charged after the drunken sex session during a May Ball at the Royal
Agricultural University in Gloucestershire) argued that evidence had been
'withheld' by officers before the trial. This included messages taken from the
victim's phone hinting that she may have consented.
It also emerged that the alleged victim had given 'different accounts' as a witness in another rape case involving an Army officer - also acquitted.
It also emerged that the alleged victim had given 'different accounts' as a witness in another rape case involving an Army officer - also acquitted.
How could the police and the Crown
Prosecution Service (CPS) have got it so wrong?
I have worked for many years as a human
rights and civil liberties barrister and I'm afraid that I do not think this
case can be dismissed as a one-off.
Sadly, it illustrates a deeper problem in
our justice system when it comes to sex crimes.
Having once been deplorably insensitive to
the problems that rape victims face, I believe that our criminal justice system
has swung too far the other way. It now assumes that an accusation by a woman
is tantamount to proof of guilt.
Even worse, it has encouraged sharp tactics
on the part of the police and the CPS who are keen to have a more positive
image as being tough on sex offenders and winning more successful prosecutions.
The most grotesque example recently
involved Scotland Yard's VIP paedophile murder inquiry — and investigation into
claims that a string of Establishment figures were responsible for killing
three boys in the Seventies and Eighties. Though the probe collapsed, the
police refused to say sorry to those whose lives had been ruined or reputations
shattered by a suspected fantasist called 'Nick', whose claims triggered the
investigation. Most controversially, one of the investigating officers, Det
Supt Kenny McDonald, had described Nick's delusional ramblings as 'credible and
true'.
The fact is that our criminal justice
system is supposed to be founded on two critical principles. First, the
presumption of innocence. Second, due process: the belief that criminal
accusations must be proven beyond reasonable doubt, by fair procedures.
However, when it comes to sexual assault,
decades of campaigning by feminists and more strident members of the victim
lobby have browbeaten judges and policy-makers into a change of approach.
The prevailing attitude seems to be that it
is unfair to anyone claiming to have been the victim of a sexual attack that
they should have to accept that their alleged attacker is 'innocent until
proved guilty' and that the case has to operate under due process.
As a result, the system has been
re-engineered to make it more difficult for the accused to defend himself.
Even the definition of rape has been
changed. Previously, it was a defence for a man to show that he honestly
believed the woman was consenting.
But the Sexual Offences Act 2003 — passed
by the Labour government — introduced a so-called test of reasonable belief in
consent. This means that the accused has to show he took reasonable steps to
ensure that the woman consented to sex.
This has led to the ridiculous situation
whereby some students demand 'affirmative consent'. This means that consent has
to be sought and given at every stage of any sexual encounter.
Most ridiculously, students at one U.S.
high school have been told that men should obtain consent every ten minutes
during sexual activity. A further worrying development is that the police and
CPS seem to see themselves as advocates for complainants — though they should
be acting impartially.
The result is that they appear to shut
their eyes to any evidence that might complicate their plans to bring a
prosecution. This phenomenon is known as 'confirmation bias'. This was
confirmed by the absurd admission of one Manchester barrister who said: 'If
someone complains, we prosecute.'
I'm sorry, but such a perverse attitude is highly dangerous. No one benefits
when innocent people are wrongly accused.
The fact is that this creates a new class
of victim: the falsely accused, or those who are prosecuted, who are presumed
guilty until they can prove their innocence.
Some high-profile examples of those wrongly
accused of sex offences are Nigel Evans MP, radio presenter Paul Gambaccini,
war hero Lord Bramall and former MP Harvey Proctor.
Significantly, the legal authorities'
attitude was outlined by former Director of Public Prosecutions Sir Keir
Starmer.
In an article for the Criminal Law Review
in 2014 written after he had left the post, he explained how changes were
needed to improve the way the credibility of alleged victims was assessed.
He called for 'a more sophisticated
approach that starts with the assumption that the victim is telling the truth'.
Sir Keir has since been elected as a Labour
MP. But the pressure to believe all complainants began before he was appointed
DPP.
Back in 2002, the Metropolitan Police
issued a Special Notice 11/02 entitled 'A policy for the investigation of rape
and serious sexual assaults'.
It began: 'Principle 1. It is the policy of
the Met to accept allegations made by any victim in the first instance as being
truthful. An allegation will only be considered as falling short of a
substantial allegation after a full and thorough investigation.'
This approach encapsulates the problem.
When the word 'victim' is used before a crime has been proved in court, it
means there is a presumption of guilt. Equally, what happened to the promise of
a 'full and thorough investigation'?
I am aware of many sex attack cases in which defendants and their lawyers have
complained that when they provided the police with evidence suggesting that a
complaint of sexual assault was false, the police simply ignored it.
For example, there was a case in which a
teenager was accused by a girl of a similar age of raping her. As part of his
defence, the accused boy's mother went through social media postings that her
son and the girl had made during the time in question.
They showed that every time the girl
claimed she was being attacked, she and the boy were in different locations.
Yet despite this research being given to the police, the officers later
returned it as 'unused material'.
Though the case went to trial, the
accused's mother handed her dossier to the CPS barrister, who said they had
never seen it before. Separately, it became clear that the girl's story didn't
add up.
Within 24 hours, the prosecution barrister
told the judge that the complainant was no longer regarded as a witness of
truth and the trial collapsed.
However, things should never have been
allowed to reach that stage. The boy's family incurred very substantial legal
costs, which they were unable to recover from the CPS.
I believe that such people who are falsely
accused and who are put through unnecessary and traumatic experiences should be
able to sue the police for damages — compensation for negligent investigations.
This is allowed in Canada.
Should those who have been falsely accused
have even more right to redress? For example, ought they be able to sue the CPS
if they feel their case has been mishandled?
Theoretically, it's already possible to sue
public officials for misfeasance, but that requires proof of bad faith —
something that is a very high threshold to cross.
Regardless of the redress that might be
available to those who are wrongly accused, there is a much more important
principle at stake.
Namely, that it is imperative that our
judicial system is fair to both accuser and accused.
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