Wednesday 24 August 2016

HIGH COURT UNDER THE MICROSCOPE; R V BUCCA 2015 "The danger of identity assumptions"


HIGH COURT UNDER THE MICROSCOPE; R V BUCCA 2015 – AWAITING DECISION. 

The danger of identity assumptions 

The case today is a case awaiting a decision. So I thought it would be interesting examine the submissions of the appellant. Submissions are papers written by defending council that outline the issues at hand. They are interesting to read – particularly for young law students because they show the application of law to legal matters. 


 Today’s case is about the use of evidence and its implications in a court of justice. When we see evidence, we like to assume it favors one side more than the other. However, in this case, you will see the impact of circumstantial evidence. Circumstantial evidence is a two-edged sword. From one angle it will support an argument and from another, it can defeat it. Phones are strong circumstantial evidence. The courts will often refuse to take the view that the accused did not have their phone on them. They can be used to track locations, motive, messages and previous history.   


CASE FACTS 


In the supreme court of South Australia Wesley Gange was convicted of shooting an Adrian McDonald. McDonald was killed in Parafield, South Australia. The prosecution argued that Gange shot McDonald. They claimed he had hidden in the boot of a car not far from where McDonald stood. McDonald and Gange were once in a relationship.


 The relationship had broken down and caused issues between them. Both of them were involved in drugs, firearms, and violent behavior. Gange had previously sold drugs to McDonald. 


His assistant Tristan Castle was sitting in the driver’s seat. Telecommunication records were used to show the movements of Gange and Castle’s phones. Before this event, Gange had sent texts to McDonald which were derogatory and contained threats.


 There was the use of an alibi for Gange. Gange’s girlfriend ‘M’ remembered seeing him at home on that day. However, disputes arose about the veracity of the evidence. She suffered from psychosis, false beliefs, auditory hallucinations, detachment from reality, paranoia and impaired reasoning. It was appealed to the Court of Criminal Appeal. The appeal was on the basis that the judge had failed to direct the jury properly about the evidence of Gange’s involvement. 


The evidence was highly circumstantial. There is was brought to light that Gange and M used multiple phones interchangeably. It is hard to discern who made what texts and who had which phone. It became more impractical when both Gange and M admitted that because of drug use they often didn’t remember where they were or what they’d done. When the judge failed to show the holes properly in the evidence, the jury gave the circumstantial evidence too much weight. The judge should have given it little weight. The failure to do so made the conviction unjust and inevitable. 


 SUMMARY 


The court believed beyond reasonable doubt that the appellant shot the deceased. They based this belief on telephone records, motive evidence, proof of planning and a confrontation via text. The text messages recorded on the phone of the accomplice, Castle. There were documents placing Gange in a different location at the time of the shooting. 


There were also tracked movements through his phone that placed him at the crime scene. Expert evidence pointed out that phones were not a confirmation of identity. It could never be completely confirmed who was on the other end of the phone. However, the courts overlooked this and claimed the evidence was an important¬part of proof. They were allowed to be equally considered by the jury. 


 APPEAL TO HIGH COURT 


The case went to the high court for two reasons


 - Court of criminal appeal erred in holding that the learned trial judge correctly admitted evidence of the appellant’s past possession of firearms 


- The court of criminal appeal erred by not finding that the learned trial judge misdirected the jury about the weight given to each piece of evidence. 


You have to have specific legal reasons for going to the High Court. You can’t just decide that you don’t want to accept the verdict. The Court of Appeal has the right to refuse you ‘leave’ to go to the High Court. 


WHY NOT BELIEVE THE EVIDENCE? 


The evidence appears to be valid. 


However, if you examine the circumstances under which the evidence appears you will realize that it is highly circumstantial. 


 Firstly, the location of Gange’s phone was unimportant. He had left it behind in Castle’s car. They had not met up for a few days. That makes the connection between his placement and the murder further removed. 


Additionally, it was possible that his girlfriend was using the phone. M had purchased and paid for the phone. Their friends recorded that couple was close and mixed communication devices often. They shared friendship groups. 


If M had been using the phone, anything she said could not be taken into account against Gange. Her medical issues, including paranoia, hallucinations, and delusions suggest that anything she said may not be true. 


 Evidence also confirmed that while Gange used this phone, he also had an additional prepaid phone. M sometimes used this prepaid phone. Connecting a particular party to a phone is impossible. The two did not identify themselves before texting. A phone number is only associated with the phone and not its user at the time. Therefore, the courts had to assume an identity for the phone. That identity could never be guaranteed. 


It was shown that others might have been in possession of the tracked phone. Gange could not identify the exact date that he had it return to him. Some evidence suggested that it had been in possession of others during the day of the murder. 


The value of the tracked movements lessened when applied to the social habits of the accused. The shooting occurred during social hours. But because of the use of drugs neither Gange or Castle kept reasonable hours. Thus tracking whose movement was where and which may have been faked was a concern. While Gange admitted that he sometimes didn’t sleep for weeks, the courts had to apply some weight to the fact that the tracked movements reflected a pattern of someone with relatively normal waking hours.


 ISSUES


 There are many more issues connected to this case. In fact, the submissions of the appellant are 22 pages long. However, I wanted to focus on the use of circumstantial evidence in criminal law. 


When used the evidence appears to make a conflicting statement about the right to fair trial. We are all familiar with this right. Therefore, committing someone on a circumstantial case alone appears unfair. 


The Bucca Case has not yet come to trial, but it will be interesting to see the High Court’s remarks upon the extreme reliance on the assumption of identity. 


 New technologies have increased the ability for police to track charged individuals. However, it also leads to confusion and greater misunderstanding. Phone numbers are not identity codes, yet it appears the court has begun to treat them as such. It would be interesting to remove the evidence of Gange’s phone and re-run the trial. My prediction would be that without the critical assumption that a phone indicates the identity of a person, no case could be completed.


 I look forward to hearing your thoughts on this issue. Also for those who don't listen to the podcast. This week I am celebrating two years of running my studyblr and theunderagelawyer.blogspot.com. In celebration I will be releasing a 'printables' package which will be available online in the next episode.

No comments:

Post a Comment