Court of Appeal Reference




NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE

No. 62

1416

relies, in part, on clinical studies published after the applicant’s appeal.

(3) The reports are—

(a) “Comment on the Probability of contamination in ‘disclosures’ obtained from children in the case of R v Ellis”, dated 30 November 1997, in which Dr Parsonson concludes that, in his opinion, ‘given the conditions prevailing, the level of parental contamination, and the extremely suggestive interviewing procedures, the probability of the proportion of fact outweighing the proportion of fiction must be very, very small indeed’;

(b) “The interviewing of children: Effects of question form, props, question repetition and repeated interviews on the accuracy of children’s reports. A review and commentary in respect of the Christchurch Civic Crèche interviewing and interviewers”, dated 27 November 1997, in which Dr Parsonson concludes that, in his opinion, the techniques for interviewing children used in the applicant’s case would not be used today;

(c) “Children’s memory: A brief review of developments”, dated 27 November 1997, in which Dr Parsonson concludes that, in his opinion, children, especially children under 8 years old, are susceptible to suggestion in recalling and reporting events.

  1. Documents relating to ground involving retraction—(1) In support of the ground described in clause 5 (4), the applicant tendered one report by Dr Parsonson.

(2) In reaching his conclusions in the report, Dr Parsonson relies, in part, on clinical studies published after the applicant’s appeal.

(3) The report is “Retraction of allegations of abuse by children”, dated 27 November 1997, in which Dr Parsonson, having reviewed research on interviewing and retraction, states that he cannot share the conclusion expressed in the Court of Appeal decision that it is not uncommon for child complainants to withdraw their allegations.

  1. Documents relating to ground involving jury—(1) In support of the ground described in clause 5 (6), the applicant tendered an affidavit by the Crown witness identified as child A’s mother, dated 29 November 1997, stating, among other things,—

(a) That she knew and was known to a jury member; and

(b) That she knew that juror as the partner of a work colleague; and

(c) That during the 6 weeks of the trial there was considerable tension in the office which impacted on her relationship with the juror’s partner and on the other staff; and

(d) That she reported the fact that she knew the juror to a person in authority and was told the relationship was not that strong and not to worry about it.

(2) The Ministry of Justice received a statement from the juror in question, dated 25 November 1997. The statement was unsolicited. It states, among other things,—

(a) That she served as a juror in the High Court trial of the applicant; and

(b) That she did not recognise the name of child A’s mother on the list of witnesses’ names; and

(c) That she did not recognise child A’s mother when she gave her evidence; and

(d) That at the end of the first day of the trial she was told by her partner that a work colleague of her partner had given evidence that day; and

(e) That she raised the connection with a jury assistant who, within about half an hour, informed her that the information had been relayed to the appropriate officers of the court and told her that the association did not warrant her standing down as a juror.

(3) The Ministry of Justice received a letter from the Registrar of the High Court at Christchurch, dated 17 March 1998. The Ministry had asked the Registrar for information on matters raised in the application. The letter reports that the Registrar had found a note in the trial judge’s notebook for 27 April 1993 reading—

‘9.30 Mrs Hay says 1 juror says a flatmate works with mother of child’.

  1. Additional grounds—(1) The applicant has, subsequent to his application received on 2 December 1997, submitted further grounds for his application that are additional to the grounds described in clause 5.

(2) One further ground, among others, is that photographs that were clearly important for the defence—

(a) Existed at the time of the applicant’s trial; and

(b) Were in the possession of the Crown at that time; and

(c) Were not disclosed to the defence despite a request for them being made.

(3) The applicant submits that the photographs were clearly important for the defence because—

(a) They were of the Christchurch Civic Childcare Centre in operation before the inquiry into alleged sexual offending at the centre; and

(b) They demonstrated in a compelling way that the sexual abuse that was alleged to have taken place in the toilet area was highly unlikely to have happened; and

(c) They were relevant to show that there was an innocent explanation for some of the games described by some of the children in their evidence.

(4) The applicant has indicated that he intends to provide evidence by way of affidavit to the Court of Appeal in support of the ground described in subclause (2).

(5) The Ministry of Justice received a letter from the Crown Solicitor’s office at Christchurch, dated 24 April 1998. The Ministry had sought comments from the Crown Solicitor’s office on the further grounds for the applicant’s application. The Crown Solicitor’s office, in the letter, contests the allegation of non-disclosure and the importance of the photographs.

Reasons

  1. Reasons—The reasons for the reference are—

(a) That the documents described in clauses 6 and 7 indicate that evidence is available that could lead the Court of Appeal to the conclusion that a miscarriage of justice might have occurred because of the techniques used to obtain the evidence of the child complainants; and

(b) That the documents described in clause 8 indicate that evidence is available that could lead the Court of Appeal to the conclusion that a miscarriage of justice might have occurred because, if the trial judge did not know the nature of the relationship between the juror and her intimate partner, he would have been unable properly to assess the closeness of the connection between the juror and the Crown witness; and

(c) That, if the applicant establishes that the photographs described in clause 9 were not disclosed to his counsel.



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⚖️ Reference to Court of Appeal for Peter Hugh McGregor Ellis Convictions (continued from previous page)

⚖️ Justice & Law Enforcement
4 May 1998
Court of Appeal, Sexual Offences, Convictions, Peter Hugh McGregor Ellis, Miscarriage of Justice, Child Witnesses, Jury Bias, Evidence Disclosure
8 names identified
  • Peter Hugh McGregor Ellis, Applicant for Court of Appeal reference
  • Dr Parsonson, Author of psychological reports on child testimony
  • Mrs Hay, Reported juror connection to witness
  • Child A's mother, Crown witness with connection to juror
  • Juror, Serving juror with potential conflict of interest
  • Trial judge, Judge presiding over original trial
  • Registrar of the High Court at Christchurch, Provided information about trial records
  • Crown Solicitor, Responded to allegations of evidence non-disclosure