Convicted cop loses appeal

-gets three years for manslaughter
ON the night of August 1, 1976, policeman, Guy Simmons walked into a gas station  and claimed that if he was not sold two cold beers, he would blow out the brains of the barman with his .38 revolver.
Bystander, Jerome Calder, who questioned the cop’ s ability to commit any such offence with a toy gun, was shown the live bullets of the revolver and, like doubting Thomas of biblical fame, was still doubting when his head was blasted from a revolver bullet.
Following police investigations, PC Simmons was charged with murder, but a mixed jury at the Demerara Assizes found him guilty of manslaughter, and he was sentenced to three years imprisonment by the trial judge.
Dissatisfied with the sentence, Simmons appealed the conviction and sentence, but the Court of Criminal Appeal, constituted by Chancellor Victor Crane and Justices of Appeal R H Luckhoo and Dhan Jhappan, dismissed the appeal and affirmed the conviction and sentence.
The accused was charged with the murder of the deceased, but he was convicted of manslaughter, the jury having rejected his defence of accident, viz, that he took out his revolver to get some money to pay for the beers, and as he was putting it back, the gun accidentally went off.
At the trial, the jury were correctly directed  on the degree of negligence which the prosecution  had to discharge  in order to bring home  a conviction of manslaughter,  but were not told that when dealing with the issue  of accident,  that the onus  was on the prosecution  to negative the defence accident.
The Court of Appeal held that:
(i)  Notwithstanding there was a lapse on the judge’s part, the circumstances  recounted  by the prosecution witnesses were compatible  and reconcilable  with the evidence  of a ballistic expert  as to the pressure needed to cock and discharge the gun, and also with the pathologist evidence as to the position of the bullet wound  on the deceased.
(ii)  The proviso would be applied, because the post mortem evidence negatived the defence of accident, and was so overwhelming as inevitably to lead a reasonable jury, properly directed, to the same conclusion of guilt.
The Appeal was dismissed and the conviction and sentence affirmed. Representing the appellant at the hearing of the appeal was Attorney-at-law, Mr. J. A. Patterson, while Mr. Loris Ganpatsingh, Assistant Director of  Public Prosecutions, Acting,  represented the State.
Delivering the judgment of the Court of Appeal, Justice Luckhoo said that on the appellant’s behalf, a number of grounds were argued, but the only one which qualified for, and merited, consideration was Ground Three (a) of his amended grounds of appeal, in which he complained that the learned trial judge “failed to tell the jury that the onus of disproving the defence of accident rests on the prosecution.”
He further observed: “That the trial judge did not in any part of his summing-up use the words, ‘The onus of disproving the defence of accident rests on the prosecution’ cannot be disputed.  Let us therefore examine the setting of  the facts of the case and relate, as we must, the directions given to that setting. Only in this way can we determine whether or not this ground is to succeed. In doing so, we gave recognition to the fact that no two judges have the same style, manner and arrangement of a summing-up before a jury. Indeed, very often the same judge must, by virtue of the way in which particular cases are presented, vary the style and arrangement of the summing-up in those cases in order effectively to assist  the jury  in appreciating the issues  set before them.”
As to the State’s case against the appellant, Justice Luckhoo said: “It rested  on the evidence  of persons present at the scene of the discharge of a .38  police service revolver;  on the evidence of Eustace Kendall, an expert in the use and functioning of firearms, including the type of revolver  in question, and on the evidence of Edward Simon, a senior Government  bacteriologist  and pathologist.
“Undisputed were the following facts: That the discharge at  the gas station, Vlissengen Road, Georgetown, at a bar where beer and other drinks were sold, and to which the public had access, that at the bar  and within close proximity  were several persons, including the deceased, Calder, and the appellant. There was also no dispute that the appellant had the revolver in his possession at the time of its discharge, and that Calder died from a bullet wound through the right temple, inflicted by a bullet discharged from the same revolver.
“Winston Oudkerk’s version of how the incident took place was in substance this: He said that the accused came up to the bar, and in a normal tone of voice,  said to the barman:  ‘Bring two beers, or I blow  your f…..  brains out.’ With that, he took out a small gun from his pocket.  Calder said to him that it was a toy gun, whereupon the accused took out a bullet from the magazine of the gun and said to the deceased: ‘This is a real f…  bullet.’
“The accused then replaced the bullet into the magazine and back into the gun.  Calder insisted it was a toy gun.  The witness then heard a loud explosion. The deceased slumped forward, spun around, and fell on his back. Before the explosion, the deceased was bending forward at the back of two men, and he was facing the accused. He did not see the deceased leaning against or touching the accused.
“Calder, he said, was a tall man, and was bending slightly forward.  He could not say whether Calder was looking into the barrel of the gun.  There was no hostility in the conversation between the deceased and the accused.  The deceased was tipsy and was swaying  as he stood up having his beer.  After the explosion, the accused put the gun back into his pocket, and in a normal tone of voice, said to the witness, ‘You must leave; you ‘ent see anything.’
“Lennox Nestor’s version was that the accused came up to the bar and requested two cold beers, and on the barman saying there were no cold beers, he said, ‘Well, if I can’t get a cold beer, I’ll shoot one of you.’ Calder asked, ‘What you gon shoot with? Your mouth?’  The accused then took a revolver from his pocket and showed it around and said, ‘With this,’ as he held it up.  He placed the revolver back into his pocket. Calder then said, ‘It is a toy pistol,’  whereupon the accused took out the revolver again, opened it, took out a bullet, held it up in the air and said, ‘Is this still a toy pistol.’ The accused then put the bullet back into the revolver and replaced it into his pocket. Calder insisted it was a toy pistol.  The witness then saw the revolver in the hand of the accused for a third time, and this was followed by an explosion. He did not see the deceased bending down before the explosion.  After the explosion, he saw the accused lying on the ground.
The accused asked the witness, Nestor, what he was doing at the gas station, and on being told that he was waiting for change, the accused told him, ‘Collect it fast and split the joint.’”
The Court of Appeal dismissed the appeal and affirmed the conviction and sentence.

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