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Andrew Drummond

THE ‘CHILLING EFFECT’ – KOH TAO SUSPECTS SACRIFICED FOR BRITISH GOVERNMENT INTERESTS?

‘I feel considerable unease’ – Justice Green

Case No: HQ15X0311

Queen Bench Division, High Court of Justice











The two young Burmese accused of the murders of Hannah Witheridge and David Miller on the Thai island of Koh Tao were sacrificed by the British authorities in the interests of continued police co-operation between the Royal Thai Police and Scotland Yard.

Ruling that the defence could not be given the whole or parts of the Scotland Yard report, on which the families issued damning statements through the Foreign and Commonwealth Office implying the guilt of Zaw Lin and Wai Phyo,  a High Court Judge however said he felt uneasy.

Scotland Yard had presented the ‘chilling effect’ argumeent – that the release of the report could cause a breakdown in co-operation between the law enforcement authorities of Thailand and the United Kingdom.

Counsel for the prosecution Anya Proops had argued that such was the power of the British public interest that it would still trump private interest – even though this caused Justice Green ‘considerable unease’ in a capital punishment case where ‘the stakes could not be higher’.

Brit police on Koh Tao

The ‘chilling effect’ was the ‘substantial and adverse effect on law enforcement, fulfilment of public policy and the UKs security objectives’.

But what appears clear from the judgment is that Scotland Yard officers, even in their ‘observational role only’ were not present at any interviews, were not witness to any DNA procedures, and were reliant on the documents and videos placed in front of them and what they were told through a Thai police interpreter, or English speaking Thai officers.

Nevertheless the report, made specifically for the families of the two victims, then led the families to issue statements through the Foreign and Commonwealth Office saying that the evidence against Zaw Lin and Wai Phyo ‘appeared powerful and convincing ‘and also led the Thai authorities to comment:


‘Relatives of the deceased in the UK have stated that they are confident in the evidence in the Koh Tao case and that the evidence was clear beyond a shadow of doubt’.

Judge Green said he gave weight to the assertion by Gerry Facenna, counsel for Zaw Wyn and Wai Phyo, that these statements had prejudiced the trial.

Anya Proops

The author of the report Scotland Yard report Detective Chief Inspector Lyons said he had written an impartial report with no value judgments about the Thai police operation.

But he appeared to counter claims by the two Burmese that they were forced to confess after torture by stating that they had confessed on a number of occasions including ‘in front of a judge and in the presence of their own counsel’.

Ironically one of the objections made by Anya Proops for Scotland Yard was not only the sensitivity of the Thai government to the case and the risk that the report might be used to engender further public criticisms, but also importantly that the release of details of the Scotland Yard report could ‘prejudice the trial’.

The judge explained why he was troubled.

“I cannot ignore the fact that this is a death penalty case conducted with the accused arguing with their eyes closed.’.

He posed a theoretical case.

“A foreign prosecutor fails to disclose to a defendant a key piece of evidence of great value to the defendant in a criminal case.  This item is however recorded in an MPS report and amounts to personal data.   

The report explains that there is compelling evidence that the foreign forensic scientists employed by the police abroad have mixed up DNA samples.  It also records that the prosecution are nonetheless seeking to rely in court upon the wrong DNA evidence to inculpate the accused. 

This entry might be pivotal to the defence and might quite literally represent a matter of life or death.  In those circumstances does the Court sacrifice the accused for the wider principle of comity and trust between authorities? Ms Proops for the MPS submitted that such was the power and force of the public interest objectives the MPS advanced that even in such extreme circumstances the public interest would still trump the private interest. 

“Does the court sacrifice the accused for the wider principle of comity and trust between authorities?…

As he made his ruling rejecting the application made on behalf of the two young Burmese he said:

“I feel considerable unease. I sit a long way from the seat of the trial and do not have a true hands-on feeling for the way evidence has been tendered by the prosecution or the main lines of defence.”

The High Court had heard in August, that even though the trial was underway,. counsel representing the two young Burmese had no way of getting access to the records of the trial.

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COMMENT

Such are the ways of the international diplomacy – the Foreign and Commonwealth and British law enforcement authorities have of course been acting in British political, policing and security interests. What is expedient counts. It is remotely possible that continuing good relations with Thai police could save lives, though more immediate is the Thai prosecutor calling for the deaths of two Burmese in jail in Koh Samui.

Of course Justice Green in London was oblivious to what was going on in the court on Koh Samui and in that it would have been difficult, as he virtually admits, to confidently judge what would be detrimental to the defence or more importantly useful.

In the trial many prosecution claims, and by that I mean also Thai government and police claims, appear to have been blown apart.  

Of course I cannot say that for sure. Reporters are not allowed to take notes.  The judge often just gives a precis of evidence, which he finds relevant, into a tape recorder for transcription.

The ‘running man’ in the prosecution’s evidence has been discredited by a British expert forensic witness in a statement could not possibly ne either of the Burmese. 

Porntip

The forensic team of defence witness Porntip Rojanasund, Thailand’s chief forensic officer, found the DNA of two males on the alleged murder weapon, the hoe, while police could find nothing.  

The post mortem conducted by Thai police on Hannah is contradicted by the post mortem done in the UK. 

Police never checked the CCTV of people leaving the island on the morning of the murder because they did not consider it important.  The list goes on and on.  

And Thailand’s Police Commissioner has claimed that his officer and Scotland Yard ‘read the same books’.

It cannot be denied that the Metropolitan Police ‘chilling effect’ case seemed compelling. If the Royal Thai Police were to stop co-operating the Scotland Yard it could, one supposes at first glance, be disastrous. 

Thailand is now a well-known hub for British criminals wishing to keep out of the away of the legendary ‘long arm of the law’, though that long arm might be exaggerated. 

Thailand is also a place where terrorist activity takes place.  Britain needs to control its criminals and people who might seek to cause terror in the UK.

But is a breakdown in international police relations a serious scenario? 

Murder weapon

Probably not. Should that happen and Thailand blank international police co-operation it would be seen as a pariah state. 

Thailand wants to be respectable. It wants to operate on the world stage. 

Would Thailand keep secrets from Scotland Yard? Maybe; but it does that anyway.  Thai Police only reveal what they want to.

Besides Thailand has a short memory – and what happens under this government, well, happens under this government.

The current military government admits there is massive corruption in the Thai police – which is frequently referred to as a ‘mafia’ organization.  

The widespread raids last year on Thailand’s Central Intelligence Bureau and Crime Suppression Division – and clear-out of some 70 per cent of its senior officers involved in just about every racket in the book – speaks for itself.

Kirsty Jones

And in terms of the murders of foreigners in Thailand the Thai Police have a track record of attempting to set up non Thais (as in the Kirsty Jones murder and rape case in Chiang Mai) and interference in the course of justice as in the Leo del Pinto murder case in Pai Mae Hong Son and complaints of torture abound.

In the case of Kirsty Jones, some 12 years of co-operation and not offending Thai police got Dyfed-Powys Police nowhere.

Dyfed Powys Police with Sue Jones – Kirsty’s mother

The fact is that Scotland Yard may not want to go public in its dealings with Thai police because also quite simply there are skeletons there to be found by very virtue of how the Thai police work.

Detective Chief Inspector Lyons’s report made no comments giving an opinion of the Thai police investigation.

Shortcuts are taken  by the RTP which would be viewed dimly back home in the public arena. 

Thai police almost always need encouragement and they are not always satisfied with a slap on the back and a ‘Well done’.

In fact there is nothing under the sun the Thai Police cannot do except perhaps read the same books as Scotland Yard and apply what they have read. 

Flying Sporran – London Sept 24

Despite massive technological breakthroughs Thai police still show a limited grasp of what is available and still prefer to rely on ‘confessions’. And all too often the courts simply accept them.

And behind the Foreign Office’s  ‘non interference in the justice system of other countries’ lies a pile of Britons often set up for crimes they did not commit abroad – let alone Burmese facing death row.

About the Author

Andrew Drummond

Andrew Drummond is a British independent journalist and occasional television documentary maker. He is a former Fleet Street, London, journalist having worked at the Evening Standard, Daily Mail, Mail on Sunday, News of the World, Observer and The Times.

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