Introduction

… claims to be ‘rebalancing the system’ in favour of victims call for close scrutiny in a country with such an unfortunate record of miscarriages of justice.Footnote 1

Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.Footnote 2

At the outset it is important to state that much literature on sexual offending focuses on the issue of rape and the ‘justice gap’. Levels of attrition in rape cases remain a concern, and the impact of ‘rape myths’, victim-blaming attitudes, gender stereotypes and the reliability, and credibility of complaints and defendants are important considerations in attrition.Footnote 3 We agree that these are sensitive and important considerations.Footnote 4 The concern here however, is the potential wrongful conviction and miscarriages of justice regarding those suspected of or charged with a sexual offence. This is due to cultural changes inside and outside the criminal justice system. Wrongful conviction and miscarriages of justice can be simply understood “as the wrongful conviction of a factually innocent person that did not commit the crime they were convicted of and played no part at all in it”.Footnote 5 Naughton highlights that “every single day, people are overturning convictions for criminal offences. Miscarriages of justice are a routine, even mundane feature of the criminal justice system. They are systemic”.Footnote 6 Over the past twenty years there have been clear classes of miscarriages of justice including historical sexual abuse cases.Footnote 7 Many common law jurisdictions, have witnessed an increased interest in and concerns about the problem of wrongful convictions and miscarriages of justice.Footnote 8 This is over the past few decades and the interest and concern is both on the part of the public and scholarly researchers. This is due to the exposure of high profile miscarriages of justice which have brought to light problems in the way that the criminal justice system works. Despite reforms being made in the criminal justice system in light of such concerns miscarriages of justice and wrongful convictions continue to happen.Footnote 9 We are concerned with potential miscarriages of justice and wrongful convictions regarding those suspected or charged with sexual offending. This has to be contextualised.

In the last 20 years or so in many Western countries the nature of sexual offending and responses to it have become prioritisedFootnote 10 within the criminal justice system and societally. This includes the introduction of the Sexual Offences Register in 1997 in England and Wales. ThomasFootnote 11comments, “[a]ttempts have been made to improve the prosecution and conviction rate of those who commit sexual offences and sentences have become more punitive”. The criminal justice system is therefore under pressure from within and without the to improve investigations, prosecutions and convictions of suspects of sexual offending. This is happening at home and abroad in which the current climate is saturated with public reports and visual representations of, and campaigns against, sexual misconduct. This includes the public reporting of cases of historical abuse on the part of celebrities, child victims of grooming and sexual abuse, student campaigns against sexual violence such as RevoltSexualAssault, and the #MeToo Movement. In such an emotive climate it is important to remember the rights of suspects, defendants and those convicted of an offence as well as those of accusers, complainants and witnesses. This is because the conviction of an innocent person is the highest injustice. Therefore, in an adversarial system that upholds the principle of due process, there are safeguards that are intended to protect suspects and defendants, including individuals’ accused of a sexual offence(s). However the presumption of innocence “has been under heavy fire over the last two decades from ambitious politicians and a press quick to be outraged, but reluctant to understand”.Footnote 12 This is to the extent that for HaylerFootnote 13 “the increasing focus on convicting the guilty instead of protecting the innocent means that we may soon all have cause to fear the dawn raid”. We argue that the safeguard of the presumption of innocence is currently being potentially undermined regarding sexual offending and the outcome is miscarriages of justice and wrongful convictions. We appreciate that further investigation is needed however we intend to open up a discussion of the potential contemporary shifts in the manner that sexual offences are viewed and responded to within and without the criminal justice system and what this may mean for those suspected of and charged with sexual offending. In so doing we discuss the presumption of innocence and then we show how this may be undermined due to recent concerns about a retreat from this principle even to the point where there are fears of a presumption of guilt with regard to sex offences.Footnote 14 We also demonstrate the role played by the pressure to believe the accuser of sexual misconduct inside and outside the criminal justice system. We then go on to discuss how the victim personal statement (VPS) contains inherent assumptions that also undermine the presumption of innocence. Finally some conclusions are provided.

The Threat to the Presumption of Innocence and the Pressure to Believe

The threats to defendants’ rights have already been articulated.Footnote 15 Many individuals in the criminal justice system “frequently slip into talking of victims (in trials), rather than witnesses”Footnote 16 or accusers or complainants. In some cases outside the criminal justice system on American campuses accusers are also referred to as ‘survivors’ and the campus mantra is “’Survivors must be believed”.Footnote 17 Also for some groups in the criminal justice system, “[t]hose who plead not guilty are accused of ‘gaming the system’”, and the aim of the criminal justice system is “to get all those accused of crimes to plead guilty… as early as possible” and this is perceived as “good performance” on the part of such individuals.Footnote 18 It has also been contended that police attitudes are still leading to damaging mistakes, incomplete investigations and non-disclosure of evidence.Footnote 19 This leads to an unfair criminal justice system and subsequently a lack of confidence in the system on the part of accusers/victims and defendants/offenders.Footnote 20 In the current climate there is the pressure and even “the requirement to believe the complainant” and this results in an “incomplete investigation, and an incomplete investigation is a threat to the whole process of justice”.Footnote 21 The above criticisms go against the wider sense of the presumption of innocence embodied in European human rights law in that “pre-trial procedures should be conducted, so far as possible, as if the defendant were innocent”.Footnote 22

A clear example of an “[i]ncompetent [p]olice [i]nvestigation” is that of Warren Blackwell.Footnote 23 Warren Blackwell had his conviction overturned in 2006 “after a seven-year battle to clear his name” (Ibid). Shannon Taylor accused Blackwell of attacking her outside a social club. Blackwell was convicted of sexual assault in 1999 but after being imprisoned for three years his conviction was overturned as Taylor’s history of making false allegations of sexual assault under another name came to light.Footnote 24 After Blackwell won his appeal, a series of errors that contributed to Blackwell’s wrongful conviction on the part of Northamptonshire Police were identified by the Independent Police Complaints Commission. A police officer from another force had expressed his concerns that “Taylor’s evidence bore striking similarities with other false allegations” that she had made—but these were ignoredFootnote 25 Further, in a detectives notes Taylor was described as ‘unreliable’ and ‘unstable’ however they were not passed on to the Crown Prosecution Service. Finally, Taylor’s accounts contained serious inconsistencies and the police insufficiently investigated them.Footnote 26 Another example of a false allegation that resulted in prison sentences of 18 years and 11 years are that of George Anderson and Margaret Hewett. One of the complainants admitted that they had lied, and this resulted in Anderson and Hewett’s convictions being over turned.Footnote 27

The potential for injustice and the threat to the presumption of innocence is not just confined to problems with police attitudes and police investigations it can also be evidenced in the criminal trial. The safeguards that are in place to ensure a fair trial are put to the test in the courtroom. The courtroom is the decisive stage in which a defendant is either found guilty or acquitted. In so doing the prosecution has to make a case that demonstrates that the defendant is guilty beyond reasonable doubt. This is because according to the adversarial system a defendant is presumed innocent of the case laid against them until a guilty verdict is reached. This is one of, if not the most, important procedural protections afforded to defendants. This is especially so with regard to the potential loss of liberty, in the form of imprisonment. In addition there are social consequences that arise from being convicted. These can include “stigma and disadvantages in employment and housing”.Footnote 28 Plus for individuals convicted of a sexual offence they have the legal consequence of ‘notification requirements’. Importantly one of the worst forms of victimisation has been identified as serving a prison sentence without having committed a crime.Footnote 29

According to the Community of the Wrongly AccusedFootnote 30 “accusations of serious criminality, especially alleged sexual wrongdoing, are often their own convictions in the court of public opinion”. This means that the public assumes that an allegation of a sexual wrongdoing must be true, and therefore the public jumps to the conclusion that once a person is accused of a sexual offence(s) that person will be convicted of such. This is due to the severity of the social stigma surrounding sexual wrongdoing together with the difficulties in proving the innocence of the person being accused.Footnote 31 The presumption of guilt is also nurtured by some of the aims and values embedded within the criminal justice system. For example, in 2002, the Metropolitan police stated that officers should “accept allegations made by the victim in the first instance as being truthful”.Footnote 32 This was compounded by a 2005 report that called for the institutionalisation of a “culture of belief, support and respect” regarding victims of sexual offences.Footnote 33 Finally in 2014, Her Majesty’s Inspector of Constabulary asserted “[the] presumption that a victim should always be believed should be institutionalised” and that complaints of sexual abuse have to be recorded as a crime straight away.Footnote 34 If rather than testing the evidence with an open mind the accuser is to be automatically and unconditionally believed then the accused may potentially be presumed to be guilty of the alleged offence. This illustrates that the presumption of guilt regarding individuals suspected of a sexual offence is a real problem, and this can persist despite the lack of judicial conviction either pre trial, where no prosecution subsequently takes place, or even where a trial does take place and a defendant is found not guilty. In the current climate of (rightly) supporting and empowering victims it can seem that even “questioning the veracity of allegations can be seen as a betrayal of the victim”.Footnote 35 As research into the voice of the victim has gained rightful and necessary tractionFootnote 36 there has been a cultural shift inside and outside of the criminal justice system towards an automatic belief of accusers of abuse. While it is extremely important to continue to empower victims to speak up about their experiences, the engendered “moral imperative not to ‘let down another victim’”Footnote 37 is a threat to the impartiality of the courtroom, and the premise of innocent until proven guilty on which the judicial system operates. This is significant as the consequences of the presumption of guilt can be severe, affecting not only the judicial sentencing of the accused but also the moral or social sentence that many defendants find themselves labouring under even in the absence of formal prosecution.

The presumption of guilt and a climate of unquestioning belief in accusers’ narratives are not confined to England, Wales, and the criminal justice system. KipnisFootnote 38 for example in her book discusses a collective culture of rape and sexual paranoia on American campuses and subsequent “officially sanctioned hysteria”.Footnote 39 In a newspaper interview about her book she also states that inside and outside of American campuses there is the idea that sex is “inherently injurious” and this “ethos of injury creates injury. It’s self-fulfilling”.Footnote 40 KipnisFootnote 41 comments on how future generations will retrospectively look back at this situation and “wonder how supposedly rational people could have succumbed so easily to collective paranoia” and “how the federal government got into the moral panic business, tossing constitutional rights out of the window in an ill-conceived effort to protect women students from a rapidly growing catalogue of bogeymen”.

KipnisFootnote 42 found herself the subject of a student protest, an official complaint, and a 72 day institutional investigation as a result of writing an essay concerned with sexual paranoia on campus. Despite the denial of a lawyer and being able to record her sessions with the investigators, and learning the charges against her when she was sat in from of them, thus having no time to prepare, she fought and won the case. As a result of this Kipnis decided to write a whistle-blowing essay on her experience. In so doing she discovered a new norm on contemporary American campuses of “rampant accusation” “especially when it comes to sex”.Footnote 43 She also unearthed a hidden world of “tales of overblown charges, capricious verdicts, and frightening bureaucratic excess” together with “accused professors and students, rigged investigations, closed-door hearings” and investigating officers running amok.Footnote 44 Kipnis acknowledges that on campus sexual assault is a reality and that everyone shares the goal of addressing this. However, she fears that the prioritisation of stories concerned with female endangerment over female agency “are the last thing in the world that’s going to reduce sexual assault”.Footnote 45 In fact this standpoint is at the heart of Kipnis’s central argument.

In reality sex is “muddled” and “confusing”.Footnote 46 KipnisFootnote 47 highlights the messiness and complexities of sexual realities and this of course muddies the waters regarding sexual consent and accusations of sexual misconduct. ‘Consent’ is a concept that is “cloudy” and “subject to change”.Footnote 48 Kipnis comments that, “[y]ears later, sex that was consensual can apparently become non-consensual. I think that is quite shocking and it should be known”.Footnote 49 Kipnis is concerned that amidst the reality of sexual messiness and complexity, a focus on women’s vulnerability and endangerment, together with a protectionist and paternalistic agenda may result in accusations of sexual offences or sexual misconduct being alleged as a result of poor sexual choices, “awkward sexual experiences or sexual ambivalences, and to adjudicate relationship disputes post-breakup”. Indeed she contends that, “campus administrators are allowing it”.Footnote 50 In a climate of rampant allegation and a presumption of guilt this is a dangerous and harmful situation as accused individuals (professors or students) may be left with a tarnished reputation at best, and expulsion from campus with no future prospects at worse. Furthermore, confusion around the issue will only serve to obfuscate and confuse genuine victims of sexual abuse and assault, those individuals who in fact, the system exists to protect and support.

Just as the presumption of guilt has become a cultural imperative, it has had practical applications within the courtroom. Studies show clearly that where a presumption of guilt exists, it affects what a juror perceives about the accused and the accuser, and becomes subject to a behavioural confirmation bias in which aspects of speech, body language and characteristics influence jurors’ thinking.Footnote 51 A cultural or ‘moral imperative’Footnote 52 to believe the accuser of sexual misconduct or abuse can lead to a ‘generic prejudice’ against that category of offender, that is, a general belief about those accused of similar crime with concurrent biases.Footnote 53 These biases may mean that the testimony of the accused is viewed less favourably than the testimony of the accuser—again, leading to problems in how the victim voice can adequately be expressed without undue influence on those making decisions on guilt. Likewise, studies show that media portrayal of victims (whether related to a specific case or to similar cases) can also affect jury decision-making. Where victims are portrayed in a generally positive light—using adjectives such as ‘kind’ or ‘likeable’ jurors are significantly more likely to find the accused guilty.Footnote 54 There is of course, research that clearly suggests that these cognitive biases operate within the minds of jurors in the other direction—that is, that some juror may hold victim blaming attitudes, or beliefs that are influenced by rape myths.Footnote 55 However, in accepting that cognitive bias exists, consideration must be given to the impact of this bias, and how this may be influenced by the emerging change of focus to a “culture of belief, support and respect” regarding victims of sexual offences.Footnote 56

The upholding of the principle of the presumption of innocence is not a panacea to miscarriages of justice and wrongful convictions. Indeed, in reality it may act “against the interests of those who might be innocent at every stage of the criminal justice process”.Footnote 57 This is because not only does this ‘presumption’ make suspects and defendants passive, it also means that pressure is put on the police and prosecution “to chip away at the presumed innocent status and construct cases that might obtain a conviction, rendering innocent victims vulnerable to wrongful convictions”.Footnote 58 However, whilst in practice the presumption of innocence may be problematic, it remains one of the most important principles and potential safeguards with regard to suspects and defendants of sexual offending. This is especially so within a criminal justice system where jurors are anxious not to “let down another victim”.Footnote 59

The Victim Personal Statement

In most common law countries, individuals who report a crime to the police have the opportunity to have some input into the criminal process by way of the provision of impact evidence on their part.Footnote 60 In England and Wales this impact evidence takes the form of a victim personal statement (VPS). Elsewhere this is known as a victim impact statement (VIS).Footnote 61 In England and Wales the police take the VPS and this is included in the prosecution papers. The ‘victim’ is offered the opportunity to make a VPS in their first contact with the police and they can make it anytime up to the sentence. The ‘victim’ may not change it but they can add to it and they can make more than one VPS. Everyone involved in the case should read the VPS. Since 2013, if the court permits (which they usually do) ‘victims’ can have their VPS heard in court once the defendant has pleaded or been found guilty. This is in order to ensure that all parties are made aware of the impact of crime on the ‘victim’.

There are many problems inherent within the VPS that undermine the presumption of innocence regarding the defendant, not least that the attention is fundamentally shifted from the burden of proof on the part of the prosecution, to the harm experienced by the victim.Footnote 62 The VPS takes for granted that there is a ‘victim’ and ‘offender’ before this has been established procedurally by a guilty verdict. DaviesFootnote 63 a former senior crown prosecutor observes “[w]e know the person giving evidence is complaining; we do not know whether she is a ‘victim’ until she has given her evidence and been through cross-examination and the defendant has given his own account of what happened”. The VPS is taken at a stage in the process where there is an accuser and an accused. Yet the accuser is treated like an established crime victim in that they can: ask for additional support (particularly when giving evidence); state the impact of the ‘crime’ on them; articulate fears regarding the ‘offender’ getting bail; highlight potential motivations for the ‘crime’ with regard to racial hostility, faith, cultural background and disability, and state if they wish to apply for compensation and protective measures if the case goes to court. The accused is assumed to be guilty as within the VPS they are referred to and treated as the ‘offender’, from the viewpoint of the ‘victim’ and in reference to the criminal justice process.

This is especially problematic in England and Wales as the influence of the VPS goes beyond impact evidence during the sentencing process. Victim impact schemes in other common law jurisdictions confine the use of VIS to the sentencing process. But in England and Wales “the VPS is meant to be used at various stages of the criminal justice process, including during the decision by the CPS whether or not to prosecute, the decision to grant bail and so on”.Footnote 64 Thus the VPS is used in the criminal justice system decision-making process from arrest through to the prosecution process before the legal establishment of a victim and offender. While it is extremely important to allow victims to participate in the criminal justice process, the content of the VPS or the VIS is more than a simple statement of experiences or facts. As suggested above, it cements for the court the victim/offender relationship of the two individuals in court—a far stronger scenario for a juror struggling to process facts and evidence than an ‘accuser’ and ‘defendant’. The VIS is a “symbolically charged narrative”Footnote 65 which provokes an empathic and emotional response. For a juror exposed to such a narrative, the presumption of innocence of the defendant may feel akin to a denial of the content of the victim testimony.

For all these reasons, the undermining of the principle of ‘innocent until proven guilty’ in the VPS impacts on all defendants whose accuser takes up this opportunity. But this is especially significant for individuals accused of a sexual offence(s) as the VPS establishment of a ‘victim’, ‘offender’, ‘crime’, ‘victimisation’ and motivation for the offence, is potentially compounded by the presumption of guilt in cases of sex offending. Being believed when reporting a sexual offence is necessary and long overdue, and concerns regarding securing justice for victims of sexual offences have rightly been aired.Footnote 66 However, it is also right to articulate and air concerns about the potential and real ramifications for criminal injustice with regard to those accused of a sexual offence(s). This is especially so, as “definitively proving innocence in a disputed sex case is often impossible”.Footnote 67 The accuser faces many obstacles and disadvantages when trying secure justice in sex cases, but so too do the accused. These are exacerbated by the pressures on juries to believe the accuser, the presumptions embedded in the VPS, and the presumption of guilt with regard to those accused of a sexual offence(s). We therefore challenge the assumption that the ‘scales of justice’ are massively tipped in favour of the accused.Footnote 68 We argue that there is a real possibility that in cases concerned with allegations of sexual offences that in reality the opposite is true.

Conclusions

It is better that ten guilty persons escape than that one suffer.Footnote 69

The concern with the victim voice and the rightful endeavour to achieve justice for victims needs also to be applied to those who are accused—and who in some cases may not actually be guilty. This is important within and without the criminal justice system as in these cases, individuals who are accused of sexual misconduct may be subject to a moral or social (or indeed legal) conviction based entirely on a false allegation. The ‘former’ accused individual is then left without support to try and cope, along with their families, with the fall-out of the impact of the social presumption of guilt on home life, employment, housing and so forth. Hoyle et al.Footnote 70 argue that there is a justification for a victimological perspective on the “predicament of the falsely accused” and how the phenomenon of moral and social conviction impacts those who have been found by the judiciary to be innocent. This can be extended to falsely accused individuals in other contexts such as on University campuses and in other professional occupations were individuals are in a position of trust.

The very presumption of innocence exists (in principle at least) to avoid the “deep injustice and substantial moral harm” of the wrongful conviction of an innocent person.Footnote 71 Safeguards within the criminal justice system for those who have been unjustly accused should not be removed, yet over time “governments have sought to load the dice against defendants in sex cases”.Footnote 72 The criminal justice system in England and Wales generally is “in a state of permanent crisis” and “inefficiency has become endemic”.Footnote 73 Also “the criminal justice pendulum has swung dramatically in the direction of victims’ rights and away from the rights of defendants” and the dramatic cuts in legal aid mean that the legal representation of many defendants is incompetent.Footnote 74 Furthermore there is “no adequate safety net” as “[t]he Court of Appeal continues to fail to get to grips with miscarriages of justice”.Footnote 75 In addition, for individuals enduring a miscarriage of justice or wrongful conviction, the Criminal Cases Review Commission is overwhelmed, chronically underfunded and ineffective and it does not do what it was set up to do—namely act as the “first state-funded miscarriage of justice watchdog”.Footnote 76 Given this and the current climate regarding the revelations and ramifications of public cases and campaigns regarding sexual offences the safeguard of the presumption of innocence must be upheld in both principle and practice. The focus should not be one of belief with regard to the accuser, but one where allegations of crime including sexual offences are taken seriously. Both accusers and accused should be subjected to a thorough, civilised investigation in which all relevant information and evidence claimed to indicate guilt is disclosed and subjected to critical interrogation.Footnote 77 In light of this, if there is a case to answer, the accused should be given a fair hearing from start to finish. This includes being guided by the principle of innocent until proven guilty in the pre-trial and criminal trial stages. Seeking to safeguard the innocence of the accused does not in any way negate the experiences of harm caused to the victim, or imply that all accusers are insincere. Instead, this safeguard recognises that the harms may be severe, but there is also the small chance that in some cases they did not occur, and importantly, that where they did occur that the accused person may not be the perpetrator of those harms. The punishment of an innocent person (by the criminal justice system or any other regulatory body) victimises that person and in the criminal justice context, it results in a miscarriage of justice and the wrongful conviction of individuals’ accused of sexual offending. Finally and crucially, the punishment of an innocent person is of no benefit to victims or society, as such a wrongful conviction potentially leaves the actual perpetrator at large.