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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> A v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2020] EWCA Civ 858 (09 July 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2020/858.html Cite as: [2020] EWCA Civ 858 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE UPPER TRIBUNAL
(IMMIGRATION AND ASYLUM CHAMBER)
The Hon Mr Justice Morris and
Deputy Upper Tribunal Judge Chamberlain
(Appeal Number: DA/00253/2015)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Vice President of the Court of Appeal, Criminal Division)
LADY JUSTICE NICOLA DAVIES
and
SIR STEPHEN RICHARDS
____________________
A |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Secretary of State for the Home Department |
Respondent |
____________________
David Blundell QC and Will Hays (instructed by the Government Legal Department) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 9-10 June 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Sir Stephen Richards :
Background
(1) Ground 1 relates exclusively to issues of procedural fairness in respect of confidential matters and is discussed in the closed judgment alone.
(2) Ground 2 contends that the UT's approach to the question whether A was the head of the OCG was flawed and that its conclusion on that issue was irrational. The arguments relate mainly to the UT's analysis in the Main Decision and to that extent can be considered in this open judgment.
(3) Ground 3 contends that the UT erred in concluding that the requirements of regulation 21(5) of the 2006 Regulations were satisfied on the basis of a limited finding that A had the "ability" to revive the OCG. The issue arises out of the Main Decision and can be considered in this open judgment.
The reasoning in the Main Decision
"12. We have before us the documentary evidence that was before the FTT. We have not heard further oral evidence. With one exception … the evidence before us is the same as the evidence that was before the FTT ….
13. It is common ground that whilst we are not bound by the findings of fact made by the FTT, where, as here, the FTT has heard the oral evidence and reached conclusions, we can and should accept those findings, unless there is good reason not to do so ….
14. In general our approach on this re-making is, in principle and ultimately, to make our own findings. Nevertheless we will adopt the FTT's findings – particularly findings of primary fact – unless there is good reason not to do so. Of course, since we have already concluded that the FTT erred in law in certain important respects, and in particular in relation to its ultimate findings of fact, we make our own findings, both on those matters, and in relation to matters relevant to those findings."
(1) In a recorded conversation in January 2014, A and B discussed the possibility of a listening device having been installed in B's car. This was said to be highly significant: "[w]hilst this may not be direct and clear evidence of the Appellant operating as the head of an OCG, the fact that they were discussing such a listening device, and that that came as no surprise to them, are further facts which are consistent with, and supportive of, such a conclusion" (§25).
(2) At a meeting with D in January 2014, in the presence of B and others, A gave D a "severe roasting" and showed that he had given instructions to others not to harm D. In the UT's view, "[t]his is supportive of the conclusion that the Appellant was a man with considerable power over others and, whilst not of itself conclusive as to his position, is consistent with him being the head of the OCG and exercising his power as such over D" (§29).
(3) There was evidence that A was seeking to trace D and find a way to "encounter him" after D had fled in March 2014. The UT said that "[t]he steps taken to trace D, in the context of the extreme verbal intimidation and the enlisting of the support of unsavoury characters, including B … supports a finding that the Appellant was a man with very substantial power, and is consistent with him acting as the head of the OCG" (§30).
(4) In a recorded conversation with B in February 2014, A's sister-in-law referred without distinction to the activities of A and of AB3, who had been heavily involved in organised crime and was the head of the OCG before his arrest for offences for which he was then serving a long sentence of imprisonment. The UT said that it was to be inferred that the sister-in-law believed that A had been involved in criminal activities of the same kind as AB3 and that those were connected with organised crime and the OCG and that they arose from his position as head of the OCG; and that "[t]his is a further finding which, taken with others, is supportive of the conclusion that the Appellant was at the time, after AB3 had been imprisoned, the head of the OCG" (§32).
(5) In relation to a recorded conversation between B and E in February 2014, the UT found that the conversation demonstrated that A and B were united in an enterprise of some description, that B's description of A demonstrated that A was a superior to B, that A and AB1 (who had been the head of the OCG) were being discussed in one and the same context of a power struggle, and that A had no answer to the significance of the conversation. It was clear evidence supporting a link between A and the OCG. The UT said that "this finding provides the strongest support that the Appellant was head of the OCG" (§37).
(6) There was a recorded conversation between A and B in February 2014 in which A said he had managed to distance himself from "centralisation". The UT found that "it is more likely than not that in this conversation, the Appellant was explaining his approach to running an organisation, how he directed others and that amongst those others he was directing was B and how, in line with that likely approach, he distanced himself to avoid detection" (§40).
(7) In a recorded conversation between B and C in March 2014 the two men appeared to be talking about the remuneration they received from someone called "Abi". The UT found that on the balance of probabilities they were talking about A and referring to him as 'Abi', and that the conversation "provides further support for the existence of an 'organisation' and … one in which the Appellant is high in the hierarchy" (§44). In a second recorded conversation in March 2014 between B and C, B talked about a previous conversation between himself and D in terms which the UT found to be clear evidence of B taking instruction from Abi and acknowledging that Abi was his superior; and the reference to Abi was again found on the balance of probabilities to be a reference to A. Accordingly, this was found to be "evidence of the Appellant being superior to B in the hierarchy" (§48-49).
(8) There were two recorded conversations between B and A in May 2014, in B's armoured car, in which B passed on news to A of a shooting at Z Road. The UT found that the proper interpretation of the conversations was that A gave B permission for retaliatory action to be taken against those involved. The fact that it was permission, and not an order, to retaliate did not of itself indicate that A could not have been acting as head of an OCG. Further, the entirety of the conversations and their context established that A was familiar with weapons and with people who carry weapons and was giving advice about what should be done with weapons. The passing on of information to him was deliberate. That this was done in the circumstances "is evidence supporting the Appellant's position as the head of an OCG" (§55).
(9) In its conclusion on A's relationship with B, the UT referred to detailed factual findings of the FTT as strong evidence that not only did B act subserviently to A in a troubling and close relationship with him, but further that B was indeed A's subordinate within an OCG. Those findings called for a response but A had not put forward any alternative explanation for his close association and involvement with B. "We find that B, a violent career criminal and drug dealer, was the Appellant's subordinate. This supports the conclusion that the Appellant was head of the OCG" (§73).
(10) The UT was not satisfied on the balance of probabilities that A had hidden his wealth, though it said that his lack of transparency on the issue and his inability to explain things did provide some limited support for the Secretary of State's case (§63). In its conclusions, however, it said that this matter did not provide direct evidence that A was head of the OCG but was "consistent with" such a finding (§78).
(11) Prison visits to A when he was on remand in custody were found to be further evidence of A having close associations with a substantial number of people with criminal records, some of whom had been in involved in very serious crime. Whilst this was not of itself conclusive evidence of the Appellant's position as head of the OCG, the UT said that "it is entirely consistent with the other strands of evidence which support that conclusion" (§75).
Ground 2
"We are astute to the need to avoid speculation. If the material renders itself capable of more than one interpretation we should only draw one adverse to the appellant if on the balance of probabilities there is no other reasonable explanation on the material before us".
Mr Jones reminded us more generally of what are now well established principles concerning the application of the civil standard of proof on the balance of probabilities. He submitted that the UT in this case failed to apply a sufficiently rigorous approach. It engaged in impermissible speculation and made findings adverse to A where another reasonable explanation was available. In elaborate submissions, Mr Jones made numerous specific criticisms of the individual strands in the UT's reasoning and advanced a number of considerations that in his submission the UT failed to factor into its overall assessment. He submitted in summary that the UT erred in its approach to the evidence, failed to have regard to relevant considerations and reached a conclusion that was not reasonably open to it.
Ground 3
"As Mr O'Callaghan [counsel appearing at the relevant time for A] accepted in argument, the issue for us is the question of 'risk' to public policy and public security at the time that we re-make the decision and that risk will be present, not only if the Appellant is head of the OCG as it exists, but also if he has the ability to revive it."
Conclusion
Lady Justice Nicola Davies :
Lord Justice Fulford :