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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Singh, R v [2003] EWCA Crim 3712 (18 December 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2003/3712.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Crim 3712 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT LEICESTER
HIS HONOUR JUDGE DE MILLE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR. JUSTICE GRIGSON
and
MR. JUSTICE RODERICK EVANS
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REGINA |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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GULBIR RANA SINGH |
Respondent |
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Mr. Jonathan Gosling and Mr. Timothy Hannam (instructed by Commissioners of Customs and Excise) for the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Auld :
The Facts
" conspired together and with persons unknown, knowing or having reasonable grounds to suspect that certain property, namely banknotes, was, or in whole or in part directly or indirectly represented, another person's proceeds of drugs trafficking and/or criminal conduct, to convert or transfer or remove from the jurisdiction that property for the purpose of assisting any person to avoid prosecution for a drug trafficking offence and/or for an offence to which Part IV of the Criminal Justice Act 1988 applies, or for the purpose of avoiding the making or enforcement of a confiscation order, in contravention of the Drug Trafficking Act 1994 and/or the Criminal Justice Act 1988." [The Court's emphases]
As we see it, the issue for the jury was whether the prosecution had proved that there was an agreement to which the appellant was a party to launder money illicitly obtained, with the intention of assisting someone to avoid a prosecution for drug trafficking or other criminal offence or, in the event of conviction, a confiscation order.
The Trial
Grounds of Appeal
Duplicity and/or uncertainty of the indictment
" if a person agrees with any other person or persons that a course of conduct shall be pursued which, if the agreement is carried out in accordance with their intentions, either
"(a) will necessarily amount to or involve the commission of any offence or offences by one or more of the parties to the agreement,
he is guilty of conspiracy to commit the offence or any offences in question." [the Court's emphases]
The wording of that provision clearly contemplates the possibility of a statutory conspiracy to undertake a course of conduct that may result in the commission of one or more offences. Sections 3 and 4 are to like effect, section 3 making provision relating the penalty in such a conspiracy "to the gravity of the offence or offences in question", and section 4 providing a restriction on the institution of proceedings for conspiracy "to commit any offence or offences".
"conspiracy to contravene section 49(2) of the Drug Trafficking Act 1994 alternatively section 93C(2) of the Criminal Justice Act 1988, contrary to section 1(1) of the Criminal Law Act 1977".
May LJ, giving the judgment of the Court, put beyond doubt in the following passages that such an indictment was not bad for duplicity or, implicitly, uncertainty:
"25. Section 1 of the 1977 Act creates the statutory offence of conspiracy. The essence of the offence is an agreement between two or more persons to pursue a course of conduct. The agreed course of conduct has to have the nature which the section requires, that is it has to be such as will necessarily amount to or involve the commission of an offence or offences by one or more of the parties to the agreement. Subject to that. the essence of the offence is the making of the agreement ..., not any subsequent giving effect to the course of conduct agreed, it is therefore necessary to distinguish between the offence which constitutes the statutory offence ( the "Conspiracy Offence") and the offence or offences which the agreement contemplates ( the "Agreed Offence or Offences").
26. The terms of section 1 show that there can be an agreement constituting a Conspiracy Offence where the agreed course of conduct, if it is carried out in accordance with the conspirators' intentions, will necessarily amount to or involve the commission by one or more of the conspirators of more than one Agreed Offence. A count in an indictment charging such a Conspiracy Offence would not be duplicitous. It would only charge one offence conspiracy.
27. an agreement to commit crime A or B is entirely possible. . such an agreement is capable of falling within section 1(1) "
"knowing or having reasonable grounds to suspect"
"Where liability for any offence may be incurred without knowledge on the part of the person committing it of any particular fact or circumstance necessary for the commission of the offence, a person shall nevertheless not be guilty of conspiracy to commit that offence by virtue of subsection (1) above unless he and at least one other party to the agreement intend or know that that fact or circumstance shall or will exist at the time when the conduct constituting the offence is to take place." [the Court's emphasis]
"The prosecution in this case quite frankly say to you that they don't know what the source of this money is, but that the inference or conclusion you have to draw from the evidence is that it must be the proceeds of some sort of crime, it must be illicit money, and that's why you have the alternatives put down either drug trafficking and/or the proceeds of crime generally. it obviously increased the wordiness, doesn't it, of the charge to have the alternatives actually spelt out? So it would be very much easier, wouldn't it, if they had been able to say that the prosecution case is that this is a conspiracy, or agreement, to launder money which had been illicitly obtained? And that's really what it all boils down to, that's what the prosecution set out to prove.
the conspiracy is to remove that property from the jurisdiction, the bank notes '[k]nowing or having reasonable grounds to suspect that certain property, namely bank notes, was or in whole or in part directly or indirectly represented another person's proceeds of drug trafficking and/or criminal conduct'. So what the prosecution case is, that they agreed that they would launder illicit money. How would they know or believe it's illicit? Well, it's a matter for the evidence, of course, for you to decide whether they must have known or believed that as part of the agreement. "
"You have to look at all the evidence as to whether the money is indeed illicit money, whether, if you're satisfied there was an agreement, whether the conspirators must have known or had reasonable grounds to suspect that it was illicit in the sense I've described, and you look at all the circumstances "
" before I deal with the details of the charge, let me say some general remarks about conspiracy. Just as it's a criminal offence here to launder money, so it is just as much a criminal offence if two or more people agree with one another to launder money, and an agreement to commit a criminal offence is what we mean by 'conspiracy' that's all conspiracy means, it's an agreement to commit an offence."
" Providing you're sure that there was an agreement with one of the named conspirators that the crime should be committed, that is should be carried out, then it doesn't matter, so far as the others are concerned, precisely what their involvement appears to be on the scale of seriousness, or precisely when he became involved."
. "
" conspired together and with persons unknown to convert or transfer or remove from the jurisdiction certain property, namely banknotes, which in whole or in part directly or indirectly represented, another person's proceeds of drug trafficking and/or criminal conduct, with the intention of assisting any person to avoid prosecution for a drug trafficking offence and/or for an offence to which Part IV of the Criminal Justice Act 1988 applies, or for the purpose of avoiding the making or enforcement of a confiscation order " etc
The purpose of money-laundering
" where large sums of money are generated by any sort of crime drug trafficking or anything else - the criminals have to somehow get rid of the money in a way that doesn't refer back to them. The way in which that is sometimes done is by what we call 'laundering' it. someone who is laundering money will be helping the criminal to get rid of that in a way that won't be traced back to the criminal, and that's what's alleged here. So where it says: 'For the purpose of assisting any person to avoid prosecution,' that obviously is the result, isn't it, if you're stopping any record being kept? Of course, that needn't be the only purpose; it's sufficient if that's one of the purposes. People who launder money do it, you may think, as well in order to get a cut out of it themselves, there will be something in it for them, which no doubt is another purpose, but you would need to be satisfied, however, that one of the purposes is as set out in here. So that too, needs to be part of the agreement doesn't it?" [the Court's emphasis]
So the prosecution have to prove those three elements really, don't they? First, the agreement involving Mr. Rana, and, secondly, what I refer to as the state of mind as to that agreement, and it would follow, you may think, from the state of mind, that the purpose is there, though that's a matter for you as well."
One conspiracy or many
" the first question there is: are you sure there was, in fact, a single agreement between those two to commit the offence in question running over the period of time. And, secondly, you would have to be sure that Mr Rana was a party to that agreement in the sense that he agreed with Mr. Dhaliwal that the crime should be committed, and at the time of that agreement he intended that they should carry it out, or that it should be carried out."
" Count 1 alleges that single conspiracy between Mr Rana, Dhaliwal and others unknown during, in effect, the whole period that you're considering. So it's the prosecution case that they had that one continuing agreement with all the various events being part of that one agreement."
Identification
"You heard Mr Krolick yesterday address you as to what he suggested is the break in the link from Wall Street through to Daychange, and . You will of course remember, as you heard it so recently, the submissions which he made.
. He said there was another customer from another bureau present at that time, and he named him as Mr. Sharif from the Day Exchange. That is, of course, evidence which the defence rely on, that it was on 16th July, and, of course, there is the record, relates only to the two dates, and the question you'll have to ask yourselves is whether you can rely on Mr. Assan's recollection that it was on that occasion that's his evidence that Mr Sharif was there."
The appellant's absence from his trial
" Unless and until the Court of Appeal has been persuaded that the verdict of the jury is unsafe, the verdict must stand. Nothing less will suffice to displace it. A mere risk that it is unsafe does suffice: the appellant has to discharge a burden of persuasion and persuade the Court of Appeal that the conviction is unsafe "