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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> O v R. [2019] EWCA Crim 1389 (31 July 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2019/1389.html Cite as: [2019] EWCA Crim 1389 |
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ON APPEAL FROM LEEDS CROWN COURT
HHJ COLLIER QC
T20087475
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE FRASER
and
SIR DAVID FOSKETT
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O |
Applicant/ Appellant |
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- and – |
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The Queen |
Respondent |
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Mr Andrew Johnson (instructed by The Crown Prosecution Service) for the Crown
Hearing date: 16th May
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Crown Copyright ©
Thirlwall LJ:
"For the purposes of an appeal, or an application for leave to appeal, under this Part of this Act the Court of Appeal may, if they think it necessary or expedient in the interests of justice –
… (c) receive any evidence which was not adduced in the proceedings from which the appeal lies."
1. The First Tier Tribunal decision which upheld her application for asylum. This is date 10 November 2009;
2. The psychiatric report of Professor Katona which she relied on in her asylum appeal. This is dated 11 October 2009;
3. The report of an expert into trafficking by Bisi Olateru-Olagbebi also relied upon in her asylum appeal. This is dated 19 October 2009;
4. Her statement of 26 October 2009 served in respect of her asylum appeal;
5. Two further witness statements from her, dated 30 January 2018 and 12 March 2019.
The Facts
The law
"Rantsev v Cyprus and Russia (Application 25965/04, [2010] ECHR 22 ) in the European Court of Human Rights, demonstrates that trafficking may fall within the scope of the prohibition on servitude contained in Article 4 of the ECHR. But the principal current international instrument, which contains specific and positive obligations upon States, is the 2005 Council of Europe Treaty. Its provisions, agreed between States, cover (1) steps to prevent and combat trafficking, (2) measures to protect the rights of victims and assist them and (3) the promotion of international co-operation. The United Kingdom is bound by this treaty. At the time of R v O [2008] EWCA Crim 2835, it had signed but not ratified the treaty and was thus subject to the attenuated obligation under Article 18 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties to refrain from acts which would defeat its object and purpose."
"… Victims of human trafficking may commit offences whilst they are being coerced by another; when reviewing such a case, it may come to the notice of the prosecutor that the suspect is a "credible" trafficked victim. For these purposes, credible means that the investigating officers have reason to believe that the person has been trafficked. In these circumstances prosecutors must consider whether the public interest is best served in continuing the prosecution in respect of the offence…"
"i) The obligation under Article 26 of the Council of Europe Convention is given effect in England and Wales through (1) the common law defences of duress and necessity or (2) guidance for prosecutors on the exercise of the discretion to prosecute (which has been revised from time to time) or (3) the power of the court to stay a prosecution for abuse of process (see R v M(L), B(M) and G(D), 2010 at paragraphs 7-12)
ii) In a case where (a) there was reason to believe the defendant who had committed an offence had been trafficked for the purpose of exploitation, (b) there was no credible common law defence of duress or necessity but (c) there was evidence the offence was committed as a result of compulsion arising from trafficking, the prosecutor has to consider whether it is in the public interest to prosecute. (See: R v M(L), B(M) and G(D), 2010 at paragraph 10.)
iii) The court's power to stay is a power to ensure that the State complied with its international obligations and properly applied its mind to the possibility of not imposing penalties on victims. If proper consideration had not been given, then a stay should be granted, but where proper consideration had been given, the court should not substitute its own judgment for that of the prosecutor (see R v M(L), B(M) and G(D), 2010) at paragraph 19).
iv) Where this court concludes that the trial court would have stayed the indictment had an application been made, the proper course is to quash the conviction, (see R v M(L), B(M) and G(D), 2010) at paragraph 17).
v) The obligation under Article 26 does not require a blanket immunity from prosecution for victims of trafficking. Various factors should be taken into account in deciding whether to prosecute; if there is no reasonable nexus of connection between the offence and the trafficking, generally a prosecution should proceed. If some nexus remained, then prosecution would depend on various factors including the gravity of the offence, the degree of continuing compulsion and the alternatives reasonably available to the defendant. Each case was fact specific. (See R v M(L), B(M) and G(D), 2010 at paragraph 13-14).
vi) The distinct question for decision in the case of a trafficked defendant is the extent to which the offences with which he is charged (or of which he has been found guilty) are integral to or consequent on the exploitation of which the person was a victim (see R v L(C), N, N & T, 2013, at paragraph 33). The court made clear such a decision is a fact sensitive one:
"We cannot be prescriptive. In some cases the facts will indeed show that he was under levels of compulsion which mean that, in reality, culpability was extinguished. If so, when such cases are prosecuted, an abuse of process submission is likely to succeed. That is the test we have applied in these appeals. In other cases, more likely in the case of a defendant who is no longer a child, culpability may be diminished but nevertheless be significant. For these individuals prosecution may well be appropriate, with due allowance to be made in the sentencing decision for their diminished culpability. In yet other cases, the fact that the defendant was a victim of trafficking will provide no more than a colourable excuse for criminality which is unconnected to and does not arise from their victimisation. In such cases an abuse of process submission would fail."
vii) The reason why the criminality or culpability of a trafficked person is diminished or extinguished does not result merely from age but in circumstances where there has been no realistic alternative available to the person but to comply with the dominant force of another individual or group of individuals (see R v L(C), N, N & T, 2013 at paragraph 13).
viii) The decision of the competent authority as to whether a person had been trafficked for the purposes of exploitation is not binding on the court but, unless there was evidence to contradict it or significant evidence that had not been considered, it is likely that the criminal courts will abide by the decision (see R v L(C), N, N & T, 2013 at paragraph 28)."
Analysis
1. Is there reason to believe that the applicant has been trafficked?
2. Is there evidence that the offences were committed as a result of compulsion arising from trafficking? Put another way, is there sufficient nexus between the trafficking and the offending? Whichever way it is put, does it extinguish culpability?
3. Assuming the answer to each of those questions is yes, did the prosecutor consider whether it was in the public interest to prosecute, in accordance with the 2007 guidance?
- see R v M(L), B(M) (above)
We then consider two further questions, those of exceptional leave and the required extension of time.
1. Is there reason to believe the applicant has been trafficked?
2. Is there a sufficient nexus between the crime committed and the trafficking?
3. Did the prosecutor consider whether it was in the public interest to prosecute at the time, in accordance with the 2007 guidance?
4. Would the refusal of leave cause substantial injustice?
5. Extension of time required