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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> GB v R. [2020] EWCA Crim 2 (16 January 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2020/2.html Cite as: [2020] EWCA Crim 2 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT LEWES
HHJ Brown DL
T20087249
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE SWEENEY
and
MRS JUSTICE JEFFORD
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GB |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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R |
Respondent |
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Benjamin Douglas-Jones QC and Andrew Johnson (instructed by Crown Prosecution Appeals Unit) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 22 October 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Dame Victoria Sharp P.
Introduction
The background facts
Fresh evidence and the status of the appellant
The arguments for the parties
The legal framework
"61. …The 2013 Guidance provides a detailed and structured approach, in clear contrast to the embryonic (though valuable) observations in the 2007 Guidance.
62. The 2013 Guidance highlights that prosecutors should be alert to the indicators of trafficking. It underlines the prosecutor's obligations in terms of Art. 4, ECHR, Art. 26 of ECAT and Art. 8 of the Directive. It calls for a "three-stage approach" to the prosecution decision:
"In addition to applying the Full Code Test in the Code for Crown Prosecutors, prosecutors should adopt the following three stage assessment:
(1) is there a reason to believe that the person has been trafficked? if so,
(2) if there is clear evidence of a credible common law defence of duress, the case should be discontinued on evidential grounds; but
(3) even where there is not clear evidence of duress, but the offence has been committed as a result of compulsion arising from trafficking, prosecutors should consider the public interest in proceeding to prosecute."
63. …The 2013 Guidance continues by working its way through the three-stage approach. With regard to compulsion falling short of duress, it says this:
"The means of trafficking used in an individual case may not be sufficient to give rise to a defence of duress, but how the person was trafficked will be relevant when considering whether the public interest is met in deciding to prosecute or proceed with a prosecution.
In assessing whether the victim was compelled to commit the offence, prosecutors should consider whether:
(1) the offence committed was a direct consequence of, or in the course of trafficking and(2) whether the criminality is significantly diminished or effectively extinguished because no realistic alternative was available but to comply with the dominant force of another.
Where a victim has been compelled to commit the offence, but not to a degree where duress is made out, it will generally not be in the public interest to prosecute unless the offence is so serious or there are other aggravating factors. "
64. Pulling the threads together and considering substance rather than form, we are entirely satisfied that this is a change of law case – even putting to one side the changes introduced by the 2015 Act, which are not relevant here. First, there has been a material change in the legal recognition of the rights of VOTs between 2007 and now. In 2007, whatever the position ought to have been, there was only very limited awareness of such rights. Secondly, the detailed provisions of Art. 26 of ECAT and Art. 8 of the Directive were not in force in this jurisdiction in 2007. Thirdly, to the extent that CPS Guidance is relevant, the contrast between the 2007 and 2013 Guidance is stark. What has emerged is more than simply a development in the existing law relating to VOTs. It could not seriously be argued that on the law and practice as understood in 2007, it was an abuse of process for the prosecution of the Applicant to proceed. Her application (and any appeal) thus depend on a change in law. It follows that to obtain exceptional leave, it must be shown that to refuse leave would occasion substantial injustice".
"For our part, this question can be taken shortly. If but only if, the Applicant can demonstrate an arguable case as to the unsafety of the conviction,… we would not preclude the Applicant from challenging the conviction. The reason is that, as is not or not seriously in dispute, the Applicant's conviction and sentence to a term of seven years imprisonment impacts on her immigration status. As a refugee, she has been granted Leave to Remain in the UK for 5 years running until late 2020. At that point in time, the Applicant's refugee status and any grant of further Leave to Remain would be at risk by reason of her conviction and sentence of imprisonment for at least 4 years: see Section 32 of the UK Borders Act 2007, and paragraphs 338A, 339AC and 339R of the Immigration Rules. In our judgment, if the Applicant is otherwise capable of demonstrating an arguable case as to the unsafety of her conviction, she ought not to fail at the hurdle of obtaining exceptional leave. The risk to her immigration status would constitute a substantial injustice if, in such circumstances, she was precluded from challenging her conviction by reason of the requirement to obtain exceptional leave. For completeness, the facts of the present case are clearly distinguishable from those pertaining in R v Ordu [2017] EWCA Crim 4; [2017] 1 Cr App R 21, where the quashing of the conviction would have had no practical consequences. Finally, if the Applicant is otherwise able to obtain leave to appeal, then (on balance) we would be satisfied that, in all the circumstances, there has been a sufficient explanation of the delay to warrant an EOT".
"ISSUE III: SAFETY OF THE CONVICTION
75. The legal framework: The starting point is to clear the decks. First, as is plain, this is a case where there was no credible common law defence of duress (or necessity). Secondly, this is not a case concerning a defendant under 18 years of age. Thirdly, the defence provided by s.45 of the 2015 Act is inapplicable. Fourthly, this is a case where the FTT and CA have concluded that the Applicant is a VOT [victim of trafficking].
76. Against this background, we venture to summarise below the relevant principles (for present purposes) in the light of the decisions and guidance of this Court in R v M(L) and others [2010] EWCA Crim 2327; [2011] 1 Cr App R 12; R v N(A) and others [2012] EWCA Crim 189; [2012] 1 Cr App R 35; R v L(C) and others [2013] EWCA Crim 991; [2013] 2 Cr App R 23; R v Joseph (Verna) and others [2017] EWCA Crim 36; 2017 1 Cr App R 33.
i) Neither Art. 26 of ECAT nor Art. 8 of the Directive confers a blanket immunity from prosecution on VOTs.
ii) Instead, the UK's international obligations require the careful and fact sensitive exercise by prosecutors of their discretion as to whether it is in the public interest to prosecute a VOT. That discretion is vested in the prosecutor, not the Court.
iii) The decisions of the FTT and CA as to whether an individual is a VOT do not bind prosecutors or the Court but will be respected (subject to submissions as to their basis or limitations) unless there is a good reason not to follow them.
iv) There is no closed list of factors bearing on the prosecutor's discretion to proceed against a VOT. Generalisation is best avoided. That said, factors obviously impacting on the discretion to prosecute go to the nexus between the crime committed by the defendant and the trafficking. If there is no reasonable nexus between the offence and the trafficking then, generally, there is no reason why (on trafficking grounds) the prosecution should not proceed. If there is a nexus, in some cases the levels of compulsion will be such that it will not be in the public interest for the prosecution to proceed. In other cases, it will be necessary to consider whether the compulsion was continuing and what, if any, reasonable alternatives were available to the VOT. There will be cases where a decision to prosecute will be justified but due allowance can be made for mitigating factors at the sentencing stage. The matter was most helpfully summarised by Lord Judge CJ, in LC, at [33], as follows:
" …the distinct question for decision, once it is found that the defendant is a victim of trafficking 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 he was the victim. 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…… In other cases….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 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."
v) As always, the question for this Court goes to the safety of the conviction. However, in the present context, that inquiry translates into a question of whether in the light of the law as it now is (this being a rare change in law case) and the facts now known as to the Applicant (having regard to the admission of fresh evidence) the trial court should have stayed the proceedings as an abuse of process had an application been made. This question can be formulated indistinguishably in one of two ways which emerge from the authorities: was this a case where either: (1) the dominant force of compulsion, in the context of a very serious offence, was sufficient to reduce the Applicant's criminality or culpability to or below a point where it was not in the Public Interest for her to be prosecuted? or (2) the Applicant would or might well not have been prosecuted in the Public Interest? If yes, then the proper course would be to quash the conviction. As explained in Joseph (Verna) at [20 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".
Discussion
Note 1 Immigration Rule 322(1C)(ii) is in these terms: “Grounds on which leave to remain and variation of leave to enter or remain in the United Kingdom are to be refused…(1C) where the person is seeking indefinite leave to enter or remain:…1. (ii) they have been convicted of an offence for which they have been sentenced to imprisonment for at least 12 months but less than 4 years, unless a period of 15 years has passed since the end of the sentence;…”
[Back] Note 2 This provides that upon a reference, the Court of Appeal, Criminal Division may dismiss an appeal against conviction if: “the only ground for allowing it would be that there has been a development in the law since the date of the conviction, and…if…the reference had not been made, but…the Appellant had made and had been entitled to make an application for an extension of time within which to seek leave to appeal on the ground of the development of the law, the Court would not think it appropriate to grant the application by exercising the power conferred by section 18(3) [to extend time]
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