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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Dines & Ors v Director of Public Prosecutions [2020] EWCA Crim 552 (23 April 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2020/552.html Cite as: [2020] WLR(D) 242, [2020] 1 WLR 3007, [2020] WLR 3007, [2020] 2 Cr App R 15, [2020] Lloyd's Rep FC 287, [2020] EWCA Crim 552 |
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ON APPEAL FROM SOUTHWARK CROWN COURT
HER HONOUR JUDGE KORNER CMG, QC
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE FRASER
and
SIR NICHOLAS BLAKE
____________________
(1) ANDREW DINES (2) ANDREW NEAVE (3) PAUL O'CONNOR |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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DIRECTOR of PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS |
Respondent |
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Mr Michael Newbold (instructed by the Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
Hearing date: Thursday 19 March 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE DAVIS:
Introduction
The Legislative Context
"(2) An external order is an order which–
(a) is made by an overseas court where property is found or believed to have been obtained as a result of or in connection with criminal conduct, and
(b) is for the recovery of specified property or a specified sum of money."
"(1) The Crown Court must decide to give effect to an external order by registering it where all of the following conditions are satisfied.
(2) The first condition is that the external order was made consequent on the conviction of the person named in the order and no appeal is outstanding in respect of that conviction.
(3) The second condition is that the external order is in force and no appeal is outstanding in respect of it.
(4) The third condition is that giving effect to the external order would not be incompatible with any of the Convention rights (within the meaning of the Human Rights Act 1998) of a person affected by it.
(5) The fourth condition applies only in respect of an external order which authorises the confiscation of property other than money that is specified in the order.
…
(7) In determining whether the order is an external order within the meaning of the Act, the Court must have regard to the definitions in subsections (2), (4), (5), (6), (8) and (10) of section 447 of the Act.
(8) In paragraph (3) "appeal" includes–
(a) any proceedings by way of discharging or setting aside the order, and
(b) an application for a new trial or stay of execution"
The word "conviction" is not defined in the 2005 Order.
"(1) Where the Crown Court decides to give effect to an external order, it must–
(a) register the order in that court;
(b) provide for notice of the registration to be given to any person affected by it; and
(c) appoint the relevant Director as the enforcement authority for the order.
(2) Only an external order registered by the Crown Court may be implemented under this Chapter.
(3) The Crown Court may cancel the registration of the external order, or vary the property to which it applies, on an application by the relevant Director or any person affected by it if, or to the extent that, the court is of the opinion that any of the conditions in article 21 is not satisfied."
Patteggiamento
"Article 444 (Application of punishment upon request)
1. The accused and the Public Prosecutor may agree to request [recte: may request] the judge to impose a penalty, specifying its type and length or amount. Such penalty may be either a substitute or a financial penalty reduced by a maximum of a third, or a sentence of imprisonment when, considered the circumstances and after its reduction by a maximum of a third, it does not exceed five years of imprisonment or five years or imprisonment combined with a financial penalty
1-bis. [omitted]
2. If the party who has not submitted the request agrees with the request and delivery of the judgment of dismissal is not required in line with Article 129, the judge shall order the application of the punishment by issuing a judgment, stating, in its operative part, that the parties have submitted the request. The judgment on the application of the punishment shall be delivered only if, on the basis of the available elements of evidence, the judge believes the legal definition of the criminal act, the application and comparison of the circumstances adduced by the parties are correct and the requested punishment is adequate […]
3. Upon submission of the request, the party may subordinate the effectiveness of the request to the granting of a suspended sentence. In this case, the judge may reject the request if he believes the suspended sentence cannot be granted."
"1. In any state and phase of the proceeding, the judge who recognizes that the fact does not exist or that the defendant did not commit it or that the fact does not represent a crime or is not qualified as a crime by law or if the crime is extinguished or a requirement to proceed is lacking, declares it ex officio in a judgment.
2. If a reason for the extinction of the crime exists but, from the documents, it is evident that the fact does not exist or that the defendant did not commit it or that the fact dies [sic] not represent or is not qualified as a crime by law, the judge issues an acquittal decision or a decision not to prosecute with the appropriate formula."
"… the Italian defendant whose case ends with a patteggiamento does not formally admit his guilt, although he accepts that he will be punished. He therefore does not formally count as someone who has been convicted."
"Unless otherwise provided by law, the judgment shall be considered equal to a judgment of conviction".
(In the papers before us, other translations use the words "equivalent to": the Italian is "è equiparata a una pronuncia di condanna".)
"It is evident the difference between the determination made by a conviction decision after the trial and a decision imposing the penalty requested by the parties [i.e. patteggiamento], because what is different is the rule of justice to apply and different is the determination of the facts made by the judge. The case-law has pointed out that in the "patteggiamento" a positive determination of the criminal liability is not required …." (page 6).
At a later stage in the judgment, this was said, as translated:
"According to the well settled case law of this Court, by requesting the imposition of the penalty the accused renounces to avail himself of the possibility to challenge the accusation. In other terms, he does not deny his responsibility and exempts the prosecution from the burden to prove it. Therefore, the judgment which grants his application contains a finding and an implicit assessment of his responsibility, without being necessary for the court to give reasons of it (see the judgment by the Joint Sections of the Court of Cassation Nr. 5777 of the 27.3.1992, Di Benedetto, Rv. 19 1134). Besides, the judgment which imposes a penalty upon the parties request cannot be impugned before the Court of Cassation by the defendant on account of an inadequate statement of reasons about the facts upon which his criminal liability is based, since their actual existence is implicitly, but unequivocally, admitted by him in the very moment he requests the 'patteggiamento', or agrees to the prosecutor's request thereof …." (page 18).
Article 21 (2) of the 2005 Order
The Italian Criminal Proceedings Relating to the Appellants
The Letter of Request and Proceedings in the Crown Court
"29. Whilst no procedure equivalent to that of the patteggiamento exists in UK law the judgements entered against these defendants in Italy and the Letters of Request from the Italian to the UK authorities, make it clear – beyond a peradventure – that the Italian authorities regard the procedure as one which equates to a conviction under their law and therefore allows them to order confiscation of assets.
30. Whilst, superficially the patteggiamento procedure may seem to be identical to that of the US nolo contendere, (as described in R. v. McGregor), it is apparent on closer analysis of the law and effects of the former procedure (see paragraphs 18-20 supra), that it is very different in major respects; in particular that the judge who is presented with an agreement is obliged to carry out an analysis of whether evidence exists inconsistent with guilt, before passing sentence and the fact that should the defendant who has accepted sentence under this procedure being convicted of a further offence the earlier sentence will be seen as an aggravating feature and if suspended, may be brought into effect.
31. Moreover the ECHR Article 5, (incorporated in to both UK and Italian law), makes it clear that "no-one shall be deprived of his liberty save in the following cases…the lawful detention of a person after conviction by a competent court". In my judgment this is such a fundamental right that no country which is a signatory to the Convention would be able to impose a sentence of imprisonment without there having been a "conviction" however described.
32. I do not find that the fact that these defendants were advised by their Italian lawyers that by entering into this procedure no finding of guilt was being made, can have any bearing on the decision which I have to make as a matter of law.
33. The UK courts are obliged to give effect to their international treaty obligations, whether they arise as a result of EU Framework Decisions or under other international agreements. The dicta of Lord Lloyd-Jones in Konecny v Disrict Court in Brno-Venkov, as already stated, have strong persuasive force when applied to the facts of this case.
34. In my judgment a UK judge is entitled to assume, absent evidence to the contrary, that the Italian authorities are acting in good faith when they describe the defendants as having been "convicted" of the offences which led to the making of the Confiscation orders and requests that the UK courts assist in the enforcement of a lawfully issued judgment."
The judge did not, in the event, in terms evaluate the evidence of the experts on Italian law or make findings, as such, on that evidence (which, under English procedure, is to be treated as evidence of fact). However, overall her ruling indicates, by implication, that she had preferred the evidence of Professor Vigano and Professor Gatta where it differed from that of Mr Sangiorgio.
Submissions
(1) The words of Article 21 (2) of the 2005 Order should be given their clear and ordinary meaning, under usual principles of interpretation of English law.
(2) The 2005 Order was not made so as to give effect to the Strasbourg Convention and in any event that Convention had, in the relevant respects, contemplated a wide degree of discretion available to subscribing states: as connoted, for example, by Article 18 (4) of that Convention.
(3) There was no applicable European Framework Decision or the like requiring a broad purposive approach to interpretation; and the judge's reliance on the case of Konecny (cited above) was misplaced, since that case related to European Arrest Warrants, whereby the relevant provisions had to be read so as to give effect to the relevant Framework Decision.
(4) The patteggiamento in Italy did not involve any confession of guilt and the appellants have never accepted guilt. Further, in so far as Article 445 of the ICCP states that (unless otherwise provided by law) a patteggiamento judgment was equivalent to a conviction (in Italian law) that did not mean that it was a conviction.
(5) Such a conclusion pays full and proper regard to fundamental principles relating not only to the protection of liberty but also to the protection of property: which Article 21 of the 2005 Order can be taken to respect.
(6) Examples taken from the nolo contendere case of McGregor (cited above) and from Deferred Prosecution Agreements made pursuant to the provisions of the Crime and Courts Act 2013 are illustrative of other situations where, even though there is an agreed penalty, there is no conviction: and the patteggiamento procedure is, in substance, comparable.
(7) Such a conclusion does not leave a requesting state altogether without remedy: it may, for example, in an appropriate case apply under Part 5 of the 2005 Order.
(1) Such a conclusion accorded with the general objectives of the Strasbourg Convention (albeit he readily agreed that that Convention did not mandate such a conclusion).
(2) In circumstances where Article 445 of the ICCP states that a patteggiamento judgment is "equal", or "equivalent to", a judgment of conviction (save where otherwise prescribed by law) and in circumstances where the Joint Sections of the Cassation Court in 2015 have decided that a patteggiamento involves an implicit and unequivocal admission of criminal responsibility, the outcome can indeed properly be said to be a conviction. The other features of a patteggiamento, taken overall, are also entirely consistent with that conclusion.
(3) The judgment of the Cassation Court in 2013 on the confiscation appeals and (in particular) the letter of request signed by Judge Capri had referred to the appellants as "convicted": that, even if not determinative, was informative and a strong pointer to there having been convictions.
(4) The position in McGregor and the position for Deferred Prosecution Agreements was not only distinguishable but revealingly so.
(5) Evidence that the appellants had been advised that to agree a patteggiamento did not involve an admission of guilt and evidence that they have always considered themselves to be innocent was not relevant: the matter was to be appraised objectively.
Disposal
(1) Was this a conviction under Italian law?
(2) Was this a conviction for the purposes of Article 21 (2) of the 2005 Order?
Conclusion