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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Finch, R. v (Solicitor General's Reference) (Rev 1) [2021] EWCA Crim 377 (18 March 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2021/377.html Cite as: [2022] MHLR 247, [2021] EWCA Crim 377, [2021] 4 WLR 64, [2021] WLR(D) 161, [2021] 2 Cr App R (S) 45 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CENTRAL CRIMINAL COURT
MRS JUSTICE WHIPPLE
T20190245 & T20190246
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MRS JUSTICE MCGOWAN DBE
and
MR JUSTICE BOURNE
____________________
Solicitor General's Reference (Simon James FINCH) |
____________________
Mr Stuart Trimmer QC & Mr Ian Ibrahim (instructed by Devonald Griffiths John Solicitors)
Hearing dates: 2nd March 2021
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Fulford V.P.:
Introduction
1. Count 1: recording information for a purpose prejudicial to the safety or interests of the State, contrary to section 1(1)(c) Official Secrets Act 1911;
2. Count 2: making a damaging disclosure relating to defence, contrary to section 2(1) of the Official Secrets Act 1989; and
3. Count 3: failing to comply with a disclosure notice, contrary to section 53(1) of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000.
By a defence statement dated 20 February 2020 the defendant denied the Official Secrets Act 1989 offence (count 2) and indicated that he would plead guilty to the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000 offence (count 3).
The Facts
"I have been informed that information, documents, or other articles protected against disclosure by the provisions of the Official Secrets Act 1989 relating to security or intelligence, defence or international relations will come into my possession as a result of my employment with [BAE Systems] as a contractor or consultant thereof on terms requiring it to be held in confidence.
I understand that, knowing such information, documents or other articles are so protected against disclosure, I may be prosecuted for an offence under the Official Secrets Acts 1911 to 1989 should I disclose without lawful authority any or any part of such information, documents or other articles.
On termination of my employment...I understand that the above declaration continues to apply."
"Since the UK has refused me any justice, compensation, or even treatment for these appalling crimes then it has no right to expect my loyalty. For over twenty years I have worked in the UK defence industry as a systems engineer. Initially I was a civil servant and even represented the UK overseas. It is particularly foolish to do this to someone who works upon classified systems, particularly if they are somewhat autistic and have a near-photographic memory. Therefore it gives me very great pleasure to say that I have spent the last ten months documenting SECRET, TOP SECRET and CODEWORD information on the wide range of military systems I have worked upon. This information has been sent (freely) to a number of hostile foreign governments. I've provided a sample (and proof) of the level of information which has been sent in Systems.doc. If the nation does not care for my security then why should I care for national security?"
"Have you read my police complaint about being subjected to crimes and being totally ignored by Merseyside Police? And my complaint that they dragged me around the floor naked? Because that's what all this is to do with. I'm so fucking angry about this complaint, so you're not going to get any kind of co-operation out of me. I'm just fucking angry with the British state and what the police did to me."
"Merseyside Police convicted me over a victimless first offence...er...any serious offence means you can never get a clearance under the Official Secrets Act again. I've had my career of 25 years taken from me for a victimless first offence, how's that for punitive justice. The UK stinks."
"...perhaps I feel that...my interests will be best served discussing this in a court environment rather than just a police interview environment. You know this is very, if this is my document and this is all to do with me, maybe I think it's too important to just be shoved away in a corner."
"I really couldn't walk away from what has happened. I have a civic duty to stand up and say 'this is happening'. Why I have chosen this crime? I had to do something to generate national exposure, it had to be quite serious, something which would gather national attention. I wanted to choose something non-violent, and I think it had to be something that would cause quite a lot of financial damage, because I had to show the nation that having a proper complaint system is cheaper.
It is not Merseyside Police that my problem is with, but it is with the IOPC for refusing to investigate the complaint.
I refused to provide details or accessing my devices. Initially I wanted this case to come to one of the highest courts in the land, and here we're at the CCC, this is a place where it will generate publicity.
I may have put a condition on the provision of the access codes, and I am not allowed to do that, but I still stand by it.
If someone had said to me, before I pressed 'send' that they were going to investigate properly, of course I would not have sent the email.
[...]
The fact I have not got anywhere with the police complaint is really why the dissemination occurred."
The Sentencing Exercise
"Some of that confidential information was included in systems.doc. We cannot know whether you recorded classified information beyond that contained in systems.doc because your own account on that matter has been inconsistent to date, and because you have refused to provide the police with access to your electronic devices. The recording of information such as that recorded in systems.doc is unlawful [...] Importantly, and what makes count 1 the more serious offence, is that your purpose in recording this information was to prejudice the interests of the United Kingdom. You planned and intended the recording and subsequent disclosure of this information which you knew would be information of use to an enemy of the United Kingdom."
"You were living in Swansea, not working, enjoying free time to do your own thing interspersed with trips to Swansea library where you drafted your cover email and the documents which would accompany it. You went on two holidays to Europe that year, taking your laptop with you and continuing to work on these documents. You sent the email from a hotel in Frankfurt on a Sunday afternoon. These were carefully planned, and deliberate offences, committed at times and in ways of your choosing.
Count 3 was also deliberate and planned. You had every chance to comply with the RIPA notice. You have chosen not to. This is an ongoing state of affairs because you still have not disclosed the digital keys to your devices. It is now over a year since you were asked; and still you refuse. The culpability is high because without knowing what is on your electronic devices, the police and other arms of the state are not able to determine the extent of your offending or to calibrate with any precision the mitigation which might be required to counteract it."
"So far as harm is concerned, the jury heard evidence from Witness A in private session. He went through systems.doc and picked out the passages in that document which breached the Official Secrets Acts; he explained why the individual breaches damaged the national interest, he explained why the disclosure of that document caused harm. That harm can be summarised in general terms as follows. There is the potential compromise of the missile system itself. If classified details about the workings of the missile fall into enemy hands, that might diminish the operational effectiveness of the missile system. That puts in jeopardy those United Kingdom servicemen and women who may be engaged in combat operations relying on the missile system. It puts in jeopardy members of the public whom the United Kingdom seeks to protect by its military operations. There is a wider harm to the reputation of the United Kingdom because there has been an unauthorised disclosure of classified information which potentially damages the trust of foreign partner states in the UK's ability to retain confidentiality in secret material. There is harm in the form of the response to your crimes which has been to implement various mitigating measures. This comes at some significant public cost and takes time. Anyway, mitigation is not a complete remedy; there are still risks remaining.
Count 3 harms the national interest in a different way. Without the digital keys to the electronic devices, it is not possible for the police or agencies to investigate the extent of classified material recorded or the possibility of other disclosures. The harm is, in truth, unascertainable."
"You have suggested that you have PTSD, depression, delusional disorder and other psychiatric problems, but there is no evidence before me that you have any of those conditions. There is evidence that you have some features of an autistic spectrum disorder. You are said to have rigid and literal thought patterns and a poor understanding of social norms, amongst other problems. The psychiatrists (Dr Davies for the defence, Dr Lock for the prosecution) agree that the features of autistic spectrum disorder had a significant effect on your thinking and behaviour in committing these offences, although they also agree that this does not fully explain why you committed these offences. Dr Davies has confirmed the agreed position in evidence before me today. I accept that your actions and decision-making were affected by the features of autism which afflict you. I accept that this reduces the culpability of your offending."
The Reference
The Defendant's submissions
Discussion
"There is much domestic authority pointing to the need for a security or intelligence service to be secure. The commodity in which such a service deals is secret and confidential information. If the service is not secure those working against the interests of the state, whether terrorists, other criminals or foreign agents, will be alerted, and able to take evasive action; its own agents may be unmasked; members of the service will feel unable to rely on each other; those upon whom the service relies as sources of information will feel unable to rely on their identity remaining secret; and foreign countries will decline to entrust their own secrets to an insecure recipient: see, for example, Attorney General v Guardian Newspapers Ltd (No 2) [1990] 1 AC 109, 118c, 213-214, 259a, 265f ; Attorney General v Blake [2001] 1 AC 268, 287d-f. In the Guardian Newspapers Ltd (No 2) case, at p 269e-g , Lord Griffiths expressed the accepted rule very pithily:
"The Security and Intelligence Services are necessary for our national security. They are, and must remain, secret services if they are to operate efficiently. The only practical way to achieve this objective is a brightline rule that forbids any member or ex-member of the service to publish any material relating to his service experience unless he has had the material cleared by his employers. There is, in my view, no room for an exception to this rule dealing with trivia that should not be regarded as confidential. What may appear to the writer to be trivial may in fact be the one missing piece in the jigsaw sought by some hostile intelligence agency."
As already shown, this judicial approach is reflected in the rule laid down, after prolonged consideration and debate, by the legislature."
"Contraventions of the Official Secrets Act which prejudice the defence of this country and which may thus tend to endanger the lives of members of the community are to a considerable degree in a category of their own. The perils they create and thus the sentences that are appropriate in the interests of the community will, of course, vary according to the circumstances of the particular case. But one factor stands out. In recent decades the dangers of mass destruction of life and property at the hands of an opposing power have increased to an outstanding degree, and it follows that as the dangers increase so does the need in protection of society for sentences of deterrent length."
"It is of the utmost importance, perhaps particularly at the present time, that such conduct should not only stand condemned, should not only be held in utter abhorrence by all ordinary men and women, but should receive, when brought to justice, the severest possible punishment. This sentence had a threefold purpose. It was intended to be punitive, it was designed and calculated to deter others, and it was meant to be a safeguard to this country."
"What this applicant had done was to take the Queen's shilling, both as a member of the Royal Air Force and of the Government intelligence service, and then to have sold her, her subjects and allies to a potential enemy. In time of war such conduct would have merited the death penalty. In peacetime the law does not provide for a death penalty. The nearest it provides for is a very long sentence indeed. In our judgment, right-minded members of the public would consider that a very long sentence was appropriate, and that is what the applicant received.
There is also in this class of case the element of deterrence. Anyone, particularly those in the armed services and Government service, who is tempted, whether by money, threats of blackmail or ideology, to communicate sensitive information to a potential enemy, should have in mind what happened to this applicant. This is particularly so nowadays when, because of developments in the gathering and storing of information by electronic means, those in comparatively lowly positions often have access to material which could endanger the security of the state if it got into the wrong hands."
"We add as a postscript to the judgment that it has to be clearly understood, as has been stated in a number of the cases […], that in sentencing for espionage the court needs to place an important emphasis upon the deterrent factor of the sentence as well as the punitive factor. Anyone who is prepared to betray his country must expect that he will receive a long sentence. It makes no difference that there may be variations in the political situation worldwide, or in the existence or non-existence of the Cold War, or any other possible source of war or threat to the United Kingdom in the future. Treachery is treachery. It must be deterred and it must be punished."
"18. We repeat and endorse the observations of Lord Taylor C.J. in relation to any case where a member of the Armed Forces, however junior, serving abroad in a theatre of military operations, chooses to disclose information to anyone which may be of use, directly or indirectly, to an enemy of this country or prejudicial to the interest and safety his colleagues and companions serving in a war zone and at daily risk of death or serious injury. The element of intended betrayal of serving colleagues makes this a very serious offence indeed. Fortunately, cases like these are very rare. When they do occur, there must be no doubt that even if the information disclosed is not proved to have caused any actual damage, and was brought to a halt before any such damage may have occurred, the deterrent element in the sentence is absolutely fundamental. In fact although no individual serving soldier was directly affected by the appellant's activities, they did have a direct impact on the military relationships between NATO forces and the Afghan Government, and this alone might well have made the task of serving soldiers lengthier and more hazardous.
19. The Court has a duty to those members of the Armed Forces risking life and health and safety through loyal service to the interests of this country to provide such protection as can be provided in the fortunately very rare cases indeed of possible treachery from those working alongside them and who are treated as trusted colleagues. The sentence imposed after the trial in this case was not manifestly excessive. In our judgment it properly reflected the deterrent element which necessarily must govern every sentencing decision in cases of treachery."
"Your motive for this offending, so you told the jury, was to gain attention for your causes. You wanted the IOPC to investigate your allegations of misconduct by the Merseyside police dating back to 2016, and you thought a high profile trial at the Old Bailey would draw attention to your complaints and get the outcome you wanted. Your motives were completely misconceived. You have no justification, moral or legal, for what you did. I assess your culpability as high." (emphasis added)
"Purposes of sentencing: adults
(1) This section applies where—
(a)a court is dealing with an offender for an offence, and
(b)the offender is aged 18 or over when convicted.
(2) The court must have regard to the following purposes of sentencing—
(a)the punishment of offenders,
(b)the reduction of crime (including its reduction by deterrence),
(c)the reform and rehabilitation of offenders,
(d)the protection of the public, and
(e)the making of reparation by offenders to persons affected by their offences.
[…]"
"Assessing seriousness
Where a court is considering the seriousness of any offence, it must consider—
(a) the offender's culpability in committing the offence, and
(b) any harm which the offence—
(i) caused,
(ii) was intended to cause, or
(iii) might foreseeably have caused."
"6. The sending of the email is an offence contrary to s 2 of the Official Secrets Act of 1989. That is count 2. By that offence, you made a damaging disclosure of classified information, which information related to the defence capabilities of this country and had come into your possession by virtue of your position as a government contractor. That disclosure was damaging to national security.
7. You had recorded confidential information on your personal devices. Some of that confidential information was included in systems.doc. We cannot know whether you recorded classified information beyond that contained in systems.doc because your own account on that matter has been inconsistent to date, and because you have refused to provide the police with access to your electronic devices. The recording of information such as that recorded in systems.doc is unlawful; it is an offence contrary to s 1 of the Official Secrets Act 1911. That is count 1. Importantly, and what makes count 1 the more serious offence, is that your purpose in recording this information was to prejudice the interests of the United Kingdom. You planned and intended the recording and subsequent disclosure of this information which you knew would be information of use to an enemy of the United Kingdom."
"26. I turn to the substantive sentence for your offending, the only sentence open to me is one of immediate custody. My starting point after trial, for all offences, would have been in the region of 6 years. I reduce that to take account of your mitigation and totality. I bear in mind that we are in the midst of a pandemic so that imprisonment may be more onerous.
27. On count 1, I sentence you to 3 years imprisonment. On count 2, I sentence you to 12 months imprisonment concurrent to the sentence on count 1. On count 3, I sentence you to 18 months imprisonment which will run consecutively to the sentence on count 1.
28. This is a total sentence of 4 ½ years imprisonment."