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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Butler v R. (Rev1) [2025] EWCA Crim 1 (13 January 2025) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2025/1.html Cite as: [2025] EWCA Crim 1 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT LEEDS
His Honour Judge Jameson KC
T20177045
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE SAINI
and
HIS HONOUR JUDGE BLAIR KC
Honorary Recorder of Bristol, sitting as a judge of the Court of Appeal Criminal Division
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JASON BUTLER |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE KING |
Respondent |
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Michael Newbold (instructed by CPS Proceeds of Crime) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 21 November and 18 December 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Edis:
Conviction and sentence
The confiscation proceedings
"Please note Receivers have now been appointed over 2 of the aforementioned properties mortgaged by the Northern Rock and I expect the Birmingham Midshires to appoint Receivers over the remaining 15 properties imminently."
"I do not have access to any debts which may be in existence in relation to the properties specified at No.3. I believe that the accounts in relation to those properties are already lodged with the prosecution authorities, and therefore any debts will be within their knowledge."
The appeal in a nutshell
"The Confiscation Order, terms of which were agreed in good faith at the time, was made on a basis which was incorrect. The assumed realisable assets had included two items (a UK property portfolio said to be worth £713,842 and the applicant's 30% share of a liability owed to Trilindist (UAE) Ltd by Nudge Ltd valued at £306,015.00), which were not and are not in fact available to the applicant in order to satisfy the Confiscation Order. The applicant, who was in custody serving his sentence at the time, did not attend the Confiscation hearing and owing to the strict regime which applied during the Covid pandemic, he had had limited access to documents and to legal advice. The Court is respectfully invited to quash the Confiscation Order and to substitute it with an order, in the lesser sum, which does not treat the two items as part of the available amount."
The offending
The appeal
"The figure of £713,842 was wrong. It had looked like the calculation contained items for tainted gifts of £379,260 which should indeed have been separated and/or removed prior to the drafting of the final order. This appeared to have been overlooked by both HMRC and my advisors. HMRC had agreed that this be removed in the section 16 statement dated 12th April 21, 9 days before the final order was agreed."
"The overseas equity held in Nudge Limited was to be realised by the repayment of a loan from a borrower named Brand Apps Limited. Nudge was struck off the company register shortly before the final POCA settlement. I had no knowledge that this had occurred. This asset was genuinely included as realisable - perhaps HMRC and or my lawyers should have checked the company status prior to the settlement but I certainly had no idea whilst confined to a cell.
20. An overseas agent was appointed to re-instate the company but this was refused by the Gibraltar authorities. Copies of these documents have been provided."
The response
"34. Additionally, the appellant was not representing that he had assets of £110,000. He was prepared to agree that figure as a matter of compromise to avoid additional potential liability. Similarly, the prosecution were not representing by this agreement that the appellant had no more than £110,000. This was in effect a consent order in which the appellant had bought off risk, both as to the amount of the confiscation order and the period he would be allowed to meet it. … .
35. In other jurisdictions, those who have entered into consent orders may set them aside on very narrow grounds. We do not exclude the possibility in the arena of confiscation orders that such circumstances might conceivably arise. But we do not consider that they arise where the essence of the complaint is that, in seeking to secure the best deal available, erroneous advice was given to one of those who was party to the agreement, save in the most exceptional circumstances. We would not wish to identify exhaustively what those circumstances might be but, in our judgment, there would need to be a well-founded submission that the whole process was unfair. We do not consider that the circumstances of this case come close to that."
What the lawyers say
"15. I also wish to add that the POCA order was not made in the knowledge that the figures were wrong but it was made on the assumption that if they were wrong they could be corrected/amended by the section 23 process . D was advised accordingly."
"6. The POCA proceedings had been dragging on, as is sadly in the nature of such proceedings, and a time arrived where an agreement on the benefit figure and the available amount was reached with the Prosecution. D had advice not just from me but from Leading Counsel, Andrew Haslam KC. The Prosecution and the Defence came to an agreement
7. D was advised not simply to agree figures just for the sake of getting the Order over the line but nonetheless there was an estimation, born of pragmatism, of the figures although the available amount was based on figures which the Prosecution was happy that could be achieved. Bearing in mind the restraint, and this point is worth repeating, they were in possession of information which would have assisted them in coming to that figure."
Q1: "The reasons for the applicant not being in attendance when the confiscation order was made at the hearing on 26 April 2021. The Crown Court's log for the hearing on 29/03/2021 has the following recorded:
Case to be listed on 26 April 2021
POCCA [sic] final hearing
Time estimate 3 days
It does not heed [sic] to be before HHJ Jameson QC
Deft to be produced.
However, it is not clear from the papers why the applicant did not then appear/be produced on 26 April 2021."
Answer: the applicant told us he did not want to attend the hearing on 26th of April 2021. For the avoidance of any doubt, the applicant fully consented to the making of the order in his absence. Mr Hammond and I had a conference [by telephone] with the applicant before and after the hearing. My recollection is that HMP Lindholme [where the applicant was remanded in custody] did not allow prison visits at the time of the hearing because of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Q2: "Were the figures provided for consideration by the Crown Court on 26 April 2021 not the final figures? Please see Para. 15 of the second witness statement by Nicholas Hammond, dated 15 April 2024." [this is set out at [24] above].
Answer: the figures provided for consideration by the Crown Court on 26th of April 2021 were 'the final figures' as understood by the defence [the applicant, Mr Hammond and myself] and the prosecution.
The oral evidence
"4. UK property portfolio £713,842"
"I have accepted the defendant's valuation of his UK property portfolio of £713,842."
"I made it clear that I did not know what was left [of the property portfolio], we would have to caveat with a reservation that we did not know what properties remained. I did not agree to a figure [which I knew to be without substance] to avoid a hidden assets finding."
"Shares Held by Trilindist (UAE) Ltd £1 ,020,050 GBP @ Cost in Nudge Ltd (GIB) Jason Butler's Share of Trilindist £306,015 GBP Ltd(30%) "
Discussion and decision
"22. I was not present at any of the hearings and therefore did not have the opportunity to check the document or figures. I genuinely believe that had I been in attendance I would have recognised this error. I am particularly familiar with the details of my case and I believe that I would have noticed the equity figure stated was too high. I also believe that the financial investigator should have noticed this figure was too high particularly given that it was twice the value stated within our forensic report and indeed their own section 16 documents. In my opinion it is not reasonable to review and include a figure that is double that as previously presented without raising a query."
Postscript
"The position appears to be that:-
A total of £104,725.24 was paid towards the order in a series of payments in 2021 and 2022 (prior to committal in default). Those payments were taken into account when the Magistrates' Court calculated the relevant part of the default term which the Appellant was ordered to serve in November 2022.
On or around 27 December 2024, a further payment in the sum of £369,584.13 was made towards the confiscation order. That payment was, in light of the part of the default term which the Appellant has already served, sufficient to require his release from custody.
It appears that confirmation of payment was received too late on 27 December for the relevant regional confiscation unit in HMCTS and/or HMP Humber to give effect to it (and that there were various emails between the HMCTS confiscation unit and the Appellant's solicitors in relation to this). The Offender Management Unit at HMP Humber confirmed yesterday that the Appellant would be released yesterday afternoon, however.
In light of this, the Respondent anticipates that the Appellant will now have been released from custody."
"You are correct in stating that Mr Butler was released from custody on 30th December 2024. This was following a payment of £369,584.13 on 27th December 2024; this payment information was transmitted to the offender management unit at HMP Humber and they deemed that this payment was enough to secure Mr Butler's immediate release.
Mr Butler still has a very large balance outstanding which will be enforced accordingly –