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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Criminal Court at the National High Court, 1st Division (A Spanish Judicial Authority) v Murua [2010] EWHC 2609 (Admin) (08 October 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2010/2609.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 2609 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(PRESIDENT OF THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION)
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THE CRIMINAL COURT AT THE NATIONAL HIGH COURT, 1ST DIVISION | ||
(A SPANISH JUDICIAL AUTHORITY) | Appellant | |
v | ||
GARIKOITZ IBARLUCEA MURUA | Respondent |
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Mr Mark Summers (instructed by Messrs Birnberg Peirce & Partners) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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"(4)(c)... particulars of the circumstances in which the person is alleged to have committed the offence, including the conduct alleged to constitute the offence, the time and place at which he is alleged to have committed the offence and any provision of the law of the category 1 territory under which the conduct is alleged to constitute an offence ..."
Particulars of the sentence which may be imposed are also required.
"... The events proven via explicit acknowledgement of the defendants, together with the documentary evidence [to which he specifically referred by page number] ... prove the incendiary and gravely damaging nature of the devices used in the various episodes, and the documentary evidence ... which prove the true existence of the damages claimed and their exact amount, as claimed ..."
He went on to hold that those constituted the crimes which had been alleged under the Articles of the Spanish Civil Code in the revised indictment to which I have referred.
"The requirements under the Convention and the Act
24. It is the obligation of a state making a request under the Convention, in the light of Article 12, to set out a description of the conduct which it is alleged constitutes the offence or offences for which extradition is requested. That requirement does not mean that the evidence has to be provided, because Article 3 of the Convention provides the state requesting extradition does not have to provide the courts of the state to which the request is directed with evidence and the court in that state does not have to be satisfied that there is sufficient evidence; as reflected in s 9(4) of the Act and paragraph 3 of the European Convention Extradition Order 2001 there is no requirement of evidential sufficiency. As the House of Lords made clear in re Evans [1994] 1 WLR 10066 at 1013:
"The magistrate is not concerned with proof of the facts, the possibilities of other relevant facts, or the emergence of any defence; these are matters for trial."
25. However the description of the conduct alleged must be made in the request and that description will be considered by the Secretary of State and the court in the decisions each has to make in respect of the offences under the law of the UK which are constituted by the conduct described. It is in my view very important that a state requesting extradition from the UK fairly and properly describes the conduct alleged, as the accuracy and fairness of the description plays such an important role in the decisions that have to be made by the Secretary of State and the Court in the UK. Scrutiny of the description of the conduct alleged to constitute the offence alleged, where as here a question is raised about its accuracy, is not an enquiry into evidential sufficiency; the court is not concerned to assess the quality or sufficiency of the evidence in support of the conduct alleged, but it is concerned, if materials are put before it which call into question the accuracy and fairness of the description, to see if the description of the conduct alleged is fair and accurate."
"4. But Part 1 of the 2003 Act must be read in the context of the Council Framework Decision of 13 June 2002 on the European arrest warrant and the surrender procedures between member states (2002/584/JHA; OJ 2002 L190, p 1). This was conceived and adopted as a ground-breaking measure intended to simplify and expedite procedures for the surrender, between member states, of those accused of crimes committed in other member states or required to be sentenced or serve sentences for such crimes following conviction in other member states. Extradition procedures in the past had been disfigured by undue technicality and gross delay. There is to be substituted "a system of surrender between judicial authorities" and "a system of free movement of judicial decisions in criminal matters" (recital (5) of the preamble to the Framework Decision). This is to implement the principle of mutual recognition which the Council has described as the cornerstone of judicial cooperation (recital (6)). The important underlying assumption of the Framework Decision is that member states, sharing common values and recognising common rights, can and should trust the integrity and fairness of each other's judicial institutions."
"24. Under article 1 of the Framework Decision the EAW is a judicial decision issued by the requesting state which this country (subject to the provisions of the Decision) must execute on the basis of the principle of mutual recognition. It might in some circumstances be necessary to question statements made in the EAW by the foreign judge who issues it, even where the judge is duly authorised to issue such warrants in his category 1 territory, but ordinarily statements made by the foreign judge in the EAW, being a judicial decision, will be taken as accurately describing the procedures under the system of law he or she is appointed to administer ..."
"8. I bear fully in mind that the background to the relevant provisions made in the 2003 Act is an initiative of European law and that the proper administration of those provisions requires that fact to be borne firmly in mind. It goes without saying that the court is obliged, so far as the statute allows it, to proceed in a spirit of co-operation and comity with the other Member State parties to the European Arrest Warrant scheme. However, it remains the case that the conduct said to constitute the extradition offence in question has to be specified in the warrant (section 2(4((c))."
Laws LJ concluded in that case that no conduct capable of constituting the extradition offence as specified was described in the Part 1 warrant. David Steel J agreed.
"The starting point for consideration of ground 6 is section 2(2)(a) of the 2003 Act which requires a European Arrest Warrant to contain inter alia the information referred to in section 2(4), which includes, at paragraph (c), "particulars of the circumstances in which the person is alleged to have committed the offence, including the conduct alleged to constitute the offence, [and] the time and place at which he is alleged to have committed the offence ...". That paragraph includes, and expands upon, a transposition of the requirements of article 8(1)(e) of the Framework Decision. We accept that the conduct must be fairly and properly described (R (Castillo) v Spain, per Thomas LJ at 1052, para 25). We accept that that is so as a matter of first principles of fairness, as well as to allow the rule of speciality to be given content (Aronson, per Lord Griffiths at pp 594D and 595D). But we also accept the submission of counsel for the Lord Advocate that one purpose of the 2003 Act was to simplify and streamline procedures for extradition to EU countries, and that a practical, rather than a technical, approach should be adopted to the specification given in the warrant ..."
(a) Eight defendants, including the respondent, were originally variously charged with reference to eight incidents of terrorist street violence, with offences classified as "estragos" where there is risk to life under Articles of the Spanish Criminal Code providing for sentences of up to 20 years' (or perhaps more) imprisonment. The respondent was alleged to have participated jointly with others in three of the eight incidents.
(b) The prosecutor's provisional conclusions were to equivalent effect.
(c) The seven defendants other than the respondent attended for trial on 9 October 2006 when the prosecution produced a modified indictment.
(d) The modified indictment added the following facts to the Provisional Conclusions document:
"There is no risk to life proven by any of the facts. It is not proven that the defendants hid their faces with balaclavas or similar item."
(e) The facts were reclassified as "danos", where there is no risk to life, and the seven defendants were charged with and pleaded guilty to reduced offences under Articles of the Spanish Criminal Code providing for sentences of up to three years' imprisonment.
(f) The judge convicted and sentenced the seven defendants. He recited the reduced facts which had been proved, including the facts of the three incidents with which the then absent defendant was concerned. He held that the legal bases for the convictions included that the events were proved by the acknowledgement of the defendants "together with the documentary evidence contained in pages [numbers given]". The respondent is not named as a defendant in this judgment, and is referred to in at least one passage of the judgment as being at large and as "another person against whom this judgment is not directed".
(g) The 2007 and 2008 draft warrants are of narrative interest only, but they do indicate that the Spanish court gave thought to requesting the extradition of the respondent upon the reduced charges brought against the other seven defendants.
(h) The 2010 European Arrest Warrant with which this appeal is concerned reverts to the original more serious "estragos" charges carrying consecutive sentences of up to 48 years' imprisonment.
"Does the court's inquiry under section 2 of the Extradition Act 2003 include an investigation into the viability of the underlying foreign proceedings?"
"Does the decision in Castillo apply to a consideration under the 2003 Extradition Act whether a Part 1 European Arrest Warrant sufficiently conforms with the requirements of section 2(4)(c)?"
"May, upon appropriately clear facts, the court's inquiry under section 2 of the Extradition Act 2003 include an investigation into the viability of the underlying foreign proceedings?"
"Does the decision in Castillo apply to a consideration under the 2003 Extradition Act whether a Part 1 European Arrest Warrant sufficiently conforms with the requirements of section 2(4)(c)?"