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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Crown Prosecution Service v Winchester Crown Court [2011] EWHC 1255 (Admin) (06 May 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2011/1255.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 1255 (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 :
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CROWN PROSECUTION SERVICE | Claimant | |
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WINCHESTER CROWN COURT | Defendant |
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Ms Gillian Jones appeared on behalf of Richard Edwards
Mr Roy Brown appeared on behalf of David Roberts
Mr Ahmed Hussain appeared on behalf of Roy Godber
Mr P Powers appeared on behalf of Mark Burgess
Mr Peter Forbes appeared on behalf of Jason Flisher
Mr Christopher Baur appeared on behalf of Shaun Wilson
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Crown Copyright ©
"The appropriate court may, at any time before the expiry of the time limit imposed by the regulations, extend, or further extend, that limit; but the court shall not do so unless it is satisfied -
(a) that the need for the extension is due to-
...
(iii) some other good or sufficient cause; and
(b) that the prosecution has acted with all due diligence and expedition."
"To satisfy the court that this condition is met the prosecution need not show that every stage of preparation of the case has been accomplished as quickly and efficiently as humanly possible. That would be an impossible standard to meet, particularly when the court which reviews the history of the case enjoys the immeasurable benefit of hindsight. Nor should the history be approached on the unreal assumption that all involved on the prosecution side have been able to give the case in question their undivided attention. What the court must require is such diligence and expedition as would be shown by a competent prosecutor conscious of his duty to bring the case to trial as quickly as reasonably and fairly possible. In considering whether that standard is met, the court will of course have regard to the nature and complexity of the case, the extent of preparation necessary, the conduct (whether co-operative or obstructive) of the defence, the extent to which the prosecutor is dependent on the co-operation of others outside his control and other matters directly and genuinely bearing on the preparation of the case for trial. It would be undesirable and unhelpful to attempt to compile a list of matters which it may be relevant to consider in deciding whether this condition is met. In deciding whether the condition is met, however, the court must bear in mind that the period of 112 days [as it was in that case] specified in the Regulations is a maximum, not a target; and that it is a period applicable in all cases."
As Mr Bryant-Heron correctly submits, those observations are essentially directed to the question of the expedition needed to ensure preparedness for trial.
"Any application for the extension of custody time limits will call for careful consideration, and many will call for rigorous scrutiny. When ruling on such an application the court should not only state its decision, but also its reasons for reaching that decision and, if an extension is granted, for holding the conditions in section 22(3) to be fulfilled ... In a case where an extension is granted, it is particularly important that the defendant should know why; but even when an extension is refused, the prosecution is entitled to know the reasons for the refusal. We would, however, emphasise that where a court has heard full argument and given its ruling, whether for or against an extension, this court will be most reluctant to disturb that decision. This court has no role whatever in deciding whether, in any case, an extension should be granted or not. Its only role, as in any other application for judicial review, is to see whether the decision in question is open to successful challenge on any of the familiar grounds which support an application for judicial review. It is almost inevitable in cases of this kind that one or other party will disagree, often strongly, with the decision of the trial court, whatever it is. Such disagreement, however strong, is not a ground for seeking judicial review of the decision. Those who make applications of this kind must take care to ensure that there are proper grounds for making application and that they are not inviting this court to trespass into a field of judgment which is reserved to the court of trial."
"This is a serious and complicated case in which seven defendants are jointly indicted with conspiring to import 26 kilograms of pure cocaine."
He gave a further description of the essential nature of the case in this way:
"This case concerns a drugs importation in Portsmouth through Portsmouth Docks and two of the defendants were employed in the docks and are alleged to have facilitated the importation so corruption of that nature is at the core of the case. It allegedly involves an organised criminal gang with evidence of several months of surveillance and phone call schedules over a large area."
"Because of those reasons, the prosecution rated this case as one requiring the attention of their Organised Crime Division and it automatically fell within the ambit of the protocol issued by the Senior Presiding Judge in December 2008, one of whose provisions is that such a case may only be heard at a designated court centre on the Western Circuit. The only two such centres are Winchester and Bristol, not Portsmouth."
So, as HHJ Boney indicated, the protocol to which I have referred applied. The position is simply this, that the automatic direction despatching a case of this nature to a designated court centre is subject to the overriding discretion of the presiding judge of the circuit.
"The case was indeed treated to its preliminary hearing at Portsmouth on November 19th. It now seems clear by this exercise of the overriding discretion of the then senior presiding judge a few days earlier. The overall point is that the prosecution must have been aware on that date, first that this decision had been taken without their being asked for their view and, second, that the resident judge at Portsmouth was taking all the steps you would expect of a competent case managing judge to ensure that the early preparation stages of the case went ahead without any hitches to ensure that the trial started in his court on April 4th. It will of course be apparent that, having fixed the trial date for 4th April, the trial was due to start on that schedule well within the custody time limits."
"The Crown's reply to these points, and I hope I do not misrepresent or oversimplify Mr Bryant-Heron's reply, is really to the effect that back in November the full seriousness of this case had not fully dawned on the Crown and it was, as the case preparation and logistics of presenting it progressed, that the need for holding this case at a designated court centre became stronger. I have to say I do not find that argument easy to accept in all the circumstances. Here was a case which was reckoned grave enough to receive the attention from the start of the Organised Crime Division and the protocol had been overridden by the senior presiding judge without their apparently having any say in the matter of the kind which they later insisted on presented before Field J. There was no reason why, as the realisation increasingly dawned, that trial at Portsmouth was inappropriate, an application could not have been made before Royce J in December to reconsider his view, especially if the Crown's view had lacked adequate presentation the first time the judge had considered it."