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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Chatwani & Ors, R (on the application of) v The National Crime Agency & Anor [2015] EWHC 1284 (Admin) (11 May 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2015/1284.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 1284 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
MR JUSTICE HICKINBOTTOM
____________________
THE QUEEN on the application of (1) SATISH CHATWANI (2) JAWAHAR CHATWANI (3) RASHMI CHATWANI (4) BHASKER TAILOR (5) RAKESH TAILOR |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) THE NATIONAL CRIME AGENCY (2) BIRMINGHAM CROWN COURT |
Defendants |
____________________
for the Claimants
Andrew Bird and David McNeill (instructed by NCA Legal) for the First Defendant
The Second Defendant neither appearing nor being represented
Hearing date: 29 April 2015
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Hickinbottom:
Introduction
The Relevant Statutory Provisions
"A judge may, on an application made to him by an appropriate officer, make a production order if he is satisfied that each of the requirements for the making of the order is fulfilled.
"(1) These are the requirements for the making of a production order.
(2) There must be reasonable grounds for suspecting that
(c) in the case of a money laundering investigation, the person the application for the order specifies as being subject to the investigation has committed a money laundering offence.
(2A)
(3) There must be reasonable grounds for believing that the person the application specifies as appearing to be in possession or control of the material so specified is in possession or control of it.
(4) There must be reasonable grounds for believing that the material is likely to be of substantial value (whether or not by itself) to the investigation for the purposes of which the order is sought.
(5) There must be reasonable grounds for believing that it is in the public interest for the material to be produced or for access to it to be given, having regard to
(a) the benefit likely to accrue to the investigation if the material is obtained;
(b) the circumstances under which the person the application specifies as appearing to be in possession or control of the material holds it."
"(2) The application for a production order must state that
(a) a person specified in the application is subject to a confiscation investigation or a money laundering investigation, or
(b) property specified in the application is subject to a civil recovery investigation.
(3) The application must also state that
(a) the order is sought for the purposes of the investigation;
(b) the order is sought in relation to material, or material of a description, specified in the application;
(c) a person specified in the application appears to be in possession or control of the material.
(4) A production order is an order either
(a) requiring the person the application for the order specifies as appearing to be in possession or control of material to produce it to an appropriate officer for him to take away, or
(b) requiring that person to give an appropriate officer access to the material,
within the period stated in the order.
(5) The period stated in a production order must be a period of seven days beginning with the day on which the order is made, unless it appears to the judge by whom the order is made that a longer or shorter period would be appropriate in the particular circumstances."
i) Section 348(5) enables copies to be taken of any material produced, or to which access is given, in compliance with the order.
ii) A production order is deemed an order of the court (section 351(7)), so that to fail to comply with it is a contempt. The integrity of the procedure is also protected by the threat of criminal sanctions: it is an offence to "tip off" another individual (section 333A: maximum sentence two years) and to make a disclosure about the procedure that might prejudice the investigation (section 342: maximum sentence five years).
iii) Under section 351, an application to discharge or vary a production order may be made to the Crown Court by the person who applied for the order or any affected person.
The Factual Background
"You are ordered to provide Kevin Gilligan or another appropriate officer the named material to take away, specifically all dealings with [the First to Third Claimants, DDL and other identified companies within the Kanta Group] and any other Chatwani controlled companies, including any files, correspondence or client account ledgers showing any financial transaction, or financial statements, annual accounts, tax and VAT returns, purchase/sales ledgers and day books, working papers, trading papers, cash books, records of meetings, copies of correspondence, assets held, material showing personal details of the subject and entities and all associated documents, for a period from the first interaction with the subject or representatives of the companies to the date of this order, which does not consist of items subject to legal privilege or excluded material, IMMEDIATELY UPON SERVICE of this order.
Where the material consists of information contained on a computer, it must be produced in a form which is visible and legible, and can be taken away. "
"1. It is an offence to prejudice a confiscation or money laundering investigation or prospective investigation by making a disclosure about it or by tampering with documents relevant to the investigation. You should not therefore falsify, conceal, destroy or otherwise dispose of, or cause or permit the falsification, destruction or disposal of, relevant documents, nor disclose to any other person information or any other matter which is likely to prejudice any investigation into confiscation or money laundering investigation. The penalty for this offence on summary conviction is imprisonment for six months or a fine or both and on conviction on indictment is 5 years imprisonment or a fine or both.
2. Anyone served with, notified or affected by this order may apply to the court at any time to vary or discharge this order (or so much of it as affects that person), but they must first inform the applicant (giving 2 clear days notice).
If you have any doubts or concerns about this order you should seek legal advice and/or contact Kevin Gilligan [and his address, and telephone and fax numbers were given]."
The Unarguable Grounds
The Arguable Ground
"An order under this paragraph is an order that the person who appears to the judge to be in possession of the material to which the application relates shall
(a) produce it to a constable for him to take away; or
(b) give a constable access to it,
not later than the end of the period of seven days from the date of the order or the end of such longer period as the order may specify."
However, whilst that is conceptually similar to section 345 of POCA, there are significant differences in practice. Under the PACE provisions (i) the seven day period cannot be shortened, as it can be under section 345 of POCA; and (ii) an application must be made on notice (paragraph 7), and an application under section 345 of POCA can be without notice.
"In respect of the Zane Partnership, I have not served a copy of this application and information on this respondent, and request that the Court deal with this application in the respondents' absence because I believe it would prejudice the investigation if these respondent was present [sic].
The intention is to serve the Production Order on the Zane Partnership LLP after the arrests in order to avoid operational compromise to this investigation."
Therefore, Mr Bird submitted, the judge could properly infer from the documents before him that, due to the close relationship between the Zane Partnership and the Kanta companies, if the auditors were given any time in which to comply with the order, there was a risk with regard to the integrity of the documents held.
Conclusion
i) grant permission to judicially review the production order challenged, on the single ground I have identified;
ii) allow the judicial review on that ground;
iii) declare the production order to be unlawful; and
iv) order the discharge of the injunction imposed in paragraphs 1 and 2 of the Order of Dingemans J dated 10 March 2015.
Lord Justice Bean: