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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Lupepe, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2017] EWHC 2690 (Admin) (30 October 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2017/2690.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 2690 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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R (on the application of Lupepe) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Secretary of State for the Home Department |
Defendant |
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Robin Tam Q.C., Mathew Gullick and Emily Wilsdon (instructed by the Government Legal Department ) for the defendant
Hearing dates: 11th , 12th and 13th October
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Crown Copyright ©
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE LEWIS:
INTRODUCTION
THE FACTUAL BACKGROUND
The Claimant's Offending and the Deportation Order
The Grant of Bail and The First Period during which a Restriction was Imposed
The Second Grant of Bail and the Second Period during which a Restriction Was Imposed
"1. The appellant shall live and sleep at the address set out above. 2. The applicant shall report to the UK Border Agency
At: Liverpool Reporting Centre, Capital Building, Union Street, Liverpool L3 9AF
On every First Monday of every month
Between the hours of 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. beginning Monday 3 March 2014.
3. Bail is granted subject to (i) the applicant co-operating with the arrangements for electronic monitoring (tagging) as set out in s. 36 of the Asylum and Immigration (Treatment of Claimants etc.) Act 2004 and ii) the UK Border Agency arranging electronic monitoring within two working days of the grant of bail. If electronic monitoring is not effected within two working days then the applicant is to be released on condition he complies with the above requirements."
The Gedi Litigation
The Review of the Claimant's Curfew
"It may still be appropriate to request tagging in cases where the offence is not on this list if, on the facts of the case, the case owner considers that the [foreign national offender] poses a high risk of harm, reoffending or absconding. In such cases the authority of an Assistant Director must be obtained to request tagging."
"… for a decision to be made about whether a curfew should be re-imposed given the facts of the individual case. This was for case owners to assess. I referred Mr Lupepe's case to the case-owning team to decide whether Mr Lupepe's case did require the re-imposition of a curfew through the detention and bailing process that had been set out in August 2016. It is clear from subsequent events that the case-owner decided that this was required".
The Notification of the Ending of the Curfew
The Claimant's Detention and the Re-imposition of a Curfew
"The Secretary of State is changing the conditions of your release and is moving you from release on Restriction Order to Chief Immigration Bail. In order to do this, you are nominally detained for a very short time. You will be free to leave once your new bail conditions have been served upon you."
THE LEGAL FRAMEWORK
"A person who is not a British citizen is liable to deportation from the United Kingdom if –
(a) the Secretary of State deems his deportation to be conducive to the public good…."
"(4A) Paragraphs 22 to 25 of Schedule 2 to this Act apply in relation to a person detained under sub-paragraph (1), (2) or (3) as they apply in relation to a person detained under paragraph 16 of that Schedule."
"(1) The following namely—
(a) a person detained under paragraph 16(1) above pending examination;
(aa) a person detained under paragraph 16(1A) above pending completion of his examination or a decision on whether to cancel his leave to enter; and
(b) a person detained under paragraph 16(2) above pending the giving of directions,
may be released on bail in accordance with this paragraph.
"(1A) An immigration officer not below the rank of chief immigration officer or the First-tier Tribunal may release a person so detained on his entering into a recognizance or, in Scotland, bail bond conditioned for his appearance before an immigration officer at a time and place named in the recognizance or bail bond or at such other time and place as may in the meantime be notified to him in writing by an immigration officer
"(1B) sub-paragraph (1)(a) above shall not apply unless seven days have elapsed since the date of the person's arrival in the United Kingdom.
"(2) The conditions of a recognizance or bail bond taken under this paragraph may include conditions appearing to the immigration officer or the First-tier Tribunal to be likely to result in the appearance of the person bailed at the required time and place; and any recognizance shall be with or without sureties as the officer or the First-tier Tribunal may determine."
THE ISSUES
(1) Was the defendant entitled to impose a curfew given that the First-tier Tribunal had not imposed such a condition when it had granted bail?
(2) Could the power to grant bail, and impose a curfew condition, be used to reduce the risk of the claimant re-offending?
(3) Was the decision to impose the curfew condition unlawful as it was made (a) having regard to an unpublished policy and (b) without giving the claimant the opportunity to make representations on whether a curfew should be imposed?
(4) Was the decision to detain the claimant unlawful because the defendant failed to apply the provisions of chapter 55 of the Enforcement Guidance when deciding to detain the claimant? and
(5) Was the decision to impose the curfew condition unlawful on a number of other grounds, including whether the power was exercised for a proper purpose or was disproportionate?
THE FIRST ISSUE – IMPOSING A CURFEW CONDITION WHERE NO SUCH CONDITION HAD BEEN IMPOSED BY THE FIRST-TIER TRIBUNAL.
"a court has conducted a full open hearing into the question of whether, in the light of certain facts and competing arguments, the public interest favours disclosure of certain information and has concluded for reasons given in a judgment that it does, section 53 cannot be invoked effectively to overrule that judgment merely because a member of the executive, considering the same facts and arguments, takes a different view."
THE SECOND ISSUE – THE SCOPE OF PARAGRAPH 22
"107 I have some difficulty in understanding why the risk of reoffending is a relevant factor in a case where there is a risk of absconding, but not otherwise. It seems to me that it is possible to construe the power to detain either (more narrowly) as a power which may only be exercised to further the object of facilitating a deportation, or (more broadly) as a power which may also be exercised to further the object which it is sought to achieve by a deportation, namely, in the present case, that of removing an offender whose presence is not conducive to the public good. The distinction between these two objects was clearly drawn by the Court of Appeal in R (A) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2007] EWCA Civ 804. Toulson LJ said, at para 55:
"A risk of offending if the person is not detained is an additional relevant factor, the strength of which would depend on the magnitude of the risk, by which I include both the likelihood of it occurring and the potential gravity of the consequences. Mr Drabble submitted that the purpose of the power of detention was not for the protection of public safety. In my view that is over-simplistic. The purpose of the power of deportation is to remove a person who is not entitled to be in the United Kingdom and whose continued presence would not be conducive to the public good. If the reason why his presence would not be conducive to the public good is because of a propensity to commit serious offences, protection of the public from that risk is the purpose of the deportation order and must be a relevant consideration when determining the reasonableness of detaining him pending his removal or departure."
Para 78 of Keene LJ's judgment is to similar effect.
"108 I acknowledge that the principle that statutory powers should be interpreted in a way which is least restrictive of liberty if that is possible would tend to support the narrower interpretation. But I think that the Court of Appeal was right in A's case to adopt the interpretation which gives effect to the purpose underlying the power to deport and which the power to detain is intended to facilitate. Perhaps a simpler way of reaching the same conclusion is to say, as Simon Brown LJ said in I's case at para 29, that the period which is reasonable will depend on the circumstances of the particular case and the likelihood or otherwise of the detainee reoffending is "an obviously relevant circumstance".
"109 But the risk of reoffending is a relevant factor even if the appellants are right in saying that it is relevant only when there is also a risk of absconding. As Lord Rodger of Earlsferry JSC pointed out in argument, if a person re-offends there is a risk that he will abscond so as to evade arrest or if he is arrested that he will be prosecuted and receive a custodial sentence. Either way, his reoffending will impede his deportation."
THE THIRD ISSUE – THE UNPUBLISHED POLICY AND PROCEDURAL FAIRNESS
The Unpublished Policy
"35 The individual has a basic public law right to have his or her case considered under whatever policy the executive sees fit to adopt provided that the adopted policy is a lawful exercise of the discretion conferred by the statute: see In re Findlay [2985] AC 318, 338 e. There is a correlative right to know what that currently existing policy is, so that the individual can make relevant representations in relation to it…...
"36 Precisely the same is true of a detention policy. Notice is required so that the individual knows the criteria that are being applied and is able to challenge an adverse decision. I would endorse the statement made by Stanley Burnton J in R (Salih) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2003] EWHC 2273 at [52] that "it is in general inconsistent with the constitutional imperative that statute law be made known for the government to withhold information about its policy relating to the exercise of a power conferred by statute…..".
The Opportunity to Make Representations
THE FOURTH ISSUE – THE LAWFULNESS OF THE DETENTION
THE FIFTH ISSUE – OTHER GROUNDS OF CHALLENGE TO THE LAWFULNESS OF THE CURFEW
ANCILLARY MATTERS
CONCLUSION