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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Craiova Court of Appeal (Romania) v Vassos [2017] EWHC 682 (Admin) (07 February 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2017/682.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 682 (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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CRAIOVA COURT OF APPEAL (ROMANIA) | Appellant | |
v | ||
VASSOS | Respondent |
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Computer-Aided Transcript of the Stenograph Notes of
WordWave International Limited
Trading as DTI
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Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7404 1424
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Miss G Lindfield (instructed by Metro Law) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
The further information
"In choosing the way of serving the punishment imposed for the offence committed by the Defendant [...] the instance of judicial control [an expression used in the judgment to mean the Court of Appeal or the High Court] also regards that we are facing a corruption offence committed by a foreign person, manager of a commercial company, a person that does not have the first conflict with the criminal law [...] a person who considers that the application of the country's laws where he carries out his activity may be subject to the financial interests of the police officer who understood to use his title in order to achieve personal patrimony purposes.
Consequently, also having regard to the nature and severity of the committed offence, the instance of judicial control (court) appreciates that all these aspects represent objective and clear criteria based on which one shall increase the imprisonment punishment and that lead to the conclusion that the purpose of punishment provided by Article 52 of the Criminal Code may be achieved only in its serving it in detention."
The District Judge's decision
"For Mr Vassos Miss Lindfield argued that the extracts from the judgment demonstrate bias due to the reference to him being a foreign national and from the view of the police officer that Marian would fare better under the system as he was a Romanian national. The comment attributed to the police officer, as I have stated above, carries little or no weight. It is a hearsay account of what a co-defendant said in the case and has no context as to when or why it was said and amounts to nothing more than his opinion.
However, the comment in the judgment, 'that we are facing a corruption offence committed by a foreign person [...] and [...] all these aspects represent objective and clear criteria based on which one shall increase the imprisonment punishment', does suggest that corruption offences committed by foreigners are worse than those committed by domestic offenders [...]
[...] The judgment makes it clear that the major grounds for raising his penalty to 1 year from 6 months are public confidence in sentencing and deterrence. However, I find as a fact that [the fact that] the Defendant was not a Romanian national was one of a number of subordinate factors which taken together led to an increase in the sentence. Hence, in my evaluation, there exists a reasonable chance that he would be punished more heavily due to his nationality. As a result, I am required to discharge the warrant under section 13(a)", for which he meant 13(b).
The arguments
Discussion
"In our judgment, generally speaking, and in cases where no 'fresh evidence' arises on an appeal on 'proportionality', a successful challenge can only be mounted if it is demonstrated that [the judge erred]" in the ways I have sought to summarise earlier in this judgment.
"In this respect the court appreciates that some of the circumstances retained by the first instance represent worsening elements for the defendant's situation. His age and education should have allowed him to fully understand which would have been the consequences of his act of offering money to a police officer, in order for the latter to improperly fulfil his job tasks in instrumenting a criminal [procedure] that regarded the activity carried out by the defendant ... and the fact that he is carrying out an activity which provides income, proves nothing but the high level of danger, having regard to the fact that the defendant proved the fact that he would use ways that are within the scope of illegality in order to achieve the purpose of managing the company that he controlled.
One should also take into account the defendant's person and, respectively his rehabilitation and social reintegration, as well as the extent of the criminal phenomenon and society's expectation towards the mechanism of criminal justice in order to achieve a real proportionality between the two aspects ..." (sic)
Where do we go from there, Miss Farrant?
"If the court allows the appeal it must quash the order discharging the requesting person, remit the case to the judge, direct him to proceed as he would have been required to do if he had decided the relevant question differently."