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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Terra Services Ltd, R (On the Application Of) v National Crime Agency & Ors [2020] EWHC 1640 (Admin) (24 June 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2020/1640.html Cite as: [2021] 1 WLR 1, [2020] WLR(D) 367, [2020] Crim LR 1060, [2020] EWHC 1640 (Admin), [2020] Lloyd's Rep FC 477, [2020] 2 Cr App R 24 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD CHIEF JUSTICE OF ENGLAND AND WALES
THE HON MR JUSTICE JAY
____________________
THE QUEEN (oao TERRA SERVICES LIMITED) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) NATIONAL CRIME AGENCY (2) SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT (3) INNER LONDON CROWN COURT |
Defendants |
____________________
(instructed by Macfarlanes LLP) for the Claimant
Guy Ladenburg (instructed by National Crime Agency) for the First Defendant
Clair Dobbin (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the Second Defendant
The Third Defendant was neither present nor represented
Hearing dates: 18th and 19th March 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
THE LORD CHIEF JUSTICE and MR JUSTICE JAY:
Overview
i) a decision of the NCA, said to have been made on 26th November 2018, to authorise under section 93 of the Police Act 1997 ("the Authorisation") a covert search and examination of the material stored at the Unit (here, we are simply setting out Terra's case, because the existence of the Authorisation is neither confirmed nor denied ("NCND") by the NCA).
ii) a decision of the Secretary of State, following her receipt of the Letter of Request, to direct the NCA under section 13 of the Crime (International Cooperation) Act 2003 ("the CICA") to apply for "a search warrant (or other appropriate measure)" to obtain material from the Unit ("the Direction").
Dramatis Personae
The Facts
"How quickly can it be changed cos (sic) base … we've been given this sort of mission to get rid of the items, sort of before 4.30 cos that's what time you guys er …"
"This request has been considered by the UKCA and has been accepted. Subject to your own assessment and any operational restraints you may wish to raise, under section 13 of [CICA], you are hereby directed to apply for a search warrant (or other appropriate measure) under section [16(1) and 16(3)] of CICA."
The parenthesis "or other appropriate measure" clearly includes and is probably limited to an application for a Production Order.
"Hard copy and electronic records, financial documentation, correspondence and communications containing evidence of money laundering, tax offences and fraud offences listed above between, among, involving or for the benefit of individuals and entities listed below: [18 individuals or entities including but not limited to Terra, Messrs Manafort and Gates, Mr Deripaska, Mr Searle, Mr Hauser, Mrs Talyanskaya, Pericles and Surf]
"The basis of the application is that the authority submits that there is material within the premises which could be of assistance and provide evidence in an ongoing US investigation into a number of criminal offences committed by two US subjects. Paul Manfoor (sic) and Rick Gates. The offences are set out on the proposed warrant and their equivalent UK offences are also listed there."
and (somewhat later in the proceedings)
"[COUNSEL]: Although this is a fairly limited to names and conduct, there is not a date parameter set out on the face of the warrant: a "from and to" date. It is difficult to give a precise set of date parameters and it is whether your Honour thinks that this is actually necessary given the - as I say, the fairly limited scope of people that are relevant to this –
[JUDGE]: I have already been through the reasons why the material fulfils the criteria. Unless you are submitting to me that there may be reason to believe that there is material that falls outwith the scope of this investigation –
[COUNSEL]: No, your Honour has dealt with it, the material and the reasons for that.
[JUDGE]: It does not seem to me that this needs to be addressed. If there is good reason to believe that, then I should have been told of that already.
[COUNSEL]: No, no."
The Authorisation
The Direction
"Where a request for assistance in obtaining evidence in a part of the United Kingdom is received by the territorial authority for that part, the authority may –
(a) if the conditions in section 14 are met, arrange for the evidence to be obtained under section 15, or
(b) direct that a search warrant is to be applied for under or by virtue of section 16 or 17 …"
"(1) Part 2 of [PACE] is to have effect as if references to indictable offences in section 8 of, and Schedule 1 to, that Act included any conduct which –
(a) constitutes an offence under the law of a country outside the United Kingdom, and
(b) would, if it occurred in England and Wales, constitute an indictable offence."
(2) But an application for a warrant or order by virtue of subsection (1) may be made only -
(a) in pursuance of a direction given under section 13, or
(b) if it is an application for a warrant or order under section 8 of, or Schedule 1 to, that Act by a constable for the purposes of an investigation by an international joint investigation team of which he is a member."
"In practice the UK accedes to most requests received and in general there is a presumption that MLA will be provided where all the requirements of the investigative measure under UK law have been met. However, the central authorities retain a wide discretion when considering whether to accede to a request." [emphasis added]
Possible grounds for refusal are said to include national security, politically motivated investigations, and the like.
"It is not sufficient for a request to be accompanied by a search warrant issued by an authority in the requesting state. Central and executing authorities in the UK do not have the authority to issue warrants themselves; they must be in a position to convince a court to issue a search warrant. … If the evidence requested can be obtained without obtaining a search warrant, the central authority will seek an alternative method of execution instead."
"An official from the UKCA considered (inter alia) whether the request provided details of the specific material or type of material to be seized and why the material requested was considered both relevant and important evidence to the investigation or proceedings. The UKCA official was satisfied that this was the position. As set out below, the Secretary of State is content to proceed on the basis that the LoR is set out in similar terms to the search warrant, as regards the materials sought."
"A multiple direction could only be lawful if, on its true construction, the statute contemplated that the police should have the duty to decide, if the Secretary of State chose to confer such a duty, whether any particular form of application should be made at all. We do not believe that the Act can be read as distributing such contingent and differential functions between the Secretary of State and the police.
In our judgment, the Secretary of State has not only the responsibility of deciding whether assistance should be given to the requesting state; in our view, he must decide what assistance should be so given.
…
It was submitted to us by Mr Richards that the police possess an experience and expertise in the administration of the PACE procedures which the Secretary of State does not share. But he has specific responsibilities under the Act of 1984 to oversee certain processes by the police: see section 66. So that submission does not, in our judgment, assist the Secretary of State." [at 34C-F]
"Unless the language of the statute forbids it, it appears to me to be desirable in a case of this kind that the Secretary of State, having considered the nature of the documents being requested and concluded that they consist of special procedure material, or include such material and do not include excluded material, should be able, if the Request he has received permits it, to direct the police to apply for whichever of a production order or search warrant under Sch 1 of PACE as appears to them to be appropriate once they have completed the inquiries required by their Code of Practice.
When I turn back to s.7 of the 1990 Act, it appears to me that the Secretary of State is entitled to give such a direction. Once the police had completed their inquiries and had satisfied themselves as to the appropriateness of the remedy they were seeking, they would be making their application in pursuance of the direction of the Secretary of State and the requirements of section 7(4) of the Act would be satisfied.
It follows that I consider Laws J was wrong to construe s.7 quite so restrictively."
The Application for and the Warrant Itself
"(3) … If an application is to be made for a warrant it is the duty of the applicant to give full assistance to the district judge, and that includes drawing to his or her attention anything that militates against the issue of a warrant."
"When there is an ongoing investigation into, for example, the affairs of a company such as EPRS, which appears to have been at the centre of the fraud, it will always be difficult to say precisely what documentation of value to the inquiry may be recovered from those justifiably suspected of being in contact with the main target company, but nevertheless the warrant needs to be drafted with sufficient precision to enable both those who execute it and those whose property is affected by it to know whether any individual document or class of documents falls within it. If that is done it seems to me that the specificity required will be no less than would be required for a notice under section 2(3) were it practicable to serve such a notice, and although the terms of the warrant may be wide it will not simply be fishing if it is directed to support an investigation which has apparent merit."
The instant case is a fortiori inasmuch as the Warrant is not limited to just one entity at the centre of the fraud, or a main target company. Thus, the present case is closer to what Simon Brown LJ (for the Divisional Court) had in mind in R v SSHD and others, ex parte Fininvest SpA and others [1997] 1 WLR 743, at 752H when he said:
"What is under investigation here is, after all … a wide-ranging, multi-faceted, international fraud involving far-reaching allegations against a large number of individuals in connection with an even larger number of companies. Considering, moreover, that it is at the investigative stage, one could hardly look to greater particularisation of the offences than is contained in the letter of request."
Disposal