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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Elmeris v The General Prosecutor's Office, Republic of Latvia [2022] EWHC 2002 (Admin) (29 July 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2022/2002.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 2002 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURTt
IN THE MATTER OF AN APPEAL UNDER SECTION 26 OF THE EXTRADITION ACT 2003
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
KARLIS ELMERIS |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE GENERAL PROSECUTOR'S OFFICE, REPUBLIC OF LATVIA |
Respondent |
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Stefan Hyman (instructed by the Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
t
Hearing dates:
26 October 2021 and 10 February 2022
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice McGowan
Introduction
Legal Framework
"(a) the appropriate judge ought to have decided a question before him at the extradition hearing differently;
(b) if he had decided that question in the way he ought to have done, he would have been required to order the person's discharge."
There is no issue between the parties on the test to be applied. The sole question is: did the district judge make the wrong decision?
Ground 1.
"In 2014 I was in a bad place in my life, selling drugs. I was arrested for this offence and beaten up by the police in a police car. I agreed with the prosecutor that I would receive a suspended sentence. The agreement was finalised in court on I did not need to attend. The agreement was sent to me by the host I received a suspended sentence of two years six months suspended for three years. (In 2015)
Under the suspended sentence I had probation supervision and a curfew which I obeyed the or stop during the term of the suspended sentence, I was caught in possession of drugs and arrested at all stop I was taken to the police station. The police officer said to me, 'if you help us to catch drug dealers then you will not go to prison and will remain subject to the suspended sentence'.
The police said that, 'your suspended sentence may be extended to potentially because of a new offence, perhaps by around six month'.. I then signed the papers saying I would assist in the capture of drug dealers. I was told that I would be guaranteed anonymity. I helped the police by staging drug deals with drug dealers I had worked with. The drug dealers received a prison sentence and were in fact told about my status as an informant.
The matter ended up in court on the 6th of February, 2017, the sentence was activated with an additional short period on top.
The prosecutor appealed and wanted some more time to be added to my sentenced the was already added that long 12th of June, 2017, the prosecutor's appeal was unsuccessful.
It then appealed to a higher court myself wanting the sentence to be suspended again. This appeal was unsuccessful in August 2017.
I was aware that I may need to hand myself into prison.
I was receiving threatening text messages they were saying that they would come to attack me in prison because I 'snitched on them' to the police will stop I no longer have these messages as they were saved on the same card from three years ago but I no longer have the. I was quite sure that some sort of physical retribution was coming. (He later clarified that all the text messages had come from the same number).
I accept that I was aware my appeal against activation of the prison sentence had failed. Equally, no one came to collect me to take me to prison. I had no information as to how the sentence would be implemented.
In any event I simply couldn't stay because I thought I was going to be either killed or seriously harmed in prison or on the outside.
I'd told my dad and mum who were in the UK but I would come and join them. My mum paid for my ticket."
- The appellant understood that he would benefit from being a participating informant.
- He knew he had committed further offences whilst subject to a suspended sentence and that at the very least he would face the activation of that sentence.
- He chose to participate in the police operation in the hopes that he would benefit from doing so.
- The fact that his benefit was not as great as he had hoped is not the same as his claim that any promise that he would receive another suspended sentence was made and then broken.
- The judge found that he doubted whether the appellant was telling the truth about that 'promise'. He noted that he had been legally represented. He further noted that the prosecutor appealed against the leniency of the new sentence.
- That the appellant did, in fact, benefit from his cooperation because although the suspended sentence was activated it was not increased in length for his further offending.
- The appellant's dissatisfaction about the imposition of the new sentence was capable of being appealed which he did. That appeal was refused.
- The appellant knew that he was obliged to surrender to prison. He chose to flee and come to the UK to avoid that sentence.
- The appellant has the right, by statute, to seek protective custody. It had been years since he received any threats but that right continued.
- The judge doubted whether there was a realistic prospect of any continuing threats after the passage of time. In any event, he found that that was something the prison authorities could manage.
- He found the appellant would not be held alongside those against whom he had given evidence and it was unlikely that they would direct anyone else to harm the appellant years after the event.
- He found that the authorities in Latvia had in place the necessary safeguards to protect the appellant's life and his health.
- He found the existence of any risk to be entirely speculative. He seriously doubted that there was any such risk to the appellant now.
- He found the lawyers criticisms of Latvian prisons insufficient to entitle a judicial authority to refuse an extradition request.
"Stage 1 of the procedure involves determining whether there is such a risk by assessing objective, reliable, specific, and properly updated evidence……A finding of such a risk cannot lead, in itself, to a refusal to execute the EAW. Where such a risk is identified, the court is required to proceed to stage 2.
Stage 2 requires the executing judicial authority to make a specific assessment of whether there are substantial grounds to believe that the individual concerned will be exposed to that risk. To that end it must request the issuing authority to provide as a matter of urgency all necessary supplementary information on the conditions in which it is envisaged that the individual concerned will be detained.
Stage 3 deals with the position after the information is provided. If in the light of that, and of any other available information, the executing authority finds that, for the individual concerned, there is a real risk of inhuman or degrading treatment, execution of the warrant must be postponed but cannot be abandoned."
Discussion
i) "Member states of the Council of Europe are presumed to be able and willing to fulfil their obligations under the ECHR in the absence of clear, cogent and compelling evidence to the contrary;
ii) That evidence would have to show that there was a real risk of the requested person being subjected to torture or inhuman degrading treatment or punishment;
iii) The resumption in i) is of even greater importance with EU member states because there is a strong, albeit rebuttable, presumption that such states will abide by their obligations under the ECHR;
iv) The evidence needed to rebut the presumption and to establish a breach of article 3 by an EU member state will have to be powerful."
Ground 2
"First, the appropriate judge should consider the evidence received and make findings of fact.Second, the appropriate judge should weigh the factors that militate in favour of and against extradition, thus creating a "balancing sheet" of "'pros and cons'".
Third, the appropriate judge should decide the case on the facts applying the 'standard' of interference prescribed and giving reasons for his decision."
Post-script