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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions >> A.G. v. Oldridge [2000] IESC 29; [2000] 4 IR 593; [2001] 2 ILRM 125 (19th December, 2000) URL: https://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IESC/2000/29.html Cite as: [2000] IESC 29, [2001] 2 ILRM 125, [2000] 4 IR 593 |
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1. On
the 26th November 1997, the District Court (Judge Gerard J. Haughton) heard an
application pursuant to Part II of the Extradition Acts,[*2]
2. The
consultative case stated came on for hearing in the High Court before Kearns J.
and in a reserved judgment delivered on the 10th November 1999 he decided that
the first question should be answered in the negative. He rejected an
alternative submission that the District Judge had no jurisdiction to state the
case.
3. The
applicant has appealed to this court from the determination in the High Court
that the first question should be answered in the negative. The respondent has
not sought to argue in this court that the District Judge had no jurisdiction
to state the case.[*3]
4. The
application for extradition arises out of what is alleged to have been an
extraordinarily elaborate scheme by a number of persons resident in the United
States and elsewhere to defraud three banks. The allegation of the prosecution
in the United States is that a woman named Ilene Moses, who was engaged in the
clothing industry through her company SMS Inc., was the prime mover in the
fraudulent scheme. She was said to have claimed that she had a
“benefactor”
in
the clothing industry who was a member of a secret cartel that controlled the
fashion industry in Europe and Asia and that, through this benefactor, she had
access to businesses controlled by the cartel and a licensee agreement to sell
its fashion designs. It is alleged that, in all, the defendants in the
proceedings obtained 28 million dollars in loans secured on foot of assets
which did not exist or, at least, did not exist in the form that the defendants
claimed they existed.
5. One
of the main features of the alleged scheme was a mythical business relationship
between two companies called Jolland and Romtex AG, as a result [*4] of which
large sums were purportedly owed by Romtex to Jolland. It was claimed by the
prosecution that Romtex had no independent existence and that the alleged
business transactions were wholly illusory. As a result of this, and other
stratagems, it was said that the banks were induced to pay sums amounting to 28
million dollars to Moses and her associated companies.
6. These
frauds were alleged to have been perpetrated from about September 1982 to March
1991. The prosecution say that between 1983 and 1988, one Laurence Anderson
assisted in the fraudulent scheme by holding himself out as being in contact
with the mythical cartel and being wholly independent of Moses and her
companies: in fact, it was claimed, he was acting on the instructions of Moses.
In the period from March 1988 to April 1989, it was alleged that the respondent
presented himself to the lawyers acting for Moses and other interested parties
as the representative of the cartel in succession to Laurence Anderson. Again,
it is said that there was no cartel and that he was not in any sense
independent and in fact acted on the instructions of Moses. During this latter
period - described by the prosecution as
“the
lulling phase”
-
it is said that the respondent provided assurances to lawyers and other
concerned persons at a stage when Moses or her associated companies had
defaulted on the loans from the banks and effectively induced them to forebear
from suing. It is alleged that, in addition to using his own [*5] name, he also
used the names
“J.
Later”
and
“R.
Schulz”
to
make it appear that Romtex AG was independent of Moses.
7. In
what is described as the
“superseding
indictment”,
the grand jury for the United States District Court of the Eastern District of
Michigan (Southern Division) charged that
8. There
follow in the indictment particulars of the allegedly fraudulent scheme. Under
the heading [*6]
9. In
his written judgment, the District Judge said that he could find no statutory
equivalent in Ireland to the statutory offences in the United States with which
the respondent was charged. It was for that reason that he was of the view that
the respondent should not be extradited. In the High Court, it was accepted by
counsel for the Attorney General that the only criminal offence known to Irish
law which could be regarded as corresponding to the offences with which the
applicant was charged was that of conspiracy to defraud, [*7] contrary to
common law. While it was accepted that the respondent, to the extent that he
was involved, had joined in the fraudulent scheme, if such it was, only after
the money had been obtained from the banks, it was submitted that his alleged
activities during the
“lulling
phase”
were
essential to the success of the fraudulent scheme and, if proved, would clearly
establish the ingredients of the common law offence of conspiracy to defraud
accepted in Irish law. That argument was rejected by the learned High Court
judge, but he also found against the applicant on another ground, i.e. that,
under the relevant provisions of the Agreement on Extradition between Ireland
and the United States (known as the Washington Treaty) an offence is to be an
extraditable offence only if it is punishable under the law of both countries
by imprisonment for a period of more than one year or by a more severe penalty.
The trial judge said that, since there was no prescribed minimum or other
penalty for the offence of conspiracy to defraud contrary to common law, that
requirement had not been met. Counsel for the respondent has not sought to
stand over that finding in this court.
11. By
virtue of the Extradition Act, 1965
(Part
2) (No. 22) Order 1987 (S.I. No. 33 of 1987), the Washington Treaty between
Ireland and the United States was, in accordance with these statutory
provisions, given the force of law in Ireland. Article I of the Treaty provides
that
13. The
punishment threshold, accordingly, provided for in the 1965 Act is lower than
that provided for in Article 2 of the Washington Treaty. Where Section 10 of
the Act is the only applicable provision, a person can be extradited provided
the relevant offence is punishable by imprisonment for at least one year. Under
Article 2, he can be extradited only where the relevant offence is punishable
by a period of more than one year. While the latter was the relevant provision
in the present case, it is clear that, whichever is applied, the threshold
requirement was met: the relevant offence was punishable by imprisonment for a
period of more than one year. The offences with which the respondent is charged
in the
“superseding
indictment”
each
carry a maximum penalty of five years imprisonment in the United States. What
is submitted to be the corresponding offence in Ireland, i.e. conspiracy to
defraud, is a common law misdemeanour which is punishable by imprisonment for
life or any lesser term. In these circumstances, counsel for the respondent
properly conceded that the finding of the learned High Court judge that the
requirements of Article 2 of the Washington Treaty had not been met in this
context could not be supported.
14. The
applicable law as to the second ground on which the learned High Court judge
found in favour of the respondent was stated as follows by [*12]
15. Barrington
J. in
The
State (Gilliland) .v. The Governor of Mountjoy Prison
(1986) JR 381 at p. 387:-
16. Further
guidance as to the applicable law is to be found in the following passage from
the judgment of Henchy J. speaking for this court in
Hanlon
.v. Fleming
(1981) IR 489 at p. 495:-
17. In
this case, the acts alleged to have been committed by the respondent and which,
it is said, formed part of the scheme to defraud the banks are alleged to have
been committed by the use of the mails or other facilities affecting interstate
or foreign commerce. It is clear, however, from the terms of Article 11.2(b),
already quoted, that the charge is laid as one of
“wire
fraud”
or
“mail
fraud”
simply
for the purpose of establishing jurisdiction in a United States federal court.
It is also clear that, at least in respect of the period prior to the
“lulling
period”,
the
acts charged against the defendants would correspond in Irish law to the
offence of obtaining money by false pretences.[*14]
18. It
is accepted on behalf of the applicant that the acts alleged against the
respondent do not amount to obtaining money by false pretences, since he did
not become involved in the alleged scheme to defraud until the lulling phase.
It is, however, submitted that the offence with which he is charged, of acting
in concert with other named persons to carry out specified acts for the purpose
of executing the alleged fraudulent scheme, constitute the offence of
conspiracy to defraud which, it is said, is an offence under Irish law.
19. That
offence was defined in
Scott
.v. Metropolitan Police Commissioner
(1975) AC 819 as
20. In
their recently published work on
“Criminal
Liability”,
Professor Finbarr McAuley and Mr. Paul McCutcheon, while acknowledging that the
definition of conspiracy to defraud is
“undoubtedly
hydra-headed”,
add
21. In
the High Court case of
Myles
.v. Sreenan
[(1999) 4 I R 294] , Geoghegan J. rejected an argument that the offence had not
survived the enactment of the Constitution, stating
22. I
would respectfully agree with that statement of the law. It has, however, been
urged in this case that since the charge against the respondent is that he
became involved in the allegedly fraudulently scheme only during the lulling
phase, the allegations against him, if proved, would not establish that he had
participated in the conspiracy, if such it was, to carry the scheme into
effect. That proposition is not, in my view, supported by either principle or
authority. The acts with which the respondent is charged were, according to the
case put forward on behalf of the prosecution, an essential feature of the
allegedly fraudulently scheme: the banks, it is said, were induced at least in
part by the respondent’s actions not to call in the loans which they
advanced and hence, it is said, he played an essential part in the continuing
conspiracy to defraud the banks. If that allegation is well founded, he would
properly be [*16] described as having participated in the conspiracy, even
though his role was confined to lulling the banks into a false sense of
security. As Coleridge J. put it in his direction to the jury in
Reg
.v. Murphy
(1837) 8 CNP 297:-
23. That
was described by Viscount Dilhorne as a correct statement of the law in
Reg
.v. Doot
[(1973) AC 807 at p. 823].
24. I
would allow the appeal and substitute for the order of the High Court an order
that the questions in the case stated should be answered as follows: