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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> AG v Bhojwani [2008] JRC 172A (01 October 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2008/2008_172A.html Cite as: [2008] JRC 172A |
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[2008]JRC172A
ROYAL COURT
(Samedi Division)
1st October 2008
Before : |
J. A. Clyde-Smith, Esq., Commissioner, sitting alone. |
The Attorney General
-v-
Raj Arjandas Bhojwani
Transposition, purpose element and admissibility applications.
Advocate M. T. Jowitt for the Attorney General.
Advocate J. D. Kelleher for the Defendant.
JUDGMENT
THE commissioner:
1. The defendant stands indicted for two counts of converting the proceeds of criminal conduct and one count of removing the proceeds of criminal conduct, contrary to the provisions of Article 34(1)(b) of the Proceeds of Crime (Jersey) Law 1999 ("the 1999 Law"). His trial is due to commence on 26th January 2009.
2. On 11th July 2008, I ordered that a number of matters were suitable for a preparatory hearing under Part 10 of the Police Procedures and Criminal Evidence (Jersey) Law 2003 ("PPCE") which hearing took place on 16th September 2008. One issue, namely the admissibility of the defendant's statement of 11th October 2002 (Exhibit PG/1), has been adjourned to a later date. I deal with the issues that were argued before me in the order set out below.
Transposition
3. Article 34(1) of the 1999 Law is in the following terms:-
4. is defined in Article 1 as follows:-
5. Schedule 1, after setting out the articles to which it applies, is in the following terms:-
6. The indictment has been further particularised and count 1 is now in the following terms:-
"Count 1
Statement of Offence
Converting the proceeds of criminal conduct contrary to article 34(1)(b) of the Proceeds of Crime (Jersey) Law 1999.
Particulars of Offence
Raj Arjandas Bhojwani, between the 1st October 2000 and 30th October 2000, in respect of criminal conduct, namely:
(a) the dishonest inflation of true prices for motor vehicles sold by him to Nigeria;
(b) the making of false representations that:
(i) the inflated prices were genuine prices;
(ii) it was necessary to pay US$ 148, 940, 000 plus freight and other charges or about that sum in order to obtain the vehicles sold under one contract; and
(iii) it was necessary to pay US$ 28, 961, 192 or about that sum in order to obtain the vehicles sold under the other contract.
(c) the obtaining of dishonestly inflated payments for the vehicles out of Nigerian public funds;
(d) the dishonest receipt for the benefit of himself and others of the inflated payments thereby obtained;
(e) the dishonest payment of monies by or on the instructions of the said Raj Arjandas Bhojwani to bank accounts connected to Nigerian public officials involved in the award of vehicle-supply contracts to Tata Overseas Sales and Services Ltd.
(conduct which, if it occurred in Jersey, would have constituted offences of fraud, conspiracy to commit fraud, fraudulent conversion, conspiracy to commit fraudulent conversion, and bribery),
converted his proceeds of such criminal conduct, namely credit balances held in the names of TaTa Overseas Sales and Services Ltd SA and Britannic Trade Corporation at the Bank of India in Jersey, into six bankers' drafts totalling approximately US$43.9 million, for the purpose of avoiding prosecution for an offence listed in Schedule 1 to the said Law or the making or enforcement of a confiscation order against him."
The remaining two counts are for the purposes of these contentions in the same terms.
7. There are three elements to the offences with which the defendant is charged, namely:-
(i) conversion or removal of
(ii) property that represents the defendant's proceeds of criminal conduct
(iii) for the purpose of avoiding prosecution or the making or enforcement of a confiscation order or both.
8. The criminal conduct alleged concerns two contracts negotiated between the defendant and officials of the military dictatorship of the President of the Republic of Nigeria, General Sani Abacha, in 1996 and 1997 for the supply of vehicles to the Republic of Nigeria at what the prosecution say were vastly inflated prices. The prosecution will seek to prove that the sums payable under these contracts, which it claims included an illegal surplus of some US$ 130M, came to the defendant's company accounts at Bank of India in Jersey. Many millions were then allegedly transferred by the defendant to bank accounts in other countries linked to the Abacha regime. The alleged conversion and removal, which are the subject of the indictment and which involve some six banker's drafts, are said to have taken place in October and November 2000.
9. We are concerned here with the second element of the offence, specifically the process of transposition and the extent of the conduct that has to be transposed.
10. Before turning to the contentions of the parties, it is helpful to refer first to the two House of Lords cases in which transposition has been considered, namely Cox v Army Council Respondents (1962) 2 WLR 950 and Norris v Government of the United States of America (2008) 2 WLR 673.
11. In Cox, the House of Lords was concerned with Section 70 of the Army Act 1955 by which any person subject to military law who commits a civil offence, whether in the United Kingdom or elsewhere, is guilty of an offence against the section. "Civil offence" is defined as meaning any act or omission punishable by the law of England which, if committed in England, would be punishable by that law. The appellant, while serving with the British Army in Germany, was charged before the District Court Martial held there with committing a civil offence contrary to section 70 of the Army Act 1955, that is to say driving without due care and attention contrary to section 3(1) of the Road Traffic Act 1960, in that at Sundern on 15th September 1960, he drove a motor vehicle on the road without due care and attention. Lord Reid said at page 70:-
Lord Radcliffe said (at page 71):-
12. Norris is an extradition case where the alleged crime had been committed in the USA, which was the requesting state. Before there can be extradition, there has to be criminality according to both the law of the requesting state and English law and it is therefore necessary to show that if the conduct had occurred in England, it would have constituted an offence under English law. It is worth setting out the unanimous judgment of the House of Lords on transposition in full:-
13. The defence argued that Norris must be regarded with some caution in that it was an extradition case involving a double criminality test. Cox on the other hand was concerned with a single criminality test and was to be preferred as authority for the purposes of the 1999 Law. However Norris was concerned with the same exercise in transposition as that required under the 1999 Law, albeit in the context of extradition, namely whether (section 137 of the Extradition Act 2003).
14. I extract from both authorities the following, namely, that in the context of the 1999 Law, for the purpose of transposing the conduct which occurred outside Jersey to Jersey, you must not fasten upon the adventitious circumstances connected with the conduct but upon the essence or essential elements of that conduct which it is said would constitute a crime or crimes if it occurred in Jersey.
15. The defence drew my attention to academic criticism of the single criminality test, namely that it offends the principle of legal certainty that is the cornerstone of any criminal justice system based upon the rule of law, in particular that the proceeds from conduct that is lawful in the place where it occurs can be rendered criminal by legal fiction. The defence cited the example of bullfighting in Spain which is legal in Spain but not in Jersey. If proceeds from bullfighting were to come to Jersey, they would be liable to confiscation under the 1999 Law. Furthermore any conversion or removal to avoid this would potentially be an offence under article 34 (1) (b) of the 1999 Law.
16. The potential for injustice that is imbedded in the single criminality test is however, in the defence's view, mitigated by the device of transposition under which, on the authority of Cox and in particular the judgment of Lord Radcliffe, the local conditions and circumstances prevailing in Nigeria at the material time should be taken into account. Specifically, the defence argued that the exercise of transposition should include the nature of General Abacha and his powers and whether what it was alleged that he did in Nigeria was unlawful. It accepted that this came very close to imposing a double criminality test.
17. I agree with the prosecution that the principle of legal certainty is not engaged here and there is nothing in the judgments in Cox to suggest that its reasoning was designed to give effect to it. The legislature have taken a policy decision to be consistent in the conduct it criminalises (by reference to its own criminal law); a decision by which we are bound. If bullfighting gives rise to differing opinions what, says the prosecution, about slavery or other forms of exploitation that may be legal in other parts of the world?
18. The defence further submitted that the House of Lords in Cox expressly envisaged certain categories of offences which were unsuitable for transposition and hence placed a limitation upon the general language of the statute containing the single criminality test in that case. Viscount Simonds said this at page 68:-
19. Although I have found in an earlier judgment that misconduct in public office is not an offence known to Jersey law (which decision is under appeal) the defence would have argued that such an offence was not susceptible of transposition at all, because it is an offence that is so closely intertwined with the political circumstances and cultural values of Jersey that it would be impossible to criminalise conduct occurring in another country by analogy through transposition. However, the defence conceded that the Jersey offences now particularised in the indictment are susceptible to transposition but maintain that the process must take into account the prevailing circumstances in Nigeria.
20. In any event we are not dealing here with acts which of their nature can only be committed in Jersey. All of the acts alleged here, namely fraud, fraudulent conversion (and conspiracy to commit the same) and bribery have what Viscount Simonds described as a character of universality.
21. The defence placed reliance on Lord Radcliffe's reference in Cox to importing into the hypothetical English occurrence the circumstances and conditions that prevailed at the place where and the time when the thing that is complained of was done or omitted and submitted that transposition consisted of three distinct stages:-
(i) Identification of the acts and omissions outside of Jersey alleged to constitute an offence if committed within Jersey and the relevant circumstances and conditions prevailing at the place and time of those acts and omissions.
(ii) Assessment of the extent to which the circumstances and conditions identified in (i) are an essential element of the acts that are alleged to constitute an offence in Jersey.
(iii) On the basis of (ii), determination as to whether the Jersey offence can be applied to the non-Jersey occurrence.
22. This places upon the Court, as part of the transposition process in this case, the burden of inquiring into and identifying the circumstances and conditions in Nigeria in 1996 and 1997 and determining firstly which of those are relevant to the acts alleged and secondly which of them are essential to those acts. In my view this would involve the court in embarking upon a potentially wide ranging exercise when the essence or essential elements of those acts alleged are already clear.
23. This is because by particularising the criminal conduct alleged in the indictment, the prosecution has now set out the essence or essential elements of the conduct alleged, which it will seek to show, if proved, would constitute the Jersey offences if it occurred in Jersey. That is its case and it accepted that it has the burden of proving each of the particulars to the criminal standard.
24. In my view and in principle, the Jurats should be directed to approach the second element of the offence in the following manner and this in respect of each count:-
(i) The first stage, which is evidential, is for the Jurats to determine whether they are sure that the conduct set out in each of the sub-paragraphs of the particulars in the count took place. If they are not sure that any of the conduct particularised took place, then they will acquit. If they are sure that some, if not all, of the conduct set out in the particulars took place, then they will move on to the second stage.
(ii) The second stage, also evidential, is for the Jurats to determine whether they are sure that "the property" referred to in the count represents the defendant's proceeds of such conduct, to the extent proved. If they are sure, then they will move on to the third stage. If not sure they will acquit.
(iii) The third stage is the process of transposition of the conduct, to the extent proved, to Jersey, which in this case can be achieved with very little substitution of the circumstances (as referred to in the extract of Lord Millet's judgment cited in paragraph 95 of Norris). Assuming, for the sake of argument, all of the particulars of the alleged conduct in count one are proved, that conduct can be transposed to Jersey by making the following limited amendments to the particulars (the amendments are underlined):-
"(a) the dishonest inflation of true prices for motor vehicles sold by a person (through a company) to Jersey.
(b) the making of false representations that:
(i) the inflated prices were genuine prices;
(ii) it was necessary to pay US$ 148,940,000 plus freight and other charges or about that sum in order to obtain the vehicles sold under one contract; and
(iii) it was necessary to pay US$ 28,961,192 or about that sum in order to obtain the vehicles sold under the other contract.
(c) the obtaining of dishonestly inflated payments for the vehicles out of Jersey public funds;
(d) the dishonest receipt for the benefit of himself and others of the inflated payments thereby obtained;
(e) the dishonest payment of monies by or on the instructions of the person to bank accounts connected to Jersey public officials involved in the award of vehicle-supply contracts to the company"
I will refer to this as "the transposed conduct".
(iv) The fourth stage is the process by which the elements of the Jersey offences are applied to the transposed conduct. It is only if all the elements in respect of at least one of the Jersey offences are found by the Jurats to be present in the transposed conduct, that the conduct is constituted "criminal conduct". They will be directed as to the elements of the Jersey offences. If they find that all the elements of at least one Jersey offence are present in the transposed conduct then the second element of the offence charged in the count is proved.. If not they will acquit.
25. This does not deprive the defence of the ability to adduce evidence relevant to the issue of whether the conduct alleged took place (which may well include evidence as to the local conditions and circumstances) or whether the property represents the defendant's proceeds of that conduct but once the Jurats have found (if they do) that, for example in relation to sub paragraph (a) of the particulars, there was a dishonest inflation of true prices for motor vehicles sold by the defendant to Nigeria, then it is that finding as to conduct which is transposed. The fact that the person with whom the defendant was dealing was a dictator and the other prevailing circumstances in Nigeria at the time are adventitious and irrelevant to the transposition process. In particular, the fact that the conduct proved may have been lawful or acceptable or tolerated in Nigeria is irrelevant to that process.
26. I therefore find against the defence in its submissions as to the process of transposition. In setting out how in principle the Jurats should be directed to approach the second element of the offence charged, I have gone further than the matters canvassed in argument. To the extent that I have done so, it is subject to any further submissions the parties may wish to make, when, in the usual way, I seek their comments on the precise directions I intend giving the Jurats.
Purpose
27. The third element of the offence is that the conversion or removal should have been 'for the purpose of avoiding prosecution or the making or enforcement of a confiscation order or both'. In my judgment of 15th August 2008 I set out at paragraph 70 how I would intend directing the Jurats in relation to the purpose element of the offence as follows:-
28. The defence submitted that the requirement must be for the prosecution to prove that, where two purposes are made out, the purpose argued for by the prosecution was the defendant's dominant or in the alternative substantial purpose.
29. As authority for these propositions, the defence relied on a number of civil cases:-
(i) In 4Cast Limited v Mitchell (Inspector of Taxes) (2005) S.T.C. (S.C.D.) 287, the judgment of the Commissioner records that although he was not required to construe the words 'for the purpose of' within the meaning of section 289(1)(b) of the Income and Corporation Taxes Act 1988, he nevertheless concluded that if he had been required to do so, he would have construed them as meaning 'for the dominant purpose of'.
(ii) In Regina v Southwark Crown Court ex parte Bowles (1998) AC 641, the Divisional Court had made an order of certiorari to quash a production order made under section 93H of the Criminal Justice Act 1988 for the production of documents, on the ground that the dominant reason for the application had been to further the investigation into the alleged criminality of the business owners and that such purpose fell outside the ambit of section 93H. The House of Lords held that on its true construction, section 93H had been enacted solely for the purpose of assisting the recovery of the proceeds of criminal conduct and did not permit applications relating to the investigation of criminal offences involving the obtaining of money or other property which ought properly to be brought under section 9 of and schedule 1 to the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984. In cases where it appeared that an application under section 93H was activated by a plurality of purposes, the judge was to grant the application if the true and dominant purpose was to enable investigation to be made into the proceeds of criminal conduct, even though, as an incidental consequence, evidence might thereby be obtained relating to the commission of an offence. Accordingly, on the Divisional Court's finding that the dominant purpose of the application had been to investigate whether an offence had been committed rather than to recover the proceeds of crime, the order of certiorari quashing the production order would stand. In his judgment, Lord Hutton approved the dominant purpose test as stated in Wade & Forsyth on Administrative Law 7th edition 1994 at page 436 as follows:-
(iii) In Inland Revenue Commissioners v Hashmi and another (2002) EWCA Civ 981, the court construed section 423(3) of the Insolvency Act 1986 under which transactions can be set aside if, inter alia, the court is satisfied that it was entered into 'for the purpose .... of putting assets beyond the reach of a person ....'. It was held that the purpose did not have to be the only or dominant purpose for which the transaction was entered into. What was required was that the claimant showed that the vendor or settlor was 'substantially' motivated by one or another of the aims set out in the section. The court commented that it was .
The defence accepts that in these cases the courts were dealing with the juxtaposition of one or more civil or legitimate purposes and not civil and criminal purposes.
30. The defence submits on the basis of these authorities that hypothetically, the Jurats might conclude that the defendant had two (or more) purposes in converting or removing his proceeds of criminal conduct:-
(i) One purpose being to avoid prosecution for an offence or the making or enforcement of a confiscation order (which I will describe as the 'criminal purpose') and
(ii) The other purpose being perfectly legitimate (which I will describe as the 'legitimate purpose').
Having found the existence of two purposes, the Jurats would then have to be sure that the criminal purpose was the dominant or alternatively the substantial purpose in order to find that element of the offence proved. If they conclude that the dominant or alternatively the substantial purpose of the defendant may have been the legitimate purpose, then they will acquit.
31. The notion that a legitimate purpose can so displace a criminal purpose would lead to the surprising result, in my view, of the defendant being acquitted even though the Jurats had found that one of his purposes, albeit not dominant or substantial, was criminal.
32. I agree with the written submission of the prosecution as follows:-
"The principal difference between a criminal and civil case in this context is the nature of the concept of criminality. As pointed out above, if something is criminal it remains criminal and punishable no matter how many non-criminal activities are engaged in at the same time. It is hard to overemphasise this distinction. A criminal mens rea whether trivial or negligible remains a criminal mens rea and if the tribunal of fact is sure it exists a conviction will follow. It follows that the simple direction to the Jurats that they must be sure that one of the defendant's purposes was a purpose set out in Article 34 must be the correct one".
33. Furthermore, the only direct authority on the points supports the prosecution position. In R v Causey (unreported 18th October 1999) the English Court of Appeal said this in relation to the equivalent English offence:-
34. In Mitchell, Taylor & Talbot on Confiscation and the Proceeds of Crime, the following passage appears at paragraph 9.015:-
35. That Causey is authority for this proposition appears to have been accepted by the English Court of Appeal in R v Montila [2004] 1 WLR 624 at paragraph 26:-
36. The contentions of the prosecution are in my view conceptually correct and are supported by authority. I conclude therefore that the proposed direction, namely that the Jurats have to be sure that one of the defendant's purposes was a purpose set out in Article 34 of the 1999 Law, is correct.
Admissibility of evidence
37. The defence challenged the admissibility of evidence relating to an attempted payment to Hong Kong in 2002. The evidence which the prosecution seeks to adduce in this respect is as follows (quoting from the prosecution's skeleton argument):-
"1. After the transactions which form the subject of this indictment, the funds were used by the Defendant to purchase India Millennium Deposits ('IMDS'), some of these were held at Bank of India in Jersey. Others were held at the Bank of India in London, in the names of 4 companies: (a) 'Jasone'; (b) 'Bromwich'; (c) 'Sound'; and (d) 'Rubie'.
2. On 9th December 2002, the Bank of India in London telephoned the company administrator for the four companies and sent them a fax. The fax reads:
"We refer to your above account and telephone talk our Mr Thaker had with you today. Recently your account had come up for scrutiny by local regulatory authorities i.e. FSA and that they have made certain observations. In order to enable us to comply with their requirements we request you to send us the following documents/papers..."
3. On the same day, the Bank of India in London sent a letter to each of the four companies. This letter read in part:
'Re: Your Loan Against IMD facility with us
We request you to submit the following documents in order to fulfil requirements of the Financial Services Authorities, the Controlling authorities in UK.
1. A certificate issued by the Registrar of Companies, Nuie stating therein:
...
e. Owners or shareholders (Name and address of all the owners/shareholders holding more than 10% shares/beneficial interest to be given)
f. Nature of companies' business.
...'
4. The same day, the Defendant sent a letter from each of the four companies to the Bank of India in London, requesting that the IMDs be transferred to Hong Kong."
38. The prosecution contended that this attempt to move the IMDs in 2002 is admissible because:-
(i) It is evidence of the defendant's guilty knowledge as to the criminal origins of the funds.
(ii) It is relevant to rebut the suggestion that he thought he had done nothing wrong in negotiating the contracts in Nigeria.
(iii) It is relevant to his purpose in converting and removing the funds in 2000 (the subject matter of the charge).
39. The prosecution will seek to demonstrate a consistency of conduct on the part of the defendant in relation to these funds from the outset by which it can be inferred that one of his purposes in converting and removing the funds in 2000 was the avoiding of a prosecution for an offence (in Jersey) or the making or enforcement of a confiscation order (in Jersey).
40. The defence referred me to Archbold 2008 edition chapter 13 'Evidence of bad character' and the test at English common law for the admission of what is called 'similar fact evidence' as set out in DPP v P (1991) 2AC 447, essentially that its probative value outweighs its prejudicial effect. Archbold notes the advantage of P was that it rid the law of the notion that had developed that the test of admissibility was that there should be a striking similarity between similar fact evidence and the evidence relating to the charge being tried, but that its disadvantage was that it gave little assistance as to what should be taken to invest the similar fact evidence with a sufficient degree of probative value. This disadvantage was more apparent than real because the Lord Chancellor's conclusion was expressed to derive from the five speeches in DPP v Boardman (1975) AC421. The defence referred me in particular to paragraph 13-40 of Archbold 'The Unlikelihood of Coincidence' and the statement that there was abundant authority for the view that evidence would be admissible under the similar fact rule if the explanation of it on the basis of coincidence would be an 'affront to common sense', or would be 'against all probabilities' or would be an explanation subscribed to only by an 'ultra-cautious jury'. If this were the case, then the evidence had the necessary probative force.
41. The defence submits that this evidence of the intended transfer of funds to Hong Kong in December 2002 at its height demonstrates that at that time the defendant was reluctant to answer the FSA's questions about the source of the funds. However, it submits that such evidence is simply irrelevant to the issue of whether in October 2000 the defendant understood that he had committed an offence in Jersey or was at risk of prosecution in Jersey or that he had at that time acted for the purpose of avoiding prosecution for a Jersey offence. The defendant became aware of the detail of the Jersey investigation in late 2001/early 2002 and in particular by December 2002 knew that a Jersey criminal investigation had been commenced and the prosecution assertion, therefore, that the defendant's conduct subsequent to the FSA inquiries in December 2002 can be taken into account by the Jurats when deciding whether they are sure that one of the defendant's motives in asking for the bank drafts in 2000 was to avoid prosecution for an offence in Jersey is entirely illogical. The fact that, subsequent to a fraud law interview, the defendant may well have been aware of the risk of a Jersey prosecution (and, if this is the effect of the evidence in relation to December 2002, wanted to avoid it) does not and cannot go any way towards disproving his case that he was unaware of that possibility prior to that interview or proving the prosecution case that his October 2000 conversion or transfer was to avoid such prosecution. Therefore the defence submitted that evidence of the defendant's conduct in December 2002 has no probative force and is irrelevant to the issue which the prosecution seeks to prove by adducing it.
42. Phipson on Evidence, 15th edition, helpfully analyses the kinds of prejudice taken into account in relation to this test in P:-
(i) The principal prejudicial effect to be weighed in the balance against probative value is what it terms 'disposition prejudice'; that is to say evidence that the defendant has a disposition to carry out certain types of activity.
(ii) 'Bad person prejudice'; that is to say evidence which shows that the defendant is generally a bad person who should not be roaming the streets.
(iii) 'Accumulation prejudice', which arises where there are a number of charges to try at the same time and the tribunal of fact may be tempted to think there is 'no smoke without fire' and
(iv) 'Diversion prejudice' which arises where a dispute about similar fact evidence may lead a tribunal of fact to be diverted from the issues in the case, which the prosecution submits is unlikely to arise where there are professional fact finders such as Jurats.
43. In my view neither disposition nor bad person prejudice apply; there is nothing inherently wrong in the transfer of funds, save potentially for the point I deal with below. Accumulation prejudice does not apply and although diversion prejudice could apply, I agree with the prosecution that it is unlikely to arise with professional finders of fact such as Jurats. The defence implicitly agrees that the evidence is not prejudicial in that it seeks to exclude the evidence on the grounds that it has no probative value and is irrelevant-not that it is prejudicial.
44. I doubt whether this evidence comes within the descriptive term "similar fact evidence". It is evidence that relates to the defendant's handling of the very same proceeds of criminal conduct (allegedly) which form the subject matter of the indictment, which in my view invests it with a sufficient degree of probative value (for the purposes tendered by the prosecution) to outweigh the prejudicial effect it may have, if any.
45. Mr Jowitt indicated that the attempted movement of these funds could constitute an attempt to money launder under UK legislation. That it might be an offence under English law is not the purpose for which the prosecution seeks its admission and there is no reason to suggest that the Jurats may consider this possibility. Rather than direct the Jurats to ignore that possibility (thus raising something which may not occur to them), I would propose (at this stage) giving the Jurats a positive direction as to the purpose for which this evidence is tendered by the prosecution.
46. I therefore find that the evidence of the attempted payments to Hong Kong in 2002 is admissible.