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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> AM v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2011] EWHC 2486 (Admin) (03 October 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2011/2486.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 2486 (Admin) |
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PTA/17/2010, PTA/18/2010 PTA/7/2010 |
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
AM |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondent |
____________________
Lisa Giovannetti QC and Carys Owen (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) for the Respondent
Muhammed Khamisa QC (on 25 and 26 May 2011 only) and Shaheen Rahman (instructed by SASO) as the Special Advocates
Hearing dates: 25 and 26 May 2011 and 19 July 2011
Further written evidence adduced on 25 and 28 July 2011
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE SILBER:
I. Introduction
(b) Obligation 7.1 of the control order to permit AM to use a memory stick to transfer data from his home computer to his university computer ("the USB Memory Stick Appeal");
(c) Obligation 7.1 of the control order to allow AM internet access at home for the purpose of his study ("the Home Internet Access Appeal");
(d) Obligation 15.2 of the control order to remove the requirement for AM's family to disconnect devices when AM visits his parents' residence ("the Parental Internet Equipment Appeal");
(e) Obligation 7.1 of the control order to allow AM greater access to the internet at university for purposes of his academic study ("the University Internet Access Appeal"); and
(f) Obligation 3 to remove and/or reduce the requirement for AM to make phone calls each day to the electronic monitoring company ("the Monitoring Cause Appeal").
a) They infringe his Article 6 rights under the standards of procedural fairness by failing to provide AM with adequate disclosure of the allegations and evidence against him (see paragraphs 17 to 19 below);
b) They are in breach of the Secretary of State's public law duty to provide AM with a reasonable opportunity to demonstrate to the Secretary of State and the court that the obligations under his control order are no longer necessary (see paragraphs 20 to 44 below); and
c) The decisions in respect of the individual appeals are flawed, unreasoned and in breach of AM's human rights (see paragraphs 45 to 122 below).
II. Chronology
III. The Statutory Framework
"…for purposes connected with protecting members of the public from a risk of terrorism"
"The obligation that may be imposed by a control order made against an individual are any obligations that the Secretary of State … considers necessary for purposes connected with preventing or restricting involvement by that individual in terrorism-related activity".
…
"a) a prohibition or restriction on his possession or use of specified articles or substances;
(b) a prohibition or restriction on his use of specified services or specified facilities, or on his carrying on specified activities;
…
(d) a restriction on his association or communications with specified persons or with other persons generally;
…
(f) a prohibition on his being at specified places or within a specified area at specified times or on specified days;
…
(p) a requirement on him to report to a specified person at specified times and places."
"1. If, while a non-derogating control order is in force, the controlled person considers that there has been a change of circumstances affecting the order, he may make an application to the Secretary of State for
…
(b) the modification of an obligation imposed by the order.."
"6.…the Court is not entitled on an appeal under section 10(3)(b) of the Act (or an appeal under s. 10(1)(b) of the Act for that matter) to question either the reasonableness of the grounds for suspecting that the controlled person has been involved in terrorism-related activity, or the necessity to make a control order against him to protect the public from a risk of terrorism. Since that is the effect of section 10 of the Act, the corollary is that the court should not – save perhaps in an exceptional case – proceed on the basis that anything more than reasonable grounds for suspecting the controlled person of involvement in terrorism-related activity exists, because that would open up the hearing of an appeal of this kind to a consideration of the wide-ranging issues which arise when the control order and the obligations imposed under it are reviewed under section 3(10) of the Act."
"63…Whether it is necessary to impose any particular obligation on an individual in order to protect the public from the risk of terrorism involves the customary test of proportionality. The object of the obligations is to control the activities of the individual so as to reduce the risk that he will take part in any terrorism-related activity. The obligation that it is necessary to impose may depend on the nature of the involvement in terrorism-related activities of which he is suspected. They may also depend upon the resources available to the Secretary of State and the demands on those resources. They may depend on arrangements that are in place, or that can be put in place, for surveillance.
[64] The Secretary of State is better placed than the court to decide the measures that are necessary to protect the public against the activities of a terrorist suspect and, for this reason, a degree of deference must be paid to the decisions taken by the Secretary of State. That it is appropriate to accord such deference in matters relating to state security has long been recognised, both by the courts of this country and by the Strasbourg court, see for instances Secretary of State for the Home Department v Rehman [2001] UKHL 47, [2003] 1 AC 153, Republic of Ireland v United Kingdom (1978) 2 EHRR 25.
[65] Notwithstanding such deference there will be scope for the court to give intense scrutiny to the necessity for each of the obligations imposed on an individual under a control order, and it must do so. The exercise has something in common with the familiar one of fixing conditions of bail. Some obligations may be particularly onerous and intrusive and, in such cases, the court should explore alternative means of achieving the same result. The provision of section 7(2) for modification of a control order 'with the consent of the controlled person' envisages dialogue between those acting for the Secretary of State and the controlled person, and this is likely to be appropriate, with the assistance of the court, at the stage that the court is considering the necessity for the individual obligations". (See also per Keith J. in AM v Secretary of State for the Home Department (referred to above) at [7] and AV and AU v SSHD [2009] 1 All ER 439 [7]).
(a) The Court will engage in a scrutiny of the 'necessity' for the particular obligation imposed on the controlled person to which the appeal relates. The test of 'necessity' needs little further elaboration: it plainly goes further than reasonableness or utility, see Keith J in AM at [7];(b) The scrutiny must be intense, in other words, closely focused on the decision to impose the obligation in the light of the relevant material put before the Court. The Court applies the relevant principles which are adopted on an application for judicial review, see s.10(6); and if, as will usually be the case, the obligation under scrutiny affects Convention rights, the applicable principle will be proportionality, see MB at [63] and AV and AU at [8];
(c) However, since the Secretary of State is better placed than the Court to decide what measures are necessary to protect the public against the activities of a terrorist suspect, the court will accord a degree of deference to the Secretary of State's assessment of what is necessary. The Court's restraint is a reflection of the fact that the Secretary of State is making evaluative and predictive judgments of risk, see the speech of Lord Hoffman in Secretary of State for the Home Department v Rehman at [48] and [57]; and that
(d) The Court will also need to have in mind that it has been provided with evidence which has been withheld from the controlled person and his legal team on the grounds of national security and that the Special Advocate is necessarily inhibited from taking instructions on the material, which he has seen.
IV. Article 6
"59…. the controlee must be given sufficient information about the allegations against him to enable him to give effective instructions in relation to those allegations. Provided that this requirement is satisfied there can be a fair trial notwithstanding that the controlee is not provided with the detail or the sources of the evidence forming the basis of the allegations. Where, however, the open material consists purely of general assertions and the case against the controlee is based solely or to a decisive degree on closed materials the requirements of a fair trial will not be satisfied, however cogent the case based on the closed materials may be".
V. The Public Law Duty
"The Government believes it important to consider whether de-radicalisation and rehabilitation programmes could be deployed to help individuals subject to a control order. Such initiatives would form another potential exit strategy, though consideration would need to be given – as part of the Control Order Review Group process – to the appropriateness of such action in relation to each individual…"
In April 2008, she also said that:-
"The consideration of exit strategies for each control order is an integral and significant part of the formal review held each quarter for every control order by the Control Order Review Group."
"…it is clear that at the time the 2003 Act was passed there was a settled understanding shared by government together with relevant agencies and professionals that upon the coming into force of the new sentencing provisions in the 2003 Act, not least IPP, procedures would be put in place (so far as not already in place) to ensure that initiatives, in particular courses in the prison, would be available to maximise the opportunity for lifers to demonstrate they were no longer a danger to the public by the time their tariff expired or as soon as possible thereafter, so as to allow the lifer's release once that was shown. Such an understanding was, I think, a premise of the legislation: it was certainly inherent in the way the legislation was intended to work in practice, and was intended to be given effect by the Secretary of State's policy set out in PSO 4700"; ([26]) and
"Reducing the risk posed by lifers must be inherent in the legislation's purpose, since otherwise the statutes would be indifferent to the imperative that treats imprisonment strictly and always as a last resort." ([49])
"105. The statutory regime for dealing with indeterminate sentences is predicated on the possibility that, save for those for whom the punitive element of the sentence requires that life imprisonment should indeed mean imprisonment for the rest of the offender's natural life, prisoners may be reformed or will reform themselves. A fair opportunity for their rehabilitation and the opportunity to demonstrate that the risk they presented at the date of sentence has diminished to levels consistent with release into the community should be available to them. The IPP sentence does not require the abandonment of all hope for offenders on whom it is imposed. They are not consigned to penal oblivion. To the contrary, common humanity, if nothing else, must allow for the possibility of rehabilitation. As Lord Phillips CJ, in the Court of Appeal, giving the judgment of the court observed, at paragraph 41:
"We also accept that those who promoted the 2003 Act and Parliament that enacted it must have anticipated that the lifer regime …would be available to IPP prisoners so as to give them a fair chance of ceasing to be, and showing that they had ceased to be, dangerous. This was the context in which the legislation was enacted. To use Laws LJ's phrase [2008] 1All ER 138, para 26, it was 'a premise of the legislation'".
In this context, this premise of the legislation is not however synonymous with its purpose. As we have seen, the statutory structure applicable to IPPs provides for two purposes, commensurate punishment and public protection".
"20…It will be difficult for a prisoner to establish that he does not pose a risk to the public if he is not provided with the courses or assessments that are normally needed to persuade the Board that his detention is no longer necessary..".
"experience shows that it is usually necessary if dangerous offenders are to cease to be dangerous.. performance of the appropriate courses is likely to be a pre-requisite to a prisoner satisfying the Parole Board that he has ceased to be dangerous" [R (Walker) v Secretary of State for Justice (supra) [39]].
VI. The Necessity and Proportionality of the Restrictions on AM which are the Subject of the Appeals.
"193. Furthermore, I have had the opportunity of seeing and hearing AM give evidence. In so doing, he is, in my judgment, highly intelligent, calm and cautious beyond his years. He was only prepared to say in oral evidence whatever was contained in his written evidence. He is strong minded and disciplined. In the face of the overwhelming evidence against him, his firm consistent denials are, in my judgment, simply untrue. They have been maintained with a degree of calmness and self-confidence, which, in my judgment, is consistent with the view of the Security Service that he is a disciplined, trained and committed person whose commitment remains unimpaired.
194. In my judgment, therefore, there is an overwhelming case that there are reasonable grounds for suspecting that AM has been involved in terrorism-related activity and would continue to be so if he had. In those circumstances, it is, in my judgment, necessary for the purposes connected with protecting members of the public from a risk of terrorism to subject him to a control order".
"My conclusions on the issues of principle are that there are and were reasonable grounds for suspecting that AM has been involved in terrorism related activity, and that it was and remains necessary to protect members of the public from the risk of terrorism to make a control order. The level of terrorist activity is extremely high. He was and remains prepared to be a martyr in an attack designed to take many lives. He remains highly trained, security conscious and committed."
"216 In my judgment, having reviewed the evidence and having had an opportunity to assess AM, the level of seriousness of the risk he poses is very high. In my judgment there is overwhelming evidence that he was a person prepared to martyr himself and, in so doing, to kill large numbers of other people. In his dealings with the SSHD and the court, in my judgment, by his denial of any past involvement in terrorist related activity and of any intent so to be involved in the future, he has repeatedly, systematically and carefully lied. It is my judgment that he is an intelligent, capable, well-trained individual who remains committed to terrorist activity. His past involvement has involved the use of electronic communication including by mobile telephone. The fact that, save for two matters, there are no open allegations of breach by him of the terms of the control orders does not, in the light of the foregoing, persuade me that he is a person for whom a light touch series of obligations is remotely appropriate. In my judgment the SSHD was entitled to impose more onerous obligations than were initially imposed".
a) Mr Rashid Rauf, who is the individual who the security services assess as having been "responsible for coordinating the transatlantic airlines plot" is said to have been killed on 22 November 2008;
b) Many of the individuals associated with the alleged "airline plot" have been convicted and sentenced to imprisonment ;
c) AY who is the individual who the Security Services assess as being responsible for providing the operational tasking to AM, is now subject to a control order ;
d) AM's use to any "extremist agenda" has been seriously disrupted because the plot in which the Security Services assess AM as being involved has now been averted; and that
e) There is no evidence that AM has had any involvement in terrorism-related activities in the four years he has been subject to a control order or that he has had contact, whether direct or indirect, with any alleged extremist during those periods, including Mr Rauf, AY, or Mr Mohammed Al Ghabra, whose role and activities I will describe in paragraph 80 below.
"After that time, at least the immediate utility of even a dedicated terrorist will seriously have been disrupted. The terrorist will know that the authorities will retain an interest in his or her activities and contacts, and will be likely to scrutinise them in the future. For those organising terrorism, a person who has been subject to a control order for up to two years is an unattractive operator, who may be assumed to have the eyes and ears of the State upon him/her. Many terrorists prefer to use for operational purposes 'clean skins', persons who are not known ever to have been arrested, as largely has been evident from terrorism plots uncovered in the UK since September 2001, and indeed well before in a context different from violent jihad. A controlee most certainly does not fall into the category of a 'clean skin'".
"12… the humane principle that an offender deemed by statute to be not fully mature when committing his crime should not be punished as if he were. As he grows into maturity a more reliable judgment may be made, perhaps of what punishment he deserves and certainly of what period of detention will best promote his rehabilitation. It would in many cases subvert the object of this unique sentence if the duty of continuing review were held to terminate when the child or young person comes legally of age".
"216…. having reviewed the evidence and having had an opportunity to assess AM, the level of seriousness of the risk he poses is very high. In my judgment there is overwhelming evidence that he was a person prepared to martyr himself and, in so doing, to kill large numbers of other people. In his dealings with the SSHD and the court, in my judgment, by his denial of any past involvement in terrorist related activity and of any intent so to be involved in the future, he has repeatedly, systematically and carefully lied. It is my judgment that he is an intelligent, capable, well trained, individual who remains committed to terrorist activity…."
VII. The Monitoring Calls Appeal
"each day, you must report to the monitoring company (as notified to you):
(a) via the dedicated line provided by the monitoring company or on the mobile phone permitted under obligation (7.1) once between 12.00 and 13.00 hours every day and once between 16.00 and 17.00 hours every day…".
"We would be prepared to consider any request your client may wish to make for modification of the times he is required to call the electronic monitoring company."
VIII. USB memory stick
(i) Introduction
"7.1 Subject to obligations (7.2), (7.4), and (7.5), you shall not (whether directly or indirectly) use, have, acquire or keep (whether in or outside the residence) or bring or permit into the residence the following without the prior permission of the Home Office:…
(c) any equipment and/or item/s that could be used to store digital data."
(ii) Aid to Extremist Communications
(iii) Aid to Attack Planning
(iv) Difficulties of monitoring and enforcement
" 3.i Internet history and files (including those stored on a USB stick can be permanently removed and rendered irrecoverable using file wiping and internet artefact removal software File wiping and internet artefact removal software are both commercially and freely available".
I will explain in paragraphs 100 to 115 below why there can be no effective way of monitoring AM's use of the Internet and files if his appeal is allowed and that reasoning is applicable to show why this appeal cannot succeed.
(v) Non -compliance with obligations
(vi) Proportionality
"…It is my judgment that he is an intelligent, capable, well trained, individual who remains committed to terrorist activity. His past involvement has involved the use of electronic communication including by mobile telephone. The fact that, save for two matters, there are no open allegations of breach by him of the terms of the control orders does not, in the light of the foregoing, persuade me that he is a person for whom a light touch series of obligations is remotely appropriate. In my judgment the SSHD was entitled to impose more onerous obligations than were initially imposed"
IX. The Home Internet Access, Parental Internet Equipment and University Internet Access Appeals
"Subject to obligations (7.2), (7.4), and (7.5) you shall not (whether directly or indirectly) use, have, acquire or keep (whether inside or outside the residence) or bring or permit into the residence the following without the prior permission of the Home Office:
(a) any equipment capable of connecting to the internet (either directly or indirectly);
(b) any computer/s or components thereof."
"15.(2) You may enter your parents' residence on up to four occasions each week, subject to
(a) written consent from your parents to, and their compliance with, the conditions given in writing at the time of the notification of the imposition of this control order. This consent must be provided in writing to the Home Office prior to you visiting your parents' residence."
(i) Aid to extremist communication
(ii) Aid to attack planning
(iii) Difficulty of monitoring and enforcement
(iv) Detection of wiping
"if the file wiping software was executed by media other then the computer's internal hard drive, then the software would not be detectable. By removing the USB interfaces, the DVD/CD drives and access to other media that may be inserted into the computer to execute a program, the possibility of a user being able to utilise software by other means can be removed".
(v) Monitoring of Internet activity
"…due to vulnerabilities in the Windows operating system, and exploits available on the Internet to perform privilege escalation, the "Standard User" could gain access to "Administrator" privileges, being able to run or delete software and Windows services, and subvert the monitoring software. It is not therefore possible to guarantee the integrity of the Administrator account, and by extension any monitoring software or account control implemented under the Administrator account"
"3…(vi) …without access to file wiping software a user would find it difficult, but not impossible to "hide" their user privilege escalation from detection by computer forensic techniques. As outlined in this report, however, there are a number of steps that can be taken to mitigate the risks of a forensically aware user from evading detection".
"3…(ii)…has been compromised by hackers who have identified mechanisms by which to escalate their user privileges. Although Microsoft often issue 'patches' , which will fix a security flaw, new mechanisms by which to escalate one's user privileges are constantly being developed and documented".
(vi) AM's non-compliance with obligations
"216. In my judgment, having reviewed the evidence and having had an opportunity to assess AM, the level of seriousness of the risk he poses is very high. In my judgment there is overwhelming evidence that he was a person prepared to martyr himself and, in so doing, to kill large numbers of other people. In his dealings with the SSHD and the court, in my judgment, by his denial of any past involvement in terrorist related activity and of any intent so to be involved in the future, he has repeatedly, systematically and carefully lied. It is my judgment that he is an intelligent, capable, well-trained individual who remains committed to terrorist activity.
X. Conclusions