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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 >> Olenski v Regional Court of Krosno, Poland [2016] EWHC 196 (Admin) (08 February 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2016/196.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 196 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
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 :
____________________
MACIEJ MARIUSZ OLENSKI |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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REGIONAL COURT OF KROSNO, POLAND |
Respondent |
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Brian Gibbins (instructed by CPS Extradition Unit) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 25 March 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Sweeney :
Introduction
i) Compelling another person to conduct himself in a specified manner, contrary to Article 191 of the Penal Code, on 11 April 2003 when he, acting with another, used force (kicking and punching) and the threat of further force to compel Marcin Jaworski to give them money for the purchase of alcoholic drinks.ii) Infringing privacy, contrary to Article 193 of the Penal Code, on the night of 23 / 24 May 2003 when he and another broke a window and got into the house of Kazimiera Kuzinska.
iii) Battery, contrary to Article 158 of the Penal Code, on the night of 25 / 26 May 2003 when, acting together with persons unknown, he punched and kicked the victim Krzysztof Kuzinski (the son of Kazimiera Kuzinska) and then threw him into a river and stood on his back to hold his head under the water. In consequence the victim suffered a number of injuries which resulted in an impairment to his health lasting more than 7 days and exposing him to an immediate danger of the loss of his life or grievous bodily harm.
i) The Appellant's extradition would not be oppressive because of the passage of time (s.14 EA).ii) Extradition would not be disproportionate with the Appellant's Article 8 rights (s.21 EA).
Background
i) The Appellant was arrested and held in custody from 25 June 2003 to 19 November 2003.ii) On 25 June 2003 the Appellant was informed of his obligations to appear before the relevant authorities when summonsed and to notify the court of any change of address, and signed a document confirming that he had been so informed.
iii) At some point the Appellant pleaded guilty to the offence of battery.
iv) On 19 November 2003 the Appellant's trial in relation to the other offences began in the District Court of Lesko and he gave evidence. He was notified of further hearings to be held on 4 & 23 December 2003 and 12 January 2004 and was then released in the knowledge that the Court would judge his criminal responsibility.
v) The Appellant thereafter stopped living at home and failed to attend all the subsequent hearings.
vi) On 20 January 2004, he was convicted in his absence and sentenced to 1 year 3 months' imprisonment.
vii) The Appellant did not appeal and thus the judgment against him became final on 28 January 2004 with, given the time served on remand, approximately 9 months' imprisonment remaining to be served.
viii) On 18 June 2004 the Appellant failed to answer a summons to Sanok Prison to serve his sentence.
ix) On several occasions the District Court requested the local police to bring the Appellant before it, but efforts to find the Appellant were unsuccessful since he had left his address and the address where he was residing was not known.
x) On 20 February 2009, a national arrest warrant and a search order were issued by the District Court of Lesko in relation to him.
xi) As indicated above, the EAW was issued on 31 March 2009. It was translated into English on 15 April 2009. A diffusion notice was sent by Interpol Warsaw to the NCA on 23 September 2014 after which checks revealed that the Appellant might be present in the UK. Hence the EAW was certified on 1 October 2014.
The correct approach
i) The general principles in relation to the application of Article 8 in the context of extradition proceedings are set out in Norris (above) and HH (above). In future, absent further guidance from a specially constituted Divisional Court or the Supreme Court, it would not be necessary to cite any other authorities. In the latter case at [8] Baroness Hale JSC made clear, at subparagraphs (3), (4) and (5), that the question raised under Article 8 was whether the interference with private and family life of the person whose extradition was sought was outweighed by the public interest in extradition; that there was a constant and weighty public interest in extradition that those accused of crimes should be brought to trial; that the UK should honour its international obligations; that the UK should not become a safe haven; and that the public interest would always carry great weight, but that the weight varied according to the nature and seriousness of the crime involved (emphasised again by Baroness Hale JSC, and also by Lord Judge LCJ, Lord Kerr JSC and Lord Wilson JSC).ii) It was important that the judge bore in mind, amongst other things, that:
(a) HH was concerned with cases that involved the interests of children, and the judgments must be read in that context [8].(b) The public interest in ensuring that extradition arrangements are honoured is very high, as is the public interest in discouraging persons seeing the UK as a state willing to accept fugitives from justice (both of which factors would be expected to be addressed in the judgment) [9].(c) The decisions of the judicial authority of a Member State making a request should be accorded a proper degree of mutual confidence and respect particularly since the UK has been subject to the CJEU (which has stressed the importance of mutual confidence and respect) since 1 December 2014 [10].(d) The independence of prosecutorial decisions must also be borne in mind [11].(e) It is also important for the judge to bear in mind that factors that mitigate the gravity of the offence or culpability will ordinarily be matters that the court in the requesting state will take into account; and the judge must also take into account that personal factors relating to family life which will need to be brought into the balance under Article 8, will also form part of the matters considered by the court in the requesting state in the event of conviction [12].(f) A structured approach to Article 8 cases is essential, given that each case will turn on the facts found by the judge and the balancing of the considerations set out in Norris and HH [14 (ii)].(g) The approach should be one in which the judge, after finding the facts, sets out a list of the "pros" (militating for extradition) and "cons" (militating against extradition) in "balance sheet" fashion, and then sets out his reasoned conclusion as to the result of the balancing exercise and why extradition should be ordered or the defendant discharged [16] & [17].
The first ground - s.14 EA
"a person's extradition to a category 1 territory is barred by reason of the passage of time if (and only if) it appears that it would be unjust or oppressive to extradite him by reason of time since he is alleged to have committed the extradition offence "
i) The District Judge had erred in finding that the Appellant was a fugitive, which was a finding of fact that the court should re-determine - if necessary via an order for live evidence under CPR 52.11-(2)(a).ii) Albeit in circumstances of mutual trust, the District Judge had failed to consider, or to sufficiently consider, the errors in the information provided by the Respondent.
iii) In particular, he ought to have taken into account that the information provided by the Respondent in the letter dated 14 November had been wrong as to the date when the Appellant had first been held in custody; that that had only been corrected after the service on the Respondent of the Appellant's proof of evidence; and that the correction had confirmed the Appellant's account that he was first held in custody in June 2003.
iv) Against that background, the District Judge ought to have found that the Applicant had been truthful as to the overall time that he had been detained in custody and as to his reasons for leaving Poland.
v) The District Judge had provided no reasoning for his finding beyond saying that he had been released prior to the completion of the proceedings against him and with full knowledge of the dates on which he was expected to attend.
vi) In addition, there was no specific finding that the Appellant did not honestly believe, whenever he was released, that he had served his sentence.
i) The Appellant's change of account as to when he had been released provided, even if taken in isolation, a proper basis upon which to conclude that he was an unreliable witness.ii) One wrong, but corrected, date in the information provided by Judge Krysa did not render the whole of the evidence provided by him inaccurate or unreliable, and he had always said that the Appellant had been released on 19 November 2003 (which was further confirmed in the Order made by District Court of Lesko on 8 December 2014).
The second ground s.21 EA
i) There was an unexplained culpable delay of some 5 years between the sentence of the Appellant in January 2004 and the issue of the national arrest warrant in February 2009.ii) There was a further culpable unexplained delay of some five-and-a-half years between the issue of the EAW in March 2009 and its certification in October 2014.
iii) Culpable delay was capable of weighing heavily in an Article 8 balancing exercise in the case of a fugitive as to which he drew my attention to Tomaszewicz v Poland [2013] EWHC 3670 (Admin) and Slawonir Oreszczynsi v Krakow District Court, Poland [2014] EWHC 4346 (Admin).
iv) The District Judge had found that the delay was unexplained, but had then failed to sufficiently weight it as a factor.
v) The Appellant had lived openly in the United Kingdom; he had applied for a National Insurance number in 2005; he had worked here for some 10 years and was of effective good character - with only one blemish on his record, namely his conviction for a number of driving offences in April 2007.
vi) The offences were not trivial, but were not serious either.
vii) Given that the Appellant had been in custody since his arrest in October 2014, and the Polish early release provisions (albeit not automatic - see Chmura v Poland [2013] EWHC 3896 (Admin)), there was only a small time remaining before the Appellant would be released.
i) The evidence showed that from 2004 onwards there had been efforts to locate the Appellant in Poland but that those had come to nothing because, as it turned out, the Appellant had fled to this country.ii) The domestic warrant was issued in February 2009 and the EAW was issued only shortly thereafter on 31 March 2009.
iii) The fact that the warrant had been translated into English on 15 April 2009 could indicate (although there was no evidence about it) that there was some information that the Appellant was in an English speaking country but he could not assist (because certification was then dealt with by SOCA rather than the NCA) with whether anything had been transmitted here at that stage and, if so, why there was no certification then. In any event, the Court should be cautious before inferring culpability.
i) The robbery and the assault were both serious offences (each with a number of aggravating features) and in this country each would almost inevitably have attracted a custodial sentence with a starting point of a year or more.ii) Such delays as had occurred were principally due to the Appellant's absconding.
iii) Whilst the Appellant had only one previous conviction in this country the suggestion that he was of effective good character had to be tempered by the fact that he had lied in his evidence during the extradition hearing.
iv) The Appellant's ties in this country were very limited. His wife and children were in Italy and were self sufficient with the Appellant only sending money occasionally for his daughter's education.
v) Whilst early release from the sentence was possible, it was not an entitlement, and the length of the remainder of the sentence did not render extradition disproportionate.
Further Argument
Conclusion