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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 >> Danfelds & Anor v General Prosecutor's Office, Latvia [2020] EWHC 2042 (Admin) (28 July 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2020/2042.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 2042 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE JULIAN KNOWLES
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MARTIN DANFELDS & ENDIJS JODELIS |
First Applicant Second Applicant |
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- and - |
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GENERAL PROSECUTOR'S OFFICE, LATVIA |
Respondent |
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Saoirse Townshend (instructed by Oracle Solicitors) for the Second Applicant
Jonathan Swain (instructed by Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 22 July 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Nicola Davies:
i) there is a real risk that the applicants will be subject to inhuman and degrading treatment if extradited to Latvia due to the established poor state of Latvian prisons (sections 21 and 21A of the 2003 Act; article 3 ECHR);
ii) extradition is a disproportionate interference with the applicants' right to a private and family life (sections 21 and 21A of the 2003 Act; article 8 ECHR).
The EAWs
The first applicant
The second applicant
i) the theft of cigarettes, Coca-Cola and chocolate from a kiosk, value €28.77;
ii) criminal damage to the kiosk, value €55.36;
iii) the theft of cigarettes from a kiosk, value €88.
The extradition hearing at Westminster Magistrates' Court
Article 3 ECHR
The submissions of the applicants and the respondent
i) legal proceedings in Northern Ireland – R v Konusenko (January 2019) – in which the Recorder of Belfast, having considered the CPT report and the response of Latvia to specific questions raised by the court arising from its content, found that surrender of the appellant would be in breach of his article 3 rights and discharged the EAW;
ii) a public statement by the Latvian Minister for Justice on 12 April 2019, which confirmed that a new prison had not been built and that during 2018 compensation totalling €8,000 was paid to prison inmates resulting from unacceptable living conditions;
iii) Amnesty International reports published in 2018 which reiterated the point that prison conditions continue to be poor, the justice system is overburdened, prisons continue to suffer from overcrowding and other alleged abuses;
iv) what are said to be fact-specific ECtHR decisions which are said to corroborate international concerns on the same issues involving violence, hygiene, dilapidated facilities, low staff numbers and poor regime.
Fresh evidence
i) extracts from pages on the Baltic News Network website which indicate that there has been slippage in the date for construction of the new prison;
ii) the Latvian Ombudsman Office in its report for the year 2019 stated that it continued to receive complaints about the living conditions in institutions of deprivation of liberty in Latvia, especially in Daugavgriva Prison. The Ombudsman report also identifies the fact that informal hierarchies and inter-prisoner violence remained a problem in 2019;
iii) the Latvian Ombudsman Office in its 2020 report on the previous year confirmed that it continued to receive a greater number of complaints about the living conditions in prisons, particularly Daugavgriva;
iv) Ms Spure, Head of the Department of Detention Places, is reported as stating in February 2019 that Daugavgrivsky Prison is "simply unsafe", 12 to 16 prisoners sit in one cell. She is reported as stating that in order "To support the outdated infrastructure of prisons, more and more budgetary funds are needed, so construction of a new prison cannot be postponed". Ms Spure acknowledged that prison numbers had dropped but is reported as stating that "the appropriate conditions of detention cannot be ensured for everyone." She is reported as having anticipated that the building of a new prison would result in the closing of at least three old places of detention.
Discussion and conclusion
Article 3 ECHR
i) failed to grapple with or analyse the content of the CPT report;
ii) failed to address the content of the key material identified in [19] above;
iii) by reason of (i) and (ii), he failed to follow the guidance set out in Aranyosi.
Accordingly, I grant permission to appeal to each applicant upon the article 3 ECHR ground. The response from Latvia to the matters set out in the Annex will be considered by the court at the hearing of these appeals upon the article 3 issue. As to the fresh evidence sought to be relied upon by the applicants, it will be a matter for the court hearing these appeals as to whether such evidence meets the Fenyvesi test.
Article 8 ECHR
The first applicant
The second applicant
Mr Justice Julian Knowles:
a) identification of the prison at which each appellant will be detained upon arrival and/or be held in pre-trial custody and/or serve his sentence of imprisonment if extradited;
b) an assurance that neither appellant will be transferred to the Griva section of Daugavgriva Prison;
c) details of the current numbers of prisoners detained in the relevant section of each prison;
d) details of the staffing levels at the relevant section of each prison to which each appellant, if extradited, would be detained;
e) an assurance that the conditions at the relevant section of each prison in terms of:
i) prisoner numbers;
ii) staffing levels;
iii) inter-prisoner violence;
iv) out of cell activities;
would not breach the rights of either appellant pursuant to article 3 ECHR;
f) an assurance of, and details of, the monitoring which will take place to ensure compliance with the appellants' article 3 rights as set out in (e) above;
g) evidence of the measures being taken in the relevant section of each prison by the appropriate authority to prevent the spread of Covid-19.