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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 >> Domian v Circuit Court In Gorzow Wieikopolski (Poland) [2022] EWHC 266 (Admin) (09 February 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2022/266.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 266 (Admin) |
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CO/259/2021 |
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
ZBIGNIEW DOMIAN |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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CIRCUIT COURT IN GORZOW WIEIKOPOLSKI (POLAND) |
Respondent |
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And Between: |
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ZBIGNIEW DOMIAN |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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JUDICIAL AUTHORITY OF POLAND |
Respondent |
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Stuart Allen (instructed by CPS) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 9.2.22
Judgment as delivered in open court at the hearing
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE FORDHAM:
i) The Appellant has asked the Court to appoint him what he calls a "duty barrister". He wants someone to help him. He emphasises that he is not familiar with English law or the English language. He wants help to find documents and to get proper translations. He has been using computer-based translation facilities and is concerned that those can involve mistakes. But on that matter I am quite satisfied, from emails that I have seen, that the Appellant has had explained to him – and understands – that the Court does not have the function of appointing a lawyer. The Court can deal with the legal aid if he has identified legal representatives who can acts under legal aid. That has indeed been his previous position. He has had legal representation in both of the cases.
ii) The Appellant submits to me that he has been "deprived of fair trial rights". This deprivation that he describes really extends to every part of this case. He says that there was never any fair trial in Poland, that the Polish sentences in his case were "not correct", and that they breached what he calls the "loyalty principle", as well as breaching his Article 6 ECHR rights. He says that the legal representatives who acted for him in Westminster magistrates' court extradition hearings failed in their duties properly to represent him. He says that: they failed to put forward relevant evidence; they failed to provide the magistrates with translated documents; and evidence relating to Article 8 ECHR private and family life was not properly put before the magistrates' court. The point about his fair trial rights in Poland appears in the grounds of appeal which legal representatives put before this Court in the context of Article 6. Private and family life of the Appellant is addressed on his behalf in materials before this court in relation to Article 8.
iii) The Appellant also says that evidence has been hidden from the courts, and ignored by the courts. He explains that he has made complaints about all of his previous legal representatives and he says that the ombudsman is currently dealing with those complaints. He submits that he was "deprived of the right to be represented in the magistrates court", at both relevant hearings. When I put to him that he had legal representation at those hearings he explained to me that his grievance was that proper evidence was not filed with the magistrates.
iv) So far as the substance of his human rights-based appeals against the orders extraditing him are concerned, he has told me that he has wanted to prove, still wants to prove, and would be able to prove two things in particular. One is the unfairness and injustice of the Polish sentences "in breach of Article 6" and the "loyalty principle". The other is the "endangerment of his life" were he extradited. On the first of those he says he has "two or three pieces of evidence" which would "prove his case". On the second of those he says he has papers which he would be able to put before the Court.
i) The Appellant's first case (CO/545/2020) relates to a conviction EAW (EAW1) issued on 1 August 2018 and certified on 17 August 2018, referable to a two-year prison sentence imposed in Poland on 3 October 2016. EAW1 gave rise to an oral hearing on 22 November 2019 before DJ Blake at which the Appellant gave oral evidence. DJ Blake, in a judgment dated 6 February 2020, ordered the Appellant's extradition on EAW1. Grounds of appeal invoking Articles 5 and 6 ECHR were – as I have indicated – filed by legal representatives who subsequently came off the record by order dated 27 February 2020. That is two years ago.
ii) The Appellant's second case (CO/259/2021) relates to a conviction EAW (EAW2) issued on 24 January 2020 and certified on 29 February 2020, referable to a distinct two-year prison sentence. That was imposed for two offences of fraud, committed on 28 July 2000 and 31 May 2001, which were the subject of Polish judgments on 11 April 2019 and 12 November 2019. EAW2 gave rise to an oral hearing on 14 December 2020 before DJ Goldspring at which the Appellant again gave oral evidence. Those proceedings had been adjourned, from an earlier hearing date of 30 July 2020, to allow documents to be translated and filed on the Appellant's behalf. DJ Goldspring refused any further adjournment for reasons that he gave in his judgment dated 15 January 2021. In that judgment, DJ Goldspring ordered the Appellant's extradition on EAW2. Grounds of appeal invoking Article 8 ECHR – as I have indicated – and the Wozniak section 2 point were filed by, legal representatives, who subsequently came off the record by order dated 16 March 2021.
i) More than two years ago, in his oral evidence on 22 November 2019 to DJ Blake, the Appellant was telling the magistrates' court that he had evidence to show that the Polish judgments were falsified and that he had suffered a complete denial of his rights in Poland.
ii) Eight months later in July 2020 he was afforded the lengthy adjournment, specifically so that documents could be obtained and translated.
iii) At the subsequent hearing in December 2020, he told DJ Goldspring that a fraud had been done to him in his trial in Poland in relation to the subject-matter of EAW2. He also told DJ Goldspring that there were documents which he had provided to his solicitors, for the purposes of having them translated and placed before the magistrates' court. That, after all, was the whole point of a five-month adjournment which had been sought and secured by them on his behalf.
9.2.22