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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Tibbetts v The Attorney General of the Cayman Islands (Cayman Islands) [2010] UKPC 8 (24 March 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2010/8.html Cite as: [2010] UKPC 8 |
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[2010] UKPC 8
Privy Council Appeal No 0058 of 2009
JUDGMENT
Patrick Thomas Tibbetts v the Attorney General of the Cayman Islands
From the Court of Appeal of the Cayman Islands
before
Lord Saville
Lord Rodger
Lord Brown
Lord Kerr
Lord Clarke
JUDGMENT DELIVERED BY
Lord Clarke
ON
24 March 2010
Heard on 21 January 2010
Appellant Geoffrey Robertson QC Lucy Corrin (Instructed by Simmons Cooper Andrew LLP) |
Respondent David Perry QC Duncan Penny (Instructed by Treasury Solicitors) |
LORD CLARKE:
INTRODUCTION
The principles
"The test is that, having ascertained all the circumstances bearing on the suggestion that the judge was (or would be) biased, the court must ask 'whether those circumstances would lead a fair-minded and informed observer to conclude that there was a real possibility that the tribunal was biased' "
The dramatis personae
The appellant's case in summary
"Counsel summarized the facts of significance, on which he relied as giving rise to apprehension of bias, as follows: (i) the juror failed to disclose that he knew the male Crown witness either in the questionnaire or when the witness testified at trial; (ii) the juror and the two witnesses socialized on an intermittent basis until three years before the trial; (iii) they discussed the investment of the witnesses in the Cash 4 Titles scheme on several occasions; (iv) the juror knew of the collapse of the scheme and that the witnesses had lost money as a result; (v) the male witness and juror had previously lost money in the failure of another business; and (vi) the evidence of the male witness assumed particular importance when it was referred to by the judge in his charge to the jury as potentially corroborative of that of the accomplice Gause."
The prosecution case against the appellant
Jury selection
The trial
The association between Mr Uzzell and Mr Bjuroe
The significance of Mr Bjuroe's evidence
i) The evidence of Mr Gause was to the effect that in August 1998 he and Mr Homa switched most of their business from Mr Rowe to the appellant. Mr Gause would call the appellant on a weekly basis to discuss how much money was being raised. Mr Gause said that the appellant was very familiar with the business and was responsible for carrying out the transfer of funds. He gave evidence of two important conversations: (a) a conversation in late 1998, following a meeting between Mr Gause and Mr Homa (and others) at Mr Gause's home in Atlanta, when the appellant was told (in effect) that the C4T investment scheme was a Ponzi scheme; and (b) a conversation in early 1999 when Mr Gause and the appellant discussed both the fact that new money was being used to pay off existing investors and the intense scrutiny to which the scheme was being subjected by the authorities in the United States. In spite of what the appellant was told by Mr Gause, the scheme continued to operate with monies from new investors being used to pay off earlier investors. The level of new funds required to pay off existing investors was at least $10 million per month.
ii) The evidence of investors in the scheme, notably Mr Halm, Mr Black and Mr Franklin, implicated the appellant and was relied upon by the prosecution as showing that he had the relevant knowledge or, at the very least, suspicion. For example Mr Halm said that the appellant had described Mr Homa and Mr Gause as crooks. Mr Franklin gave evidence that, after an FBI raid in September 1999, he telephoned the appellant and informed him that the focus of the raid was C4T documentation and that the FBI was asserting that the scheme was a Ponzi scheme. Mr Black said that he was concerned that the scheme was a Ponzi scheme and that in August or September 1999 he spoke to the appellant to pass on his concerns.
iii) Mr Don Seymour of the Cayman Islands Monetary Authority gave evidence that he met the appellant on 21 October 1999 and that he appeared to have an excellent understanding of the flow of funds and knew that the funds were not going to C4T but were instead being diverted into companies controlled by Mr Gause. Mr Seymour said that the appellant admitted his knowledge that funds had been diverted and invested in aeroplanes and condominiums.
iv) The appellant himself filed a Suspicious Activity Report on 20 October 1999.
v) Only ten days before Mr Gause's arrest the appellant told another investor, Mr Maurice Walker (who gave evidence), that he did not have financial statements and the only person who had them was Mr Homa. Following the arrest of Mr Gause, Mr Walker telephoned the appellant, and was told by him that Mr Gause had $60 to $70 million in C4T and that the money should cover the investors, which was, the prosecution said, simply untrue.
"admitted taking money from Interworld and, instead of sending it to Sunset Financial directly, put it into Interworld, and that money from Interworld would come back to the investors. So basically the money that was going into JMP or one of the other companies never made it to C4T as an investment in the company itself. "
When Mr Williams asked the appellant why he was taking the money and not investing it in the C4T scheme, he said 'because money is a bit short here and we have to pay the investors every month. So instead of taking the money all the way up and then bringing it all the way down, we just cross it over earlier and bring it down to the investors'. In short, Mr Williams said that the appellant had no real answer when it was put to him that the money was not being put where it was intended to go. Mr Williams made notes during the meeting and made further notes on his computer when he returned home. In December 1999 Mr Williams and Mr Bjuroe attended a meeting with the appellant at the offices of Quin & Hampson at which the appellant admitted that he had moved money to a company controlled by Mr Gause and not to the United States.
"Members of the jury, you will realise, of course, that these admissions which this witness [Paul Williams] and Mr Bjuroe attribute to Mr Tibbetts are of importance in this trial. You will have to ask yourselves whether you can rely on what these witnesses or either of them had to say, whether there is any reason for them to make things up, whether they may have been mistaken. Being such an important matter, my direction to you is that, like all other important aspects of the Crown's case, you must be sure about the reliability and accuracy before you might rely upon it to convict an accused person."
Decision of the Court of Appeal
"Even in populous jurisdictions there are, of course, cases of notoriety in which some or all jurors have read, heard and seen pictures of people and events involved, and may have discussed, and perhaps expressed opinions about, the issues raised at trial. In a jurisdiction such as the Cayman Islands, with a small and closely-knit population, there is a greater possibility that a juror may also have been associated in some way with one of the witnesses, and this must particularly be so in a trial such as the present, which involved more than 50 Crown witnesses. The jury questionnaire was obviously intended to identify prospective jurors whose connection with a party or witness was close enough to be of concern. The possibility that a potential juror might have knowledge of facts of the case was not raised in the questionnaire. Nor was the possibility that a juror might in the past have been associated with a Crown witness. The fact that the juror in question erroneously declared himself to be a current friend of a Crown witness did not, in the event, lead to objection being taken by counsel."
The Board agrees with that approach. It is noteworthy that the questionnaire was agreed between counsel with the very problems identified by the Court of Appeal in mind.
" that counsel for [the appellant] had accepted the juror understanding him to be a friend of the female witness, who had invested through the accused and lost money, and with the knowledge that she was married to another Crown witness who lost money, and would testify also regarding an allegedly inculpatory statement by the accused. The observer would in our view take into account also that the juror's association with these witnesses had never been particularly close, and had ended more than three years earlier. Of importance, too, would be the fact that the apprehension of bias asserted was not said to arise from prior knowledge by the juror of prejudicial facts, but rather from sympathy that the juror might feel for the loss suffered by the witnesses, and from willingness to accept their evidence on account of former friendship."
Discussion