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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 >> Lacorre v High Instance Court of Paris [2008] EWHC 2871 (Admin) (29 October 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2008/2871.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 2871 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE GROSS
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LACORRE | Claimant | |
v | ||
HIGH INSTANCE COURT OF PARIS | Defendant |
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(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Ms L Collins (instructed by the CPS) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
"Criminal conspiracy with the purpose of committing such violations as importation, transportation, possession, sale, commercialisation of drugs, in this case cannabis resin;
Importation, transportation, possession, sale commercialisation of drugs, in this case cannabis resin."
The offences are in the main alleged to have been committed contrary to sections 222 and 450 of the French Penal Code. The particulars of circumstances identified in the warrant are as follows:
"In Paris, on the national territory, in Spain, in the years 2004, 2005, 2006 since time not covered by statutes of limitation.
In January 2004 the officers of the Paris Drugs Squad received undercover intelligence according to which a team of experienced mobsters, some of whom had already been convicted on armed robbery charges had switched to drug trafficking over cannabis resin on an international scale. According to the information received these individuals would organise sea trips of huge quantities of cannabis resin between the Moroccan coastline and Spanish coast in the vicinity of Alicante.
The criminal organisation was made up, among others, of Gerard DUPRE, Marc LACORRE, Eric PARTARRIEU, Guy PETIT, Abdelkrim BOUCORRA and Cherif TEMMAT who were all arrested with the exception of Marc LACORRE.
All these persons met several times in France and Spain while looking for a sailing ship in order to transport drugs and approach people in connection with the cannabis producers of the Moroccan Rif area.
More especially Marc LACORRE, aka 'Le Grand' appears as the one who conveys information and instructions from Gerard DUPRE within the organisation and attends to the preparation of the logistics in Spain (maintenance of the ships, organisation of sea trips with drugs, unloading and storage of the goods).
On 18th April 2008 we have been informed that Marc LACORRE had been arrested in Bridgetown (Trinidad & Tobago) from London, flight BA 2153 with French passport 04 CF 18440 issued by the authority in Hauts de Seine country on 14th December 2004, reported stolen as blank under the name of Marc Alain BARONNET born 11th May 1958 in Bordeaux and a national ID card under the same name, no.B061092058542."
In short, the particulars reveal that the appellant was a member of a criminal organisation engaged in drug trafficking on an international scale by importing cannabis resin from Morocco to Spain.
"(c) particulars of the circumstances in which the person is alleged to have committed the offence, including the conduct alleged to constitute the offence, the time and place at which he is alleged to have committed the offence and any provision of the law of the category 1 territory under which the conduct is alleged to constitute the offence."
"The particulars of the conduct alleges, amongst other things, that Paris Police undercover intelligence had shown 'a team of experienced mobsters . . . had switched to drug trafficking [of] cannabis resin on an international scale . . . these individuals would organise sea trips of huge quantities of cannabis resin between the Moroccan coastline and Spanish coast in the vicinity of Alicante'.
The particulars also state that the criminal organisation was made up, among others, of Gerard Dupre, Eric Partarrieu, Guy Petit, Abdelkrim Boucorra, Cherif Temmat and the defendant Marc Lacorre. All these persons are alleged to have met several times in France and Spain while looking for a sailing ship in order to transport drugs and approach people in connection with the cannabis producers of the Moroccan Rif area. The defendant's alleged role is further particularised as 'More especially Marc Lacorre, aka 'Le Grand', appears as the one who conveys information and instructions from Gerard Dupre within the organisation and attends to the preparation of the logistics in Spain (maintenance of the ships, organisation of sea trips with drugs, unloading and storage of the goods)'."
She concluded:
"The defence submission is that there is a lack of sufficient particularity, eg, the particulars should go beyond saying the named alleged co-conspirators met in France and Spain and specify the place of each meeting and which of the co-conspirators were present and specific details of the defendant's role in the meetings. It was further submitted that in relation to the substantive offence of drug importation that details should be provided of the type, number and location of ships used to smuggle the drugs and details of how, when and where the drugs were unloaded and stored, and in what quantity. In my view this goes far beyond what is required by section 2(4)(c) given its plain and ordinary meaning. The particulars of time and place, the criminal conduct and the defendant's alleged participation in the two alleged offences are specified in sufficient detail to satisfy the requirements of section 2(4)(c) and I find that the EAW [European Arrest Warrant] is a Part 1 Warrant within the meaning of the Act."
"Providing that the description in a warrant of the facts relied upon as constituting an extradition offence identifies such an offence and when and where it is alleged to have been committed, it is not, in my view, necessary or appropriate to subject it to requirements of specificity accorded to particulars of, or sometimes required of, a count in an indictment or an allegation in a civil pleading in this country. Allowance should be made for the fact that the description, probably more often than not, was set out in a language other than English, requiring translation for use in this country, and that traditions of criminal 'pleading' vary considerably from one jurisdiction to another. As Laws LJ observed in Palar, at paragraph 8, while emphasising the need for conduct said to constitute the extradition offence to be specified in a warrant:
' . . . the background to the relevant provisions made in the 2003 Act is an initiative of European law and . . . the proper administration of those provisions requires that fact to be borne firmly in mind . . . the court is obliged, so far as the statute allows it, to proceed in a spirit of co-operation and comity with the other Member State parties to the European Arrest Warrant scheme . . . '."
"The judge must decide whether any of the offences specified in the Part 1 Warrant is an extradition offence."
"34. Common to the first condition about the place of the conduct, irrespective of the subsection under which it has to be satisfied, are two questions: (1) whether the person must be within the territory of the requesting State at the time of the conduct which he is alleged to have committed, and (2) whether the conduct must have occurred exclusively within that territory. In many cases, of course, these will not be live issues as it will be plain that the conduct occurred exclusively in the territory of the requesting State. But many of the offences in the Framework list such as trafficking in human beings are commonly committed across borders. The appellant is alleged to have engaged in conduct of that kind, so these questions must be addressed in his case.
35. The answers are to be found in the first place in the language which has been used by the legislature which Lord Bingham has analysed. The context in which that language has been used is, of course, provided by the common law. It is provided in particular by the rules which apply when jurisdiction is claimed on the basis of territoriality. It is now well established that the physical presence of the defendant in the territory is not required so long as the effects of his actions were intentionally felt there. That rule is matched by its corollary which is that, if the effects of those actions were intentionally felt here, criminal jurisdiction can be exercised in respect of their effect irrespective of where the actions took place that gave rise to them . . . "
Later at paragraph 40, Lord Hope continued:
" . . . The conduct must occur 'in' the category 1 territory if the condition which is set out in these paragraphs to be satisfied. But a purposive meaning must be given to the word 'conduct' in this context. It would impose a wholly artificial restriction on the extradition process if it were to be taken as meaning that all the conduct which resulted in the offence must have taken place exclusively within the category 1 territory. Actings elsewhere will be sufficient to constitute conduct in that territory so long as their intended effect was to bring about harm within that territory . . . "
"38. As to that, it is true that some of the alleged conduct took place outside Spain. But that does not matter so long as some of the conduct alleged in respect of each offence took place in Spain. In my view, it did. There is an allegation that, for a time, the appellant was living in Bilbao and was involved in the receipt of money from Germany which was used for terrorist purposes and also in the forgery and distribution of false documents including passports for use in terrorist activity. It is alleged that during this time he was a member of Al-Qaeda. In my judgment, that is enough to satisfy subsection 3(a)."
I do not consider that Smith LJ's conclusion in that respect assists in the resolution of the present issue.
"The conduct also constitutes an extradition offence in relation to the category 1 territory if these conditions are satisfied --
(a) the conduct occurs outside the category 1 territory and no part of it occurs in the United Kingdom;
(b) the conduct would constitute an offence under the law of the relevant part of the United Kingdom punishable with imprisonment or another form of detention for a term of 12 months or a greater punishment if it occurred in that part of the United Kingdom;
(c) the conduct is so punishable under the law of the category 1 territory (however it is described in that law)."
The critical paragraph is (c). There may be, as I have observed, circumstances in which the conduct alleged is punishable under the law of France, but Ms Collins had no instructions about it and the warrant contains no information which purports to support it. She is unable to advance subsection (5) as an alternative gateway to the extradition offences in these circumstances.
"48. I would wish to hear further argument on this issue before concluding that the approach which Crane J took to the facts . . . was the correct one, especially as your Lordships were not referred to his decision during the hearing of this appeal. It is sufficient for present purposes to say that it is open to the court to draw inferences from the material available to it to determine whether the requirements of the statute have been satisfied. But those against whom the system for extradition is invoked are entitled to protection against its use in circumstances which have not been provided for by Parliament. So I think that Crane J was right to indicate that, if there is a gap in the information, it ought not to be filled by mere guesswork."