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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 >> British Sky Broadcasting Ltd, R (on the application of) v The Central Criminal Court & Anor [2011] EWHC 3451 (Admin) (21 December 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2011/3451.html Cite as: 2012 SCCR 562, [2011] EWHC 3451 (Admin), [2012] 3 WLR 151, 2012 JC 308, 2012 SCL 635, [2012] UKSC 24, (2012) 109(27) LSG 19, [2012] QB 785, [2013] 1 AC 413, [2012] HRLR 24, [2012] 4 All ER 600, 2012 SLT 799, 2012 GWD 21-432, [2012] 3 WLR 78, 2012 SC (UKSC) 308 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
MR JUSTICE BEAN
____________________
THE QUEEN (on the application of BRITISH SKY BROADCASTING LTD) |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
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THE CENTRAL CRIMINAL COURT and THE COMMISSIONER OF POLICE for the METROPOLIS and AB |
Defendant Interested Parties |
____________________
Mr. James Lewis Q.C. and Miss Saba Naqshbandi (instructed by Metropolitan Police Directorate of Legal Services) for the defendant and the Metropolitan Police Commissioner
Mr. Simon McKay (solicitor advocate) for AB
Hearing date: 21st November 2011
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Moore-Bick:
Background
"9.— Special provisions as to access.
(1) A constable may obtain access to excluded material or special procedure material for the purposes of a criminal investigation by making an application under Schedule 1 below and in accordance with that Schedule.
(2) Any Act (including a local Act) passed before this Act under which a search of premises for the purposes of a criminal investigation could be authorised by the issue of a warrant to a constable shall cease to have effect so far as it relates to the authorisation of searches—
(a) for items subject to legal privilege; or
(b) for excluded material; or
(c) for special procedure material consisting of documents or records other than documents."
"1. If on an application made by a constable a circuit judge is satisfied that one or other of the sets of access conditions is fulfilled, he may make an order under paragraph 4 below
. . .
3. The second set of access conditions is fulfilled if—
(a) there are reasonable grounds for believing that there is material which consists of or includes excluded material or special procedure material on premises specified in the application, or on premises occupied or controlled by a person specified in the application (including all such premises on which there are reasonable grounds for believing that there is such material as it is reasonably practicable so to specify);
(b) but for section 9(2) above a search of such premises for that material could have been authorised by the issue of a warrant to a constable under an enactment other than this Schedule; and
(c) the issue of such a warrant would have been appropriate.
4. An order under this paragraph is an order that the person who appears to the circuit judge to be in possession of the material to which the application relates shall—
(a) produce it to a constable for him to take away; or
(b) give a constable access to it . . .
. . .
7. An application for an order under paragraph 4 shall be made inter partes."
"Sky has been given a copy of the Notice seeking the Production Order and a copy of the information in support redacted to the extent that secret information has been excluded. The full information is to be provided to the judge including the redacted secret information."
"A person who is or has been a Crown servant or government contractor is guilty of an offence if without lawful authority he makes a damaging disclosure of any information, document or other article relating to security or intelligence which is or has been in his possession by virtue of his position as such but otherwise than as mentioned in subsection (1) above."
"For the purposes of subsection (3) above a disclosure is damaging if—
(a) it causes damage to the work of, or of any part of, the security and intelligence services; or
(b) it is of information or a document or other article which is such that its unauthorised disclosure would be likely to cause such damage or which falls within a class or description of information, documents or articles the unauthorised disclosure of which would be likely to have that effect."
"In this section "security or intelligence" means the work of, or in support of, the security and intelligence services or any part of them, and references to information relating to security or intelligence include references to information held or transmitted by those services or by persons in support of, or of any part of, them."
Were the proceedings unfair?
(a) that unless his client obtained disclosure of the evidence against it and proper particulars of the case being made by the Commissioner, it could not tell whether the application for a production order was well-founded;(b) that it was important to know, when assessing the evidence, whether it was being said that there were grounds for suspecting that an offence under section 1(1) of the Act had been committed and that the judge needed to focus on that question if he were looking at the secret evidence in a closed hearing;
(c) that, insofar as it was said that there were grounds for suspecting that an offence had been committed under section 1(3) of the Act, B Sky B had not been told in what respect it was alleged that the disclosures were said to have been damaging to the security or intelligence services, nor had it been given access to evidence that might support that allegation;
(d) that the Commissioner was asking the judge to take into account in support of the application evidence not disclosed to B Sky B;
(e) that the principles recognised by the Court of Appeal in Al Rawi v Security Service [2010] EWCA Civ 482, [2010] 3 WLR 1069 did not permit closed hearings in the absence of statutory authority, which did not exist in the present case;
(f) that what was being proposed differed from the ordinary PII procedure under which material is either made available to, or withheld from, both parties; and
(g) that the decision in R (Malik) v Manchester Crown Court [2008] EWHC 1362 (Admin), [2008] 4 All ER 403 did not provide support for a closed procedure in this case.
"I heard evidence from Detective Sergeant Patrick Holt, an officer of the Metropolitan Police Counter Terrorism Command.
I heard his evidence in two parts. I heard him first inter partes, when he swore that the open or disclosed information which he produced was true to the best of his knowledge and belief. I then heard him ex parte, when he produced his secret or undisclosed information and swore that that too was true to the best of his knowledge and belief. It is unnecessary to say more about the secret information, save to record that it amplifies in greater detail the information set out in the open information disclosed to B Sky B."
"In the end I have reached the conclusion that the evidence I have heard ex parte should not be disclosed and I accept the argument that it does not detract from or assist the arguments put forward by B Sky B."
" . . . As I have said, the fact that R v Davis was a criminal case is not material. The issues considered were of application to trials generally. It decided that, subject to certain exceptions and statutory qualifications, the right to be confronted by one's accusers is such a fundamental element of the common law right to a fair trial that the court cannot abrogate it in the exercise of its inherent power. Only Parliament can do that. The closed material procedure excludes a party from the closed part of the trial. He cannot see the witnesses who speak in that part of the trial; nor can he see closed documents; he cannot hear or read the closed evidence or the submissions made in the closed hearing; and finally he cannot see the judge delivering the closed judgment nor can he read it."
" . . . no form of closed material procedure can properly be described as a development of the common law of PII, although there is no objection to the use of special advocates to enhance the PII process: see para 49 below. In many ways, a closed procedure is the very antithesis of a PII procedure. They are fundamentally different from each other. The PII procedure respects the common law principles to which I have referred. If documents are disclosed as a result of the process, they are available to both parties and to the court. If they are not disclosed, they are available neither to the other parties nor to the court. Both parties are entitled to full participation in all aspects of the litigation. There is no unfairness or inequality of arms. The effect of a closed material procedure is that closed documents are only available to the party which possesses them, the other side's special advocate and the court. I have already referred to the limits of the special advocate system."
"The defendants' second argument proceeds on the premise that placing before a judge all relevant material is, in every instance, preferable to having to withhold potentially pivotal evidence. This proposition is deceptively attractive—for what, the defendants imply, could be fairer than an independent arbiter having access to all the evidence germane to the dispute between the parties? The central fallacy of the argument, however, lies in the unspoken assumption that, because the judge sees everything, he is bound to be in a better position to reach a fair result. That assumption is misplaced. To be truly valuable, evidence must be capable of withstanding challenge. I go further. Evidence which has been insulated from challenge may positively mislead. It is precisely because of this that the right to know the case that one's opponent makes and to have the opportunity to challenge it occupies such a central place in the concept of a fair trial. However astute and assiduous the judge, the proposed procedure hands over to one party considerable control over the production of relevant material and the manner in which it is to be presented. The peril that such a procedure presents to the fair trial of contentious litigation is both obvious and undeniable."
Evidence of an offence under section 1 of the Official Secrets Act 1989