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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 >> Kapoor v Juzagado De Instruccion No.4 De Las Palmas De Gran Canaria (Spain) [2020] EWHC 590 (Admin) (12 March 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2020/590.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 590 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
In the matter of an appeal under s.26 of the Extradition Act 2003
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
AMANDEEP KAPOOR |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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JUZAGADO DE INSTRUCCION No.4 DE LAS PALMAS DE GRAN CANARIA (SPAIN) |
Respondent |
____________________
Ben Lloyd (instructed by CPS) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 27 February 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Supperstone :
Introduction
i) The DJ erred in finding that the EAW was issued for the purposes of prosecution under s.2(3) of the Extradition Act 2003 ("the 2003 Act") (Ground 1);
ii) The DJ erred in finding that his extradition was not barred by an absence of prosecution decision under s.12A of the 2003 Act (Ground 2);
iii) The DJ erred in finding his extradition to be compatible with his rights under Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights ("ECHR") and s.21A of the 2003 Act (Ground 3); and
iv) The DJ erred in finding his extradition was neither unjust nor oppressive under s.25 of the 2003 Act (Ground 4).
Ground 1: EAW not issued for the purposes of prosecution (s.2(3))
"2 Part 1 warrant and certificate
(1) This section applies if the designated authority receives a Part 1 warrant in respect of a person.
(2) A Part 1 warrant is an arrest warrant which is issued by judicial authority of a category 1 territory and which contains—
(a) the statement referred to in sub-section (3) and the information referred to in subsection (4), or
(b) the statement referred to in sub-section (5) and the information referred to in sub-section (6).
(3) The statement is one that—
(a) the person in respect of whom the Part 1 warrant is issued is accused in the category 1 territory of the commission of an offence specified in the warrant, and
(b) the Part 1 warrant is issued with a view to his arrest and extradition to the category 1 territory for the purpose of being prosecuted for the offence."
"Extradition for the purpose of interrogation with a view to obtaining evidence for a prosecution, whether of the extradited individual or of anyone else, is not a legitimate purpose of an arrest warrant. But the judicial authority in the requested state cannot inquire into the purpose of the extradition. It is therefore necessary for there to be an unequivocal statement of that purpose in the arrest warrant itself."
"If an EAW has been issued by a requesting state as an 'accusation case' warrant, but its purpose is, in fact, the surrender of the requested person for the purpose of conducting an investigation to see whether that person should be prosecuted, it is not a legitimate purpose and so the warrant is not an EAW within the meaning of section 2 (2) (3)."
"This warrant has been issued by a competent judicial authority. I request that the person mentioned below be arrested and surrendered to the judicial authorities for criminal prosecution purposes or for enforcement purposes under the scope of a coercive detention order or custodial sentence."
"The person under investigation is yet to be located in order to be questioned in the presence of a solicitor regarding his role in connection with the facts and the charges against him. Thus, it is vital that he be located, detained and surrendered to the jurisdiction of this Court."
Mr Sternberg submits that the use of the word 'charges' does nothing to resolve the ambiguity as to whether the Appellant is required for prosecution purposes or merely questioning.
"… Over the past few months, several trafficking incidents of this nature have been identified in the Canary Islands in which the person under investigation was directly involved, together with other members of the conspiracy currently on remand awaiting trial in respect of these offences…. The person under investigation and other members of the conspiracy accompanied the persons attempting to enter European countries illegally on forged passports or genuine passports issued to other persons or members of the organisation, arranging lodging and transport for the illegal immigrants and covering their expenses."
"This warrant pertains also to the seizure and handing over of property held by the wanted person in respect of the offence:
Description of the property (and location) (if known); ID documents, transport tickets, bank statements, papers and any kind of document that might be related to the crimes under investigation, telephones, mobile phones, computers, tablets, digital storage devices, and other equipment or devices, that may have been used to carry out the offences, or that may contain information related to the said facts."
"The nature of the information sought in box (g) supports the overall impression that this is a warrant issued as part of an investigation. The extent of the information sought, namely all the accounts, business records and details of the payments made and received by the company undermines the particulars detailing the losses allegedly caused by the Appellant. If the investigation authorities are still seeking information about the income of the company and the details of the goods and payments, it is difficult to see how they can be in the position to particularise with anything approaching finality their case against the Appellant with regard to the losses allegedly incurred."
"On 9 August 2018 request issued to non-court personnel was approved to be forwarded to law enforcement in the interests of securing the arrest and subsequent surrendering to the jurisdiction of this Court of AMANDEEP SINGH KAPOOR. This request was issued for the purposes of questioning the person of interest in the presence of a solicitor and ruling on the latter's personal situation in light of the serious nature of the charges laid against him. The Court drafted a European Arrest Warrant in respect of the aforementioned person under investigation and proceeded to issue the appropriate instrument to that end."
"The reason a European Arrest Warrant was issued by this Court against Amandeep Singh KAPOOR is for him to be questioned as a person under investigation in the presence of legal counsel in light of the fact he is suspected of committing a count against the rights of foreign nationals (promoting illegal immigration) and a count of forgery of private documents. … Given the circumstances, it is appropriate that the subject be detained and surrendered to the jurisdiction of this Court in order to rule, once he has been questioned and pursuant to the prosecutor in Spain's motion at the time, on whether he should be remanded in custody or not. (Incidentally the other persons under investigation that belong to the conspiracy detained thus far are currently being held on remand). Such a measure is advisable given the suspect is a flight risk. He is a foreign national with no ties to Spain and he has been implicated in serious offences. For these reasons the Court refuses to approve his release."
"On what date did the authorities within the territory of the Judicial Authority reach the decision to prosecute Amandeep Singh KAPOOR for the offences in the EAW?'. (Question 2)
'Was Amandeep Singh KAPOOR made aware of the prosecution? If so, how was Amandeep Singh KAPOOR made aware?'." (Question 3)
"(2) Once the Court received the corresponding police report outlining the facts subject to investigation and the investigation carried out, and after the other persons implicated were surrendered to the jurisdiction of the Court (the other three suspects are currently being held on remand), the Court issued an EAW against Amandeep Singh KAPOOR as it was impossible to locate him in Spain. Moreover, the police enquiry revealed he was directly involved in the offences under investigation, and an arrest warrant dated […]
(3) The suspect has not been made aware of the prosecution so far given that, as has already been explained, he has neither been arrested nor questioned in respect of the offences due to the fact that he was not located in Spanish territory."
"The appeal raises the not unusual problem of whether the extradition warrant is issued for the purpose of being prosecuted for an offence constituting an offence or offences for which the Appellant may be extradited. The problem is whether, as the Appellant contends, the extradition is sought merely so that he should be investigated as to whether he is guilty of an offence or whether it is for the purposes of his prosecution. The problem is particularly acute where, under the criminal process in question, the Spanish criminal system, investigation and questioning takes place as part of the process of prosecution. The starting point must be the warrant by which the Appellant's extradition was sought. It contains on its face a statement:
'This warrant has been issued by a competent judicial authority. I request that the person mentioned below be arrested and surrendered for the purposes of conducting a criminal prosecution or executing a custodial sentence or detention order'.
No-one suggests that the purpose of the warrant is for executing a custodial sentence or detention order."
"11. The fact that the prosecution is what Mr Ostos describes as a preliminary inquiry was not a ground for questioning the statement of purpose contained in a warrant issued in Spain, and a recent decision of this court, Street v Spanish National Court…
12. In my judgment, having regard to the need for trust in the judicial authorities of those countries which fall within Part 1 of Category 1 and Part 1 of the Extradition Act 2003, it is not possible for this court to go behind the express statements from the judicial authority as to the purpose of the extradition. True it is that she [the judicial authority] refers to investigation but there is ample authority and example of cases where, notwithstanding the fact that the extradited person or others are to be questioned and notwithstanding the fact that investigations are continuing, the process still forms part of the process of prosecution. …"
Ground 2: The absence of a prosecution decision (s.12A).
"12A Absence of prosecution decision
(1) A person's extradition to a category 1 territory is barred by reason of absence of prosecution decision if (and only if) –
(a) it appears to the appropriate judge that there are reasonable grounds for believing that –
(i) the competent authorities in the category 1 territory have not made a decision to charge or have not made a decision to try (or have made neither of those decisions), and
(ii) the person's absence for the category 1 territory is not the sole reason for that failure,
and
(b) those representing the category 1 territory do not prove that –
(i) the competent authorities in the category 1 territory have made a decision to charge and a decision to try, or
(ii) in a case where one of those decisions has not been made (or neither of them has been made), the person's absence from the category 1 territory is the sole reason for that failure.
(2) In this section "to charge" and "to try", in relation to a person and an extradition offence, mean –
(a) to charge the person with the offence in the category 1 territory,
and
(b) to try the person for the offence in the category 1 territory."
"I find that the wording on the warrant is clear and unambiguous and is supported by similar wording on other documents, repeatedly referring to "charges" – it is clear that the JA has made a decision to charge."
"It is also important to emphasize that the real focus of s.12A is always on whether there has been a decision to try. If there has been no decision to try, the question of whether there has been a decision to charge is irrelevant. If there has been a decision to try, a decision to charge will inevitably have been taken either earlier or at the same time as the decision to try. The words "decision to charge" in reality add nothing to the achievement of the purpose, actual or supposed, of the Act or to its effect. They add nothing at either the "reasonable grounds" stage or at the second stage where the burden lies on those representing the competent authority of the requesting state to prove that the decisions have been taken."
"28. The application of s.12A in practice is not easy to work out because it involves two distinct stages. In the first stage, which involves both s.12A(1)(a)(i) and (ii), the "appropriate judge" is concerned with whether there are reasonable grounds for believing that at least one of two decisions have not been taken, i.e. the decision to charge or the decision to try the requested person, and, then, furthermore, if one of those two decisions have not been made, that a state of affairs (the absence of the requested person from the category 1 territory) is not the sole reason for the failure to make one or other or both of those two decisions. Both those negatives have to be established (to the requisite level of "proof") by the requested person. The appropriate judge will only have to consider the issue of whether it appears that there are reasonable grounds for believing that the sole reason for a "failure" to make one or other or both of the two decisions (to charge and try) is not the requested person's absence from the category 1 territory if it "appears" to him that there are reasonable grounds for believing that at least one of those two decisions has not been made.
29. The appropriate judge will only embark on the second stage, in s.12A(1)(b)(i) and (ii), if he is satisfied that there are reasonable grounds for believing both that no decisions to charge and/or to try have been made and that the person's absence from the category 1 territory is not the sole reason for those decisions not being taken…"
"…in our view, a decision to try is nonetheless a decision to try even if it is conditional or subject to review … There will, for example, be a decision to try, even if it is taken subject to the completion, after extradition, of formal stages, such as an interview and subject to those stages not causing a reversal of the decision already made even informally, to charge and try."
"The absence of a formal charge even where such a stage clearly exists in the procedures of the requesting state, does not mean that a decision to charge has not been taken within the meaning of section 12A…Section 12A is not to be construed as a means of throwing technical spanners into the extradition works. It does not require the concept of a decision to charge, or to try for that matter, to be construed as if applying domestic procedural concepts to foreign procedures. What matters is that a decision to charge has been taken within the meaning of section 12A, a broad expression applying equally in a practical and purposive way to the various criminal procedures of category 1 territories, the cosmopolitan approach."
"...Puceviciene at [55] explains that the statement in the EAW that surrender is sought for the purpose of conducting a criminal prosecution usually shows that there has been a decision to charge and, (at [56]) that may also be the same as the decision to try. Indeed, in the absence of other material, the standard statements in the EAW should suffice for both. After all, the decision to charge shows, in the absence of anything else, that there is a decision to try."
Grounds 3 and 4: Article 8 ECHR and the Appellant's extradition is unjust or oppressive by reason of his physical and mental condition (s.25 of the 2003 Act)
"29 Factors favouring extradition being granted:
(a) The public interest in this country complying with its international extradition treaty obligations and not being regarded as a haven for those seeking to avoid criminal proceedings in other countries.
(b) The mutual confidence and respect that should be given to a request from the judicial authority of a Member State.
(c) The extremely serious nature of the allegation – trafficking and forgery, punishable in Spain by sentences of 8 and 3 years' imprisonment respectively.
30 Factors against extradition being granted:
(a) Interference with the Requested Person's right to private and family life.
(b) He is a young man with certain medical problems which cause limitations for him. It may well be that he would struggle if separated from his family for some time in a foreign country.
(c) The Requested Person has no criminal convictions."
"I am satisfied that the Article 8 rights of Mr Kapoor are engaged. On the evidence before me, there is nothing to suggest that the negative impact of his extradition is of such a level that the Court ought not to uphold this country's extradition obligations, particularly given the serious nature of the offences alleged."
"He lives with his parents. He was born with a form of cerebral palsy, has had speech and language support and attended a special school."
"13. He suffers from a number of medical conditions which limit his opportunities, for example to work.
14. However he was educated and gained qualifications.
15. He was able to provide instructions and give evidence in these proceedings.
16. He was able to visit Spain (Gran Canaria) in April this year without any family members."
"13.1 Based on the available information there is evidence to suggest that Mr Kapoor had congenital abnormalities in the form of Dandy-Walker malformation and Microcephaly. He suffered from the symptoms of the Dandy-Walker syndrome in the form of poor co-ordination and balance since his childhood. There is also evidence in his medical records that he had learning problems at school and he received his education in a special school. He seems to have done reasonably well with the support he has received from the special school and has completed his schooling with passing his exams. He also enrolled into a college and has completed an ICT Diploma levels 1, 2 and 3. He had brief periods of employment…
13.3 There is no evidence to suggest that Mr Kapoor currently suffers from any diagnosable mental illness…
13.4 In my opinion, with his background physical, health conditions and his learning difficulties, Mr Kapoor is a vulnerable person. His vulnerability seems to have been compensated to a considerable extent with the support he has received consistently from his school, his family and the local support network. Although there is clear evidence in his medical records that he had learning difficulties, there is no record of any formal IQ assessments to ascertain the degree of his learning disability. The degree of his vulnerability depends on the extent of his learning disability. Hence, I recommend a neuro-cognitive assessment by a Clinical Psychologist to ascertain his cognitive function and his IQ.
13.5 I suspect that there is a significant risk of deterioration of his mental state if he were to be subjected to undue stress with his background learning difficulties, his brain deformities and physical health conditions. However, it is difficult to comment conclusively on his fitness to be extradited, stand trial and his ability to cope with a lengthy prison sentence in the absence of a detailed neurocognitive assessment."
"57. Mr Kapoor presented as a pleasant, yet somewhat naïve young man. He appeared keen to display a presentation of non-disability, although his congenital problems were observable...
58. About subjective mental state, Mr Kapoor denied any mood disturbances or biological markers of depression or anxiety. However, while I am not of the opinion he presents with a significant depressive episode, I have some concern he may be masking his true emotions…
59. With regards to intellectual functioning, Mr Kapoor was operating within the Extremely Low range for Verbal Comprehension, Perceptual Reasoning and Processing Speed. His Working Memory score was in the Borderline range. …While his adaptive living skills appear to be within relatively normal parameters, these scores, coupled with his poor verbal fluency skills, indicate notable learning impairments. One would therefore assume that his reasoning and consequential thinking skills are far below that of others. …
60. Formal testing on the Gudjonsson Suggestibility Scale ranked Mr Kapoor five points above the 95th percentile. This suggested he was significantly vulnerable to suggestive bias, as well as being susceptible to the effects of interpersonal pressure and negative feedback.
63. About the trial process, I think Mr Kapoor is fit to file pleas, but, given his extremely poor intellectual abilities, and processing skills, coupled with his overly suggestible nature, I am of the opinion that he will struggle to follow proceedings and maintain focus when challenged in cross examination. I am also in agreement with Dr Nimmagadda, that, given his numerous difficulties, there is a significant risk of deterioration in his mental state if he is subjected to undue stress."
"3.0. OPINION
3.1 In view of the new information in the form of objective psychological testing, I am of the opinion that while Mr Kapoor has the capacity to enter into a plea and understand the implications of such pleas, and probably he has the capacity to give valid instructions to his legal team, I believe he is likely to have difficulties to follow the proceedings of the trial. I have reasonable doubts about his fitness to stand trial. Results of the psychological testing confirm his vulnerability and I continue to hold the opinion that there is a significant risk of deterioration in his mental state, if he is subjected to undue stress. I am further of the opinion that the removal of Mr Kapoor from his family and support network or being subjected to a lengthy prison sentence is highly likely to cause him significant stress and that is likely to cause a deterioration of his mental state."
"With respect to the supposed illness of the person under investigation, its very existence, nature and extension and its influence on the imputability of the person under investigation should be the subject of study, examination and diagnosis on the part of the forensic doctors attached to the Las Palmas Institute of Legal Medicine, who are responsible for assisting this Criminal Investigation Court in this matter as objective and impartial witnesses, and who answer directly to the Spanish Ministry of Justice.
[The relevant provisions of the Spanish Law of Criminal Procedures (Article 520) that guarantees rights to all parties who are under arrest or held in custody are then set out. The response continues]
With respect to the content of the medical reports, it should be taken into account that these appear to have been drawn up and issued by a private doctor, and it is evident that any serious pronouncement with a minimum scientific base about the pathology suffered by the person under investigation, and the relevance or influence of this on the degree of criminal imputability, would require close scrutiny by a specialist doctor in the field, and at the same time it is the Spanish Courts which are competent to pronounce on any modifying or exempting circumstance in terms of the criminal liability of the accused with respect to the serious offences which he is charged with and which in turn could be grounded in the pathology in question. For this reason, as I have pointed out in my previous requests and communications, once the aforementioned person under investigation has been handed over to this Court, orders will be given in order that with all due haste a forensic-medical report be drawn up dealing with the matter of the degree of imputability based on all the available factors and documents and on an in-depth medical check-up and exploration by the forensic doctors, notwithstanding the right of the accused's defence to present to the court any expert witness medical reports which it deems opportune."
Conclusion