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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 >> Wasielyszyn v Regional Court In Radom, Poland [2022] EWHC 1632 (Admin) (23 June 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2022/1632.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 1632 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
PATRYK WASIELYSZYN |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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REGIONAL COURT IN RADOM, POLAND |
Respondent |
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Saoirse Townshend (instructed by CPS) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 16.6.22
Judgment as delivered in open court at the hearing
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE FORDHAM:
i) The first relates to the expiry of the limitation period on the passport offending (1385/04). It was clear on the face of the EAW of 28 April 2010 that the limitation period was stated to be 17 February 2015. By the time extradition came to be considered by a Court that limitation period date had expired. I am told by the Respondent in the witness statement and I accept that that issue had promptly been raised on 8 July 2015 by the CPS with the Respondent judicial authority and chaser messages had been sent subsequently. The point was specifically considered by DJ Roscoe at the hearings in October 2015. The chronology has been filled in subsequently as to the non-pursuit of the 1385/04 matter. It was the express subject matter of Further Information dated 28 November 2017 received by the CPS on 15 May 2018, at which point the Appellant was unlawfully at large and unrepresented. That was not provided to anyone on behalf of the Appellant or to a Court, as I understand it, until 13 June 2022 when it was put forward in the Respondent's bundle for the hearing before me. DJ Roscoe recorded that she had been "told nothing by the Respondent to contradict" the fact that the limitation period had expired.
ii) The second relates to the limitation period of 12 February 2019 in relation to the robbery of the wallet (991/03). That date also appeared on the face of the EAW of 28 April 2020. It had not passed at the time when the case came before DJ Roscoe in October 2015. It had passed by the time the case came before the Magistrates' Court in March 2020. By that time the EAW dated 11 February 2019 had been issued which referred to an extension of this limitation period from 12 February 2019 to 12 February 2029 relation to 991/03 (as well as an extension in relation to 1059/07 from 3 August 2022 to 3 August 2032). One ground of appeal (in the perfected grounds in May 2020) concerned the expiry of the limitation period in relation to 991/03. Further Information dated 8 June 2020, responding to questions raised on 22 May 2020, was attached to an email together with the EAW of 11 February 2019, sent to the Appellant's legal representatives on 11 June 2020. Swift J on 17 June 2020 relied on the June 2020 Further Information as answering the 991/03 limitation expiry point. What was being said in the Further Information dated 8 June 2020 was that the EAW dated 11 February 2019 "does not replace" the EAW dated 28 April 2010 which had "not been withdrawn". The Further Information of June 2020 was one of the materials which would have needed the Court's permission to be adduced.
iii) The third relates to an EAW dated 29 April 2015. The Further Information dated 28 November 2017, which was provided to the Appellant's representatives for the first time on 13 June 2022, said "it should be pointed out that an updated European Arrest Warrant was issued on 29 April 2015". The point that was there made was that that April 2015 EAW did not cover the passport offending 1385/04. That was the Further Information that had been received by the CPS on 15 May 2018. No April 2015 EAW has been provided to the Appellant's representatives or to any Court dealing with the extradition.
iv) The fourth relates to the revocation, and non-pursuit of extradition, as to the alleged theft of the wallet (958/03). What is stated in the Further Information dated 14 June 2022 is that there was a decision on 29 April 2015 of the Polish Court (in Radom) which "revoked" the EAW issued against the Appellant with regards to both (a) 1385/04 (the passport offending) and (b) 958/08 (the alleged theft of the wallet). In light of that "revocation" decision the Further Information stated that the Polish judicial authority "no longer requests extradition" with respect to either of those two matters. At the hearing before me on 16 June 2022 this was confirmed. It was described as a development in the Appellant's favour. This Court was therefore being told that revocation in relation to the accusation matter (958/08) had been the subject of a formal judicial decision on 29 April 2015. This was not the subject of any earlier express communication that I have seen. The Further Information of November 2017 – seen by the CPS in May 2018 and by the Court and Appellant's representatives in June 2022 – referred to a revocation decision on 29 April 2015, but that was in relation to 1385/04 (the passport offending). The email of 11 June 2020 from the CPS Senior Crown Prosecutor to this Court and to the Appellant's representatives records that when questions were posed on 22 May 2020 the understanding from the CPS end had been communicated that surrender was no longer sought in respect of either the passport offending 1385/04 (in relation to which the Appellant had already been discharged) or "to be prosecuted for an offence under domestic judgment 958/0[3]". The email made clear that the CPS Senior Crown Prosecutor understood the Further Information in response (8 June 2020) to reflect the position that "surrender is sought for all offences" (presumably meaning the three remaining matters, the passport offending having been the subject of discharge). The EAW of 11 February 2019 and the Further Information of 8 June 2020 were attached to the email and could be seen for themselves. The Further Information of June 2020 was saying that the EAW of 28 April 2020 was "not … withdrawn". This was an extradition case where there were hearings in the Magistrates' Court in October 2015 and again in March 2020. On the face of it, there was an April 2015 discharge decision in relation to one of the matters on which extradition was ordered, unbeknown to the Magistrates' Court ordering extradition. Again, when the appeal was being considered by this Court in June 2020, and again in February 2022, there had been a formal discharge decision back in April 2015 in relation to one of the matters which had been the subject of an order for extradition, but that was not known to this Court or to the Appellant's representatives.
v) The fifth is that the various CPS Requests for Further Information have, at least since May 2020, communicated to the Respondent that there is a duty of candour which the High Court is said to have made clear extends to information held in the requesting state.
vi) The sixth relates to the EAWs of 28 April 2010 and 11 February 2019. What is stated in the communication from the NCB in Warsaw dated 20 June 2022 to the NCA is: "we confirm that the warrant issued on 28 April 2010 has been withdrawn by the Court and the warrant issued on 11 February 2019 replaced the one issued on 28 April 2010". The Further Information dated 8 June 2020 (and again on 10 June 2022) stated that the decision to issue the EAW dated 28 April 2010 "has not been withdrawn", which the EAW dated 11 February 2019 "does not replace".
23.6.22