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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 >> Ristin v Court of Timisoara, Romania [2022] EWHC 3163 (Admin) (09 December 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2022/3163.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 3163 (Admin) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
B e f o r e :
____________________
ALEXANDRU RISTIN |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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COURT OF TIMISOARA, ROMANIA |
Respondent |
____________________
Stefan Hyman (instructed by CPS) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 29/11/22
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE FORDHAM:
Introduction
70. In all the circumstances, the extradition of the [Appellant] will not disproportionately interfere with any person's right to respect for private and family life. It is compatible with the Convention rights.
The Rogers Report
27. The RP relies on the content of an expert report provided by Mr Graham Rogers, a consultant psychologist. The relevant context is Mr Seifert's submission that his client never received appropriate treatment or support to address the adverse effects on his mental health resulting from the very severe trauma he experienced in 2010, when he was 16 years old. 28. The JA were content for the report to go before me as agreed evidence. That being said, it is of course a matter for me what weight I attach to Mr Rogers' opinions and conclusions. 29. Mr Rogers saw the RP at the offices of his solicitor on 1 December 2020, during a morning and an afternoon session. 30. Mr Rogers observes that a psychological assessment of the RP was undertaken while he was recovering from his injuries. I have been provided with a translation of the relevant report, by Toma Voiculescu, dated 14 December 2010. It indicates that the RP was anxious, depressed and suffering from post-traumatic stress and feelings of social isolation. It concludes that the RP's experience may lead "to the development of a psychosis as long as he follows no specialized psychotherapeutic recovery treatment." 31. I understand it to be uncontested that Mr Ristin did not receive such recovery treatment. Mr Rogers considers that a consequence of Mr Ristin's trauma could be the development of risk taking behaviour, placing the RP at risk of making very poor judgements. Mr Rogers states, "Finally, one must also consider the neuropsychological effects, which were not addressed." 32. Mr Rogers says that Mr Ristin told him that 35% of his body had been burned. Mr Ristin also told him that since the incident he has travelled extensively and changed jobs frequently, getting bored with them. He achieved his European Baccalaureate, as stated above, and was offered a place on a course at the University of Suffolk, but he found focussing on this a struggle (and it appears never completed the course if he attended at all). Mr Ristin obtained his driving licence at the age of 18. Mr Ristin told Mr Rogers that his concentration levels are poor. 33. Mr Rogers found that Mr Ristin's cognitive abilities were as they were originally, with the exception of "executive functioning". He considers that Mr Ristin may be suffering the long term effects of brain injury sustained in the incident in 2010. Mr Rogers advises that Mr Ristin "needs a referral to a specialist neuro-clinic; initially a neuropsychologist, followed by a neurologist. A neurologist would begin by interviewing Mr Ristin, but would not immediately find very much on the surface. In my view, a neuropsychologist via testing might find more. My results would form a baseline, from which they can extend the assessment. This would provide the neurologist with good quality background information, upon which they would build. It is highly likely, based on my experience, at some stage in the near future the neurologist would provide a brain scan to look for any obvious traumas. If something were to be found, treatment options could be considered to provide Mr Ristin with the best chance of sustaining an independent and fulfilled life." 34. Mr Rogers also criticises the psychologist in Romania for undertaking personality assessments, when in his view executive functioning ought to have been the focus of attention. He says that: "Problems with executive functioning can affect mental health, such as depression, anxiety, obsessive compulsive behaviour, and inattention and impulsivity. They also affect daily functioning." Mr Rogers suspects that the RP's functioning may have deteriorated since he achieved his good results in his Baccalaureate, but this remains to be proved.
35. Ultimately, with respect to Mr Rogers, his report says little that is surprising. One would expect there to be mental health consequences from the sort of horrific experience Mr Ristin unfortunately went through at the age of 16. I accept too that Mr Ristin may have undergone a deterioration in executive functioning to some extent. On the other hand, it is apparent that Mr Ristin's health has not been so impaired that it has prevented him from attaining his Baccalaureate, starting a new life in the UK and thereafter finding employment and being fully self-sufficient, financially and otherwise. He has done all this without seeking medical or psychiatric help or therapy. It would not be fruitful for me to speculate about what a neuropsychologist or neurologist might or might not find in the event of any future assessment of the RP.
61. Mr Seifert suggests that since the serious accident in 2010, Mr Ristin has not received the treatment he should have had to maintain and keep track of his health. This has led him to 'self-medicate' through alcohol and drugs. The offences occurred in that context, and they are the summit of his offending. Mr Seifert relies on Mr Rogers' uncontradicted opinion. Mr Seifert says that if he had been sentenced in this country, Mr Ristin would have had the benefit of an assessment by the probation service and probably from an appropriate medical practitioner too 62. Mr Hyman refers to the presumption that member states of the EU will provide appropriate medical care to extraditees but, in any event, he says that there is no clear diagnosis of any condition in Mr Rogers' report
67. Against extradition, I find that there are the following factors: (iii) The extradition offences may well, at least in part, relate to the dreadful trauma the RP suffered in 2010; the RP may well continue to suffer from undiagnosed mental health or neurological problems.
In describing his 'decision' on Article 8, the Judge said this:
69. The RP has no diagnosed illness or condition that has any real relevance to the Article 8 balancing exercise.
Seriousness/putative domestic sentence
[I]n relation to conviction appeals: (i) The judge at the extradition hearing will seldom have the detailed knowledge of the proceedings or of the background or previous offending history of the offender which the sentencing judge had before him. (ii) Each Member State is entitled to set its own sentencing regime and levels of sentence. Provided it is in accordance with the Convention, it is not for a UK judge to second guess that policy. The prevalence and significance of certain types of offending are matters for the requesting state and judiciary to decide; currency conversions may tell little of the real monetary value of items stolen or of sums defrauded. For example, if a state has a sentencing regime under which suspended sentences are passed on conditions such as regular reporting and such a regime results in such sentences being passed much more readily than the UK, then a court in the UK should respect the importance to courts in that state of seeking to enforce non-compliance with the terms of a suspended sentence. (iii) It will therefore rarely be appropriate for the court in the UK to consider whether the sentence was very significantly different from what a UK court would have imposed, let alone to approach extradition issues by substituting its own view of what the appropriate sentence should have been. As Lord Hope said in HH at §95 in relation to the appeal in the case of PH, a conviction EAW: "But I have concluded that it is not open to us, as the requested court, to question the decision of the requesting authorities to issue an arrest warrant at this stage. This is their case, not ours. Our duty is to give effect to the procedure which they have decided to invoke and the proper place for leniency to be exercised, if there are grounds for leniency, is Italy." Lord Judge made clear at §132, again when dealing with the position of children, that: "When resistance to extradition is advanced, as in effect it is in each of these appeals, on the basis of the article 8 entitlements of dependent children and the interests of society in their welfare, it should only be in very rare cases that extradition may properly be avoided if, given the same broadly similar facts, and after making proportionate allowance as we do for the interests of dependent children, the sentencing courts here would nevertheless be likely to impose an immediate custodial sentence: any other approach would be inconsistent with the principles of international comity. At the same time, we must exercise caution not to impose our views about the seriousness of the offence or offences under consideration or the level of sentences or the arrangements for prisoner release which we are informed are likely to operate in the country seeking extradition. It certainly does not follow that extradition should be refused just because the sentencing court in this country would not order an immediate custodial sentence: however it would become relevant to the decision if the interests of a child or children might tip the sentencing scale here so as to reduce what would otherwise be an immediate custodial sentence in favour of a non-custodial sentence (including a suspended sentence)."
The passage of time from 29.1.16
Fugitivity I
64. A person who has knowingly placed himself beyond the reach of a legal process is a fugitive. It is for the requesting state to establish fugitive status to the criminal standard. It must be shown that the requested person deliberately and knowingly placed himself beyond the reach of the relevant legal process.
Mr Seifert accepts that the Judge identified the relevant case-law and identified the correct core principle.
65. Mr Ristin accepts that [i] he chose to leave Romania while his appeal was ongoing, in the knowledge that if unsuccessful he would have to serve immediate custody. He spoke of [ii] what he understood to be his chances of success on appeal as 'hoping for a miracle.' He said [iii] he has not returned to Romania because he wanted to sort things out from England. Against that backdrop, I am sure that [iv] Mr Ristin came to England, in approximately August 2019, to avoid the prison sentence that hung over him. [v] He did so intending to avoid the reach of the relevant legal process [vi] Mr Ristin has taken positive steps to evade the authorities in the requesting state.
[H]ad the judge found as a fact that the appellant had fled back to Holland during the course of the French proceedings and without the court's permission; or was told on 28 June 2001 at the French court that she had been convicted and sentenced, so that she knew that that was the position when she returned to the Netherlands, I would have held that the judge's conclusion on fugitive status was correct
That passage, as Mr Seifert rightly points out, was obiter. But I find it assists me. Mr Seifert's logic means I would have to treat "without the court's permission" as meaning "in breach of a condition prohibiting her from leaving"; and it would mean I would have to treat "convicted and sentenced" as meaning "convicted and sentenced and required immediately to attend prison". I think Garnham J meant what he said and was not incorporating these other features. If Ms De Zorzi had not been given "the court's permission", and had been told she had been "convicted and sentenced", she would have had all five of the features emphasised in the present case by Mr Seifert.
Fugitivity II
Overall outcome
Conclusion