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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 >> Dragoi, R (On the Application Of) v Secretary of State for Justice [2024] EWHC 60 (Admin) (18 January 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2024/60.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 60 (Admin) |
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AC-2023-LON-001849 |
KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE KING (on the application of Vasile Dragoi) |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR JUSTICE |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr Skinner (instructed by Government Legal Department) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 15 November 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Michael Ford KC, sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge:
Introduction
Relevant Facts
(1) An email dated 22 May 2023 from the Ministry of Justice ("MoJ") Policy Team, explaining how that the police had contacted the HMPPS Modern Slavery Team about this case; summarising the police concerns relating to fears about the 11 victims from the Claimant's home town who gave evidence against him and who were said to be vulnerable, fearful and easily traceable; referring to the police view that removal of the Claimant would undermine trust in the criminal justice process and/or stop others giving evidence in future; and saying that sometimes in extreme cases prison governors did refuse ERS.
(2) An email dated 15 May 2023 from the police, attached to the above email from the MoJ, and which repeated the same points as the police had made in their earlier email dated 10 February 2023, to which I have referred above (see §14 above).
(3) An email of 26 May 2023 from the MoJ Early Release Team, and a chain of associated emails, one of which explained that Ion Dragoi and Florinel Dragoi had been removed under ERS without the knowledge of the police. As well as the relevant removal form, attached to that email were the following:
i. A detailed submission from MoJ Release Policy Team, dated 25 May 2023, explaining that an urgent decision was required in relation to ERS. It set out the background to the conviction and sentencing of the Claimant and his co-defendants; gave the information about the victims which I have summarised at §8 above; stated that the police were not aware that the Claimant's co-defendants had been removed to Romania until they were contacted by a Romanian NGO; and summarised the concerns of the police about the impact on the Claimant's victims, who remained in fear of reprisals, and the risk that future victims might not be prepared to come forward. The document gave general advice about the ERS policy, saying at §20 that:
"...there is a general presumption in favour of authorising early removal unless the prisoner meets one of the reasons to refuse or whose early removal would seriously undermine public confidence in the scheme and the administration of justice."
After referring to the typical reasons for refusal, such as ongoing criminal matters and others listed in the PSI, it stated at §23.
"Unlike other removal cases however, Mr Dragoi would be returning to the country where the victims of his crime are living and will be expecting to again live in the small village where they reside. The offence involved the exploitation of very vulnerable people, who gave evidence against Mr Dragoi in his criminal trial, and who are still attempting to piece their lives back together following the trial and their return to their home country".
The document also stated that it did not anticipate any Parliamentary "handling" arising from the submission, nor any media interest in the matter.
ii. An email chain between HMPPS and the MPS Modern Slavery and Child Exploitation unit, which included the email of 10 February 2023 referred to above at §14.
iii. An email of 22 May 2023 from the from Governor of HMP Wandsworth Governor, explaining why he had refused removal under ERS on 18 May 2023, based on impact on the victims and the potential to undermine trust and confidence in the criminal justice system.
"This note summarises my decision in relation to Mr Vasile Dragoi (Senior)'s application for removal from the UK under the Early Removal Scheme (ERS).
Early removal under the ERS is discretionary and not a right. It is for me as Chief Executive of HMPPS to make the final decision on whether or not, taking the individual circumstances of the case into consideration, early removal is appropriate.
I have considered the facts of the case carefully. My decision is to refuse Mr Dragoi's application for removal under ERS on the grounds, under section 2 of PSI 04/2013, that to grant his application would undermine both public safety and public confidence in the Criminal Justice System.
Mr Dragoi's offence involved the exploitation of very vulnerable people. Several gave evidence against him during his criminal trial. I understand that those 11 victims live in Valcea, Romania – the same small town that Mr Dragoi is from and where he owns property. Were he to return early, the victims would be easily traceable by the defendants who recruited them and there would be a real risk to their safety.
Granting early release to Mr Dragoi has the potential to undermine the trust and confidence not only of those victims but of the wider public, who would not think it reasonable to allow an offender of this type to return early to the area where their vulnerable victims reside. There is a real risk that future victims of exploitation may not have the confidence to come forward and give evidence if they take the view that offenders will serve reduced amounts of time in prison before being released back into their home country."
Legal Framework
"(1) Where a fixed-term prisoner is liable to removal from the United Kingdom, the Secretary of State may remove the prisoner from prison under this section at any time after the prisoner has served the minimum pre-removal custodial period (whether or not the Board has directed the prisoner's release under this Chapter).
(2) The minimum pre-removal custodial period is the longer of—
(a) one half of the requisite custodial period, and
(b) the requisite custodial period less one year.
(2C) Subsection (1) does not apply in relation to a prisoner to whom section 247A applies.
(4) A prisoner removed from prison under this section—
(a) is so removed only for the purpose of enabling the Secretary of State to remove him from the United Kingdom under powers conferred by—
(i) Schedule 2 or 3 to the Immigration Act 1971, or
(ii) section 10 of the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999 (c. 33), and
(b) so long as remaining in the United Kingdom, and in the event of a return to the United Kingdom after removal, is liable to be detained in pursuance of his sentence."
"Where HOIE [Home Office Immigration Enforcement] confirm that a FNP [Foreign National Prisoner] can be removed, and the prisoner is not subject to further custodial requirements, outstanding criminal matters, or confiscation order proceedings, Governors must normally approve removal under the ERS. However, there may be some exceptional cases in which ERS should be refused, particularly where there are serious concerns about public safety. These are:
• clear evidence that the prisoner is planning further crime, including plans to evade
immigration control and return to the UK unlawfully;
• evidence of violence or threats of violence, in prison, on a number of occasions;
• dealing in class A drugs in custody;
• serving a sentence for a terrorism or terrorism-connected offence.
• other matters of similar gravity relating to public safety.
• where early removal under the ERS would undermine public confidence in the criminal justice system."
There is a form to be used, setting out the reasons for the refusal. By §2.20, where it is thought by a Governor that removal may undermine public confidence in the scheme or in the criminal justice system, the Chief Executive takes the final decision on whether early removal is appropriate, taking all matters into consideration. The PSI anticipates that such cases will be exceptional: see §2.21.
The Grounds of Challenge
Ground (1): Failure to Consider Material Facts
(1) It is said in the Statement of Facts and Grounds ("SFG") at §24.1 that the Defendant did not provide reasons why Claimant was treated differently. But there is no reasons challenge and, in any event, Ms Rees explains in her evidence why the Claimant was treated differently from his sons. In the case of the sons, it seems no consideration was given to the risks caused by their return to Valcea under ERS; but, if those cases had been referred to her, she said it was "unlikely" she would have given them early release. In summary: the difference in treatment arose because the Claimant's sons were removed under ERS without the police being alerted to this, with the result that the potential risks to victims or public confidence in the criminal justice system were not considered at the time, whereas the police were alerted to the potential removal of the Claimant. That is, I consider, a rational ground for the difference in treatment.
(2) In the skeleton argument for the Claimant, the matter was put in a third way. On the (correct) factual assumption that the Defendant did consider the sons' early removal to Valcea, it is contended that the Defendant acted irrationally because the victims' concerns have not materialised, even though the sons have been released. But, as Ms Rees explained in her statement, the presence of the Claimant's sons in Valcea added to her wider concerns about the release of the Claimant. This is supported by the information set out in the document of 25 May, according to which the Romanian NGO reported to the UK police that victims had seen the sons back in their local community. The obvious inference was that the victims were concerned about the presence of the Claimant's sons. In light of those concerns, the serious offences of which the Claimant and his sons were convicted, the vulnerability of the victims, and the likelihood that the Claimant, who was the leader in the offences, would in all likelihood be returned to the same town as the victims if he were removed under ERS, I consider it was sufficient for the Defendant to consider the risk to the safety of victims, even in the absence of clear evidence that in fact the Claimant's sons had harmed or threatened victims. Put another way, I do not consider that the absence of evidence of actual harm to victims was a factor so obviously material that no reasonable decision-maker could fail to have regard to it.
Ground (2): Irrationality
Ground (3): Unlawful Detention
"5. It is plain that the remedies which the claimants seek are not available to them at common law. The Secretary of State's breach of his public law duty to have a system in place which provided prisoners with a reasonable opportunity to demonstrate that they are no longer dangerous does not confer on individuals who are affected by this breach a right to damages. Mr Owen QC for Mr Lee and Mr Wells submitted that they were entitled to writs of habeas corpus. But he accepted that he was unable to challenge the legality of the warrant which authorised their continued detention. As Simon Brown LJ said in R v Oldham Justices, Ex p Cawley [1997] QB 1, 13-14, where there has been a criminal conviction the courts have firmly excluded collateral attack by habeas corpus, holding that the only proper remedy lies by way of appeal. Sentences of imprisonment for public protection are sentences for an indefinite period, subject to the provisions of Chapter II of Part II of the 1997 Act as to the release of prisoners and duration of licences: 2003 Act, section 225(4). There is no entitlement to release until release has been directed by the Parole Board, and a direction to that effect cannot be given until the Board is satisfied that detention is no longer necessary for the protection of the public. Mandatory orders may be obtained to ensure that the system works properly. But it is not open to the courts to set that system aside by directing release contrary to the provisions of the statute.
6. For this reason I cannot agree with Laws LJ's finding in the Divisional Court [2008] 1 All ER 138, 154F that, to the extent that the prisoner remains incarcerated after tariff expiry without any current and executive assessment of the danger that he does or does not pose to the public, detention is unlawful. In terms of the statute, his detention is lawful until the Parole Board gives a direction for his release. The default position, as Mr Pushpinder Saini QC put it in his helpful intervention for the Parole Board, is that until the direction is given protection of the public requires that the prisoner should be confined."
See similarly Lord Brown at §§36-37.
Conclusion