BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £5, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> A v ACC [2017] EWHC 301 (QB) (15 February 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2017/301.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 301 (QB) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
In the matter of an application under Section 72 of the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002
B e f o r e :
____________________
A |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
ACC |
Respondent |
____________________
Miss A. Pinto QC & Miss C. Collins for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 11th January 2017 – 2nd February 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr. Justice OPENSHAW :
(1) If the following three conditions are satisfied the Crown Court may order the payment of such compensation as it believes is just.(2) The first condition is satisfied if a criminal investigation has been started with regard to an offence and proceedings are not started for the offence.
(4) If subsection (2) applies the second condition is that—
(a) in the criminal investigation there has been a serious default by a person mentioned in subsection (9), and(b) the investigation would not have continued if the default had not occurred.(6) The third condition is that an application is made under this section by a person who held realisable property and has suffered loss in consequence of anything done in relation to it by or in pursuance of an order under this Part.
(9) Compensation under this section is payable to the claimant and—
(a) if the person in default was or was acting as a member of a police force, the compensation is payable out of the police fund from which the expenses of that force are met;(b) if the person in default was a member of the Crown Prosecution Service or was acting on its behalf, the compensation is payable by the Director of Public Prosecutions …'.
"… it is essential that the duty of candour laid upon any claimant for an order without notice is fully understood and complied with. It is not limited to an obligation not to misrepresent. It consists in a duty to consider what any other interested person, would, if present, wish to adduce by way of fact, or to say in answer to the application, and to place that material before the judge. That duty applies to an claimant for a restraint order under [the 2002 Act] in exactly the same way as to any other claimant for an order without notice. Even in relatively small value cases, the potential of a restraint order to disrupt other commercial or personal dealings is considerable. The prosecutor may believe that the defendant is a criminal, and he may turn out to be right, but that has yet to be proved. An application for a restraint order is emphatically not a routine matter of form, with the expectation that it will routinely be granted. The fact that the initial application is likely to be forced into a busy list, with very limited time for the judge to deal with it, is a yet further reason for the obligation of disclosure to be taken very seriously. In effect a prosecutor seeking an ex parte order must put on his defence hat and ask himself what, if he were representing the defendant or a third party with a relevant interest, he would be saying to the judge, and, having answered that question, that is what he must tell the judge ...".
In the face of such a clear ruling, it is not necessary to cite other authorities, which merely re-state this principle in other terms.
i) The money for the purchase of the property was provided to the claimant by X, out of the proceeds of his drug dealing.ii) If, which I doubt, the money did at some stage pass through the hands of Y, the money had been provided to Y by X.
iii) It is not necessary for me to find that the claimant knew of the tainted source of the money from the beginning, but there were reasonable grounds for the police so to suspect right up until the police submitted the file to the CPS for a charging decision and certainly up to the time that the police applied for the restraining order.
iv) The claimant went to the police and agreed to act as a CHIS principally because he intended thereby to provide himself with the defence should he later be suspected of money laundering the proceeds of X's drug dealing.
v) Although, as I have already said, his status as a CHIS, and his defence, should have been disclosed when applying for the restraint order and although it was in my opinion a serious default on the part of the police not to do so, I am clearly of the opinion that the investigation would have continued, even if the judge had been made fully aware of the true position.
vi) That the investigation did in fact continue even after the officers knew the full facts is, of itself, compelling support for the conclusion which I reached in paragraph (v).
vii) Furthermore, the property would in any event have been, or become or remained, restrained under an order made against X's assets.
viii) Therefore, the second condition under section 72 is not made out and the claim fails.