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Jersey Unreported Judgments |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> AG -v- Michel and Gallichan 2-June-2006 [2006] JRC 082 (02 June 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2006/2006_082.html Cite as: [2006] JRC 82, [2006] JRC 082 |
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[2006]JRC082
ROYAL COURT
(Samedi Division)
2nd June 2006
Before : |
Sir Richard Tucker, Kt., Commissioner. |
The Attorney General
-v-
Peter Wilson Michel
Simone Anne Gallichan (formerly Rabet)
Directions hearing
C. E. Whelan, Esq., Crown Advocate.
Advocate D. F. Le Quesne for Michel.
Advocate C. M. Fogarty for Gallichan
JUDGMENT
THE Commissioner:
1. The application now before me is made by Advocate Le Quesne on behalf of the defendant, Peter Michel. It relates to Counts 1 and 9 of the Indictment. Count 1 is in these terms:
" Assisting another to retain the benefit of criminal conduct, contrary to Article 32(1)(a) of the Proceeds of Crime (Jersey) Law 1999 "
Particulars of Offence:
"Peter Wilson Michel and Simone Anne Gallichan (formerly Rabet), between about 1st July 1999 and 8th July 2001, in the Island of Jersey knowing or suspecting that clients of Michel and Co. were persons engaged in criminal conduct, namely theft and/or cheating the UK Public Revenue, were concerned together and with others in an arrangement whereby the retention or control on behalf of such persons of their proceeds of criminal conduct, namely stolen funds or funds chargeable to tax which were transferred to accounts at banks in Jersey in a manner calculated to conceal that they were so chargeable, was facilitated, by the delivery to such persons in England of cash in amounts broadly corresponding to such transfers.
2. It was at first submitted that this Count is bad both for duplicity and for insufficient particularity, and that it should therefore be quashed. So far as the complaint of lack of particularity is concerned, it is to be observed that further particulars of this Count were provided last year. There has been no request for yet further particulars.
3. It is submitted that the fundamental rule is that a Count should not allege more than one offence. Reliance is placed on the Indictment Rules 1972. Rule 1 states:
4. Rule 6 (2) states:
5. I do not derive assistance from these Rules. In my opinion they go to the form of the Indictment as a whole rather than to the allegations contained in the individual counts of the Indictment. Thus Rule 6 (2) enables the Court to intervene where the accused is charged with more than one offence in the same Indictment and to order a separate trial of any count or counts of the indictment. But that does not apply to the present application. The form of the indictment was considered many months ago. It was at that stage a hybrid indictment in that it contained both common law and statutory offences. It was directed that the indictment should be severed and that there should be a separate trial before Jurats of the counts alleging statutory offences. At subsequent directions hearing, following observations made by the Court the Prosecution agreed to proceed on a limited number of counts. Thus the indictment on which the trial (or First Trial) is to proceed was much reduced in length and the trial itself thereby hopefully simplified and shortened.
6. However, this does not affect or undermine the fundamental rule for which counsel contends. Where the alleged offence consists of a single act or transaction a count would not be bad for duplicity, for example, by alleging the uttering a number of forged receipts in one bundle. But that is not the situation here. The Crown allege that over a period of two years the defendants were concerned, together and with others, in an arrangement whereby the retention or control, on behalf of various unspecified clients, of funds which resulted from criminal conduct of various kinds was facilitated. The charge is not one of conspiracy. The Statement of Offence is "Assisting another to retain the benefit of criminal conduct". Advocate Le Quesne describes the Count as referring to different evidential quantities and qualities attached to myriad allegations.
7. The defence submit that this is born out by the Crown's Statement of Case. It is said that this Count reflects the general scheme to launder clients' proceeds of crime usually but not invariably tax fraud. There is reference to an arrangement, the ambit of which was much wider than the aggregate of arrangements charged in later Counts of the Indictment. The criminal conduct relied on is variously fraud, conspiracy to commit fraud, theft, fraudulent conversion and money laundering.
8. The Crown concede that only one offence may be charged in a single Count. Their case is that the arrangement referred to in this Count is a single arrangement and hence a single offence. It is not duplicitous.
9. Advocate Le Quesne says that his submission does not hinge on duplication. In Count 1 as in all the other 9 Counts of the Indictment the Prosecution allege offences contrary to Article 32 Proceeds of Crimes (Jersey) Law 1999. The real complaint now made by Mr Le Quesne in relation to Count 1 is that the prosecution are not properly characterising the degree and effect of that Article.
(b) A's proceeds of criminal conduct -
10. The defence submission hinges on the word "arrangement", which is not defined in the Law, and must be given its ordinary meaning. The defence say it must involve another person (A, or the predicate criminal). In other words there has to be a predicate criminality, since that is one of the ingredients of the arrangement referred to in the Article. The defence argue that the arrangement has to be between the Defendants and a criminal. Therefore, so the argument runs, the arrangement relied upon by the Crown which does not specify any named criminals, is not an arrangement such as is contemplated by the Article.
11. This is the lack of particularity relied upon. The Defence submit that without knowing what the criminals are, or what the criminality is, it would be impossible to defend this Count, resulting in unfairness since the defendants will be unable to avail themselves of the defences provided by Article 32 (4).
12. As to Count 9, the Defence submit that the Prosecution must prove that funds which came into the defendants hands were the proceeds of criminal conduct. This Count is fundamentally flawed because the criminal activity relied upon is not specified. In order to fall within the Article it must be activity which is referred to in Article 1 and Schedule 1 of the Law. If, as the Prosecution say, they do not know what the conduct was they cannot satisfy this requirement.
13. The Crown's response to the submissions on Count 1 is that the Count is concerned with an arrangement by the two defendants of laundering cash. Counts 2 to 10 are free-standing Counts charging extra criminality. The Indictment should reflect the overall criminality of the defendants. There was extensive protracted money laundering and Count 1 refers to a particular system or arrangements involving cash returns to clients. The Crown's case is that Michel and Company was a money laundering factory with no other function or purpose and that the Count reflects that. It charges a single arrangement whereby crooked money came into the business and was returned to the client as untraceable cash. Customers came and went, but the arrangement remained in place available to those who paid to use it. It was a single arrangement for the wholesale laundering of money.
14. Crown Advocate Whelan submits that there is no requirement that the underlying criminal should be a party to the arrangement and therefore no obligation on the prosecution to specify him or her in Count 1. To declare otherwise would be to emasculate the purpose of the Article. And so it is said that sufficient particulars have been given and that Count 1 is not duplicitous.
15. As to Count 9 the Crown concede that they cannot specify the particular conduct of Mr Krizjl. They rely on the circumstances in which cash was received from him and the inferences to be drawn from them. The Crown contend that they do not have to specify the particular criminal conduct which produced the proceeds of crime. There is no such requirement in the Law. All that is required is that the money was the proceeds of criminal conduct. That will be a question of fact for the Jurats to decide.
16. I am grateful to both Advocates for their helpful skeleton arguments and oral submissions. I have considered them with care and I have reserved my ruling in order to take further time to do so.
17. Attractive though Advocate Le Quesne's submissions are, I prefer those of Crown Advocate Whelan. In my opinion the full flavour and extent of the defendants' alleged criminality would not be deployed before the Court were I to quash Count 1. In my view it represents and charges a single arrangement for money laundering, and Advocate Whelan's submissions are correct. Equally he is correct in his submissions as to Count 9. I accept the Prosecution's submissions on both Counts. Accordingly the Defence application is refused.