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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 >> Mariotti v Government of Italy & Ors [2005] EWHC 2745 (Admin) (02 December 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2005/2745.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 2745 (Admin) |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION (SULLIVAN J)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
MR JUSTICE PENRY-DAVEY
____________________
MARIOTTI |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE GOVERNMENT OF ITALY & ORS |
Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal WordWave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Alun Jones QC and Mr Andrew Colman (instructed by the Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Maurice Kay :
"While not relinquishing the exercising of my right to defend myself in the extradition case with the English authorities, in which I find myself with the conditions imposed by the courts of this country, I state that I wish to be present at the second level hearing at [the Court of Appeal]."
"Mr Mariotti was committed by Bow Street as an accused person and the Secretary of State also issued an order to proceed on that basis. Given that Mr Mariotti's conviction has now been made final, the Secretary of State has exercised his discretion under section 12 of the Extradition Act 1989 and decided not to order Mr Mariotti's return to Italy."
"It now seems clear that there is no opportunity for the applicant to appeal these convictions, he having decided of his own choice not to return to Italy for the hearings when it would certainly have been possible to do so … The charges of which he has been convicted are extremely grave, he was aware of all stages of the proceedings in Italy, opting not to return and deliberately absenting himself from the hearings. I am unable to find any reason why the applicant should not be returned to Italy."
Sections 6(2) and 11(3) of the 1989 Act
"A person who is alleged to be unlawfully at large after conviction of an extradition crime shall not be returned to a foreign state, or committed or kept in custody for the purposes of return to a foreign state, if it appears to an appropriate authority –
(a)that the conviction was obtained in his absence; and
(b)that it would not be in the interests of justice to return him on the ground of that conviction."
"Without prejudice to any jurisdiction of the High Court apart from this section, the court shall order the applicant's discharge if it appears to the court in relation to the offence, or each of the offences, in respect of which the applicant's return is sought, that:
(a) …;
(b) by reason of the passage of time since he is alleged to have committed it or to have become unlawfully at large, as the case may be; or
(c) because the accusation against him is not made in good faith in the interests of justice,
it would, having regard to all the circumstances, be unjust or oppressive to return him."
"The discretion of the judge to allow the trial to proceed [in a defendant's absence] must however be exercised with great reluctance, and with a view to the due administration of justice rather than to the comfort and convenience of anyone. It is arguably wrong in principle to surrender a fugitive upon no other ground than a finding of guilt reached in his absence, in circumstances in which the trial would not have been allowed to proceed in England …
It is not the view of the European Court of Human Rights that all trials in absentia are ipso facto unfair (Colozza v Italy (1986) 7 ECHR 516) but the part of the Convention which I have quoted does draw attention to the need to look at not only the substance of the case against the applicant as it appears from the extradition request, but also at the procedure which prevailed in Italy at the time of his trial …
I bear very much in mind that this court is not a further Court of Appeal, but it is not possible to decide, for the purposes of section 6(2), what the interests of justice require without some examination of the case against the applicant as it was presented and accepted in Italy." (see paragraphs 18, 21 and 22).
i) Abbatino's evidence against the applicant was hearsay originating from a dead accomplice;ii) there is no independent evidence of the applicant's involvement in the crime;
iii) Abbatino was himself a party to the crime;
iv) Abbatino has been found to be a discredited witness when acting as a supergrass in another trial involving Signor Andreotti, a former Prime Minister of Italy; Abbatino received a reduced sentence (from 21 to 8 years) for his evidence;
v) there was uncertainty around the circumstances in which Abbatino had identified the applicant by photograph.
All this leads Mr Lewis to submit no English court would have convicted the applicant on such evidence.
"The European Court of Human Rights and the Commission have repeatedly made clear that it regards the appearance of a criminal defendant at his trial as a matter of capital importance … That court has also laid down
(1) that a fair hearing requires a defendant to be notified of the proceedings against him: Colozza v Italy …;
(2) that a person should as a general principle be entitled to be present at his trial: Ekbatani v Sweden (1988) 13 EHRR 504, 509, para 25
(3) that a defendant in a criminal trial should have the opportunity to present his arguments adequately and participate effectively: Ensslin, Baader and Raspe v Germany (1978) 14 DR 64, 115; Stanford v United Kingdom 23 February 1994, publications of the European Court of Human Rights, series A no. 282-A;
(4) that a defendant should be entitled to be represented by counsel at trial and on appeal, whether or not he is present or has previously absconded …
The right to be defended has also been described by the European Court of Justice as a fundamental right deriving from the constitutional traditions common to the member states of the European Union: Bamberski v Krombach [2001] QB 709.
All these principles may be very readily accepted. They are given full effect by the law of the United Kingdom. But the European Court of Human Rights has never found a breach of the Convention where a defendant, fully informed of a forthcoming trial, has voluntarily chosen not to attend and the trial has continued."
"In the present case I consider that the deliberate decision of the defendant to abscond in breach of his bail conditions to avoid his forthcoming trial on a serious charge justifies the inference that he had no intention of putting forward a defence at that trial and that therefore he did waive his right to defend himself in an unequivocal manner."
"In no sense could it be said in this case that he was denied adequate rights of defence at his trial. Whether he has any realistic prospect of having his conviction reviewed if returned to Italy I do not know, and I make no assumption, but in the light of the decision in Hayward and others … it seems clear to me that had the trial taken place in England the Court of Appeal Criminal Division would not now interfere. Whatever may have been the position in 1982 that authority does suggest that a defendant does not now have to be arraigned before he can be tried in his absence."
"Although this is not expressly mentioned in paragraph 1 of Article 6 …, the object and purpose of the Article taken as a whole show that a person 'charged with a criminal offence' is entitled to take part in the hearing. Moreover, sub-paragraphs (c), (d) and (e) of paragraph 3 … guarantee to 'everyone charged with a criminal offence' the right 'to defend himself in person', 'to examine or have examined witnesses' and 'to have the free assistance of an interpreter if he cannot understand or speak the language used in Court', and it is difficult to see how he could exercise these rights without being present.
In the instant case the Court does not have to determine whether and under what conditions an accused can waive exercise of his right to appear at the hearing since in any event, according to the Court's established case law, waiver of the exercise of a right guaranteed by the Convention must be established in an unequivocal manner."
"I have before me a Sentence Enforcement Order dated 13 July 2000 signed by the Deputy State Prosecutor attached to the Court of Appeal of Rome, effectively a warrant of arrest, which shows that Mr Mariotti was unlawfully at large and not present at his trial. I am satisfied that Mr Mariotti is unlawfully at large."
"That language may indicate that the applicant is already regarded as unlawfully at large and therefore liable to arrest which, if so, would of course support the government's case. But it may, as it seems to me, be authority to arrest him when he has been found and when he has been handed a copy of the order, which would suggest that he was not unlawfully at large until those steps had been accomplished. In the absence of expert evidence of Italian law I do not know how the magistrate could, or how we can, choose between those hypotheses."
"The wanted person is qualified as an absconder until the arrest warrant is revoked or the wanted person arrested. Any judicial document is served on the absconding defendant by delivering a copy of said document to the absconder's defence counsel; the absconder is represented to all intents and purposes by his defence counsel (Article 165 of the Code of Criminal Procedure – Annex 3). In this case, on October 2nd 1993, the judge for preliminary investigations issued a pre-trial custody warrant against Mariotti. Mariotti was nowhere to be found and, the same day, a report of vain search was issued … Following the above mentioned procedure, Mariotti was summoned to appear as an absconder."
An attached chronology states:
"2.10.93: Following the drawing up of a report of unsuccessful searches, Mariotti was declared unlawfully at large (latitante) …
28.7.2000: A report of unsuccessful searches in respect of Mariotti was issued, and Mariotti remained unlawfully at large (latitante)."
There is a further advice which refers to the considered documents as
"Conclusive evidence that Mariotti voluntarily became unlawfully at large and as such was absent at his trial."
"2(1) In this Act … "extradition crime" means –
a) conduct in the territory of a foreign state … which, if it occurred in the United Kingdom, would constitute an offence … "
"… The requirements to the applicability of Article 116 of the Criminal Code are:
(a) the adhesion of all the co-defendants to an offence wished in complicity;
(b) the execution of a fact and more serious of the one wished (and that is an autonomous offence) caused only by one of the participants;
(c) a relation of material causality between the two offences;
(d) a connection of psychical causality between the behaviour of the accomplice who only wished the less serious offence previously agreed and the different and more serious fact wished and caused by the co-defendant. Essentially the most serious offence should represent itself to the psyche of the acting subject in its essential elements as a logically and normally foreseeable development of the wished offence and should not present itself as an exceptional and atypic event, occurred because of independent and unpredictable circumstances and that cannot at all be linked with the criminal offence originally agreed.
It mentioned, in particular, that as regards a kidnapping that is followed by the murder of the victim, it was repeatedly affirmed that the provision of Article 116 … may be applied to the person who, though he did not directly cause the conditions by which the death of the hostage occurred, planned and effected together with the other participants in the offence of the kidnapping, because the death of the hostage is not an exceptional and atypic event, occurred because of unpredictable circumstances that cannot at all be linked with the kidnapping …
… as the death of the hostage constitutes one of the alternatives considered and contemplated of the criminal operation and it can happen for several reasons among which the non-payment of the ransom, the violences suffered by the hostage through the action of some of one of the accomplices during the kidnapping or the identification of one of his warders …
It is easily understood that all the defendants belonging to the group … must necessarily answer also of the offence of murder as per Article 116 … , according to the principle affirmed by the Supreme Court of Cassation, with consequent modification of the judgment of the Court of Assizes with regards to this point."
"Not only did said defendant, who was a friend of the family of the hostage and who took flight as soon as he could, betray the trust that the son of the Duke had in him, but – as it can clearly be deduced from the same deposition rendered by the latter and from all the proceedings' papers – that he had a determining role in the execution of the offence, as he provided all the useful information about the movements of the family and the extent of the assets of the hostage."
"Therefore for the reasons which I have given I would answer the certified question … by stating that … it is sufficient to found a conviction for murder for a secondary party to have realised that in the course of the joint enterprise the primary party might kill with intent to do so or with intent to cause grievous bodily harm."
Conclusion