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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 >> Kalniets v District Court of Ogre [2009] EWHC 534 (Admin) (03 March 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2009/534.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 534 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE SWEENEY
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ROMAN KALNIETS | Appellant | |
v | ||
DISTRICT COURT OF OGRE | Respondent |
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John Jones (instructed by CPS Extradition Unit) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Introduction
(1) An expert report by Marina Dombrovksa dated 20th February 2009, together with an addendum dated 26th February 2009.
(2) A report of the Committee for the Prevention of Torture on a visit to Latvia in 2004.
Despite the late arrival of this fresh evidence, there is no application for an adjournment of this argument by the respondent, but both the application to adduce the evidence and the appeal itself are opposed.
Background
"On 6th December 2006, in the flat of Roman Kalniets in Spidolas Street 17-14, Lielvarde, Ogre District, Roman Kalniets shot with a hunting shotgun in the direction of Mihails Mihalkins and wounded him to death in the presence of Tatjana Cervakova and Vitalijs Alsevskis. On the next day the dead body of Mihails Mihalkins was taken to woods in Birzgale, Ogre District and buried there. On 14th April 2007 the suspect, Vitalijs Alsevskis, during examination of evidence on the spot, indicated the place where, on 7th December 2006, [the] dead body of Mihails Mihalkins was buried. There was a skull found which, in accordance with an expert opinion, was admitted as the skull of Mihails Mihalkins."
The law
"In relation to Article 3, it is necessary to show strong grounds for believing that the person, if returned, faces a real risk of being subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment."
"(a)... evidence is available that was not available at the extradition hearing;
(b)the... evidence would have resulted in the... judge deciding [the relevant question] differently;
(c)if he had decided the question in that way, he would have been required to order the person's discharge."
"32. In our judgement, evidence which was 'not available at the extradition hearing' means evidence which either did not exist at the time of the extradition hearing, or which was not at the disposal of the party wishing to adduce it and which he could not with reasonable diligence have obtained. If it was at the party's disposal or could have been so obtained, it was available. It may on occasions be material to consider whether or when the party knew the case he had to meet. But a party taken by surprise is able to ask for an adjournment. In addition, the court needs to decide that, if the evidence had been adduced, the result would have been different, resulting in the person's discharge. This is a strict test, consonant with the parliamentary intent and that of the Framework Decision, that extradition cases should be dealt with speedily and should not generally be held up by an attempt to introduce equivocal fresh evidence which was available to a diligent party at the extradition hearing. A party seeking to persuade the court that proposed evidence was not available should normally serve a witness statement explaining why it was not available. The appellants did not do this in the present appeal.
...
35. Even for defendants, the court will not readily admit fresh evidence which they should have adduced before the District Judge, and which is tendered to try to repair holes which should have been plugged before the District Judge, simply because it has a human rights label attached to it. The threshold remains high. The court must still be satisfied that the evidence would have resulted in the judge deciding the relevant question differently, so that he would not have ordered the defendant's discharge. In short, the fresh evidence must be decisive."
The rival submissions
(1) Those who now represent the appellant are not in a position to say why his previous solicitors did not seek to obtain evidence of this type, but the appellant should not be disadvantaged by what may have been the failings of his previous solicitors to properly pursue this aspect of the case. The court should be generous in favour of a lay defendant with no understanding of the legal complexities and consequences.
(2) As to the report and the addendum of Marina Dombrovksa, an experienced Latvian lawyer practising in criminal law and drawing on her own experience, her report indicates that the appellant, if extradited, is likely to be held on remand for many months in Riga Central Prison and, if convicted, in a closed prison thereafter. It is her assertion that whilst there have been improvements in the Latvian prison system, conditions in Riga Central Prison are such as to breach Article 3. In that regard, there are three specific passages on page 8, page 9 of the addendum and pages 16 and 17 of the main report, at which point the witness refers to the Office of the Latvian Ombudsman, and to claims made in 2007 of bad conditions in Latvian prisons. The witness concludes:
"Thus, most probably [the] defendant's Article 3 ECHR rights would be breached... since living conditions in Latvian prisons, de facto, are still not in line with human rights standards."
(3) The court should take into account the Committee for the Prevention of Torture 2004 Report, which, although now some 5 years old, is a good guide to the fact that conditions in Latvian prisons are still likely not to be Article 3 compliant in the respects referred to in the 2004 Report.
(4) There have been a number of cases before the European Court of Human Rights in which there have been findings that conditions in prison violate Article 3, although not, we note, in relation to Latvian prisons.
(5) In order to fulfil the test in the ex parte Ullah case (above), the appellant must demonstrate that if extradited he is likely to be sent to a prison where there is a real risk that the prison conditions to which he is subject will breach his Article 3 rights, in the sense that it is likely that aspects of those conditions will amount to inhuman or degrading treatment, as evidenced in the reports to which I have just made reference, and which also finds support from the appellant's assertions in evidence, albeit rejected by the learned District Judge.
(1) The court should decline to admit the fresh evidence, as it plainly touches on a live issue that was before the lower court and was rejected by the District Judge. The material could and should have been obtained by the exercise of due diligence before that hearing, and there is no witness statement giving any explanation whatsoever as to why that due diligence was not pursued.
(2) Marina Dombrovksa is simply a Latvian lawyer who only qualified to practise in 2005, and it is not clear that she should be regarded as an expert on Latvian prison conditions.
(3) Her report is largely innocuous; when the addendum is taken into account, it does not even reach any clear conclusion that the appellant would be held in custody at Riga Central Prison; and her assertions that "most probably the appellant's Article 3 rights would be breached" come out of the blue, and are unparticularised in the report.
(4) Insofar as the report of the Committee for the Prevention of Torture is concerned, it is simply too old to reflect any future risk in 2009, and there is no decided case before the European Court in which an adverse finding under Article 3 has been made in relation to a Latvian prison.
(5) Taken together, the fresh evidence does not begin to reach the high threshold required of an Article 3 breach in a foreign case, the more so when one considers the nature of the allegation and its gravity, on the one hand, and the prospect of an alleged murderer walking free against Article 3 allegations of this type, on the other hand.
The merits