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 £1, 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 (Administrative Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Cupi v The Government of Albania [2016] EWHC 3288 (Admin) (21 December 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2016/3288.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 3288 (Admin) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE JEREMY BAKER
____________________
Gjergj Cupi |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
The Government of Albania |
Respondent |
____________________
Miss Hannah Hinton (instructed by The Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 13 December 2016
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Jeremy Baker:
Factual background
"….it was found that the defendant Gjergj Cupi is an inhabitant in the village Kacinar, of the commune Kacinar. As the result of the feud between the family Cupi and Ndreca, which dates back in 1992, Petrit Cupi was killed. At that time, the defendant Mirash Ndreca (the victim) was sentenced to 22 years' imprisonment and he suffered punishment in the respective places until the moment when the prisons were opened in March 1997. As the defendant (the victim), Mirash Ndreca, escaped from the place where he was suffering the punishment, the defendant Gjergj Cupi came up with the criminal idea to revenge for his brother, profiting even from the unfavourable situation the state went through from January to June 1997, when all the population was armed as the ammunition depots were opened.
The defendant got the gun to commit the crime and on 27.07.1997, he committed the premeditated murder of the victim Mirash Ndreca and of the other people, at the place called 'Karburanti i vjeter', at the town of Rreshen. Consequently, the other victim, Donika Kadeli, was murdered, and the citizens Preng Perkeqi and Frrok Perkeqi were wounded. The administered evidence and the interrogation of the witnesses Dode Pertena, Ndue Cupi, Vitore Perlesi, Pashk Shyti prove completely the fact that the defendant Gjergj Cupi has committed the criminal offence of the premeditated murder, of the attempted premeditated murder and of keeping of guns without a permit. The witnesses explained that the defendant Gjergj Cupi communicated with them directly or indirectly stating that 'I revenged for the blood of my brother'. So, it is obvious that the defendant Gjergj Cupi has premeditated the murder against the citizen Mirash Ndreca and Donika Kadeli, and the attempted premeditated murder against the citizens Preng Perkeqi and Frrok Perkeqi……."
Ground 1
Statutory framework
"85 Case where person has been convicted
This section has no associated Explanatory Notes
(1) If the judge is required to proceed under this section he must decide whether the person was convicted in his presence.
(2) If the judge decides the question in subsection (1) in the affirmative he must proceed under section 87.
(3) If the judge decides that question in the negative he must decide whether the person deliberately absented himself from his trial.
(4) If the judge decides the question in subsection (3) in the affirmative he must proceed under section 87.
(5) If the judge decides that question in the negative he must decide whether the person would be entitled to a retrial or (on appeal) to a review amounting to a retrial.
(6) If the judge decides the question in subsection (5) in the affirmative he must proceed under section 86.
(7) If the judge decides that question in the negative he must order the person's discharge.
(8) The judge must not decide the question in subsection (5) in the affirmative unless, in any proceedings that it is alleged would constitute a retrial or a review amounting to a retrial, the person would have these rights—
(a) the right to defend himself in person or through legal assistance of his own choosing or, if he had not sufficient means to pay for legal assistance, to be given it free when the interests of justice so required;
(b) the right to examine or have examined witnesses against him and to obtain the attendance and examination of witnesses on his behalf under the same conditions as witnesses against him."
In addition, under section 87, the court considering the extradition request must have regard to the individual's ECHR rights.
"87 Human rights
This section has no associated Explanatory Notes
(1) If the judge is required to proceed under this section (by virtue of section 84, 85 or 86) he must decide whether the person's extradition would be compatible with the Convention rights within the meaning of the Human Rights Act 1998.
(2) If the judge decides the question in subsection (1) in the negative he must order the person's discharge.
(3) If the judge decides that question in the affirmative he must send the case to the Secretary of State for his decision whether the person is to be extradited."
This section has no associated Explanatory Notes
Moreover, under section 206, the onus of proving the matters set out in section 85 rests upon the state seeking the extradition, and must do so to the criminal standard.
"206 Burden and standard of proof
This section has no associated Explanatory Notes
(1) This section applies if, in proceedings under this Act, a question arises as to burden or standard of proof.
(2) The question must be decided by applying any enactment or rule of law that would apply if the proceedings were proceedings for an offence.
(3) Any enactment or rule of law applied under subsection (2) to proceedings under this Act must be applied as if—
(a) the person whose extradition is sought (or who has been extradited) were accused of an offence;
(b) the category 1 or category 2 territory concerned were the prosecution.
(4) Subsections (2) and (3) are subject to any express provision of this Act.
(5) In this section "enactment" includes an enactment comprised in, or in an instrument made under, an Act of the Scottish Parliament."
Review of authorities
"8. Section 85(5) requires the judge to decide whether a convicted person who has not deliberately absented himself from his trial would be entitled to a retrial et cetera in which he would have the rights specified in section 85(8). 'Entitled' as a matter of ordinary language must mean 'has the right under law'. It is the law of the requesting state which either confers or does not confer that right. It is a right which must be conferred, not merely the possibility of asking the court to exercise a discretion. Free of authority, I would hold that it is neither necessary nor right to examine what a requesting state does in practice. Its law will either provide clearly for the relevant entitlement or it will not."
"5. That retrial is defined so as to include expressly the rights conferred under Article 6(3)(c) and (d) of the European Convention on Human Rights. If the answer to that third question, if the third question arises, is 'no' or 'perhaps' or 'in certain circumstances', then that is not enough, the statutory test is not met…………"
"26. However, having made all allowances I properly can, I am unable to conclude that, upon examination of the Albanian provisions and the explanations given for them, I am satisfied that the defendant would be entitled to the required retrial or (on appeal) review amounting to a retrial in Albania. I do not doubt the good faith in which the 'guarantee' was given but I see considerable force in the submissions of Mr Pearse Wheatley. There are in my judgment too many open ends and insufficient clarity to be able to conclude that the information supplied belatedly and by instalments, following the concession before the judge, provides a sufficient assurance that the defendant would receive in Albania the retrial, or review amounting to retrial, which the 2003 Act requires is extradition is to be ordered. I do not find signatures of the European Convention on Human Rights, or the UN Covenants, in themselves amount to sufficient assurance in the circumstances."
A similar conclusion was reached by Richards LJ, with whom Aikens J, as he then was, agreed, in Mucelli V Government of Albania [2007] EWHC 2632 (Admin).
"51. In my view the building blocks for evaluating Albanian law and practice are firstly, that Albania is a contracting state of the European Convention on Human Rights and therefore subject to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Human Rights. The Convention has been explicitly adopted by article 17 of the Albanian Constitution and under Article 122 takes precedence over domestic law. Albania is also a signatory to the Second Additional Protocol to the European Convention on Extradition which provides, as we have seen, for a guarantee of a re-trial in Article 3. There is also the enactment of Article 51.4 of Law No 10 193 of 3 December 2009. All these are a necessary, but not a sufficient, condition for a conclusion as to whether there is a practical and effective right of retrial in Albania.
52. Next, there is the jurisprudence. The ES case is the first of the trilogy of Albanian decisions pertinent to the issue before us. It is clear that that case turned in the Constitutional Court on Article 147 CCP; there is no mention of Article 450 CCP. It established that a person tried in absentia had a right to have his case re-opened, even if he had been represented at trial by a family appointed lawyer. The case then went to the Supreme Court. Professor Kokona makes the point that there is a lack of clarity in the Supreme Court in ES because of the combination of considerations of procedural principle and the factual merits of the case. In other words, as I understand it, the Supreme Court considered the merits of ES's case and that was at least an element in the court's decision to refuse his claim. Professor Kokona also explains that there was no evidence in ES of a Ministerial guarantee of a retrial. So despite that distinctly off beam answer the Albanian Ministry of Justice gave in its 22 December 2011 reply to the Secretary of State's questions about ES, it seems to me that whatever happened in ES is of no relevance to the issues before the court.
53. Mece is a crucial decision. There was a Ministerial guarantee there given to the Spanish court that Mece would have a retrial. On his return to Albania Mece applied to the Supreme Court for a retrial under Article 450 CCP. The Supreme Court in its 17 September 2010 decision held that Mece should obtain a retrial. The Ministry of Justice has explained that Mece changed Albanian law, that it is binding on lower courts and that Mr Mucelli falls exactly within the ruling. Professor Kokona accepts Mece as a positive step, although she points to the conflicting use of Article 147 CCP in ES and Article 450 CCP in Mece. She accepts, however, that Bogdani followed Mece. Mr Blaxland QC contends that there is no evidence about whether Mece has been retried. Even if it is not too late in the day to be advancing that point, the fact is that we do know what happened in Bogdani. To my mind that is determinative.
54. Bogdani followed his extradition from this country consequent on the decision of this court: [2008] EWHC 2065. Applying Mece, the case was sent to the Court of Appeal in Gjirokastër, and we have Judge Qirjazi's report about how the case is proceeding. Professor Kokona majors on the procedural hurdles and delays in the case, but these are explained by the Ministry of Justice. The crucial point is that the Supreme Court has on at least two occasions held that there is a right of retrial and we have chapter and verse on what happened in Bogdani's case. There were delays but they have been explained. Mr Mucelli will need to act quickly on return, and he will need a lawyer to make his Supreme Court application. Despite the absence of legal aid in Albania for the purpose, there is no evidence before us that Mr Mucelli will not be able to make a timely application or obtain legal assistance.
55. In my view, the law and practice in Albania is now such that there is no real risk that Mr Mucelli will suffer a flagrant denial of justice on his return to Albania. He is entitled to a retrial of the merits of the case against him. As for Messrs Hoxhaj and Gjoka, I cannot see that the District Judge erred in her conclusion that she was sure that they would be entitled to a retrial or (on appeal) a review amounting to a retrial on their return to Albania. I am fortified in these conclusions because of the history of Albanian extradition attempts. The Albanian authorities must be acutely conscious of the fact that these present cases will be observed carefully when these three persons are extradited. There is also the scrutiny of Albanian extraditions in the European Court of Human Rights, an ongoing scrutiny because, as Professor Kokona explains, the Sulejmanni case is still before that court."
"12. Under sub-section 85(5) of the 2003 Act, if a judge decides that a person, who was convicted in his absence by the requesting state, has not deliberately absented himself from his trial, the judge must go on to decide
'….. whether the person would be entitled to a retrial or (on appeal) to a review amounting to a retrial'
However I point out that such a decision is necessarily based on the premise, or hypothesis, that, as found by the judge, there has been no deliberate non-attendance at trial. It does not seem to me that, under the subsection, the judge is required to conclude (before ordering extradition) that, even if the requesting court were to reach a different conclusion on that factual issue, it would have to afford an automatic right of retrial to the person subject to the extradition request."
The court proceeded to consider the evidence provided by the Government of Albania, both in relation to its interpretation of its laws, and in relation to those individuals whose cases had been considered in Mucelli & others, and stated, in relation to the latter,
"16. i) It was not suggested in argument by Mr. Cooper, on behalf of the appellant, that the Albanian Court would be bound by the District Judge's finding that the appellant did not deliberately absent himself from his trial. Nor was it argued that any condition precedent to the exercise of his right of appeal in Albania, which required the appellant to demonstrate that he had not deliberately so absented himself, would amount, in the circumstances of the District Judge's finding, to a contravention of his Convention rights or would preclude the demonstration of an 'entitlement' for the purposes of subsection 85(5), on the basis of the hypothesis there set out, namely the District Judge's finding. In the present case this Court must assume that it is extremely unlikely that the respondent would seek to take such a point, given its statement quoted above that the appellant 'has not been informed of any stages of the criminal proceedings'.
ii) There is nothing in the evidence relating to the further proceedings in Albania in relation to Mr. Mucelli that suggests his Convention rights have been infringed in his subsequent appeal proceedings in Albania. On the contrary, the evidence shows that on 24 October 2012, the Court of Appeal, Tirana, having concluded that Mr. Mucelli had not been appropriately notified of the criminal proceedings against him, decided to overrule the previous verdict against him and to send the case back to the Judicial District Court of Tirana for retrial by a different judgement panel. Mrs. Kokana's comments that a retrial has not yet started (in my judgment, not necessarily surprising given the date of the appeal decision) and that the website of the Court of Appeal inaccurately reported the result, have no bearing on the matter.
iii) Similarly, there is nothing in the evidence relating to the further proceedings in Albania in relation to Mr. Hoxha (one of the conjoined appellants in Mucelli) that demonstrates that his Convention rights have been abused as a consequence of extradition to Albania. The evidence shows that he was apparently extradited on 8 March 2012 and presented an application pursuant to Article 450 of the Code of Criminal Procedure and Article 6 of the Convention, which was registered by the Albanian Supreme Court on 10 May 2012. The fact that his case is, according to Mrs. Kokona, still pending before the Supreme Court, may, arguably, be regrettable in terms of delay, but does not, in my judgment, amount to such an abuse of his Convention rights as to demonstrate that he has not effective 'entitlement' to a retrial for the purposes of section 85(5) of the 2003 Act.
iv) The evidence relating to Mr. Gjoka (another of the conjoined appellants in Mucelli) likewise does not demonstrate any absence of "entitlement" of a right to a retrial or that Albanian procedures in relation to retrial are unclear or purely discretionary. In that case, according to Mrs. Kokona's evidence, Mr. Gjoka applied to the Albanian Constitutional Court to find the "unlawfulness of the judgments which led to his conviction and quash them accordingly", pursuant to article 42 of the Albanian Constitution. On 12 July 2012 the Constitutional Court dismissed the request as ill-founded, on the basis that Mr. Gjoka had failed to prove that he had not been on notice of the criminal proceedings against him and therefore did not have the entitlement to a retrial. Mr. Cooper submitted that the fact that Mr. Gjoka had apparently been required to demonstrate in Albania that he had not deliberately absented himself from trial, was contrary to what appeared to be guarantees which had been given by the respondent in relation to Mr. Gjoka, and/or the respondent's acceptance that he had not deliberately absented himself from trial, as set out in paragraphs 10 and 11 of this Court's judgment in Mucelli. In my judgment, in circumstances where this Court does not have available to it the terms of the guarantee given by the respondent in that case, or knowledge as to whether the concession referred to in paragraph 11 was simply given for the purposes of the UK proceedings, and where it was clear from the reasoning of the Albanian Constitutional Court that it concluded that Mr. Gjoka was indeed aware of the criminal proceedings and voluntarily chose not to attend them, I cannot conclude that the requirement that Mr. Gjoka had to demonstrate that he had not deliberately absented himself from trial, in any way deprived him of his Convention rights.
v) ………….
vi) As Mr. Toby Cadman, counsel for the respondent, submitted, and as this Court held, in Nastase v Office of the State Prosecutor, Trento, Italy [2012] EWHC 3671 (Admin), the mere fact that a person's entitlement to a retrial is restricted if the requesting Court is satisfied on the evidence that he knew of proceedings and voluntarily renounced his right to appear or to file an appeal, does not prevent compliance with a person's Article 6 rights. The existence of procedural steps, which an extradited person is required to satisfy before being afforded a right of retrial (i.e. demonstrating that he did not voluntarily absent from trial and filing notice of appeal within the stipulated time), does not remove the entitlement to a retrial for the purposes of section 85(5); see Nastase at paragraph 45.
17. For all the above reasons I conclude that the District Judge was right to decide for the purposes of section 85(5) that the appellant would be entitled to a retrial or (on appeal) to a review amounting to a retrial upon extradition to Albania, and, pursuant to section 87, that extradition would not be incompatible with the appellant's Convention rights. Accordingly, I would dismiss this appeal."
"58. Consequently, in respect of the claim that the appellant would not receive a retrial we conclude that there is no evidential basis to depart from the decisions of this court in Mucelli and Zeqaj. In this case Albania has given an explicit guarantee that the appellant will enjoy a right of retrial in its letter dated 30 July 2012. There is no basis for the appellant to assert that he would not receive a retrial. This court is not concerned primarily with doctrinal niceties about what may or may not be the position in Albanian law but with whether the right to a retrial or on appeal a review is a real and effective right. Nothing we have heard persuades us that this appellant will not be able to exercise the right the Albanian Ministry of Justice has guaranteed."
Appellant's submissions
Respondent's submissions
Decision of the District Judge
"62. I am satisfied the assurance provides a practical and effective right of a retrial consonant with article 6 and, on the evidence before me if extradited, Mr Cupi will have a retrial that is article 6 compliant."
Discussion
"147.2 If the decision was rendered in his absence, the defendant may request the reinstatement of the time-limit to appeal when he proves that he has not been notified of the decision.
147.3 The request to reinstate the time-limit is submitted within ten days from the disappearance of the fact which constituted the mischance or any force majeure, whereas in cases provided for in the paragraph 2 from the day when the defendant has received effective notice thereof. The reinstatement of the time-limit is not permitted more than once for each party for each stage of the proceedings."
Although the application of Article 147.2, which relates to the defendant's knowledge of the original criminal proceedings, was not required to be considered in detail in Mucelli & others, nevertheless the court clearly had it in mind, as it was set out in full when the court undertook its review of the Albanian Constitution and legislation. It is this Article which enables the Albanian courts to qualify an individual's entitlement to a retrial, not as a matter of discretion, but only in the event that they are not satisfied that the individual had not been notified of the original criminal proceedings. In these circumstances, I do not consider that there is any question of the court in the subsequent cases of Zeqaj and Bardoshi having misunderstood the position. On the contrary, unlike the court in the earlier case of Mucelli & others, and as a result of what had happened upon Mr Gjoka's return to Albania, the court in the subsequent cases was obliged to consider both of these aspects of the Albanian legislation.
"45. The existence of procedural steps does not remove the entitlement to a retrial. Rather, the Italian authorities must be permitted to regulate their own proceedings by imposition of their own rules. Section 20 may create entitlements, but procedural rules set parameters within which such rights are exercisable. In my view the evidence demonstrates that s.20(5) is satisfied by the provisions recited in the material provided to this court and to the District Judge. I am not persuaded that Nastase would be excluded from those protections. I conclude that the District Judge was correct to answer the question set out in section 20(5) of the 2003 Act in the affirmative."
"To my mind the appellant has an entitlement in this case to a retrial in Romania. Article 466 provides that. There is no discretion in the Romanian court to deny that right. Admittedly the Romanian court could decide that the appellant had appointed Mr Octavian to represent her, through her mother or otherwise, and therefore does not qualify for a retrial under Article 466. But that is a 'procedural step', as it was described in Nastase. There Rafferty LJ held that, although the Italian court could theoretically refuse a retrial where it is satisfied that a requested person knew of the original proceedings and where is was satisfied that a requested person knew of the original proceedings and voluntarily absented himself, that was a procedural step which did not detract from the unconditional nature of the legal right………..."
"……. Gjergj Zef Cupi had committed the crimes for which he had been declared guilty and convicted with 25 years' imprisonment, had escaped in unknown direction, avoiding on purpose the investigation, arbitration at all its levels, so that he not serve the sentence with imprisonment for the crimes committed by him. In these circumstances, 'de facto', he had been fully aware that he would be investigated, tried and convicted with imprisonment for the crimes committed."
Ground Two
Conclusion
Lord Justice Treacy:
I agree.