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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 >> CIS v Regional Court in Kielce (Poland) [2021] EWHC 3317 (Admin) (07 December 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2021/3317.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 3317 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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PAWEL CIS |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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REGIONAL COURT IN KIELCE (POLAND) |
Respondent |
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The Respondent did not appear and was not represented
Hearing date: 7/12/21
Judgment as delivered in open court at the hearing
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE FORDHAM :
Wozniak
Article 8 ECHR
i) The first feature which has informed my view on arguability relates to the passage of time. That involves a first period of six years between the issue of the EAW in December 2008 and its certification by the NCA in December 2014. There is then a second further period, of another six years, between certification in December 2014 and the Appellant's arrest in December 2020. The Judge referred to evidence from the NCA, which he accepted, as to "basic checks" which had been conducted and which had found "no trace" of the Appellant in the UK. The Judge also found as a fact that the Appellant had been living in the United Kingdom entirely "openly", throughout. The Judge recorded that it was "inexplicable" and "beyond me" how the authorities allowed the periods of time without any progress or further successful pursuit. Unlike in the world of section 14 of the Extradition Act 2003 (oppression by reason of the passage of time), in the world of the evaluative balancing exercise under Article 8, fugitivity does not operate as an 'on-off' switch for the purposes of weighing the implications of the passage of time. The question may be whether the Respondent's own blamelessness, together with the Appellant's originating fugitivity and the NCA's "basic checks", are a sufficient basis to avoid the following conclusion: that there is in this case a passage of time involving sufficient "culpability" as materially to undermine the strength of the public interest considerations in favour of extradition that would otherwise apply. Particularly when the 12 years passage of time is put alongside the changes in the Appellant's life, including for example the birth of his daughter in April 2012 and the 2015 separation from her mother which means that his only chance of being in her life on an ongoing and day-to-day basis is his being in the United Kingdom.ii) The second feature of the case which weighs with me, for the purposes of the arguability threshold on permission to appeal, is the transformative position so far as concerns the Appellant himself. The index offending took place in June 2006 when he was aged 22. The offending arose against an upbringing and chaotic family life which the Judge described as "tough" (into which I need not go further for the purposes of these brief reasons), and in circumstances where the Appellant had become a drug addict. As the Judge recognised, the 37-year-old, the proportionality of whose extradition now has to be considered by the courts of this country, is a transformatively different person. The Judge described him as "wholly rehabilitated", "a credit to his family and friends" and "a shining example to society" who, through "perseverance and love" had overcome the difficult start in his life and who now showed in the care and love for his daughter that he is "not the role model" that his own father and stepfather had been in his own childhood and upbringing.
iii) The third feature of the case which informs my view as to arguability is the position of the Appellant's nine year old daughter, whose best interests and welfare were the subject of a report from a senior social worker which the Judge considered. Although her primary carer is her mother – the Appellant's ex-partner – the evidence, which the Judge accepted, was that the Appellant has daily contact with his daughter. The impact of extradition for them both, as well as the current partner and fiancée to which the Judge also referred, and for the relationships between them all falls also to be seen in the light of a further feature of the case: the uncertainties now arising as to whether the Appellant would be able to return to this country, were he surrendered to Poland to serve the remaining 11 months of his custodial sentence there.
7.12.21