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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 >> Spanish Judicial Authority v Duff [2021] EWHC 3436 (Admin) (17 December 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2021/3436.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 3436 (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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SPANISH JUDICIAL AUTHORITY |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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KEITH ANTHONY DUFF |
Respondent |
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Abigail Bright (instructed by Eshegian & Co Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 17.12.21
Judgment as delivered in open court at the hearing
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE FORDHAM :
Introduction
The case for bail
My assessment
i) He has a conviction in the French criminal court in March 2012, for what the papers described variously as drug smuggling or the improper possession and importation of drugs. The clear inference is that this was action 'across borders'. Indeed, that it more than an inference. In my assessment, based on what I have been told and shown, that was the nature of the criminal offending. And so, 9½ years ago, the Respondent was sentenced to 30 months custody (served in a French prison) for that criminal conduct, the length of that sentence itself reflecting that the matter was of some real seriousness.ii) Much more recently, 11 months ago (in January 2021) the Respondent is known to have committed criminal offences involving the fraudulent possession of a fraudulently obtained genuine passport and the use of that passport. That offending came to light as a consequence of his arrest on 27 November 2020. What were uncovered were matters of real seriousness, to the point that the extradition proceedings were interrupted to enable the public interest considerations in support of domestic prosecution here to take their course. The Respondent was convicted and sentenced to two concurrent 15-month sentences which he served (interrupting his qualifying remand in the extradition proceedings) between 14 January 2021 and 13 July 2021. The sentencing remarks, which I have seen reference to, reflect the nature of the conduct which was uncovered.
iii) The Respondent's conduct, I am satisfied for the purposes of today's assessment of risk, is conduct which has included the following. He was travelling, on a 'fraudulently obtained genuine passport' bearing another person's name and details, 15 months ago in August 2020. That travel included Bangkok, Doha and Dublin. He has been using the fraudulently obtained genuine passport to transfer funds across borders and overseas. The sentencing Judge described the "highly skilled" nature of the manipulation which had created the passport in another name which the Respondent was using in those ways. There was also evidence that he was using that passport to obtain a driving licence in that alternative identity. And there was evidence of other pending applications for passports. All of this was alongside the situation of being a British citizen where he had his own genuine identity documents in his own real name.
iv) In my assessment, the themes that arise from that picture include the following. (a) There is a very clear international and cross-border element, including presence in many foreign countries. (b) There are apparent connections with others in other countries and there are apparent transfers of resources suggestive of access to resources overseas. (c) There was the ability to evade the authorities by using deception in the context of travel and dealing with funds. (d) There was the ability to create that situation or to engage with others to be able to create that situation. (e) There was the motive to act in that way rather than use the genuine identity and genuine identity documents. Whatever precisely that motive was, it is very difficult to see how it could be other than criminally evasive. (f) Another clear feature of this picture is that this conduct is recent. (g) The final feature is that this is conduct which is persistent and involves something of a pattern. That picture in my assessment is one of considerable concern when I approach the bail merits and the question of the abscond risk.
v) To that is to be added the Respondent's criminal record much of which I have already referenced. But, in my assessment, Mr Allen is right to emphasise that amid the picture of past conduct there was a recognised Bail Act offence for which the Respondent was convicted and fined in September 2015, just over six years ago. That conduct was a failure to surrender.
i) But what this means is this. When the point is made that there is an imminent and real prospect that "the extradition proceedings will be at an end", what that prospect amounts to involves a situation involving then serving a custodial sentence – which is likely to be a substantial one – in prison in the United Kingdom. In other words, the incentive to cooperate and resolve matters is a pathway to the lesser of two custodial alternatives. The other is the prospect of custody in Spain, were the Respondent to be convicted there.ii) A grant of bail serves to produce a third option for the Respondent. It is true that the current picture gives him the opportunity to secure being able to serve substantial custody in this country through the section 21B route. But what bail would allow, for a person in his position, is the opportunity to try and avoid both of those two alternative custodial options, which may from his perspective now loom large. And it is that question which directly engages the question of compliance with bail conditions and the risk of failing to surrender.
iii) In my assessment, it is also at least relevant to have this in mind. The continuation of ongoing custody on remand – from today – would serve as further 'qualifying remand' reducing the time left to be served, from the perspective of either of the two custodial alternatives which I have described: a sentence to be served in Spain (if convicted); or a sentence served in prison in the UK (following a guilty plea, in conjunction with the s.23B interview, if that is achieved). It is a feature of this case that the Respondent, who has opened up an avenue to lead to the serving of custody in prison in this jurisdiction – as the lesser of two custodial alternatives faced – is seeking to be released on bail, and for what may be a short interim period.
Conclusion
Mode of hearing
17.12.21