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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 >> Lynch, R (On the Application Of) v Westminster Magistrates' Court [2022] EWHC 142 (Admin) (26 January 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2022/142.html Cite as: [2022] 1 WLR 2065, [2022] WLR(D) 46, [2022] WLR 2065, [2022] EWHC 142 (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 :
____________________
THE QUEEN on the application of MICHAEL RICHARD LYNCH |
Claimant |
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- and |
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WESTMINSTER MAGISTRATES' COURT |
Defendant |
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- and |
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(1) SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT (2) GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA |
Interested Parties |
____________________
for the Claimant
Mark Summers QC & Rachel Barnes (instructed by CPS) for the Second Interested Party
Hearing date: 18 January 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE SWIFT
A. Introduction
" The Defendant is accused in the US of conduct between January 2009 and November 2018, particularised in a Superseding Indictment containing 17 counts constituting: (i) conspiracy to commit wire fraud (count 1); (ii) wire fraud and aiding and abetting wire fraud (counts 2-15); securities fraud and aiding and abetting securities fraud (count 16); and a conspiracy to conceal the above (count 17). "
"19. The central allegation is that prior to the sale, between January 2009 and October 2011, to deceive purchasers and sellers of Autonomy Securities about the true performance of Autonomy's business, its financial performance and condition, the nature and composition of its products, revenue and expenses, and its prospects for growth. It is alleged that the Defendant was the leader of the corporate conspiracy to fraudulently inflate the reported revenue, earnings and value of Autonomy, in order to make the company more attractive to potential purchasers HP.
20. It is alleged that a consequence of the conspirators' fraudulent activity, HP was persuaded to purchase the shares in Autonomy at a significant overvalue
21. Subsequently, between October 2011 and November 2018, the Defendant is further alleged to have conspired with others to conceal the fraudulent nature of the accounting at Autonomy, and to obstruct investigations into the fraud, through conduct including the making of false and misleading statements to HP's General Counsel, the theft and destruction of documents, and the payment of "hush money" to former Autonomy employees to influence, delay and prevent their testimony."
"The Defendant indicated in a Skeleton Argument dated 24 December 2020 that he intended to argue four issues in opposition to extradition:
- Dual Criminality Section 78(4)(b) and Section 137: the alleged conduct did not occur 'within the United States' for the purposes of section 137(3)(a); and 'the conduct alleged, if properly transposed as required by section 137, would [not] yield any offence triable in the UK' under section 137(3)(b);
- Passage of time Section 79(1)(c) and Section 82: the conduct dates back to 2009, the (first) indictment was not issued until 2018 and the extradition request was not made until 2019; extradition would be both oppressive and unjust in these circumstances;
- Forum Section 79(1)(e) and Sections 83A-E: the Defendant is a British citizen with lifelong links to the UK; the alleged conduct concerns the takeover of a UK company that which applied UK accounting standards and was audited by a UK auditor; 'this is a factual matrix, par excellence, which should engage the protection of the forum bar';
- Article 3 ECHR Section 87: extradition would expose the defendant to detention in substandard prison conditions; the impact of those conditions is to be considered by reference to the Defendant's 'specific health needs' and 'his ability to prepare for trial';
- Abuse of process: a 'number of interlinked issues' are to be raised 'the core of which is that the Government has presented and relies upon a significantly distorted picture, including inter alia: (i) misleading content, (ii) material omissions and (iii) jurisdiction'. The alleged abuse appears to be of the type identified in Zakrzewski v Regional Court in Lodz, Poland [2013] 1 WLR 324."
The Judge rejected these submissions, and in accordance with Part 2 of the 2003 Act sent the case to the Secretary of State for her consideration.
"If before the required period ends the Secretary of State applies to the appropriate judge for it to be extended the judge may make an order accordingly; and this subsection may apply more than once."
"On 17 August 2021, the Requested Person served detailed representations in relation to the bars to extradition that the Secretary of State must consider under the 2003 Act. The Secretary of State has considered those representations but in light of the complex nature of the background to this case and the need for the Secretary of State to give full consideration to all the relevant issues that have been raised before her, a short extension of seven days is sought pursuant to section 99(4) of the 2003 Act."
This application was considered at an ex parte hearing, and was granted.
"The extension sought is until Monday 29 November 2021, in order to enable the Secretary of State to fully consider all of the matters raised in representations made on behalf of Mr Lynch which include submissions in relation to the potential relevance of the ongoing civil proceedings before Mr Justice Hildyard.
Mr Justice Hildyard has indicated that a draft judgment in that case will be circulated to the parties in late October, early November, with the final public judgment therefore due around two weeks thereafter. As such the extension sought in this matter is until 2 weeks after the expected date of the judgment in the civil proceedings, in order to give the Secretary of State time to consider the same."
That application too, was granted following a short ex parte hearing.
"On 17 August 2021, the requested person sent detailed representations to the Secretary of State in relation to specialty and the reasons why he submitted that the judgment of Hildyard J was likely to be relevant to her decision."
Under the heading "Application" the letter concluded with the following paragraphs:
"As noted, the purpose of the last application for an extension of time, as granted by the court, was to allow the Secretary of State to consider the requested person's representations with respect to specialty in light of the judgment of Hildyard J upon which the requested person places heavy reliance. The Secretary of State has reached no view herself as to the relevance or otherwise of any findings made by Hildyard J to the statutory questions that she must decide but, in the unusual circumstances of this case, considers it appropriate to await the hand-down of the judgment to enable her to consider the submissions made by the requested person in their full context.
The Secretary of State is mindful of the purpose of the statutory time-limits in the 2003 Act and the need to ensure that extradition requests are considered expeditiously but notes that, to her knowledge, the delay in the hand-down of the civil judgment has not been caused by any party to the extradition proceedings.
In those circumstances, while the additional delay to the extradition process is regrettable, she applies for a further extension until 14 March 2022 to allow her to consider all the matters raised before her as relevant considerations in order to reach her own view as to their relevance to the statutory questions that she must decide. The proposed extension period assumes that judgment will be handed-down by 21 January 2022, and allows the requested person three weeks to make representations followed by four weeks for the Secretary of State to make her decision. Whilst we realise this is a request for a considerable extension, we are keen to avoid having to revert to the court with multiple further requests as we consider this time frame provides a realistic view of the time it will take to consider this matter once the civil judgment is handed down."
"7. One of the difficulties I face, is that having heard a number of applications on the same basis previously, I cannot have any great confidence and this is not a criticism that the judgment will be handed down by 21 December.
8. Alongside that it is extremely difficult to see how a judgment given in a civil case is likely to lead to the conclusion that there is a real risk of the American prosecutors laying further charges against Dr Lynch. I have not been given any detail as to why it is asserted that there is a real risk; I am just told that the representations have been made and the Secretary of State wants to consider them.
9. Frankly, given the delay in this matter, and given the further delay which I am asked to endorse, I am not satisfied on a purely speculative basis that it is appropriate to grant the application as sought. Parliament did not give the Secretary of State an unfettered discretion; Parliament gave her a discretion fettered by time and fettered by having to make further applications to the court. I am afraid it cannot be enough simply to say that the Secretary of State wants to consider further matters and the court must rubber stamp what she requires. If further time is required, the reasons for the application have to be clearly set out and I am afraid that has not been done in sufficient detail for my purposes today. I am not prepared to grant the application in its current form. I am prepared to grant a short period of three weeks until 16 December 2021."
B. Decision
(1) What is the test the Judge should have applied?
(2) What were the Judge's reasons for refusing the Secretary of State's application?
C. Disposal