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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 >> Ratajewski v Polish Judicial Authority [2024] EWHC 1359 (Admin) (05 June 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2024/1359.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 1359 (Admin) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
SITTING IN LONDON
B e f o r e :
____________________
LUKASZ RATAJEWSKI |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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POLISH JUDICIAL AUTHORITY |
Respondent |
____________________
David Ball (instructed by CPS) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 5.6.24
Judgment as delivered in open court at the hearing
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Crown Copyright ©
FORDHAM J:
Introduction
Jurisdiction
Materials
My Function
The Extradition Arrest Warrants
i) The Appellant has, in the UK, now a full 20 years of community ties since 2004. He has the strong character reference support evidenced by the letters. He has established strong and legitimate business interest on various fronts in this country, through industry and commitment and with notable success. He had the durable relationship of ongoing support from the partner of 20 years who joined him here (as a 20 year old), shortly after his own arrival from Poland, to start their life here together. They have the 14 year-old daughter to whom they are devoted. She was born here in 2009 and her only life has been known here. This is where she has her friends, her private and family life, and where she is attending a private school. There is the family home here with its mortgage. There is the seriously detrimental effect of the Appellant's ongoing incarceration, for all 3 of them, which has been assessed in Dr Green's expert report. There is the impact and the implications of all of that, when seen from the perspective of the Appellant, with the impact and implications on the one hand of his being able to return to the family home to be with them and support them; and the impact and implications on the other hand of the suggestion about him seeking to abscond, whether with or without them.
ii) Strong emphasis is placed on the fact that the Appellant has every incentive to "face the reality" – as it is put – of these criminal matters in Poland, and these extradition proceedings; "come what may". That means addressing the position by defending the hearing in September with what Mr Perry KC characterises as a "very powerful" Article 8 case based, in particular, on the position of the daughter; but also points which will relate to the passage of time and arguments under section 14; and all other points that can properly be advanced. This is all in circumstances, moreover, where the Appellant has instructed lawyers in Poland to advance his interests there.
iii) There is the explanation put forward for the Appellant having left Poland in 2004, and for the identity he then assumed in this country and has maintained here. This is characterised as having been based on self-protection, with a well-founded fear to life and limb in the light of previous association with a criminal organisation in Poland. Alongside that, emphasis is placed on the evidence of an "industrious commitment to rehabilitation" over the last 20 years. Reliance is also placed, in the submissions, on a contention that the Appellant was aware of enquiries in the run up to his arrest but did not abscond.
iv) Most of all, the "key point" emphasised concerns the "catastrophic" consequences were the Appellant to fail to surrender; the unthinkable effects of the loss of everything that he has worked to establish in the UK; the callous and cruel impacts that that would mean for the partner; and for the daughter to whom both parents are devoted, and for whom the Appellant is determined to achieve the best possible present and future. There is the complete absence of any third country which is identifiable to which he or they could go; or of the means of getting there. There is the unrealistic prospect that the Appellant: (a) would leave the partner and daughter behind, leaving his business interests on which their welfare depends to fold; or alternatively (b) that he would be in a position to take them with him, or would choose to do so given the impacts for them of being wrenched from their lives here. All in all, it is said that the Appellant should be now free from the detrimental impacts of his ongoing incarceration. He should now be allowed to put his business affairs into order, and reunited with his partner and daughter so that he can leave his business in good hands, should he need to be extradited. He should be on bail, to deal head-on with the extradition proceedings.
My Assessment
i) The starting point, in my assessment, is the Appellant's action (then aged 26) when he, and then his partner (aged 20), left Poland in 2004. On the materials that are before me that that was action which they took in the following circumstances. The Appellant had been tried in a criminal court and then sentenced, in his presence, in December 2003 to a three-year prison sentence relating to the firearms possession offence. What happened next was that an appeal was launched. It ultimately failed and the conviction and sentence became final in June 2004. On the face of the materials, the action of leaving Poland was following the conviction and sentence, and being fully aware of it, and while that appeal was pending. Assessing risk, on the basis of the materials on the face of them, that was the avoidance of accountability in relation to the conviction matter; rather than staying to fight the appeal process and face responsibility. It was action which involved crossing borders. It involved going to completely new country with which there was no connection. It involved starting a life from scratch. Moreover, it was action, avoiding serving a sentence, which I have to put alongside the narrative that I have been given in the materials: about escaping Poland so as to "break ties" with the criminal gang; and doing so in the context of what are said to be serious risks of danger to life and limb. This aspect of the case, in my assessment, is a matter of serious concern when I am considering risk.
ii) Next, there is the fact that – in the course of that action in 2004 and during the entirety of the 20 years since then – the Appellant has been in the United Kingdom under a false name (Dariusz Plazewski). He acquired a false identity document. He changed his name to match the name of that other individual. It is in his false name that all of his friends and associates, who have written the various character references, have come to know him. Again, assessing risk on the basis of the position on the face of it, this was continuing conduct after leaving Poland, taken in the avoidance of accountability, by way of dishonest deception. It is a dishonest deception which has continued for 20 years, up to the time of the arrest in January of this year. It was also a situation known to the partner. She had known the Appellant and his true identity back in Poland. Again, there is a narrative which has been presented to this Court which I have had to consider. The narrative is that the identity document that was false have been obtained from a "friend" to whom the appellant had explained he was in "imminent danger". It is that the continuance of the false identity over 20 years in this country has been borne out of concerns for "personal safety" of the Appellant and the members of the family. That narrative appears strongly to have featured in the case for bail was put to Farbey J. In her reasons, she records that notwithstanding that she was shown materials to which the Appellant's proof of evidence had referred, which were communications in recent years, she was not satisfied that those materials were evidence of a "threat to life". On the contrary she recorded a concern as to whether the Appellant was, in relying on this material, someone who was willing to seek to deceive the Court. As to this idea of ongoing threats to life and limb – which as Mr Ball points out would raise concerns on their own – it is difficult, in my assessment, to square these with the idea expressed in the evidence that there was a sense of "relief" from the Appellant's true identity having come to light earlier this year. There is another theme in the narrative. It is the idea of the Appellant being blackmailed and making payments to those who were aware of the Appellant's true identity and in a position to threaten to expose it. That raises a set of other concerns. Those concerns really come down, in my assessment, to this. It would involve a willingness on the Appellant's part to make payments, to former associates including in recent years, to achieve the maintaining of a false identity.
iii) I have referred to the submission made about the Appellant's awareness of pursuit by the authorities and yet his choice not to abscond when the opportunity presented itself. In assessing risk on the materials before me, there are real difficulties with that description. It was not included in any previous material, prior to the very recent skeleton argument. There is the Appellant's own proof of evidence which, twice, addresses the topic of his not having previously absconded. But on each occasion, he is describing the contact in recent years from associates who he says were writing him the threatening letters. His evidence is that had intended to abscond he could have done so "when they first located me"; "long ago". The fact is that he was successful in continuing to maintain his identity in this country until very recently. I am not able to place any strong weight on this particular aspect – about awareness of recent pursuit – but nor in my assessment could it tip the balance, in light of the other serious concerns that I am identifying.
iv) Next, there is the fact that the position is now known by the Appellant to be far more serious than it was when he was leaving Poland in 2004 in the face of his three-year criminal sentence and then maintaining his false identity in this country. That is because of the January 2012 indictment which led to the accusation Extradition Arrest Warrant in July 2012, on which he was ultimately arrested on 18 January 2024. Notwithstanding the 4 matters that have fallen away because of limitation periods, there are left a series of 8 extremely serious alleged crimes committed by the Appellant. As Mr Ball understandably emphasises in his written submissions, the first of the 8 involves the Appellant's participation in 1997 (aged 20) in a conspiracy intending to kill a named individual, in which the Appellant is named as having supplied to the principal offender an AK-47 weapon and ammunition, wearing a disguise, and driving the would-be killer to the location of the intended murder where there was no good shooting opportunity so the planned murder was abandoned. The 7 other matters include allegations of drug trafficking including two counts relating to drug trafficking in prisons. There are also allegations of extortion and robbery. These serious matters are allegations. But they are matters which the Appellant now knows that he faces by way of trial were he extradited to Poland. They serve to increase the concerns that arise so far as absconding is concerned. They also materially affect the picture as he will perceive it when considering the options that are open to him.
v) Next, there is, in my assessment, a significant risk of a perceived fragility so far as the Appellant's ability successfully to resist extradition at the September 2024 hearing is concerned. I repeat a point that I emphasised earlier: I am not making any observation which in any way is intended to cut across the consideration of the merits by the Westminster Magistrates' Court, or on any further consideration which may arise. All questions are open, and I am deciding none of them. But in assessing the risk there is, in my judgment, the very serious prospect of a perceived fragility so far as concerns the 'option' of successfully resisting extradition by fighting the matter in court. I accept without hesitation that remaining with the family and taking that course, with the assistance of his legal representatives, is one clear option open to the Appellant. I also accept without hesitation the significance in practical terms of the idea of his putting his affairs in order. However, assessing risk from the perspective of his 'options', there are the two other possible outcomes. One is that extradition is unsuccessfully resisted, and the Appellant is then removed Poland to face responsibility for the conviction matter, and the accusation matters, or any combination of them; with all the impacts and consequences that that would have. The third possible outcome is the prospect with which I am directly concerned, namely failure to surrender and steps to seek to abscond to avoid responsibility, whether without or with the other family members. I must also have in mind that, from the perspective of getting his affairs in order, I need to assess the risk not only of an immediate failure to surrender but also of a failure to surrender at a subsequent stage, prior to the September 2024 hearing. That is important because it would present an option involving putting his affairs in order, and yet the failure to surrender with which I am concerned.
vi) Finally, all of these matters arise unmistakably in the context of an individual who has – on the face of the materials – a resolve and a resourcefulness. That is together with the very real prospect of associations which could assist him, just as they did when he was able in 2004 to obtain a false identity document and build a new beginning from scratch in a completely new country.
End-Note