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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Mohammed v The Home Office [2017] EWHC 2809 (QB) (08 November 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2017/2809.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 2809 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
SITTING AS A DEPUTY HIGH COURT JUDGE
____________________
ABDULRAHMAN MOHAMMED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE HOME OFFICE |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr Benjamin Tankel (instructed by the Government Legal Department) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 7 & 8 November 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR EDWARD PEPPERALL QC:
2.1 41 days from 12 September to 22 October 2012;
2.2 139 days from 6 January to 24 May 2013; and
2.3 265 days from 14 June 2015 to 4 March 2016.
FINDINGS OF FACT
EARLY LIFE IN AFRICA
7.1 First, Dr Margit Szel examined Mr Mohammed on 6 October 2015 upon his admission to an Immigration Removal Centre (an "IRC"). Dr Szel found scarring consistent with Mr Mohammed's report.
7.2 Secondly, Dr Jonathan Orrell examined Mr Mohammed on 10 November 2015. He again found physical evidence consistent with Mr Mohammed's account. Specifically, the straightness of the scarring on each side of his mouth was consistent with being caused by a bayonet. Dr Orrell discounted as unlikely the possibility that such wounds were self-inflicted. He also found further scarring that was consistent with the account of being branded with a cattle prod.
7.3 Thirdly, Dr Wootton diagnosed a moderately severe post-traumatic stress disorder that she attributed, not surprisingly, to the severe trauma of this childhood incident.
COMING TO THE UK
"My friends were crazy; they would drink, take all sorts of substances and steal cars. I wanted to fit in and became involved in those things too. I am not looking to blame anyone; I am responsible for my actions and decisions. But I was a young boy in a new country with freedoms and a culture unlike anything I had ever experienced before. I was drawn to so many things which were not good for me and I did not know how to stop or impose any limits on myself. I started spending all my time with my friends and began drinking more and more. It was soon clear I had developed a drinking problem and with that began my offending."
Date | Offence(s) | Sentence |
2 February 1998 | Shoplifting | Community service |
30 July 1998 | Criminal damage Failing to surrender to custody |
Fined |
20 November 1998 | Allowing himself to be carried in a vehicle taken without authority Failing to surrender to custody |
Fined |
12 January 1999 | Burglary | 4 months' detention in a young offenders' institution |
29 March 1999 | Possession of an offensive weapon | Conditional discharge |
26 March 2002 | Possession of cannabis Resisting or obstructing a constable |
Fined |
6 November 2002 | Robbery (x2) | 4 years' imprisonment |
25 February 2002 | Deception | Fined |
17 March 2006 | Robbery | 2 years' imprisonment |
20 April 2009 | Disorderly behaviour | Fined |
28 May 2010 | Criminal damage | Community order |
13 January 2011 | Use of racially or religiously aggravated words | 12 weeks' imprisonment suspended for 12 months |
17 February 2011 | Failing to surrender to custody (x2) Failing to comply with the requirements of a community order |
12 weeks' imprisonment suspended for 12 months |
17 March 2011 | Failing to comply with the community requirements of a suspended sentence order | 12 weeks' imprisonment |
23 May 2011 | Common assault (x2) | 10 weeks' imprisonment |
25 July 2011 | Disorderly behaviour | 1 day's imprisonment |
17 November 2011 | Possession of a knife in a public place | 4 months' imprisonment |
24 May 2012 | Affray | 5 months' imprisonment |
22 August 2012 | Using threatening, abusive or insulting words or behaviour with intent to cause fear or provocation of violence Shoplifting |
Fined |
24 August 2012 | Common assault | 20 weeks' imprisonment |
26 November 2012 | Common assault | 18 weeks' imprisonment |
14 June 2013 | Possession of cannabis | Fined |
5 December 2013 | Robbery | 4 years' imprisonment |
IMMIGRATION STATUS
THE IMPACT OF DETENTION
"I have found being detained very difficult. I know I have been in prison on a number of occasions, but immigration detention is different. In prison, you know when you are going to be released; you have hope that there is an end point. With detention, there is no fixed point. I have spent long periods in detention. It has always made me feel frustrated and depressed. It makes me feel hopeless and I find it difficult to concentrate on even ordinary things like reading a newspaper. Detention makes me feel trapped and humiliated."
"46. Detention also makes dealing with my experience harder. When I am outside with friends and family, it is easier not to think of the attack. It is important to have friends and family around you … [In] detention I am away from my family and the bad dreams and flashbacks get much worse. This is especially so when things are quiet and I am left on my own such as at night.
47. I understand that the Home Office are suggesting that detention might be better for my mental health as I am able to work in detention whereas outside I am not. I accept that working in detention is better than being in detention and not working. But that does not mean it is better than being free, it does not make up for the fact that I am incarcerated and that I feel like I am caged and humiliated because so much of what I do is in the control of others. I will always find it easier to deal with what happened to me if I am outside rather than in detention, whatever the conditions of detention might be."
"The reason that these adults are considered at risk is because the trauma/torture victim is being controlled and restricted in both a situation of trauma/torture and also in a detention centre. Detention will then trigger their feelings of powerlessness and helplessness, vulnerability, loss of choice and degradation (associated with their previous trauma) which will make them feel in danger and therefore exacerbate and increase their symptoms placing them at further risk of harm."
"It is not possible to completely separate out the impact of Mr Mohammed's precarious immigration situation and the impact of detention per se. However, I think it is possible to be clear that detention caused a deterioration in his mental health for the reasons described by him. When he is detained:
i. He feels isolated.
ii. It is more difficult for him to see and communicate with is (sic) family.
iii. He has to sleep alone: 'not next to anyone, alone.'
iv. And perhaps most significantly: he 'feels trapped and humiliated' when he is detained (as he did when he was tortured)."
"The purpose of detention centres shall be to provide for the secure but humane accommodation of detained persons in a relaxed regime with as much freedom of movement and association as possible, consistent with maintaining a safe and secure environment, and to encourage and assist detained persons to make the most productive use of their time, while respecting in particular their dignity and the right to individual expression."
THE LAW
"There is now guidance in the cases as to appropriate levels of awards for false imprisonment. There are three general principles which should be born in mind:
1) The assessment of damages should be sensitive to the facts and the particular case and the degree of harm suffered by the particular claimant: see the leading case of Thompson v. Commissioner of Police [1998] QB 498, at p.515A and also the discussion at p.1060 in R v. Governor of Brockhill Prison, Ex Parte Evans [1999] QB 1043;
2) Damages should not be assessed mechanistically as by fixing a rigid figure to be awarded for each day of incarceration: see Thompson at p.516A. A global approach should be taken: see Evans p.1060E;
3) While obviously the gravity of a false imprisonment is worsened by its length the amount broadly attributable to the increasing passage of time should be tapered or placed on a reducing scale. This is for two reasons: (i) to keep this class of damages in proportion with those payable in personal injury and perhaps other cases; and (ii) because the initial shock of being detained will generally attract a higher rate of compensation than the detention's continuance: Thompson p.515 E-F."
35.1 First, the Court of Appeal has repeatedly stressed that the assessment of damages must be tailored to the particular circumstances of the case. Some cases (such as the unreported 1991 case of Lunt v. Liverpool City Justices) concern the false imprisonment of people with no experience of the criminal justice system, while others (such as Evans) involve relatively short periods of false imprisonment following the completion of a lawful sentence of imprisonment. Even among those with previous criminal records, the facts vary widely. Some, such as Muuse v. Secretary of State for the Home Department [2010] EWCA Civ 453, involve egregious indifference to the lawfulness of detention of a relatively lightly convicted man. Thus, circumstances vary widely and it is the extent of the harm suffered by the individual claimant that must be assessed, not simply the mechanistic application of a tariff.
35.2 Secondly, as Jay J. observed in AXD v. Home Office [2016] EWHC 1617 (QB), there is precious little authority in respect of very long periods of unlawful detention.
36.1 AXD had previous convictions for unlawful wounding, sexual assault of a child under 13 and criminal damage. He had been sentenced to various terms of imprisonment, most notably to 16 months for wounding and 21 months for the sexual offence. (Details of these convictions are taken from the judgment on liability: [2016] EWHC 1133 (QB).)
36.2 AXD was detained in prison between November 2011 and 14 May 2014 when he was transferred to The Verne IRC where he remained until 5 December 2014.
36.3 Jay J. found that detention had initially been lawful but that he was falsely imprisoned from 1 April 2013 until 5 December 2014.
36.4 AXD's experiences in prison were worse than at the IRC. First, because he was locked up for 21 hours per day in prison and only allowed access to fresh air for 30 minutes, whereas at the IRC he was only locked up at night from 8pm to 8am. Secondly, AXD was bullied and, on one occasion, assaulted in prison because of his homosexuality.
36.5 While AXD was a paranoid schizophrenic, there was no evidence that he was worse off in prison or that his mental health condition was exacerbated by his detention.
36.6 AXD, who was also Somalian, had not suffered torture in his home country. He was nevertheless fearful of being returned to Somalia, and the judge found, at [39], that such factor enhanced the award in his case "to some limited extent." Such enhancement was modest because of AXD's limited insight.
Period of lawful detention | Length of false imprisonment | Proportion in the prison estate | Award | Updated award |
25 months | 339 days | 39% | £58,000 | £60,488 |
23 months | 400 days | 48% | £62,000 | £64,660 |
16 months | 614 days | 66% | £80,000 | £83,432 |
AGGRAVATING FEATURES
"1. It must be considered that your criminality constitutes a level of behaviour serious enough to demonstrate to the Home Office that you have shown a blatant disregard for the laws of the United Kingdom. The Home Office has to take into consideration your criminal record and level of offending and has to judge that this is a clear indicator of risk that you pose to the United Kingdom. It is noted that you have received 23 convictions for 32 offences since you have resided in the UK.
2. Because of the severity of your convictions as detailed and your numerous other convictions the public of the UK expect your deportation.
3. Your criminal behaviour undermines the good order of society and renders you a threat to it. The United Kingdom is not required to keep here someone whose conduct strikes so deeply at its social values that it strains the tolerance of even a broadminded society.
4. If you are released from detention, our actions can lead to a negative view of the Home Office by the general public who may see the department as failing in its duty to protect them from criminals and therefore there is a high risk of harm to the public."
"[Mr Buttler] acknowledges, on his client's behalf, that it is 'understandable' why the Secretary of State might, for what he identifies as 'political reasons', be reluctant to release the Claimant."
"The prospect of deportation for this Claimant to Mogadishu / Somalia within a reasonable period is, on all the available evidence, remote. As such and within her own guidance, the Home Secretary is required by law to facilitate the Claimant's release. That this has been the position now for some time is obvious. One is left with the sense that the decision has indeed been deferred, as the Claimant suggests, for reasons of expediency."
"Bearing in mind the undisputed primacy of the interests of those who claim asylum in this country after being the victims of torture elsewhere, the failure to have an adequate system for dealing with rule 35 cases, notwithstanding a warning by the Inspector of Prisons, was as grave a failure on the part of the Home Office and its contractors as can be imagined in the context of this sort of case."
THE AWARD
Period of lawful custody | Period of subsequent false imprisonment |
18 days | 12.9.12-22.10.12 (41 days) |
42 days | 6.1.13-24.5.13 (139 days) |
2 years | 14.6.15-4.3.16 (265 days) |
62.1 This is not an initial shock case. Mr Mohammed has been in and out of prison for many years and, in any event, each period of unlawful detention was preceded by a period of lawful custody.
62.2 While there is no initial shock, the award for each period falls to be tapered in order to ensure parity with personal injury awards.
62.3 It is important to take into account both the length of each period of unlawful detention and the preceding period of lawful detention.
62.4 The first two periods of unlawful detention were served in the more restrictive prison regime, as too were the first 81 days of the third period.
62.5 Immigration detention is potentially open ended and therefore particularly difficult for a detainee.
62.6 Detention in this case, just as lawful sentences of imprisonment, exacerbated Mr Mohammed's post-traumatic stress disorder.
62.7 This case has been aggravated by the Home Office's failings that I set out above.
63.1 £10,000 for the period of 41 days from 12 September to 22 October 2012;
63.2 £27,000 for the period of 139 days from 6 January to 24 May 2013; and
63.3 £49,000 for the period of 265 days from 14 June 2015 to 4 March 2016.
65.1 £8,500 for the first period of 41 days;
65.2 £25,00o for the second period of 139 days; and
65.3 £45,000 for the third period of 265 days,
making a total award in this case of £78,500.
POSTSCRIPT
66.1 First, there are few principles more important in a civilised society than that no one should be deprived of their liberty without lawful authority.
66.2 Secondly, it is essential that where a person is unlawfully imprisoned by the state that an independent judiciary should hold the executive to account.
66.3 Thirdly, justice should be done to all people. In R (Kambadzi) v. Secretary of State for the Home Department [2011] UKSC 23, [2011] 1 WLR 1299, Baroness Hale said, at [61]:
"Mr Shepherd Kambadzi may not be a very nice person. He is certainly not a very good person. He has overstayed his welcome in this country for many years. He has abused our hospitality by committing assaults and sexual assault. It is not surprising that the Home Secretary wishes to deport him. But in Roberts v. Parole Board [2005] UKHL 45, [2006] 1 All ER 39, at [84] … Lord Steyn quoted the well-known remark of Justice Frankfurter in United States v. Rabinowitz (1950) 339 US 56, at 69, that 'It is a fair summary of history to say that the safeguards of liberty have frequently been forged in controversies involving not very nice people.' Lord Steyn continued: 'Even the most wicked of men are entitled to justice at the hands of the State.' And I doubt whether Mr Kambadzi is the most wicked of men."