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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Serious Fraud Office v Papachristos & Anor [2014] EWCA Crim 1863 (19 September 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2014/1863.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Crim 1863 |
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ON APPEAL FROM Southwark Crown Court
His Honour Judge Goymer
T20117602
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE MACDUFF
and
MRS JUSTICE ELISABETH LAING DBE
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Serious Fraud Office |
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- and - |
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Miltiades Papachristos and Dennis Kerrison |
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A Mitchell QC and Mr C Foulkes (instructed by the Serious Fraud Office) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 9 September 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Fulford :
Introduction
The Central Issue on the Appeal
i) a broad conspiracy to give corrupt payments as an inducement to secure contracts relating to two or more of Innospec's products (which included TEL), together with a sub-conspiracy that involved securing contracts for TEL alone which, as a matter of law, should have been charged as a separate offence, or
ii) a broad conspiracy to give corrupt payments as an inducement to secure contracts relating to two or more of Innospec's products (which included TEL) of which an individual would be guilty if he had agreed corruptly to secure contracts for TEL alone and he was unaware that his involvement was a part of the wider agreement corruptly to procure contracts for other Innospec products.
The Background
i) Stadis, AO37 and AO80 which are anti-static fuel additives. They were sold from approximately 2000 to June 2003. The Crown alleged the sales were corrupt.
ii) PLUTOcen which is, a benign iron-based alternative octane-enhancing additive with a comparatively low octane-enhancing capability compared with TEL. It was tested in Indonesia to obtain authorisation for use, but none was sold.
iii) MMT which is a manganese-based alternative octane-enhancing additive.
The Trial Indictment
"STATEMENT OF OFFENCE
Conspiracy to corrupt, contrary to section 1 of the Criminal Law Act 1977
PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE
Dennis Graham John Kerrison and Miltos Papachristos between the 14th February 2002 and 31st January 2008 conspired with David Peter Turner, Paul Willis Jennings, John Walker, Willy Sebastian Lim, Mohammed Syakir and others to give or agree to give corrupt payments contrary to section 1 of the Prevention of Corruption Act 1906 to public officials and other agents of the Government of Indonesia as inducements to secure or as rewards for having secured contracts from the Government of Indonesia for the supply of its products including Tetraethyl Lead to the said Government of Indonesia by Innospec Ltd (our emphasis)."
The Prosecution Case
"We suggest that this demonstrates that Innospec's agents were seeking funds from time to time to make payments to officials at Pertamina. It wasn't dependent, plainly, on specific orders for TEL; it was simply to continue to maintain relationships which had previously developed […] general sweeteners […] Octel was going, we suggest, to try to develop PLUTOcen as the replacement for TEL, not just simply by competing as a quality product alternative but by using, we suggest, corruption to achieve that purpose."
The Defence Case
Additional count 2
"An agreement to supply TEL alone is a subset of the wider agreement which is indicted to supply Octel products generally. Unlike the Innospec count, the count before the jury is not limited to TEL. Accordingly, any person who entered into an agreement limited to the procurement of TEL contracts, cannot be guilty of the wider agreement, unless the Crown can also at least prove that that conspirator was aware that the TEL agreement was a sub-set of and part of the wider agreement indicted. That, it is submitted, is the effect of R v Coughlan and Young, 63 Cr.App.R. 33 and R v Ali (Abdulla Ahmed) [2011] 2 Cr App R 22, CA and is supported by the reasoning in the recent cases of Mehta unreported, December 31, 2012, CA ([2012] EWCA Crim 2824) and Shillam (Wayne Lee) [2013] Crim. L.R. 592, CA."
"All this raises the possibility of an alternative conspiracy limited to TEL alone and one that is said to be a separate conspiracy from the main conspiracy that is the subject of the indictment and that the evidence on one construction could show involvement in an entirely separate conspiracy limited to TEL rather than that TEL was evidence of the involvement by the defendants in the wider conspiracy which extends to all Innospec products.
For myself I am inclined to regard this distinction as unimportant because my view is that the reality is that if the jury are sure in the case of either defendant that he knew of the corrupt payments being made in respect of TEL and that he intended to be part of it and evidenced that intention by some action on his part, that that would inevitably lead the jury to conclude that his involvement in TEL, so long as the jury are sure that he was aware of and intended to be part of a wider conspiracy, would be sufficient."
"STATEMENT OF OFFENCE
Conspiracy to corrupt, contrary to section 1 of the Criminal Law Act 1977
PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE
Dennis Graham John Kerrison and Miltos Papachristos between the 14th February 2002 and 31st January 2008 conspired with David Peter Turner, Paul Willis Jennings, John Walker, Willy Sebastian Lim, Mohammed Syakir and others to give or agree to give corrupt payments contrary to section 1 of the Prevention of Corruption Act 1906 to public officials and other agents of the Government of Indonesia as inducements to secure or as rewards for having secured contracts from the Government of Indonesia for the supply of Tetraethyl Lead to the said Government of Indonesia by Innospec Ltd. ...emphasis added)"
"The reality is, members of the jury, that if you find Dr Papachristos not guilty on count 1, you would have to find him not guilty on count 2 also because the evidence in his case does not warrant the suggestion that he was a party to a separate conspiracy. TEL is the common feature of both these conspiracies. So you cannot convict Dr Papachristos of having been involved in some conspiracy that involved PLUTOcen alone and in which TEL had no part. So be very clear about that. "
Grounds of Appeal Against Conviction
"Orders for amendment of indictment, separate trial and postponement of trial.
(1) Where, before trial, or at any stage of a trial, it appears to the court that the indictment is defective, the court shall make such order for the amendment of the indictment as the court thinks necessary to meet the circumstances of the case, unless, having regard to the merits of the case, the required amendments cannot be made without injustice.
[…]"
"Wherever a broad conspiracy is deliberately alleged, the prosecution should not as a matter of principle be permitted to seek to amend the indictment […] at the close of all the evidence to allege a sub-plot (or indeed substantive offences) not on the basis of any technical error, defect or misjoinder, but because it is realised that the defence may have made some headway against their case as originally stated."
"Dr Miltos Papachristos was the senior sales and marketing director for the Asia Pacific region, which included Indonesia; his main responsibility was the promotion of alternative TEL products such as PLUTOcen, but armed with that responsibility he did not allow PLUTOcen to compete with TEL and played a role in ensuring the longevity of the supply of TEL before allowing PLUTOcen to be regarded as the future alternative."
Discussion
"[…] that though the indictment in each case alleged a conspiracy to cause explosions in the United Kingdom, in deciding whether there was one conspiracy or two, it was permissible to have regard to the nature of the overt acts relied on by the Crown, and if necessary to the individuals named as parties to the conspiracy, and that as in the one case the overt acts were limited to Manchester and in the other to Birmingham, and that as the persons named as conspirators in the Manchester case were, with two exceptions, different from those named in the Birmingham case, the jury could and should infer that the Birmingham indictment alleged a different conspiracy from that of which Coughlan had been convicted at Manchester."
"There is no difficulty in law about alleging a separate conspiracy to cause explosions in Manchester and another to cause explosions in Birmingham, even though some, or it may be all of the conspirators, may have been parties to a wider agreement to cause explosions throughout the United Kingdom, including Birmingham and Manchester. The wider agreement or conspiracy would not preclude the existence of sub-agreements or sub-conspiracies to cause explosions in particular places, and as a matter of law these sub-conspiracies or agreements could properly be charged as separate offences. Acquittal or conviction on a charge of one such offence would be no bar to the trial of the same accused on another."
"36. The authorities establish the following propositions:
1. A conspiracy requires that the parties to it have a common unlawful purpose or design.
2. A common design means a shared design. It is not the same as similar but separate designs.
3. In criminal law (as in civil law) there may be an umbrella agreement pursuant to which the parties enter into further agreements which may include parties who are not parties to the umbrella agreement. So, A and B may enter into an umbrella agreement pursuant to which they enter into a further agreement between A, B and C, and a further agreement between A, B and D, and so on. In that example, C and D will not be conspirators with each other.
37. These principles are illustrated by the well known lime fraud case of Griffiths ([1966] 1 QB 589). A supplier of lime to farmers, acting in concert with an employee, entered into agreements with several farmers to defraud the government by making false subsidy claims. There was no evidence that any of the farmers was aware of the arrangements being made between the principal defendant and any of the other farmers, but they were all charged with a single count of conspiracy. The Court of Criminal Appeal held that there was no evidence of a conspiracy between all those convicted, as opposed to a number of different conspiracies, and the convictions were quashed. Paull J gave an illustration which has been quoted in later cases:
"I employ an accountant to make out my tax return. He and his clerk are both present when I am asked to sign the return. I notice an item in my expenses of £100 and say: "I don't remember incurring this expense". The clerk says: "Well, actually I put it in. You didn't incur it, but I didn't think you would object to a few pounds being saved." The accountant indicates his agreement to this attitude. After some hesitation I agree to let it stand. On those bare facts I cannot be charged with 50 others in a conspiracy to defraud the Exchequer of £100,000 on the basis that this accountant and his clerk have persuaded 500 other clients to make false returns, some being false in one way, some in another, or even all in the same way. I have not knowingly attached myself to a general agreement to defraud.""
"[…] necessary that the prosecution should establish, not indeed that the individuals were in direct communication with each other, or directly consulting together, but that they entered into an agreement with a common design. Such agreements may be made in various ways. There may be one person, to adopt the metaphor of counsel, round whom the rest revolve. The metaphor is the metaphor of the centre of a circle and the circumference. There may be a conspiracy of another kind, where the metaphor would be rather that of a chain; A communicates with B, B with C, C with D, and so on to the end of the list of conspirators. What has to be ascertained is always the same matter: is it true to say, in the words already quoted, that the acts of the accused were done in pursuance of a criminal purpose held in common between them?"
"The company, Innospec, has pleaded guilty to corruption, in criminal courts both here in England and in the United States. It is just part of the background. It does not prove anything against either of these defendants. In particular, it does not prove that either of them was involved in the conspiracies in this indictment on which he is standing trial."
"36. […] what cannot be done is to put two different counts into the indictment to enable the jury to determine a factual issue where the difference in the facts does not make the offence in each count different. There can only be different counts where the there are different offences. […]
37. In the light of those authorities and the argument before us, […] it would be unlawful to charge the same offence in different counts in the indictment even though the factual basis differed. It is not permissible to put into an indictment an alternative factual basis which makes no difference to the offence committed whether or not it is for the purpose of enabling a jury to decide an issue of fact or for any other purpose. […]"
61. […] it seems to us that, looking at the evidence in the case, it is clear that there was the possibility of two distinct agreements on the evidence advanced by the prosecution: an agreement by all to murder and an agreement by some (or all on the prosecution's case) to murder not simply by detonating a device before an iconic object but by detonating IEDs on transatlantic aircraft. Although the object was to commit the same underlying offence of murder, they are distinct and different agreements as the latter involved an infinitely more serious and sophisticated agreement to do so by detonating IEDs on aircraft.
62. It would, in our judgment, be possible in law to have charged one single conspiracy to murder, even though there was a distinct conspiracy to murder by detonating IEDs on transatlantic aircraft. It would have been open to the Crown to prove a conspiracy to murder; that would have been sufficient for the jury to convict and for the judge to have taken upon himself, as he would do in the ordinary case, the burden of deciding the role each played in the furtherance of the conspiracy and the importance of that role. In the usual case, experience has shown that this is the better course where the agreement is to commit the same substantive offence. The position in the case of agreements to commit different substantive offences was considered in R. v Roberts; R. v Taylor [1998] 1 Cr. App. R. 441 at 449–450; it is for the Crown to determine whether to charge one conspiracy or more than one (cf. R. v Wells [2010] EWCA Crim 1564 where the court expressed the view it was fairer to charge more than one conspiracy where different substantive offences (robbery and theft) were involved).
"If you are sure that the defendant was part of the conspiracy as far as TEL was concerned but you are not sure that this was part of a wider conspiracy covering other Innospec products, then he could not be guilty of Count 1. He would be guilty of a different conspiracy, limited to TEL alone. This is contained in Count 2."
Grounds of Appeal against Sentence
"By [Jennings'] pleas of guilty to conspiracy to corrupt, he accepts that not only did he know of it but he also intended to be part of it and as a chief executive officer in that position he must accept substantial responsibility for what happened, though I assess his responsibility as somewhat less than that of Dennis Kerrison."