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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 >> Singh, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2013] EWHC 380 (Admin) (28 February 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2013/380.html Cite as: [2013] EWHC 380 (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 :
Sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court
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THE QUEEN on the application of DIMPL SINGH |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Defendant |
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Kerry Bretherton (instructed by Treasury Solicitor) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 14 February 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Robin Purchas QC :
Introduction
The Facts
"This is a serious offence, aggravated by the fact that there were two of you against one of her; that it was committed in the hours of darkness and that you used violence and it is such a serious offence that only a custodial sentence can be justified ... You are a man who had eight previous convictions for 16 offences, 12 of which are theft related, all of which are dated in 2010 and clearly show a life spiralling into disorder."
"To effect removal from the United Kingdom, your removal from the United Kingdom is likely to be within a reasonable timescale, you are likely to abscond if given temporary admission or release, there is insufficient reliable information to decide whether to grant you temporary admission or release, you have previously failed to comply with conditions of your temporary release or bail, your release carries a high risk of public harm and there is a risk of further re-offending."
The Claimant's detention pending deportation formally commenced on the 20 May 2011.
"On speaking with wing staff, they stated this person is a model prisoner, very private, certainly has no current drug issues, he is not on any prescribed medication, does not hang around with any known prisoners who are known to use."
"(The Claimant) has been willing to go home for the last 11 months and has provided the UKBA (with) as many details as he has … The resident is still detained and I personally cannot see how this case has progressed much since last year. Notes … also highlight the fact we were expecting an ETD agreement months ago but seven months down the line we do not seem to be any closer to our goal."
"Whilst his previous offending and failures to surrender might well have been related to his drug abuse, whilst the applicant now appears to be drug free whilst in detention, his history is nevertheless a factor which militates against his reliability. … He has no sureties. …Whilst the Applicant has now been in detention for a little over a year, which is a lengthy period, the Respondent's position is that progress is now being made with regard to obtaining an emergency travel document, this issue now being before the Indian authorities in the particular State from which the Applicant originates. The Respondent indicates the situation is being monitored weekly. The Applicant would appear to have left India as a child and to have no extant ties to India which I find to be a factor of relevance in assessing the credibility of his professed willingness to return to India. He has demonstrated an ability to live in and to travel around various countries in Europe, thereby demonstrating a significant degree of resourcefulness. In all the circumstances and even bearing in mind the length of the Applicant's detention to date, I consider there is a significant risk of absconding at the present time, which risk is not outweighed at this point in time by the length of his immigration detention."
"Whilst it is clear the Appellant has been detained for a long time, it appears that the Respondent has been doing everything possible to secure emergency travel documentation for the Appellant and it does appear that there is a possibility that that process will come to a conclusion in the reasonably imminent future. Having regard to the risk of the public and the risk of the Appellant not answering to his bail, having regard to the fact the Appellant is the subject of a deportation order, I consider that his continued detention is reasonable and proportionate, having regard to the public interest and the removal of foreign criminals."
"On the 19 December 2012 I spoke with the Jammu and Kashmir authorities who advised me that the case of (the Claimant) has not been verified as an Indian citizen on police intelligence checks, however a police report from door to door nationality verification inquiries is still awaited and is expected to take 5 to 6 working days."
"The Indian High Commission confirmed that they have been unable to obtain positive verification from the nodal state officer of (the Claimant's) nationality and identity. The High Commission confirmed that the information provided in the application form and during the interview was insufficient."
"(The Claimant's) presumption to release has been considered in line with Chapter 55 of the EIG. The number of his offences has been taken into account along with his failure to comply with reporting instructions. His prolonged detention is self-induced as he has not produced sufficient information to support his return to India. As there is a reasonable likelihood of him reoffending and absconding, this poses an unacceptable risk of harm to the public if released. The case owner must chase CROS for an update from the IHC in terms of verifying his identity. Progress must be made within the next 28 days in order to obtain an ETD or consideration should be given whether he can be removed within a reasonable timescale."
"The problem has been the delay in getting an ETD from the Indian High Commission. But the Respondent has been doing her best to get the ETD, not helped by the lack of cooperation. He now says he wants to go home, so he has been cooperating now. The answer to this detention is further and renewed and more effective measures by Home Office to get the TD. If detention goes on much longer, the High Court may find such detention to be unlawful. If there were sound sureties here, bail may have been granted."
"on the basis of my assessment and taking into account available statistics regarding the long term prognosis of those treated for drug addiction, I grade (the Claimant's) risk of relapse into illicit drug use if released to the community as medium. I am of the opinion that if he continues to distance himself from previous drug using associates, his risk will be reduced, particularly so if he can find himself both a supportive peer group who abstain from illicit drugs and meaningful activities to structure his time.
1.3 From (the Claimant's) account, and the available documentation, his previous offending appears to have been driven by his need to fund his drug use. The risk of future re-offending is therefore linked to his risk of relapse to drug use. Regarding his risk of absconding in the community, I concur with the previous assessments that this risk is significant at present. It is notable that he currently lacks accommodation and positive relationships, as well as finance and opportunities for legal employment. If these factors could be addressed it is my opinion that his risk of re-offending and of absconding would be significantly decreased."
"14.5 Subsequent to my assessment I was informed by his solicitor that if he is returned to the community he will be provided with NASS accommodation and support. It is my view that this will aid to decreasing his risk of absconding but, particularly given his previous transient lifestyle, not eliminate that risk entirely.
14.6 It is not possible to state definitively whether or not (the Claimant) will offend or abscond if released in the future, as he, in common with the rest of the population, has some ability to determine his own future actions. For individuals, the most useful function of risk assessment tools such as OASys is to determine items that are amenable to future change. In (the Claimant's) case, aside from the question of his drug use, it is notable that he currently lacks positive relationships, and opportunities for legal employment. The fact that he will be provided with NASS support for accommodation and basic finance, is likely, however, to have a positive impact upon his risk of reoffending."
The legal framework
"(i) The Secretary of State must intend to deport the person and can only use the power to detain for that purpose.
(ii) The deportee may only be detained for a period that is reasonable in all the circumstances.
(iii) If before the expiry of the reasonable period, it becomes apparent that the Secretary of State will not be able to effect deportation within that reasonable period, he should not seek to exercise the power of detention.
(iv) The Secretary of State should act with reasonable diligence and expedition to effect removal."
"47. Principles (ii) and (iii) are conceptually distinct. Principle (ii) is that the Secretary of State may not lawfully detain a person "pending removal" for longer than a reasonable period. Once a reasonable period has expired, the detained person must be released. But there may be circumstances where, although a reasonable period has not expired, it becomes clear that the Secretary of State will not be able to deport the detained person within a reasonable period. In that event principle (iii) applies. Once it becomes apparent that the Secretary of State will not be able to effect the deportation within a reasonable period, the detention becomes unlawful even if the reasonable period has not yet expired.
48. It is not possible or desirable to produce an exhaustive list of all the circumstances that are, or may be, relevant to the question of how long it is reasonable for the Secretary of State to detain a person pending deportation pursuant to paragraph 2(3) of Schedule 3 to the Immigration Act 1971. In my view they include at least: the length of the period of detention; the nature of the obstacles which stand in the path of the Secretary of State preventing a deportation; the diligence, speed and effectiveness of the steps taken by the Secretary of State to surmount such obstacles; the conditions in which the detained person is kept; the effect of detention on him and his family; the risk that if he is released from detention he will abscond; and the danger that if released he will commit criminal offences."
"The convenient starting point is to determine whether, and if so, when, there is a realistic prospect that deportation will take place. As I said at paragraph 47 of my judgment in I's case, there may be situations where, although a reasonable period has not yet expired, it becomes clear that the Secretary of State will not be able to deport the detained person within a period that is reasonable in all the circumstances, having regard in particular to time that the person has already spent in detention. I deal below with the factors which are relevant to the determination of a reasonable period. But if there is no realistic prospect that deportation will take place within a reasonable time, then continued detention is unlawful."
"I have some difficulty in understanding why the risk of re-offending is a relevant factor in a case where there is a risk of absconding, but not otherwise. It seems to me that it is possible to construe the power to detain either (more narrowly) as a power which may only be exercised to further the object of facilitating a deportation, or (more broadly) as a power which may also be exercised to further the object which it is sought to achieve by deportation, namely, in the present case, that of removing an offender whose presence is not conducive to the public good. The distinction between these two objects was clearly drawn by the Court of Appeal in R (A) v. SSHD [2007] EWCA Civ 804. Toulson LJ said at paragraph 55:
'A risk of offending if a person is not detained is an additional relevant factor, the strength of which will depend on the magnitude of the risk, for which I include both the likelihood of it occurring and the potential gravity of the consequences. Mr. Drabble submitted that the purpose of the power of detention was not for the protection of public safety. In my view that is over simplistic. The purpose of the power of deportation is to remove a person who is not entitled to be in the United Kingdom and his continued presence would not be conducive to the public good. If the reason why his presence would not be conducive to the public good is because of the propensity to commit serious offences, protection of the public from that risk is the purpose of the deportation order and must be a relevant consideration when determining the reasonableness of detaining him pending his removal or departure.'
Paragraph 78 of Keene LJ's judgment is to similar effect.
...
108. I acknowledge that the principle that statutory powers should be interpreted in a way which is least restrictive of liberty if that is possible would tend to support the narrower interpretation. But I think the Court of Appeal was right in A's case to adopt the interpretation which gives effect to the purpose underlying the power to deport and which the power to detain is intended to facilitate. Perhaps a simpler way of reaching the same conclusion is to say, as Simon Brown L.J said in I's case at paragraph 29, that the period which is reasonable will depend on the circumstances of the particular case and the likelihood or otherwise of the detainee reoffending is 'an obviously relevant circumstance'.
109. But the risk of reoffending is a relevant factor even if the appellants are right in saying it is relevant only when there is also a risk of absconding. As Lord Rodger of Earlsferry JSC pointed out in argument, if a person reoffends there is a risk that he will abscond so as to evade arrest or if he is arrested, that he will be prosecuted and receive a custodial sentence. Either way, his reoffending will impede his deportation.
110. The risk of reoffending is, therefore, a relevant factor."
"The risk of absconding and reoffending are always of paramount importance, since if a person absconds, he will frustrate the deportation for which purpose he was detained in the first place."
"I do not read the judgment of Mitting J in R (A) v SSHD as laying down a legal requirement that in order to maintain detention the Secretary of State must be able to identify a finite time by which or period within which removal can reasonably be expected to be effected. That would be to add an unwarranted gloss to the established principles. In my view Mitting J was not purporting to do that but was simply asking himself the questions "By when?" and "On what basis?" for the purposes of his own consideration of the case before him. Of course if a finite time can be identified, it is likely to have an important effect on the balancing exercise: the soundly based expectation that removal can be effected within, say, 2 weeks, will weigh heavily in favour of continued detention pending such removal, whereas an expectation that the removal would not occur for, say, a further 2 years will weigh heavily against continued detention. There can, however, be a realistic prospect of removal without it being possible to specify or predict the date by which, or period within which, removal can reasonably be expected to occur and without any certainty that removal will occur at all. Again, the extent of certainty or uncertainty as to whether and when removal can be effected, will affect the balancing exercise. There must be a sufficient prospect of removal to warrant continued detention when account is taken of all other relevant factors. Thus in A (Somalia) itself there was "some prospect of the Home Secretary being able to carry out enforced removal although there was no way of predicting with confidence when this might be" (per Toulson LJ at paragraph 58); that was held to be sufficient prospect to justify detention for a period of some 4 years when regard has been had to other relevant factors, including in particular, the high risk of absconding and of serious reoffending if they were released.
66. Sale J's committed no error by asking himself first whether there was "some prospect" of removal: he referred in that connection to R (Khadir) v SHHD, where the focus was on the existence rather than the exercise of the power of detention, but the same language is to be found, as I have said, in A (Somalia). "Some" prospect in this context plainly means a realistic prospect, and I do not read Sale J's judgment proceeding on any other basis. Of course, A (Somalia) shows that the court needs to go on to consider the degree of certainty or uncertainty affecting the prospect of removal and to ask itself whether the prospect is sufficient to warrant detention in all circumstances of the case;…"
"The judge gave proper weight to the very long period of time during which the Claimant was subject to immigration detention and rightly treated it as a factor of considerable and increasing importance as the situation dragged on. As the period of detention gets longer, the greater the degree of certainty and proximity of removal I would expect to be required in order to justify continued detention. The judge evidently had the point in mind when he observed that especially in the latter stages, from late 2006, "The Secretary of State should have been giving particularly anxious consideration to the question whether it remained viable to suppose that there was a realistic possibility of removal to Somaliland, such as to justify the detention of the Claimant. ..."
a) the Secretary of State may only detain the Claimant for a period that is reasonable in all the circumstances;
b) the burden of justifying that that detention remains reasonable is on the Secretary of State;
c) the question is to be determined at the date of judgment in the light of all the circumstances;
d) a primary consideration will be the period for which the person has been detained and would be likely to be detained in the future to effect deportation; the length of that total period will be likely to affect the judgement as to whether the prospect of effecting deportation and the degree of certainty or uncertainty is sufficient to justify continued detention when account is taken of all the relevant factors;
e) that will particularly depend on the nature of the obstacle which prevents the Secretary of State effecting deportation and how quickly or easily it can be resolved and with what certainty;
f) the diligence, speed and effectiveness of the steps that have been and are being taken by the Secretary of State to overcome the obstacle;
g) so far as relevant, the conditions in which the detained person is kept and the effect of that detention on him and if relevant his family;
h) the extent to which the period of detention is due to the conduct, active or passive, of the detained person; and
i) the risk that if he is released from detention he will abscond and that he will then commit further criminal offences together with the consequent risk of harm to the public good.
"Risk of harm to the public will be assessed by NOMS unless there is no offender assessment system (OASYS) or pre-sentence report available. There will be no licence and OASYS report where the sentence is less than 12 months. NOMS will only be able to carry out a meaningful risk assessment in these cases where a pre-sentence report exists (details of which can be obtained from the prison) or where the subject has a previous conviction resulting in a community order. . ..
55.3.2.8 Where NOMS are unable to produce a risk assessment and the offender manager advises that this is the case, case owners will need to make a judgment on the risk of harm based on the information available to them. Factors relevant to this will be the nature of the original offence, any other offences committed, record of behaviour in prison and/or IRC and general record of compliance. A PNC check should always be made. Where there is a conviction for an offence on the list at 55.3.2.1 above, the nature of the offence is such that the person presents a high risk on the table below. Such high risk offences should be given particularly substantial weight when assessing reasonableness to detain. Those with a long record of persistent offending are likely to be rated in the high or medium risk, those of a low level one off conviction with a good record of behaviour otherwise are likely to be low risk."
Submissions
a) There is no evidence to support the assertion that the Claimant has deliberately misled or frustrated the verification process. Throughout he has made clear that he had no documents and no other information as to his origins in India. His evidence has been consistent, that he left India at the age of seven and he gave what information he had to identify his home village in the state of Jammu. That he does not have any further information or document is a fact but not one for which he is to be the subject of censure or discrimination.
b) His earlier absconding was clearly related to his offending, which in turn was directly connected with feeding his drug habit. The unequivocal evidence is that he has now rid himself of that drug habit. Dr. Drife confirms that the risk of future reoffending which would be linked to his relapse to drug use can be graded as medium and that with support and accommodation the risk of absconding will be further decreased, if not eliminated entirely. The same considerations apply to reoffending, so that there is no proper basis for concluding that there is a high risk of reoffending in these circumstances. In both respects, it is to be borne in mind that contrary to the guidance the Defendant has failed to obtain an independent NOMS assessment of the Claimant as to the risk of absconding or reoffending.
c) Taking all the above circumstances together, it is submitted that the risk of absconding or reoffending would not and should not outweigh the unacceptable length of the detention that has occurred which is likely to continue, including the uncertainty of any positive outcome in respect of verification. The conclusion should therefore be that the Defendant has failed to demonstrate that the continuing detention is lawful.
a) For the reasons set out above the Claimant is to a large extent the cause of the period of delay in the failure to provide any additional information to assist the process of verification;
b) The Secretary of State can be seen to have applied real urgency to the case, placing pressure on the Indian authorities to encourage the administrative process of verification through the state authorities;
c) Once that process is concluded, there is every prospect that in a short time the ETD will be issued, followed by deportation; on the other if the verification process including the final stage of door to door inquiries proves negative, there is every expectation that the period of detention will be brought to an end by the Secretary of State;
ii) Of paramount importance in the overall balance, there is a very serious risk of the Claimant absconding, given his past history and offending record, together with his past involvement with drugs. Notwithstanding support and accommodation provided under section 4, he is plainly a man who has become involved in drugs and with it offending; that offending has involved both repeated offences of dishonesty together with a very serious offence of robbery; thus in terms of the public good this is a man who has a proven record of dangerous criminal activity. His record of failure to respond and absconding is consistent with the long period over which he was evidently able to escape the notice of the authorities, notwithstanding the absence of any lawful travel or nationality documents.
Consideration