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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Grout, R (On the Application Of) v Financial Conduct Authority [2015] EWHC 596 (Admin) (09 March 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2015/596.html Cite as: [2015] EWHC 596 (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 :
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The Queen on the application of JULIEN GROUT |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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FINANCIAL CONDUCT AUTHORITY |
Defendant |
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Mr Paul Stanley QC (instructed by Financial Conduct Authority) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 4th March 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
See Order at bottom of this judgment
Mr Justice Males :
Introduction
Background
"2.2 The Firm's failings were extremely serious. The losses were caused by a high risk trading strategy, weak management of that trading and an inadequate response to important information which should have notified the Firm of the huge risks present in the SCP. Flaws in the Firm's marking and valuation control process for the SCP meant that the Firm failed to price certain positions within the SCP accurately in 2012. As losses began to mount during 2012, those flaws allowed traders on the SCP to conceal them through mismarking the SCP's positions. …
2.8 From 2007, at the direction of SCP management, the traders on the SCP's approach to marking the SCP's positions was such that they provided an estimate of what they, the traders, thought the position was worth, rather than necessarily picking the mid of what the market thought the positions were worth. In February and March 2012 as the SCP began to lose substantial amounts of money, traders on the SCP began to mark their positions in a noticeably favourable manner. At the direction of SCP management, they priced the positions at the most beneficial end of the bid-ask spread. This had the effect of making the SCP appear more profitable and enabled the traders to conceal the scale of the losses arising in the SCP from CIO Senior Management. …
2.10 By March 2012, it was clear to the traders on the SCP that the adverse market moves were continuing against the SCP's positions. In order to conceal this from CIO Senior Management, traders on the SCP continued to mark aggressively. By mid-March, they had gone further and, at the direction of SCP management, deliberately mismarked the SCP in order to conceal what one trader believed to be genuine losses. On 16 March 2012, the traders calculated that the losses appeared to be understated by almost $500 million, based on their estimation of market mid-prices. Nonetheless on that day the portfolio only showed a loss of $4 million in its internal reporting to CIO Senior Management."
"We recommend that the investigation into the conduct of Julien Grout ('Mr Grout') in connection with mismarking and potential manipulative trading practices in his role as a trader within the Chief Investment Office ('CIO') in the London Branch of JP Morgan Chase Bank N.A. ('JP Morgan') should now be closed.
Mr Grout was a junior trader on the Synthetic Credit Portfolio ('the SCP') reporting directly into Mr Iksil (the 'London Whale') and indirectly to Mr Martin-Artajo as their senior manager. He was responsible for entering the marks which we say constituted mismarking of the SCP. Although he did so under the supervision of Mr Iksil, and received guidance from Mr Iksil as to the marks to apply, there is evidence that he nevertheless knew the marks were inaccurate. There is also evidence that he was responsible for sending daily profit and loss reports to senior management in which the SCP's losses were understated.
We recommend closure of the case against him for the following reasons:
1. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission ('SEC') and the U.S. Department of Justice ('DOJ') have open civil and criminal cases against Mr Grout. Specifically:
- On 14 August 2013, the SEC charged Mr Grout with fraudulently overvaluing investments in order to hide massive losses in a portfolio he and others managed. Specifically, the charges allege: that Mr Grout engaged in fraudulent conduct; that he knowingly falsified or caused to be falsified JP Morgan's books and records; and that he was reckless in not knowing and substantially assisted the consequent failure of JP Morgan to maintain and furnish accurate financial reports to the SEC.
- On 16 September 2013, the DOJ indicted Mr Grout for conspiracy; falsifying the books and records of JP Morgan; wire fraud; and causing false statements to be made in JP Morgan's filings with the SEC.
2. Mr Grout is no longer working in the financial services industry and is no longer residing in the UK. We would not expect any firm authorised by us to seek approval on his behalf for him to perform a controlled function while he is under indictment. It is also unlikely (although not impossible) that he will be employed again in the UK financial services industry given the publicity of the 'London Whale' matter.
To continue with the investigation into Mr Grout would require a significant commitment in both resource and time. We do not think this is a proportionate use of our resources in circumstances where action is being taken against him in the US and he is in effect out of the UK financial services industry.
In addition, it is possible that we would decide to stay the proceedings at Warning Notice stage in light of the on-going criminal proceedings."
The legislation
"(7) The investigating authority may, by a direction to an investigator, control—
(a) the scope of the investigation;
(b) the period during which the investigation is to be conducted;
(c) the conduct of the investigation; and
(d) the reporting of the investigation.
(8) A direction may, in particular—
(a) confine the investigation to particular matters;
(b) extend the investigation to additional matters;
(c) require the investigator to discontinue the investigation or to take only such steps as are specified in the direction;
(d) require the investigator to make such interim reports as are so specified."
The section 393 procedure
"39. In the light of these principles in my view the correct approach to be taken in order to establish whether Mr Macris has been identified in the Final Notice through the description "CIO London management" is to answer the following questions:
(1) Are the references in the Final Notice to CIO London management references to an individual, ascertained by reference solely to the terms of the Notice itself?
(2) If so, can those references be regarded as referring to anyone other than Mr Macris?"
Legal principles
"63. … There is much authority to the effect that the jurisdiction to conduct a judicial review of a public authority's decision to launch or not to launch a prosecution, though it undoubtedly exists, is to be exercised sparingly. Where the decision is to prosecute, this admonition of restraint arises in part at least out of the imperative that criminal proceedings should not be the subject of satellite proceedings which have the effect of delaying the trial: R v Director of Public Prosecutions, ex parte C [1995] 1 Cr App R 136, especially per Kennedy LJ at 141; R v Director of Public Prosecutions, ex parte Kebilene [2000] 2 AC 326. Where the decision is not to prosecute, there cannot I think be a different rule; in any event there will have been expert assessments of weight and balance which are so conspicuously within the professional judgment of the statutory decision-maker that there will very rarely be legal space for a reviewing court to interfere.
64. Here, of course, the decision sought to be reviewed is a decision not to investigate. The position as regards the judicial review jurisdiction is in my judgment a fortiori a decision whether to prosecute. The authority's (here, the Director's) discretion is even more open-ended. It will involve consideration of the manner in which available resources should be deployed and whether particular lines of inquiry should or should not be followed: Hill v Chief Constable of West Yorkshire [1989] 1 AC 53 per Lord Keith of Kinkel at 59 D-F, summarising R v Commissioner of Police for the Metropolis, Ex parte Blackburn [1968] 2 QB 118. It is submitted for the Director that absent bad faith or other exceptional circumstances a decision to investigate or not to investigate an allegation of crime is not subject to review. That is not quite right. It looks like an argument to limit the court's jurisdiction of judicial review; but the jurisdiction is as wide or as narrow as the court holds. The true proposition is that it will take a wholly exceptional case on its legal merits to justify a judicial review of a discretionary decision by the Director to investigate or not."
Differential treatment
Too much weight on the US proceedings
"To continue with the investigation into Mr Grout we would require a significant commitment in both resource and time. We do not think this is a proportionate use of our resources in circumstances where action is being taken against him in the US and he is in effect out of the UK financial services industry."
Time and resources
Loss of an opportunity for Mr Grout to clear his name
A duty to consult
Conclusion
ORDER
UPON the Claimant's application for judicial review filed on 14 March 2014
AND UPON READING the first, second and third witness statements of Graham Paul Kingsby Huntley and the witness statement of Matthew Nunan
AND UPON HEARING Leading counsel for the Claimant and the Defendant
IT IS ORDERED that:
1. The Claimant's application for judicial review is dismissed.
2. The Claimant must within 42 days pay the Defendant's costs of and occasioned by the application for judicial review, which are assessed on the standard basis in the sum of £28,958.67.
Dated the 9 March 2015