BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Weiss & Anor, R (On the Application Of) v Westminster Magistrates' Court [2024] EWHC 1256 (Admin) (24 May 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2024/1256.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 1256 (Admin) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
AC-2024-LON-001416 |
KING'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE JULIAN KNOWLES
____________________
THE KING ON THE APPLICATION OF (1) TOMASZ WEISS (2) ADRIAN PIETRASZEWSKI |
Claimants |
|
- and – |
||
WESTMINSTER MAGISTRATES' COURT |
Defendant |
|
-and- |
||
(1) THAMES & CHILTERN CROWN PROSECUTION SERVICE |
First Interested Party |
|
(2) REGIONAL COURT IN GLIWICE, POLAND |
Second Interested Party |
____________________
(instructed by Sonn Macmillan Walker) for the First Claimant
Mark Summers KC and Amelia Nice
(instructed by Michael Carroll & Co Solicitors)for the Second Claimant
Joel Smith KC (instructed by Thames & Chiltern CPS) for the First Interested Party
Richard Evans (instructed by CPS Extradition Unit) for the Second Interested Party
The Defendant did not appear and was not represented
Hearing date: 21 May 2024
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Julian Knowles:
Introduction
Background
a. Their extradition is barred by s 19B of the Extradition Act 2003 (EA 2003) on grounds that the UK, not Poland, is the proper forum for their trial and so extradition would not be in the interests of justice; and
b. Their extradition is an abuse of the extradition process, being a deliberate attempt to prosecute them using evidence (namely the accounts of the Polish co-accused) that was known to both IPs to be inadmissible in this jurisdiction. They accuse the Polish authorities and IP1 of 'forum shopping' which they say is inherently objectionable so as to amount to an abuse of process.
The application before the district judge
"(1) Where a justice of the peace is satisfied that –
(a) any person in England or Wales is likely to be able to give material evidence, or produce any document or thing likely to be material evidence, at the summary trial of an information or hearing of a complaint ... by a magistrates' court, and
(b) it is in the interests of justice to issue a summons under this subsection to secure the attendance of that person to give evidence or produce the document or thing,
the justice shall issue a summons directed to that person requiring him to attend before the court at the time and place appointed in the summons to give evidence or to produce the document or thing."
"As I understand it, what the claimant seeks is the record of the criminal trial involving the victim in England, together with other information that the Metropolitan Police may have about his record and aliases and materials of that nature intended to show that he had other enemies. Because of the provisions of section 84 of the Extradition Act 2003, any statement about such matters would potentially be likely to be material evidence. There is therefore no reason why the claimant's solicitors should not seek a witness summons themselves to fulfill the duty which they seek to impose upon the CPS."
"1. The domestic CPS's charging decisions, including the decisions not to charge murder or assault.
2. The evidence and allegations adduced by the domestic CPS before the Reading Crown Court.
3. Details of the two defendants detained in Poland.
4. All records, and correspondence, concerning the CPS' liaison with UK police, Polish police and prosecutors, and the CPS Extradition Unit concerning the jurisdiction for Mr Weiss' prosecution."
"material held by [IP1], including the records of the 2023 concurrent-jurisdiction decision-making process."
"records (decision-making records, minutes of meetings (including in February and June), and briefing notes) concerning the concurrent-jurisdiction decision-making process, excluding Treasury Counsel's advices over which TCCPS asserts LPP."
and compendiously referred to as 'the concurrent jurisdiction decision-making material'.
"In relation to abuse and forum:
- MSKC allegation it was submitted there was bad faith on part of the Judicial Authority and on part of the CPS who have misled the Crown Court in respect of the nationality bar.
- That the CPS and police and judicial authority lied to the Crown Court, to secure jurisdiction amounting to an abuse. It was also submitted that the Crown seek to expose the defendants to a trial in Poland on the basis of evidence inadmissible here, but admissible there.
JSKC: nationality bar was in force at the time of making the decision, that was the understanding of CPS at time and it cannot amount to bad faith. Evidence admissible in one jurisdiction is not abusive, but in line with established case law – prosecutor entitled to consider admissibility regimes and does not amount to bad faith.
I have carefully considered the application, the submissions, and the authorities provided, and for the following reasons the application is refused. The approach underpinning extradition is one of mutual trust and recognition of judicial authorities, Poland is a Category 1 territory, the system is designed to be swift and effective. The Crown Prosecution Service owes a duty to the court first and foremost, the suggestion that there has been a web of lies designed to mislead in conjunction with the Polish authorities or alone is fanciful.
Despite that, there were three documents that may be relevant and I requested sight of them to consider their relevance. I was provided with the MG3, I was provided with two briefing notes and the minutes of the meeting in June. The Crown have not, at this stage, provided a copy of Treasury Counsel's advice as they have asserted privilege. This issue was parked until I had reviewed the remaining documents.
Having reviewed the documents, there is nothing in those documents that is of relevance in a way which goes towards or supports in any way the basis on which counsel for the defence say they ought to be disclosed. I have considered the briefing…
I have reconsidered whether I should look at Treasury Counsel's advice and I am satisfied from assessing additional briefing notes that that is now not required. The question of legal privilege does not arise.
The requests for details of the co-defendants has been provided in the prosecutor's belief statement and this was not pursued in oral argument. In terms of the correspondence, the defence have not identified a proper basis on which that should be disclosed. The allegations of bad faith regarding the nationality bar and admissibility of evidence are not made out, and that has been strengthened by my review of three documents. Overall, the application is refused."
"A joint meeting was held between the Polish and UK prosecution and investigative teams with a view to establishing the most appropriate venue for the joint trial of all 4 defendants. There is currently an extradition bar from Poland to the UK which means that however we end up, we do not currently anticipate any trial here of all four defendants."
"To remind, the defence case under Tollman abuse [R (Tollman) v Bow Street Magistrates' Court [2007] 1 WLR 1157] is that Poland worked with [IP1] to procure the 2023 [IP1] decision to cede jurisdiction over an ongoing Crown Court trial via …. and which was brought about by Poland and/or IP1 having misled the Crown Court into believing Polish law did not allow the extradition of the co-accused [KW] and [AN] to the UK."
Section 19B and the prosecutor's belief statements
"19B Forum
(1) The extradition of a person ("D") to a category 1 territory is barred by reason of forum if the extradition would not be in the interests of justice.
(2) For the purposes of this section, the extradition would not be in the interests of justice if the judge—
(a) decides that a substantial measure of D's relevant activity was performed in the United Kingdom; and
(b) decides, having regard to the specified matters relating to the interests of justice (and only those matters), that the extradition should not take place.
(3) These are the specified matters relating to the interests of justice -
(a) the place where most of the loss or harm resulting from the extradition offence occurred or was intended to occur;
(b) the interests of any victims of the extradition offence;
(c) any belief of a prosecutor that the United Kingdom, or a particular part of the United Kingdom, is not the most appropriate jurisdiction in which to prosecute D in respect of the conduct constituting the extradition offence;
(d) were D to be prosecuted in a part of the United Kingdom for an offence that corresponds to the extradition offence, whether evidence necessary to prove the offence is or could be made available in the United Kingdom;
(e) any delay that might result from proceeding in one jurisdiction rather than another;
(f) the desirability and practicability of all prosecutions relating to the extradition offence taking place in one jurisdiction, having regard (in particular) to—
(i) the jurisdictions in which witnesses, co-defendants and other suspects are located, and
(ii) the practicability of the evidence of such persons being given in the United Kingdom or in jurisdictions outside the United Kingdom;
(g) D's connections with the United Kingdom.
(4) In deciding whether the extradition would not be in the interests of justice, the judge must have regard to the desirability of not requiring the disclosure of material which is subject to restrictions on disclosure in the category 1 territory concerned.
(5) If, on an application by a prosecutor, it appears to the judge that the prosecutor has considered the offences for which D could be prosecuted in the United Kingdom, or a part of the United Kingdom, in respect of the conduct constituting the extradition offence, the judge must make that prosecutor a party to the proceedings on the question of whether D's extradition is barred by reason of forum.
(6) In this section " D's relevant activity " means activity which is material to the commission of the extradition offence and which is alleged to have been performed by D."
"13. The scheme of section 19B is clear. If a 'forum bar' point is raised, the judge has to decide whether the extradition of a person to a category 1 territory 'would not be in the interests of justice'. In making that decision the judge has to be satisfied on two questions. First, he has to decide whether a substantial measure of the requested person's 'relevant activity' was performed in the UK. Whether a 'substantial measure' of the requested person's 'relevant activity' occurred in the UK will usually be exclusively a question of fact, which will be determined by the 'appropriate judge'. If this pre-condition is not satisfied then that is the end of this issue. The statutory 'forum-bar' cannot operate in that case.
14. However, if the judge does decide that a 'substantial measure' of the requested person's 'relevant activity' was performed in the UK, then he has to decide whether it is in the interests of justice that the extradition should not take place. The judge will do so by first of all "having regard" to all the matters that are specified in section 19B(3). The judge cannot take any other factors into account, apart from the one in section 19B(4) concerning disclosure. One or more factors may or may not be relevant on the facts of a particular case: but in all instances the judge must 'have regard' to each of the factors. The weight to be given to each of the specified matters set out in section 19B(3) is for the 'appropriate judge', ie. the judge at the extradition hearing, to decide on the facts of the case before him. There is no ranking of importance of the various factors. Finally, the appropriate judge has to make a value judgment overall on whether the extradition of the requested person would "not be in the interests of justice," having had regard to, but only to, the factors set out in section 19B(3). We believe this analysis is entirely consistent of that of Simon J at [18] of Dibden v Tribunal de Grande Instance de Lille, France [2014] EWHC 3074 (Admin) with which Pitchford LJ agreed."
"47. The overarching test prescribed by section 83A is whether extradition would not be in the interests of justice: section 83A(1), Dibden v Tribunal De Grande Instance De Lille, France [2014] EWHC 3074 (Admin) per Simon J at [18], Shaw v USA [2014] EWHC 4654 (Admin) per Aikens LJ at [41], Love v USA [2018] EWHC 172 (Admin); [2018] 1 WLR 2889 per Lord Burnett CJ at [22].
48. Section 83A prescribes the circumstances in which extradition would not be in the interests of justice. Two conditions must both be fulfilled. First, section 83A(2)(a) imposes a threshold or qualifying condition. Read with section 83A(6), this threshold condition is that activity which was material to the commission of the extradition offence, and which is alleged to have been performed by the requested person, was performed in the United Kingdom.
49. If (and only if) the threshold condition imposed by section 83A(2)(a) is satisfied, the court must then consider the seven specified matters in order to determine whether extradition should not take place: section 83A(2)(b), Dibden at [18], Atraskevic v Prosecutor General's Office, Republic of Lithuania [2015] EWHC 131 (Admin) per Aikens LJ at [13].
50. The seven specified matters that must be considered have no necessary hierarchical weight. They are matters that the court must consider to reach an overall evaluative judgment as to whether extradition would not be in the interests of justice: Shaw at [40], Atraskevic at [14], Dibden at [18], Love at [43] – [44], USA v McDaid [2020] EWHC 1527 (Admin) at [43] – [44].
51. In Love Lord Burnett CJ and Ouseley J explained the purpose of section 83A at [22]:
'In our judgment, section 83A is clearly intended to provide a safeguard for requested persons, not distinctly to be found in any of the other bars to extradition or grounds for discharge, including section 87 and the wide scope of article 8 ECHR. The safeguard is not confined to British nationals, but it is to be borne in mind that the United Kingdom is one of those countries which is prepared to extradite its own nationals. Its underlying aim is to prevent extradition where the offences can be fairly and effectively tried here, and it is not in the interests of justice that the requested person should be extradited. But close attention has to be paid to the wording of the statute rather than to short summaries of its purpose or to general Parliamentary statements. The forum bar only arises if extradition would not be in the interests of justice; section 83A(1). The matters relevant to an evaluation of "the interests of justice" for these purposes are found in section 83A(2)(b). They do not leave to the court the task of some vague or broader evaluation of what is just. Nor is the bar a general provision requiring the court to form a view directly on which is the more suitable forum, let alone having regard to sentencing policy or the potential for prisoner transfer, save to the extent that one of the listed factors might in any particular case require consideration of it."
52. In Patman and Safi v Specialist Criminal Court in Pezinok, Slovakia [2020] EWHC 3512, Swift J said (in the context of section 19B which is in materially identical terms to section 83A) at [18]:
'the notion of 'interests of justice' is not a matter at large; rather it is carefully calibrated by the matters listed at section 19(3). The objective pursued by section 19B a curb on claims to exorbitant jurisdiction, is also relevant because this too informs the choice of the matters which are listed in section 19B(3)'
53. As to the relative importance of each of the factors, Simon J said in Dibden at [18]:
'The relative importance of each matter will vary from case to case, and the weight to be accorded to the specified matters may also vary. The court will be engaged in a fact-specific exercise in order to determine whether the particular extradition would not be in the interests of justice.'"
a. That there was a parallel investigation in Poland into the victim's death and perverting the course of justice.
b. That a joint meeting between UK and Polish police/investigators took place on 28 February 2023 to assess the nature and extent of the evidence held by each jurisdiction and the most appropriate venue for a joint trial.
c. That further consideration was to be given to a number of issues including consideration of homicide charges, jurisdiction for prosecution and potential extradition.
d. The fact that two suspects (namely KW and AN) were being held in Poland on offences akin to perverting the course of justice.
e. The fact that all four suspects and several witnesses were Polish nationals, some of whom remained in the UK, but some of whom were in Poland.
f. That it was considered to be in the interests of justice for all four suspects to be tried together in one jurisdiction for the crimes alleged in relation to the victim's death and the aftermath.
g. That there was currently a bar on extradition from Poland to the UK preventing the suspects in Poland from being extradited to the UK at that time.
h. That no indictment had been preferred in the UK proceedings, as until the question of jurisdiction had been properly addressed, and in so far as the process did not adversely affect the rights of either defendant, it would not be in the interests of justice for any steps to be taken in the UK criminal proceedings that could jeopardise the issues as to jurisdiction, which were under consideration.
i. That Polish arrest warrants, seeking the extradition of C1 (for murder and assault of the victim) and of C2 (for assault and an offence akin to perverting the course of justice) were received on 28 April 2023.
"9. I have considered s19B(3) of the Extradition Act 2003 and the factors set out in subsections a) to g) therein, as summarised below and corresponding to the subsection of the Act.
a. All of the harm occurred in the UK.
b. It is believed that the victim's family are resident in Poland. It is in their interests that those suspected of being responsible for the offences committed against the victim are tried.
c. It is my belief that the UK is not the most appropriate jurisdiction in which to prosecute TW in respect of the conduct constituting the extradition offence.
d. I understand that there is insufficient admissible evidence to prosecute TW in the UK for the offences of murder and assault.
e. Proceeding in the UK with Perverting the Course of Justice and Preventing a Lawful Burial may have impeded the Polish prosecution for murder and associated offences, including by causing potential delay.
f. It is most desirable for one prosecution of all offences, having regard to the location of the two key witnesses and other suspects (all believed to be in Poland) and the fact that the evidence of the other suspects (KW and AN) would not be admissible against TW and AP in UK proceedings.
g. TW is a Polish national with no known existing connections to the UK.
10. It is my belief that although the UK would ordinarily have been the most appropriate forum for the offences with which TW was charged (namely Perverting the Course of Justice and Preventing a Lawful Burial), as proceeding with such offences could risk impeding the Polish prosecution for homicide and associated offences, I am led to the conclusion that the UK would therefore no longer be the appropriate forum. I have also considered the highly relevant factor that the Full Code Test is not met for any homicide or violence offence in the UK."
Submissions
a. Ground 1: Forum: the district judge's decision is unlawful for lack of legally adequate reasons.
b. Ground 2: Forum: her conclusion is in any event Wednesbury unreasonable.
c. Ground 3: Abuse: her conclusion is also Wednesbury unreasonable.
d. Ground 4: Forum and abuse: the district judge made a material error of law in that she applied a test of relevance other than that identified in s.97 MCA 1980.
"… concurrent-jurisdiction decision-making materials (i.e. understanding why TCCPS decided in 2023 to cede jurisdiction in this case to Poland) are crucial to understanding and evaluating both (a) the weight that can be placed under s.19B(3)(c) on TCCPS's 2024 PBS, and (b) the weight to be ascribed to the other statutory matters, including for example s.19B(3)(f) (the desirability and practicability of all prosecutions in one jurisdiction). Only an understanding of the actual decision that led to the cessation of jurisdiction in 2023 can sensibly inform those matters. At lowest, those materials are relevant to those issues."
"The important point is that, in each of these cases, the Court had before it the actual record of the decision not to prosecute in this jurisdiction, completed and signed by the reviewing lawyer who himself had reviewed all the evidence."
"How can the extradition judge rationally weigh a 2024 PBS [prosecutor's belief statement, ie, Mr McGill's statements] which adopts that antecedent 2023 decision, without knowing the full extent of the decision made, why it was made, and examining all its potential flaws ? Put otherwise, how could the DJ rationally conclude that none of this was 'likely to be relevant' to the weight that might be afforded to the PBS in this case ?"
Discussion
"The documents likely to be material evidence in respect of the abuse of process argument are:
All records, and correspondence, concerning the CPS' liaison with UK police, Polish police and prosecutors, and the CPS Extradition Unit concerning the jurisdiction for Mr Weiss' prosecution. This should include, but is not limited to, minutes of the 28 February joint meeting, Treasury Counsel's advice and minutes of the CPS National Case Management meeting in April 2023.
Details of the two defendants who, according to the CPS letter dated 31 March 2023, are detained in Poland and whether these defendants were ever arrested in the UK, spoken to, or interviewed by the UK police, or whether any statements have been shared with the UK authorities."
"The same materials identified above at 20 are also - and obviously - relevant to all of the s 19B(3) forum 'specified matters'. In the alternative [to abuse], therefore, the materials are sought on this basis also."
"Although the initial application had been very bald, subsequent written submissions made it clear that the application was focussed on Section 19B(3)(d), and the question whether evidence necessary to prove the offence was or could be made available in England. It was submitted that the Appellant was at a significant disadvantage in addressing this 'specified matter', since he had no access to the material forming the basis of the decision not to proceed with an English prosecution. There should be 'equality of arms' on the point. It was still not made clear what documentation was sought, in the sense of witness statements, exhibits or 'unused material', whether exclusively English, or foreign, or both."
"DJ Purdy refused the application on 29 June 2015. He was referred in the course of argument to three authorities: Dibden v Tribunal de Grande Instance de Lille, France [2014] EWHC 3074 (Admin), Piotrowicz v Regional Court in Gdansk, Poland [2014] EWHC 3884 (Admin) and Atraskevic v Prosecutor General's Office, Lithuania [2015] EWHC 131 (Admin). These cases bear directly on Section 19B(3)(c) and the consideration of prosecutorial 'belief' as to forum, but DJ Purdy took those authorities to be 'strongly analogous' to the issue under s 19B(3)(d), and as pointing against further disclosure."
"32. Were the Appellant to succeed in his application for a witness summons or in his submissions as to the proper approach to evidence in this case, extensive secondary litigation would become inevitable. It would first be necessary to receive an account of the evidence and/or other material held by the CPS when making the decision not to conduct an English prosecution. It is clear there could be extensive argument about what should or should not have been produced. It is likely that important questions of confidentiality, public interest immunity and legal professional privilege would arise. All that is so, even were the application to be confined, as Mr Gledhill says he intends, to English rather than foreign material. For myself, I find it difficult to see how, if such an approach was indeed appropriate in relation to English material, it would not very rapidly emerge that there was an application to see foreign material. The argument would be that it was necessary to see what material might be made available in the United Kingdom.
33. It is also worth re-emphasising that the question of evidence in the United Kingdom is only one of the range of matters which a district judge has to consider in the course of the overall decision as to the justice of extradition. In the absence of compelling specific circumstances, it seems to me that the structure of Section 19B itself points against extensive secondary litigation as to the individual 'specific specified matters' which must be considered. For all those reasons, I take the view that the decision of the Divisional Court in Dibden, my own judgment in Piotrowicz, and the decision of the Divisional Court in Atraskevic, whilst not direct authority on this subsection, do represent useful guidance when interpreting the approach to Section 19B(3)(d). Similar considerations arise in each case.
34. However, it seems to be that there are at least two additional serious problems with the submissions made by Mr Gledhill. The first concerns the effect on disclosure if such an application were to succeed and subsequently extradition were refused in favour of English prosecution. The outcome would be that an Appellant such as this would have subverted or bypassed the careful arrangements for disclosure in criminal proceedings laid down in statute and in the Criminal Procedure Rules. Set aside any question of operational material, or material subject to the legal professional privilege of the Crown: the Appellant would have obtained sight of the existing witness statements and potentially the 'unused material', whether inculpatory or exculpatory, before he had even been charged, never mind served a defendant's case statement which, in the normal course of criminal proceedings, would be necessary before much of such disclosure would be triggered. It can hardly have been the intention of Parliament to override the criminal law and Criminal Procedure Rules in that way.
35. In this context Section 19B(4) is relevant. For convenience I repeat the wording here:
"(4) In deciding whether the extradition would not be in the interests of justice, the judge must have regard to the desirability of not requiring the disclosure of material which is subject to restrictions on disclosure in the Category 1 territory concerned."
In my view it is inconceivable that Parliament could have intended to protect the normal rules governing disclosure in criminal proceedings in a relevant foreign jurisdiction, whilst intending to abrogate the limits on disclosure in England and Wales. If that is right, then a further argument would arise from an application such as that made by the Appellant. The Crown could legitimately argue that the Appellant should have no more disclosure than that to which he would be entitled under normal English criminal law and procedure. Unless that argument failed, the outcome of the application would be a circularity.
36. A further difficulty arising from this application was conceded by Mr Gledhill in the course of argument. He agreed that the outcome of his approach would mean, on the facts of this case at least, the district judge would be asked to review the decision by the appropriate prosecutor not to instigate a prosecution in this jurisdiction. As I have set out above, there was in this case a clear decision not to proceed. There is no need to rehearse the well-established reluctance of the Courts to interfere with the decisions of properly constituted prosecution authorities: see R v DPP ex parte Manning [2001] QB 330, at paragraph 23; R (Purdy) v DPP [2010] 1 AC 345, at paragraph 99; R v DPP ex parte Kebilene [2000] 2 AC 326.
37. For all the above reasons, in my judgment the application for disclosure made by this Appellant was ill-founded. The district judge was entirely right to reject it. Given that the Appellant now maintains no other criticism of the decision of DJ Blake, I therefore dismiss the appeal. I should add for completeness that, given the other material before the magistrates' court bearing on the other "specified matters" under section 19(B), it seems to me that there was a very strong basis for the Court's decision that the interests of justice favoured extradition and trial in the Czech Republic."
"21. [Counsel] then relies on the fact that the Crown concede that these offences could be tried in the United Kingdom, a concession which appears in the original skeleton argument on behalf of the requesting judicial authority. He encapsulates his criticism on this aspect of the case by saying the prosecution belief simply was not explored sufficiently.
22. In the course of argument, Mr Gledhill was asked by me to consider how far that process should go. Should there be disclosure of the existing files held by the CPS so as to demonstrate the exact extent of their evidence? Should there be disclosure sought of the files held by the Polish authorities so as to compare the two?
23. Mr Gledhill was pressed two or three times as to where, in his submission, the limits of this process of investigation should go in the course of an extradition hearing. Perhaps wisely, he declined to attempt to formulate any general limitations. But it is clear that his submission is that there should be an extensive examination of the basis of the prosecutor's 'belief' as to the appropriate jurisdiction.
24. Guidance was given in the course of the Dibden decision in the judgment of Simon J on this issue at paragraph 35. He said this:
'In my judgment, section 19B(3)(c) was not intended to invite a review of the prosecutor's belief as to the more appropriate jurisdiction on grounds short of irrationality. It was certainly not intended to invite a debate with demands for documents justifying the belief.'
25. In my judgment, that was an entirely correct observation. The very statutory language, which for convenience I repeat, 'any belief of a prosecutor that the United Kingdom, or a particular part of the United Kingdom, is not the most appropriate jurisdiction in which to prosecute', is instructive. It is not any developed view. What that language indicates is not any written presentation intended to invite investigation by the court in a way consistent with the submissions of Mr Gledhill. Of course, an irrational belief by the prosecutor which was self-evidently so would carry little or no weight when considered by the court looking at the relevant factors. Of course, enquiries to establish, in round terms, what the basis of the belief may be, will be entirely appropriate. But it would be far beyond what, in my judgment, was intended by the introduction of this consideration as one, amongst others, for the kind of secondary litigation presupposed by Mr Gledhill's submissions to be appropriate. I am fortified in that view by the judgment in Dibden."
"34. It is in that context that the concurrent-jurisdiction decision-making materials (i.e. understanding why TCCPS decided in 2023 to cede jurisdiction in this case to Poland) are crucial to understanding and evaluating both (a) the weight that can be placed under s.19B(3)(c) on TCCPS's 2024 PBS, and (b) the weight to be ascribed to the other statutory matters, including for example s.19B(3)(f) (the desirability and practicability of all prosecutions in one jurisdiction). Only an understanding of the actual decision that led to the cessation of jurisdiction in 2023 can sensibly inform those matters. At lowest, those materials are relevant to those issues."
"49. How can the extradition judge rationally weigh a 2024 PBS which adopts that antecedent 2023 decision, without knowing the full extent of the decision made, why it was made, and examining all its potential flaws? Put otherwise, how could the DJ rationally conclude that none of this was 'likely to be relevant' to the weight that might be afforded to the PBS in this case?"
"44. … The facts before the DJ, as summarised by him at paragraph 21(c) of his Ruling, were as follows:
'...Prior to the forum bar provisions coming into force the views of the CPS were sought and by an undated letter (some time after 16th April 2013) sent by Mr Hadik to Mr Shaw's solicitors it is recorded "The CPS after conducting a careful review determined that it would forgo prosecution of Mr Shaw in connection with his possession of indecent images of children, in favour of Mr Shaw's prosecution by the US authorities." Subsequently, after the forum bar came into force, the matter has been re-visited by the CPS. [Counsel for the USA] has informed the court that the matter has been carefully considered at the highest level within the CPS and with the assistance of leading counsel advising, an unnamed Senior Crown Prosecutor 'believes England & Wales is not the most appropriate jurisdiction in which to prosecute Mr Shaw in respect of the conduct constituting the extradition offence'."
"56. In my judgment, the position of the CPS on the facts of this case is not satisfactory. The original consideration was plainly given upon the wrong basis and not upon the statutory finding. It was then reviewed in the light of the statutory wording, but it was done on what can only be described as a rather unsatisfactory and 'non-transparent' basis. The person who actually made the decision was not then identified and no statement from the decision maker was given, nor was there any other document setting out the decision and the basis for it."
57. There is, in my view, very little weight to be attached to the 'belief' in these circumstances. It is not clear to me how much weight, if any, the DJ attached to this factor, but in my judgment the weight to be attached to it is comparatively small, if any at all."
"58. We have been asked by both counsel if we could give some guidance as to what we think the practice should be for dealing with this factor in the future. This is, I must emphasise, undoubtedly preliminary guidance. Guidance will inevitably evolve as more of these 'Forum Bar' cases come before this court. My guidance, at present, is as follows: first it is for the requested person to identify 'Forum Bar' as an issue that is to be raised in the extradition hearing before the DJ. Secondly, if the requesting state wishes to adduce material as to the 'belief' of the UK prosecutor, then that should be done in a document, something akin to a 'decision letter', that is so well-known in immigration proceedings. In that document the reasons for the belief should be given; and the 'prosecutor' who has the belief should be identified in the document. Thirdly, this material need not be in a statement form. However, it should be if it seems that under the circumstances of the case that is the appropriate way to deal with it. Fourthly, it is for the DJ to decide at a case management hearing, or equivalent, what the timetable should be for the production of material relating to this issue and any response to it, and also how that material is to be adduced at the extradition hearing. Fifthly, it is for the DJ to decide how the material concerning the belief and the challenge to it, if there is one, is to be dealt with at the extradition hearing.
59. We note and emphasise, once again, the limited basis upon which there can be a review of the prosecutor's belief, as set out in paragraph 35 of Simon J's judgment in Dibden. We agree with that approach and we again emphasise that section 83A(3)(c), like section 19B(3)(c), is not intended to invite a debate with demands for documents."
"'a prosecutor' must mean a domestic prosecutor within the UK: see the definition in section 83E(2). In England and Wales this means someone within the domestic branch of the CPS, rather than the separate and independent branch of the CPS, called the CPS Extradition Unit, which deals with extradition matters."
"It is ultimately for the judge to decide on the weight to give to this factor. If the material about the belief and the basis for it is sound, then doubtless this will weigh heavily with the appropriate judge. If the material appears to be flimsy, or ill considered or even irrational (or perhaps even given in bad faith), it will have little or no weight at all. The mere say-so of a prosecutor about his belief, which is not supported by reasons, will carry little or no weight and the judge will be entitled to dismiss this as a factor seriously to be taken into account."
"86. [The prosecutor] expresses the clear view that the UK is not the most appropriate jurisdiction in which to prosecute the appellant. That is a factor that weighs heavily in the balance, if the view is sound. Conversely, if it is based on flimsy material, or is ill-considered or even irrational then it will carry no weight at all. Similarly, the mere assertion the UK is the most appropriate jurisdiction in which to prosecute a requested person does not, in itself, carry any significant weight: Shaw at [51] – [53], Dibden at [35], Love at [54] and Wyatt at [18] – [20]."
"84. The judge should be alert to the possibility of allegations of abuse of process being made by way of delaying tactics. No steps should be taken to investigate an alleged abuse of process unless the judge is satisfied that there is reason to believe that an abuse may have taken place. Where an allegation of abuse of process is made, the first step must be to insist on the conduct alleged to constitute the abuse being identified with particularity. The judge must then consider whether the conduct, if established, is capable of amounting to an abuse of process. If it is, he must next consider whether there are reasonable grounds for believing that such conduct may have occurred. If there are, then the judge should not accede to the request for extradition unless he has satisfied himself that such abuse has not occurred."
"93. We believe that the scenario described above will be rare. Once it has been shown that there is an issue of abuse of process that requires investigation, it should be possible, provided that the parties act reasonably, to agree material facts, or that the material necessary to resolve any issue is placed in the public domain."
"Tollman abuse of process: The UK police, domestic CPS and Polish authorities collectively determined that Polish law could achieve a murder/assault conviction based on evidence (co-accused statements) which UK law regards as inadmissible. Implementation of that abusive scheme required ceder of jurisdiction to Poland of an ongoing Crown Court trial (of defendants waiting in custody), regardless of the UK knowledge of the lack of independence of its judiciary, heedless of the broad interests of the ongoing UK trial, and regardless of the interests of the defendants. It was put into effect over the course of months by the joint meetings and advices referred to above at §6. It is not yet known whether extradition CPS were involved in these discussions. The scheme required and involved actively misleading the UK court as to Polish law, specifically the extradition liability of the two Polish defendants."
"To remind, the defence case under Tollman abuse is that Poland worked with TCCPS to procure the 2023 TCCPS decision to cede jurisdiction over an ongoing Crown Court trial via (1) a bad faith desire to secure conviction upon testimony (of co-accused) which it knew would not be admissible in the UK trial, and which was (2) brought about by Poland and/or TCCPS having misled the Crown Court into believing that Polish law did not allow the extradition of co-accused Wojcik and Nikiel to the UK. See Note on Jurisdiction (26 February 2024) at §10(b)."
"Abuse of process (was the 2023 decision to cede jurisdiction to Poland a bad faith attempt to secure conviction upon testimony (of co-accused) which would not be admissible in the UK trial? Was the decision, in any event, brought about by Poland having misled TCCPS and the Crown Court into believing that Polish law did not allow the extradition of co-accused Wojcik and Nikiel to the UK?)"
"The Crown Prosecution Service owes a duty to the court first and foremost, the suggestion that there has been a web of lies designed to mislead in conjunction with the Polish authorities or alone is fanciful."
"Where permission is granted to appeal on the grounds that the judgment does not contain adequate reasons, the appellate court should first review the judgment, in the context of the material evidence and submissions at the trial, in order to determine whether, when all of these are considered, it is apparent why the judge reached the decision that he did. If satisfied that the reason is apparent and that it is a valid basis for the judgment, the appeal will be dismissed …"
Lord Justice Bean: