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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> AG -v- Bhojwani [2009] JRC 217 (23 November 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2009/2009_217.html Cite as: [2009] JRC 217 |
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[2009]JRC217
ROYAL COURT
(Samedi Division)
23rd November 2009
Before : |
J. A. Clyde-Smith, Esq., Commissioner, sitting alone. |
The Attorney General
-v-
Raj Arjandas Bhojwani
Exclusion of evidence under Article 66 PPCE
M. T. Jowitt, Esq., for the Attorney General.
Advocate J. D. Kelleher for the Defendant.
JUDGMENT
THE commissioner:
1. The defendant stands indicted for two counts of converting the proceeds of criminal conduct and one count of removing the proceeds of criminal conduct, contrary to the provisions of Article 34(1)(b) of the Proceeds of Crime (Jersey) Law 1999. His trial is due to commence 24th November, 2009.
2. The defence apply by way of pre-trial hearing for a direction that evidence that is admissible by virtue of Article 65 of the Police Procedures in Criminal Evidence (Jersey) Law 2003 ("PPCE") ought not to be admitted.
3. By way of background, the prosecution has obtained evidence from Nigeria (and other jurisdictions) pursuant to letters of request issued under Article 4 of the Criminal Justice (International Co-operation)(Jersey) Law 2001 ("the Co-operation Law"). Evidence so obtained is admissible in evidence without being sworn to by a witness pursuant to the provisions of Article 4(6) which is in the following terms:-
4. The inter-relationship between Article 4(6) of the Co-operation Law and the law in relation to the admission of evidence generally is illustrated by reference to the following extract from paragraph 9-3 of Archbold 2008 Edition:-
5. Article 4(6) of the Co-operation Law is concerned with the first issue only, so that evidence obtained by letter of request need not be proved by a witness. However, it is not concerned with the second issue which is what use may be made of its contents. Every document must be relevant to an issue in the case in order to be put into evidence at all and if it is relevant, it is subject to the rule against hearsay; namely that any statement in a document will be hearsay and inadmissible if the purpose for which it is sought to tender it in evidence is to rely on the truth of the statement, unless the document can be brought within one of the exceptions to the rule.
6. In this case, the prosecution do seek to tender the documents obtained by letters of request in order to rely on the truth of the statements made within those documents and hence apply under Article 65 of PPCE for their admission. Article 65 is in the following terms:-
7. It is for the prosecution to satisfy me that the conditions set out in Article 65 are met and I am so satisfied. The defence accept that these conditions are satisfied. However, the defence submit that certain of the Nigerian documents should not be admitted in the interests of justice pursuant to the principles set out in Article 66 of PPCE which is in the following terms:-
The defence have asked me to have particular regard to Article 66(2)(a) and (d) and to proceed to rule on the basis of the statements obtained by the prosecution in relation to the Nigerian letters of request.
8. There is no Jersey case law on the operation of Article 66 and there is limited case law under English law in relation to the equivalent provision, namely Section 25 of the Criminal Justice Act 1988 (now superseded by Section 117 of the Criminal Justice Act 2003). R-v-Gordon Foxley [1995] 2 Cr. App. R.523 however provides a useful illustrative analysis of the test under Section 25. In that case, it was held that the purpose of Sections 24 and 25 of the Criminal Justice Act 1988 was to enable a document to speak for itself and parliament's intention would be defeated if in every case the creator or keeper of a document or the suppler of the information had to be called. Parliament's intention had clearly been that the court could draw such inferences as it thought proper from the documents themselves and from the method or route by which the documents had been produced before the court.
9. In Foxley the defendant was employed by the Ministry of Defence and was alleged to have corruptly placed contracts with three foreign manufacturing companies and to have had money paid into numbered accounts in Swiss banks on his behalf through three other foreign companies acting as intermediaries. The prosecution case depended upon documentary evidence produced by two Ministry of Defence police investigators which evidence included documents created by the Ministry of Defence showing the part that the defendant played in the authorisation of the contracts, the documents found at the defendant's home and documents such as credit notes, invoices and credit invoices recovered from the manufacturing companies through commissions rogatoires or other formal foreign procedures.
10. One of the grounds of the appeal of Foxley was that the judge was wrong not to exclude the documents from the three manufacturing companies under section 25(2)(a) to (d) (the equivalent of our Article 66(2)(a)-(d)). In relation to the authenticity and reliability of the documents Roch LJ said this:-
11. In relation to section 25(2)(d), quoting from the judgment of Roch LJ:-
12. There were other documents upon which the defendant in Foxley was not in a position to controvert but quoting from the judgment:-
13. The criminal conduct (from which it is alleged that the defendant derived his proceeds which are the subject of the money-laundering offences) concerns two contracts allegedly negotiated between the defendant and officials of the military dictatorship of the President of the Republic of Nigeria, namely General Sani Abacha and Colonel Marwa, a defence adviser. The prosecution will be relying on the Nigerian documents to seek to prove that the defendant purchased the vehicles through a first front company and then sold them to Nigeria through a second front company, in both of which transactions the lie is asserted that the stipulated purchase price was the price to be paid to secure the vehicles. The prosecution say that General Abacha and Colonel Marwa were complicit in this. That lie was bolstered by two further lies, namely that the second front company was part of the Indian manufacturing company and secondly that the prices indicated were genuine manufacturers' prices. Nigeria was, say the prosecution, deceived into thinking that it was dealing directly with the manufacturer. The entire amount was allegedly paid to accounts controlled by the defendant in Jersey from which Colonel Marwa and others closely linked to General Abacha benefited. In effect it alleges a conspiracy or joint enterprise between the defendant and General Abacha and Colonel Marwa. The prosecution intend to rely upon some of the intergovernmental documentation so as to implicate General Abacha and Colonel Marwa in these transactions.
14. The defence have highlighted some 44 documents which it says I ought not to admit in the interests of justice. I will refer to them as the "intergovernmental documents".
15. The starting point for the defence is that this case is focused upon alleged corruption at the highest levels of government in Nigeria. Corruption involves misrepresentations and deceit and the Court should not assume that any documents obtained from Nigeria are reliable. It is possible that the documents may have been forged either at the time or subsequently either to assist in obtaining evidence in support of the prosecution against the defendant or to extricate those who were involved in the contracts. Nigeria is a quite different territory to say Germany.
16. Mr Kelleher illustrated this submission by reference to Colonel Bako (retired), who was one of the people from whom a witness statement and documents were obtained under the letters of request. At the time of the contracts he was an officer in the Nigerian army, and, according to his own statement, he worked very closely with General Abacha, describing himself as one of his closest confidants, who he saw every day. He would appear to have been imprisoned later for his involvement in a coup attempt against General Abacha, but within days of his release, wrote to the defendant's Nigerian company in relation to these contracts in language which the defence say can only be interpreted as an attempt to extract a bribe. In his witness statement he admitted that he had received $100,000 out of the sums paid over to Jersey although he gave an innocent explanation for this receipt.
17. In a letter dated 10th February, 2008, exhibited to the recent statement of PC Patterson filed in relation to the prosecution application for an adjournment, Colonel Bako claims certain out of pocket expenses from Commissioner Gana (who was in charge of the evidence gathering process under the letters of request) in relation to his involvement in this case. From that letter, it would appear that he was involved in 2004 in accessing documentation from the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) at the behest of Commissioner Gana and in order to do this had to give certain "welfare packages" to those who assisted him. It would appear therefore, says Mr Kelleher, that we are dealing with documents obtained by way of bribe. Are they genuine or have they been tampered with? If Colonel Bako could get access to public documents at a time when he was not a public officer by the payment of bribes, who also may have had such access? He accepted that documents were also obtained directly from INEC through its chief legal officer Mr Bawa against whom there were no allegations.
18. The defence take no objection to letters sent to or received by the defendant or his companies or to minutes of meetings at which he was said to be present because he is in a position to controvert that evidence. Where the defence take issue is in relation to correspondence and documentation passing between the various ministries involved in the payments made under these contracts, namely the Central Bank of Nigeria, the Nigerian Ministry of Defence and INEC-the intergovernmental documentation. The defendant was not involved in that documentation in any way and he is not in a position to controvert it.
19. A further factor was that in Foxley the Court was able to draw an inference of reliability in part because the process undertaken in Switzerland and other countries was lawful but in this case the Nigerian courts have recently declared that the evidence gathering undertaken by Commissioner Gana was unlawful. A yet further concern for the defence is that a number of these documents have manuscript comments upon which the prosecution seek to rely (as implicating General Abacha and Colonel Marwa) and which again the defendant is in no position to controvert.
20. At the hearing the prosecution were able to confirm that in fact there are only 6 documents produced by Colonel Bako upon which the prosecution seek to rely which are not within the intergovernmental documents and which the defence do not object to. They are documents involving the defendant or his companies which he is in a position to controvert.
21. We went through a large number of the intergovernmental documents at the hearing but they all have the same character, namely documents created by and communications between the various ministries involved in the process by which the payments for the contracts were authorised and made. They comprise letters, official forms and minutes involving a number of different officials with their respective stamps. Some, but not all, of the intergovernmental documents, would appear to have been signed by General Abacha or Colonel Marwa. If those which have been signed by General Abacha and Colonel Marwa are forgeries then the operation would have been immensely sophisticated. Unknown persons would have had to have replaced individual documents within a run of documents involving signatures of a number of different parties in order, it is suggested, to implicate General Abacha or Colonel Marwa or to extricate themselves.
22. There is nothing on the face of the documents which counsel or I have seen which gives any indication that they are not authentic and there is no extraneous evidence to support an allegation that they are forgeries. The sums mentioned in the intergovernmental documents tally with the sums other documents show the accounts controlled by the defendant received in Jersey.
23. As to the process by which the documents were obtained, it is true that the Nigerian court has recently declared that the evidence gathering process undertaken by Commissioner Gana pursuant to the letters of request was unlawful but this was not known by the parties involved at the time. As I said in my judgment of 9th November, 2009, the evidence gathering process was undertaken by those involved in good faith.
24. The intergovernmental documents have been obtained through Commissioner Gana, a Deputy Commissioner in the Nigerian Police Force and chairman of the Special Investigation Panel, the authority appointed by the Nigerian Government at the time to deal with the letters of request, from public officials at the ministries involved, namely Mr Nada, director of Central Bank of Nigeria, Mr Al Hassan, the Permanent Secretary to the Nigerian Ministry of Defence and Mr Bawa, the Chief Legal Officer of INEC. None of the documents which concern the defence come from Colonal Bako but even if the defence concerns about Colonel Bako, are justified, they cannot reasonably be allowed to colour the whole of the evidence gathering process undertaken by Commissioner Gana with these ministries; nor can general speculation about the level of corruption in Nigeria.
25. Having regard to the nature and source of these documents, created some 12 years ago, I think it most unlikely that any of them have been fabricated in order to implicate General Abacha and Colonel Marwa or to extricate others or for any other purpose. They make no assertions as to the honesty or dishonesty of the defendant but deal with the processes by which the sums due under the contracts were paid by the Nigerian government.
26. It is true that the defendant cannot controvert the intergovernmental documents, but as made clear in Foxley it is a question of balancing the competing interests. There are a substantial number of Nigerian documents which the defendant is in a position to controvert and he can of course give evidence as to the true nature of his involvement with General Abacha and Colonel Marwa.
27. In conclusion, I am satisfied that the conditions for the admission of the documents obtained under the letters of request are satisfied, that they are therefore admissible in the proceedings and that it is in the interests of justice that they be admitted.