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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Halim, R v [2017] EWCA Crim 33 (10 February 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2017/33.html Cite as: [2017] EWCA Crim 33 |
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ON APPEAL FROM CROYDON CROWN COURT
HH Judge Gower QC
T 2013 0042
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE BLAKE
and
HH JUDGE LEONARD QC (sitting as a Judge of the Court of Appeal)
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Regina |
Appellant |
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and |
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Akim Halim |
Respondent |
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Ms Lisa Freeman for the defence
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Simon:
(1) The Court may –
(a) Proceed under section 6 before it sentences the defendant for the offences (or any of the offences) concerned, or
(b) Postpone proceedings under section 6 for a specified period.
(2) A period of postponement may be extended.
(3) A period of postponement (including one as extended) must not end after the permitted period ends.
(4) But subsection (3) does not apply if there are exceptional circumstances
(5) The permitted period is the period of two years starting with the date of conviction.
36. Enough has been said to show that Lord Steyn's prediction in Soneji (see para 1 above) was sadly entirely accurate. The Law Commission has expressed interest in reviewing the confiscation legislation. It may be that amongst the topics which would merit review are (1) the best way of providing realistically for the sequencing of sentencing and confiscation and (2) the status of procedural requirements in the Act.
37. The Act must, however, be obeyed as it stands. Confiscation proceedings are particularly susceptible to drift. They must not be allowed to suffer it. They need not always be complicated, and efforts should be made by the Crown, as well as the courts, to simplify them. It will often be in the interests of defendants to delay. In overstretched police and CPS offices it may often be tempting to give priority to something other than confiscation. Courts have got to be alive to these realities. It may help to echo the useful practical guidance offered by Irwin J, giving the judgment of the Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) in Johal:
48. ... We re-emphasise the message given at para 13 by this court in R v T [2010] EWCA Crim 2703. The fact that the courts will not wish to see the intention of Parliament defeated by technical points taken to stave off meritorious confiscation orders, does not mean that the obligations under the Act can be taken lightly. It is essential that listing officers, acting as they do on behalf of judges and discharging a judicial function delegated to them for day-to-day administration, pay close regard to the procedural steps laid down in section 14. Listing officers should be aware of the necessity to adhere to the two-year limit. They should be alive to the risk that the parties may not alert them to such a problem. They should be aware of the requirement to consider whether there are exceptional circumstances before a postponement beyond two years is granted. They should be aware of the obligation not to postpone generally but to specify a date when there is to be a postponement. It would be wise for listing officers to consult the resident judge when any such problem is likely to arise. It would also be wise to keep a record of what was taken into consideration at the time, and in particular whether any exceptional circumstances arose which justified postponement.
39. Standing back from all the authorities, it is clear in our judgment that the intention of Parliament was that a broad approach should be taken to what constitutes 'exceptional circumstances'. Indeed, in the approach to section 14 generally, Parliament's intention must be taken to be to ensure that confiscation proceedings go ahead and are effective without technical problems of timing and timetabling acting as a bar to recovery. Adherence to the timetable is an obligation, as we shall re-emphasise later in this judgment, but the approach to strict failures to comply should reflect that intention of Parliament.
On the 9 July this year, the Crown Prosecution Service wrote to say that the addendum to the section 17 response, which had been ordered on the 15 May and which was due by the 12 June, had not then been served. That left, they said, the prosecution with insufficient time for the investigator to produce his report by the 10 July. That response was submitted on the last working day of last week, Friday, the 14 of August, and I have considered that response.
It is self-evident that the parties are very substantially apart as to the benefit enjoyed. The defendant has produced a mass of paper including, on my preliminary perusal, some limited detail in respect of rental income. The Crown criticise the disclosure, suggesting that figures are unsupported by evidence and at variance with other documents.
I have also looked, very briefly, at the short addendum, indicating that the total pages now run to no fewer than 268 pages. In addition, in the judge's file, I find 104 pages of spreadsheet analysis.
My consideration of the papers has been limited in time, but I have to say candidly that I am presently at a loss to understand how this quantity of complex paperwork in what has been described - and I think rightly described - as an intricate and complicated investigation could ever be dealt with within the timescale originally provided.