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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 >> Greater Manchester Police, R (on the application of) v Manchester Crown Court [2022] EWHC 3709 (Admin) (01 November 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2022/3709.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 3709 (Admin) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION,
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT,
DIVISIONAL COURT
1 Bridge Street West Manchester M60 9DJ Wednesday 1 November 2022 |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE FORDHAM
____________________
R (on the application of) | ||
THE CHIEF CONSTABLE OF GREATER MANCHESTER POLICE | Claimant | |
- and - | ||
MANCHESTER CROWN COURT | Defendant | |
- and - | ||
RAJA IMTIAZ | Interested Party |
____________________
The Defendant did not appear and was not represented.
The Interested Party did not appear and was not represented.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE POPPLEWELL:
Introduction
1. Mr Imtiaz, then aged 33, had a criminal record comprising ten convictions between 2004 and 2019, including for offences of drug supply and possession of imitation firearms with intent to resist arrest.
2. Following the execution of a drugs warrant at his address in 2012, there were found a quantity of high purity cocaine, cutting agents, scales, snap bags and a debtors' list, together with £3,140 in cash. Mr Imtiaz was not prosecuted in relation to these offences but a forfeiture order was made under Part 5 of POCA in respect of the cash, on the grounds that it was the proceeds of drugs supply. Mr Imtiaz unsuccessfully appealed against that order, claiming that the money had been given to him by his grandmother.
3. On 14 March 2017 Mr Imtiaz was convicted of dangerous driving, possession with intent to supply cocaine, possession with intent to supply cannabis, and possession of heroin. He was sentenced to three years' imprisonment. There had been seized from Mr Imtiaz, following his arrest, the sum of £15,200 in cash "which subsequently set off a confiscation order following his conviction for drugs supply", in the words of para.15 of the statement. No further details were given on the confiscation order which, as will be seen, features at the heart of the issues before us. However, at para.18 of his statement, DC Pickup said:
"The activity that has taken place in this account since it was opened supports the belief covered by Greater Manchester Police that it was being used to launder the hidden proceeds of the respondent's criminal past, which were not identified and restrained during the confiscation investigation into him."
4. Mr Imtiaz was released on licence and within two weeks opened the Monzo bank account. The account statement obtained under a production order of 20 October 2020 and exhibited to DC Pickup's statement showed that the £6,654 remaining in the account had been funded by two payments from one "K Hussain", of £5,000 and £25,000, paid respectively on 26 May and 5 June 2020. DC Pickup had, in the meantime, before the production order had been obtained, already identified these payments and asked Mr Imtiaz about them, as well as seeking other details in relation to the account. In correspondence Mr Imtiaz said that Mr Hussain was a customer of a bitcoin investment advisory business, which he, Mr Imtiaz, ran and that he, Mr Imtiaz, had done due diligence checks on Mr Hussain but had not met him since 11 June 2020. In one communication Mr Imtiaz said that he had asked Mr Hussain for the documentation which DC Pickup had requested from him in order to investigate the source of the funds, but that Mr Hussain had declined to provide it to Mr Imtiaz. Mr Imtiaz produced very little documentation in response to DC Pickup's detailed request for evidence to support the alleged operation of a bitcoin business.
5. DC Pickup had identified the "K Hussain" as Khalif Hussain, with a known date of birth and address. That Khalif Hussain featured in an unrelated account-freezing investigation, which had revealed that he, Khalif Hussain, had received £100,000 in criminal proceeds from a Mr Madni, the latter being someone who was also subject to forfeiture proceedings in relation to a sum of some £92,000.
6. Khalif Hussain's tax report showed that he had not had any employment since 2017 and there was no record of any PAYE or self-assessment income for him.
7. A production order over Khalif Hussain's Lloyd's bank account revealed payments by him into bank accounts at Halifax and Barclays Bank in the name of Mr Imtiaz, of a further £170,000 – at about the same time as the two payments into Mr Imtiaz's Monzo bank account – giving a total transferred by Khalif Hussain to Mr Imtiaz between 26 May and 8 June 2020 of £200,000.
8. DC Pickup summarised GMP's case at paras.42 to 44 of his statement in the following terms:
"42. The respondent is a career criminal who has profited from his past criminality, namely drug dealing. There is no evidence to back up the respondent's claim that he is operating a crypto currency trading business. If this were true, there would be financial records, proof of due diligence, contracts, accountants, book-keeping records. The only material supplied by the respondent has been a few screenshots of his Coinbase and Monzo bank account, which took him 3 months to provide.
43. From the outset the respondent has tried to frustrate this investigation by creating a lot of empty noise – something which he reportedly did during the two previous POCA investigations against him. There has been nothing produced by the respondent to date that is near credible.
44. Within 6 months of being released from prison for a drug related offence, the respondent received bank transfers totalling £200,000 from a jobless 23-year-old who has failed to engage with this investigation from the outset and whom the respondent has been reluctant to disclose the identity of. Most of this money has been carefully laundered by the respondent and at least £70,000 has been converted into crypto-currency. What remains is subject to today's application for forfeiture and which in my opinion represents recoverable property."
The Law
"General purpose of this Part
(1) This Part has effect for the purposes of -
(a) enabling the enforcement authority to recover, in civil proceedings before the High Court or Court of Session, property which is, or represents, property obtained through unlawful conduct,
(b) enabling property which is, or represents, property obtained through unlawful conduct, or which is intended to be used in unlawful conduct, to be forfeited in civil proceedings before a magistrates' court or (in Scotland) the sheriff and, in certain circumstances, to be forfeited by the giving of a notice.
(2) The powers conferred by this Part are exercisable in relation to any property (including cash) whether or not any proceedings have been brought for an offence in connection with the property."
"(2) ... if satisfied that there are reasonable grounds for suspecting that the money held in the account (whether all or part of the credit balance of the account) -
(a) is recoverable property ..."
"The court or sheriff may order the forfeiture of the money or any part of it if satisfied that the money or part -
(a) is recoverable property ..."
"(1) Property obtained through unlawful conduct is recoverable property."
"Property is not recoverable if it has been taken into account in deciding the amount of a person's benefit from criminal conduct for the purpose of making a confiscation order, that is -
(a) an order under section 6 ..."
"(1) A person obtains property through unlawful conduct (whether his own conduct or another's) if he obtains property by or in return for the conduct.
(2) In deciding whether any property was obtained through unlawful conduct -
(a) it is immaterial whether or not any money, goods or services were provided in order to put the person in question in a position to carry out the conduct,
(b) it is not necessary to show that the conduct was of a particular kind if it is shown that the property was obtained through conduct of one of a number of kinds, each of which would have been unlawful conduct."
The Crown Court Hearing
"... because the Crown Court has offered no evidence as to the benefit figure, which is the very starting point, because in order for the Crown and the government to take any proceeds of crime they have to first calculate what those proceeds of crime would be for the relevant offence, and in the circumstances I have no evidence ... of what that figure might be ..."
The grounds
a. Ground 2: the Crown Court erred in law by failing to approach the appeal by reference to whether, as a matter of fact on the evidence, the conditions in s.303Z14(4)(a) were made out;
b. Ground 3: the Crown Court erred in law in treating findings in the confiscation proceedings as though they were determinative of the separate forfeiture proceedings; and
c. Ground 5: the Crown Court erred in law by requiring the GMP to prove that the contents of the frozen Monzo account were part of Mr Imtiaz's benefit from offences of which he had been convicted.
"The High Court -
(a) must refuse to grant relief on an application for judicial review ...
if it appears to the court to be highly likely that the outcome for the applicant would not have been substantially different if the conduct complained of had not occurred."
1. The burden of proof lay upon Mr Imtiaz, not GMP, to prove on the balance of probabilities that the exception applied. The absence of evidence as to the benefit figure and the basis of its calculation could not, therefore, be a ground for dismissing the appeal without considering the other evidence in the case.
2. The court would have been entitled to conclude that the Monzo account money had not been taken into account in calculating the benefit figure in the confiscation order on the evidence which was already before the court, notwithstanding that it had no evidence of the precise figure or how it was calculated.
3. Even if the burden of proof had been on the GMP, and the evidence of the benefit figure and how it was calculated had been critical to the outcome of the appeal, the Crown Court might well have granted the GMP an adjournment to another date to obtain the evidence had it understood its relevance to be for the purposes of the s.308(9) exception.
I will take each of those in turn to explain, in a little further detail, why I regard each of those as reasons why the result might well have been different.
The Burden of Proof
a. The general rule is that he who asserts must prove (see for example Joseph Constantine Steamships Line Ltd v. Imperial Smelting Corporation Ltd [1942] AC 154 at p.174). It is for the respondent to assert that what is otherwise recoverable property, as a product of unlawful conduct, as established by the applicant, is taken out of the realm of recoverable property by an application of one of the exceptions in s.308.
b. The variety of exceptions, which are contained in s.308 of POCA mean that it would be impose an unworkable burden on the applicant to have to prove that none of them apply in every single case. Moreover the information in respect of them will typically be exclusively within the knowledge of the respondent and which only the respondent will be in a position to raise. Section 308(3), for example, excepts property if it has been used to satisfy a judgment in a civil claim based on the unlawful conduct in question. Section 308(1) excepts property in the hands of a bone fide purchaser for value without notice. Sections 308(4) to (7)(a) except property which has been applied pursuant to orders made under various statutory provisions.
c. The same is true generally of confiscation orders. While the confiscation order in this case arose out of an investigation by the same police force as brought the forfeiture application that will not necessarily be the case. It cannot be said that the applicant for a Part 5 forfeiture order will always be able, by virtue of its knowledge of prior proceedings, to collate and present evidence as to the absence of an exception under s.308(9).
d. Conversely there is no substantive prejudice to respondents in bearing the burden under s.308(9), or indeed under s.308 more generally. It will be within the knowledge of the respondent whether the exception can be relied on, and the evidence in support will generally be in the respondent's hands. To the extent that such evidence may unusually lie in the applicant's hand, applicants are under a duty of disclosure in civil proceedings in the magistrates' court (see R (Clearing) v. Highbury Corner Magistrates' Court [2006] EWHC 1869 (Admin) [34]).
Other Evidence
Adjournment
Disposal
Mr JUSTICE FORDHAM: