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Jersey Unreported Judgments |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> AG v Martins and Others [2007] JRC 207 (09 November 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2007/2007_207.html Cite as: [2007] JRC 207 |
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[2007]JRC207
ROYAL COURT
(Samedi Division)
9th November 2007
Before : |
F. C. Hamon, O.B.E., Commissioner (sitting alone). |
The Attorney General
-v-
Fabio Andre Fernandes Martins
Claudio Rodrigues de Freitas
Joao Carlo Ornelas Martins
Crown Advocate C. E. Whelan for the Attorney General.
Advocate M. L. Preston for F. Martins
Advocate P. S. Landick for de Freitas.
Advocate M. H. Temple for J. Martins
JUDGMENT
THE COMMISSIONER:
1. An indictment was laid against the three accused in the Samedi Court on Friday 31st August. All three pleaded not guilty. The indictment charged all three with "attempting to acquire property representing the proceeds of drug trafficking contrary to Article 38(1) of the Drug Trafficking Offences (Jersey) Law 1988" and the offence was particularised in this way:-
"Fabio Andre Fernandes Martins, Claudio Rodrigues de Freitas and Joao Carlos Ornelas Martins on 13th March, 2007, attempted to acquire property, directly or indirectly, with the proceeds of drug trafficking by Vittoriano Sousa Gomes."
2. We ordered a preliminary hearing on a point of law. I sat alone to hear this legal argument.
3. It may be useful to work out the relevant Articles of the Drug Trafficking Law. Article 38(1) states that:-
4. Article 1(1) of the 1988 Law reads:-
5. It is argued by Counsel for the defence that the indictment is defective because firstly, it omits an essential element of the alleged offence, namely the knowledge that the property that was being sought was, directly or indirectly, the proceeds of the drug dealing carried out by the convicted drug trafficker Vittoriano Gomes and secondly, that there is no offence in Jersey customary or statutory law of attempting to commit the offence created in Article 38(1).
6. This is an inchoate offence and what is required is the full intent to commit the offence contemplated and it is clear to me that the mental element of an attempt is an intention to bring the substantive offence into effect. There is, in Article 38(1) an element of knowledge. The Article specifically says that:-
7. It is not in dispute that despite careful searching of the garden which was being dug in the early hours of the morning, there was nothing there. That does not, in my view, destroy the prosecution's case. It is clearly not an argument since Ruban v AG [1987-88] JLR 204 makes it an offence in Jersey to attempt the impossible.
8. Whether or not the acts done can be regarded as "immediately connected" with the crime contemplated is a matter for trial.
9. As the Court said in Ruban (at page 218):-
10. Article 1 of the Law does not create the offence but it recognises the customary law offence of attempting to acquire the proceeds of drug trafficking.
11. This takes me on to the second point, most ably argued by defence counsel, that there is no offence in Jersey customary law of attempting to commit a statutory offence. The argument put more finely by Advocate Preston is whether "a definition in an interpretation section in a statute is, without more, sufficient to create an offence". He cites, as one of many examples, Article 27 of the Road Traffic (Jersey) Law 1956 (as amended) which says specifically:-
12. That may well be so but Crown Advocate Whelan cites several statutes such as the Loi (1884) sur les Matieres Explosives; section 1 of the Aviation Security Act 1982 (again extended by Order in Council); and Article 2 of the Protection of Children (Jersey) Law 1994. The statute in question - the draft Criminal Offences (Jersey) Law - is still awaiting sanction by the Privy Council but it appears to me to do no more than to codify the law in relation particularly to attempts to provide the mode of trial and to set out that the maximum penalty for an attempted statutory offence is the same as that for the substantive offence.
13. It is clear that in England an attempt to commit an indictable offence is a common law misdemeanour unless it is made a felony by statute. In this jurisdiction, in my view, there are clear examples where inchoate offences relating to statutory offences are regarded as part of the customary law, although they are not made criminal within the statute which creates the offence. An example was given to us by Crown Advocate Whelan. The Customs and Excise (Jersey) Law 1999 does not specifically mention conspiracy, yet conspiracy to evade the prohibition on the importation of controlled drugs ahs been charged, tried and punished on very many occasions. It appears to me that the Jersey customary law of attempt is similar to the English common law and on that basis it would seem unnecessary to distinguish in this Island between attempt and other inchoate offences. I regret that I cannot follow the passage cited to me by Advocate Preston from the 4th Edition of Bennion on Statutory Interpretation which states:-
14. In my view, this is not a case which calls in aid this principle. This does not mean that there will not be legal argument at trial. For a moment, I need to look at the mode of trial. This will, of course, depend on whether I decide that Article 1 of the 1998 Law creates a statutory offence or whether the attempt is a customary offence. It seems perverse that the full offence would be tried before the Inferior Number yet the lesser offence would be an assize trial. All defence counsel were of the view that AG v Pennington [1970] JJ 1349 was wrongly decided. I find that argument is insupportable particularly as it was followed in AG v Weston [1980] JLR 43. In those two cases the Court summarised authorities with some care. In my view there is no alternative as the law stands but for the defendant's to be tried before the Inferior Number, and I so order.