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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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[2022] ZAWCHC 184
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## Director of Public Prosecutions, Western Cape v Mhlanga N.O. and Another; Tucker v Director of Public Prosecutions, Western Cape (19434/17; A37/18)
[2022] ZAWCHC 184; [2022] 4 All SA 332 (WCC);
2023 (1) SACR 245 (WCC) (16 September 2022)
Director of Public Prosecutions, Western Cape v Mhlanga N.O. and Another; Tucker v Director of Public Prosecutions, Western Cape (19434/17; A37/18)
[2022] ZAWCHC 184; [2022] 4 All SA 332 (WCC);
2023 (1) SACR 245 (WCC) (16 September 2022)
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sino date 16 September 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
[WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN]
[REPORTABLE]
Case
nos:
19434
/17; A37/18
In
the matter between:
THE
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS,
WESTERN
CAPE
Applicant
and
THE
MAGISTRATE AT CAPE TOWN,
DR
VP MHLANGA
N.O
First respondent
LEE
NIGEL
TUCKER
Second respondent
AND
:
Case
no:
In
the matter between:
LEE
NIGEL
TUCKER
Applicant
and
THE
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS,
WESTERN
CAPE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED (VIA EMAIL) ON 16 SEPTEMBER 2022
SHER,
J (SAMELA J concurring):
1.
There are 3 matters before us. They concern
Mr Lee Nigel Tucker (‘Tucker’), who is wanted for trial
in the United Kingdom
on 50 charges which, in the main, pertain to
the alleged rape and sexual assault of children between 1983 and
1993, in England
and Wales.
2.
The first of the matters concerns a referral by the magistrate
of
Wynberg to this Court for review, in terms of the provisions of
s
304(4)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
, of the decision
which he previously made on 10 November 2017, whereby he held that
Tucker was liable to be extradited to the UK.
The basis for the
referral was that during follow-up proceedings which took place
before him in November 2021 the magistrate had
come to the view that
there had been a failure of justice in the proceedings in 2017 and
that he had erred in holding that Tucker
was liable to be extradited.
In response to this the Director of Public Prosecutions in turn seeks
to review and set aside the
magistrate’s decision to refer the
matter to this Court, on the basis that it was irregular and
incompetent in law. Contingent
on the outcome of these matters is an
application by Tucker that he be released on bail.
The
relevant facts
(i)
T
he extradition enquiry in 2017
3.
In
the judgment which we previously handed down on 28 March 2019
[1]
we set out the factual background and history of events which gave
rise to the extradition enquiry which took place before the
magistrate in November 2017, in some detail. It is not necessary to
regurgitate what was said in that regard and I will attempt
to
provide only a summary of the salient aspects, insofar as is
necessary.
4.
In 1997 the British police launched an
investigation into the activities of a paedophile ring which operated
in Bristol (in England)
and in Cardiff, Swansea and Caerphilly (in
Wales), which resulted in several men being prosecuted. Following the
initial convictions,
Tucker and two other males were arrested in
October-November 1999 and arraigned in the Bristol Crown Court on
some 31 counts which
involved sexual offences such as ‘buggery’
(sodomy) and indecent assault. One of the accused entered a plea of
guilty
to some of the charges.
5.
During the trial that followed the
complainants testified that the appellant and his co-accused had
non-consensual anal and oral
sex with them at various locations in
England and Wales, when they were under the age of 16 years, and
often at a time when they
were drugged or under the influence of
alcohol. At the conclusion of the trial the jury were called upon to
render a verdict on
28 of the 31 counts.
6.
On 4 October 2000 they found Tucker guilty
on 9 counts and his co-accused on 10 counts. Aside from a conviction
on a charge of administering
a ‘stupefying’ drug, the
remaining 8 charges on which Tucker was found guilty were in respect
of sexual offences. Tucker
was not present when the verdict was
handed down as he had ‘jumped’ bail and absconded two
days earlier. He was sentenced
to 8 years imprisonment, in his
absence.
7.
Although he was a fugitive, he nonetheless
lodged an appeal against his conviction. On 29 May 2002 the Court of
Appeal upheld the
appeal and quashed his conviction as well as that
of his co-accused, as it was of the view that the verdict could not
be regarded
as safe, because the trial judge’s summing-up for
the jury had been inadequate. On some of the charges the necessary
particularity
as regards the date and place when and where the
offences had been committed had been insufficient, and the trial
judge had not
provided the jury with the necessary directions as to
the evidence which was applicable to the charges.
8.
The
Court of Appeal directed that, given the seriousness of the offences,
Tucker and his co-appellant should be re-tried on the
selfsame
charges.
[2]
A re-indictment on
the 8 sexual offences was duly lodged against Tucker at Bristol Crown
Court the following day, and a warrant
for his arrest was issued in
July 2002.
9.
Some 14 years after Tucker absconded the
British police received information that he was living in South
Africa. He was arrested
in Cape Town in March 2016 and a formal
application for his extradition was presented by the British High
Commission a few weeks
later. In papers which were lodged in support
of the application it appeared that apart from the original 8
offences on which Tucker
was sought for retrial, his extradition was
also sought in respect of several additional sexual offences. It was
pertinently stated
in this regard in the affidavit of police officer
Detective Constable Mildren, that these were ‘new’
offences in respect
of which Tucker had not previously been
prosecuted, albeit that some of them concerned complainants who had
testified against him
previously, in respect of similar offences. The
remaining charges emanated from additional complainants who had been
traced following
a further investigation.
10.
Tucker
appeared before the magistrate of Cape Town at an extradition
enquiry,
[3]
on 13 October 2017.
At the commencement thereof the prosecutor handed up a certificate,
in terms of s 10(2) of the Extradition
Act, which had been supplied
by the Chief Prosecutor of the Crown Prosecution Service of England
and Wales, in which it was declared
that the evidence which was
referred to in the request for Tucker’s extradition was
available for trial and was sufficient
under the law of England and
Wales to justify his prosecution.
11.
Notwithstanding
that s 10(2) expressly provides that for the purposes of satisfying
himself whether there is sufficient evidence
to warrant a prosecution
in a requesting state the magistrate at an extradition enquiry shall
accept, as conclusive proof, a certificate
to that effect which is
issued by the competent authority in charge of the prosecution in the
foreign state, Tucker’s counsel
contended that inasmuch as the
Act required
[4]
that proceedings
at an extradition enquiry were to be conducted in a manner in which a
preparatory examination was to be held,
[5]
the prosecutor was obliged to put forward evidence
viva
voce
,
whereafter Tucker would be required to plead to the charges on which
extradition was sought and would then have an opportunity
to testify
and to call witnesses in his defence.
12.
The
magistrate indicated, quite correctly,
[6]
that he did not understand that this was how the proceedings should
be conducted. Nonetheless, Tucker’s counsel reiterated
his
stance that the prosecutor was required to present oral evidence and
contended that inasmuch as the evidence which was contained
in the
affidavits which had been put forward by the British police in
support of the extradition was not first-hand and was largely
hearsay, it was inadmissible. He also contended that sufficient
particularity had not been provided in relation to several of the
charges which had been preferred against Tucker.
13.
Importantly, he did
not
contend that the UK authorities were impermissibly seeking to
extradite Tucker to stand trial on charges on which he had previously
been prosecuted and acquitted. Instead, he claimed that in view of
the provisions of s 7(2) of the UK Criminal Appeals Act of 1968
Tucker could not be extradited to face trial on any charges but those
on which he had previously been arraigned, and in this regard
he
indicated that they were in the process of obtaining a copy of an
original indictment on which he had stood trial in the
Swindon
Crown Court, in order that they could demonstrate that the fresh
indictment which was filed against him in the Bristol Crown Court
in
April 2016 contained ‘different’ charges, in breach of s
7(2).
The Swindon indictment was however never produced.
14.
As
we pointed out in our previous judgment
[7]
the appellant’s contention that s 7(2) served as a bar to him
being extradited to stand trial on the additional offences
which were
set out in the fresh indictment, was disingenuous. The section simply
provides that in the event of a successful appeal
against a criminal
conviction in the UK, the Court of Appeal in the UK (and not a Court
of any state in which extradition is sought)
may only direct that the
accused be retried on the offences of which he was originally
convicted,
[8]
or any offence which might have been an alternative offence to that
with which he was originally charged, or a competent verdict
in
respect thereof.
[9]
In ordering that the appellant was to be re-tried in respect of the
same offences for which he originally stood trial in Bristol
the
Court of Appeal thus did no more than to give effect to the
provisions of s 7(2), and the trial indictment which was lodged
at
the Bristol Crown Court in April 2016 accorded with that directive.
But that did not mean that the UK authorities could not
seek Tucker’s
extradition on additional, fresh charges which were to be preferred
against him at subsequent proceedings,
in respect of fresh complaints
and in fact, by virtue of the rule of speciality, which is
fundamental to extradition law, unless
his extradition was granted on
the additional charges as well the UK authorities would not be able
to prosecute him on them.
[10]
15.
After the prosecutor indicated that in
light of the provisions of s 10(2) of the Act he did not intend to
present any oral evidence,
Tucker then proceeded to testify, at which
time he denied that he had committed any of the alleged offences and
averred that the
media coverage to which he had been subjected
subsequent to his arrest in Cape Town had occurred in violation of
the injunction
which the Court of Appeal had placed on reporting.
Consequently, so he claimed, it was impossible for him to receive a
fair trial
in the UK.
16.
When
his evidence was concluded Tucker requested that he be allowed to
place before the magistrate some of the media reports to
which he
took exception, together with an affidavit from an expert on British
law, which he claimed would show that it discriminated
unfairly
against homosexuals, so that this material could be included in the
record which was submitted by the magistrate to the
Minister for his
decision. The magistrate declined to allow him to do so, and on 10
November 2017 he handed down a judgment in
which he rejected the
complaint that the charges which had been preferred against Tucker
lacked sufficient particularity and held
that in view of the s 10(2)
certificate from the Chief Prosecutor there was sufficient evidence
to hand on which to prosecute him
in the UK, and he was therefore
liable to be extradited.
[11]
Consequently, he made an order committing Tucker to prison, whilst
awaiting the Minister’s decision as to his surrender.
17.
The magistrate’s findings and the
order which he made were challenged on appeal and review to this
Court, largely on the same
basis as which Tucker’s liability to
be extradited was challenged before the magistrate. In this regard it
was similarly
contended that the affidavits on which the UK
authorities sought to rely constituted impermissible hearsay, that
the charges on
which extradition was sought had not been set out with
sufficient particularity, and that as Tucker had been subjected to
unfair
media coverage contrary to the injunction which had been
granted by the Court of Appeal, if he were to be extradited it would
result
in the breach of his right to a fair trial in the UK.
18.
In addition to these grounds, Tucker also
contended that the irregular and discourteous manner in which he had
been treated by the
prosecutor and the magistrate had been grossly
unfair. Not only had the magistrate allowed the prosecutor to subject
him to cross-examination
that was objectionable, but the magistrate
had improperly refused to allow him to present the affidavit in
regard to the allegedly
discriminatory features of English law and to
submit extracts of the unfair media coverage to which he had been
subjected.
19.
We
held that, save in respect of the complaints as to the magistrate’s
refusal to allow the admission of the affidavit by
a British expert
and the submission of the media reports, there was no merit in the
appeal and the review. We were of the view
that in the light of
decisions of the SCA and the Constitutional Court
[12]
the magistrate was obliged to accept this material even though it
pertained to the Minister’s decision as to whether Tucker
should be surrendered, and not to the magistrate’s
determination of whether he was extraditable. In the circumstances we
directed that, for this purpose, the matter should be remitted to the
magistrate in order to afford Tucker an opportunity to put
such
material before him, so that it could be transmitted to the Minister
together with the magistrate’s report, as envisaged
in terms of
s 10(4) of the Act.
20.
Tucker
was dissatisfied with the ruling we made and sought to appeal it to
the Supreme Court of Appeal, which was unsuccessful,
as was a
petition for reconsideration by the president of the SCA. One would
have thought that in the circumstances the DPP would
have taken steps
to have the matter remitted to the magistrate as a matter of urgency,
with a view to finalizing the extradition
process as soon as
possible. Instead, the DPP allowed itself to be inveigled into making
application to the Constitutional Court
for leave to appeal our order
for remittal. Argument was heard in the matter on 3 November 2020.
Judgment was handed down some
10 months later, on 6 September 2021,
at which time the application for leave to appeal was dismissed and
the terms of the remittal
order we made were confirmed.
[13]
21.
It is important to mention that the order
which the magistrate made on 10 November 2017 whereby he held that
Tucker was liable to
be extradited to the UK (on
the charges
listed in the indictment which was lodged with the Bristol Crown
Court on 31 March 2016 as well as for the additional
offences as set
out in the warrant which was issued by the North Avon magistrates’
court on 26 February 2016), which was
confirmed by us on appeal on 28
March 2019, was thus not affected by the outcome of the proceedings
and the order of the Constitutional
Court.
(ii)
T
he remittal proceedings in October-November 2021
22.
Tucker did not comply with the terms of the
remittal order. Instead of filing an affidavit by an expert on
British law, he presented
a 21-page affidavit which he had deposed
to, on 12 October 2021, in which he sought not only to refer to a
‘bundle’
of press releases in the UK and SA, but also to
re-challenge the decision that he be extradited (notwithstanding that
the 2017
order that he be extradited was confirmed by this Court in
2019 and endorsed by the Constitutional Court in the proceedings
before
it in 2020-2021). Many of the grounds on which he sought to do
so were a repetition of the grounds previously advanced by him in
2017. But there were also some new ones.
23.
He said that he had made the affidavit for
the purpose of demonstrating that 1) he was not extraditable 2) the
charges on which
his extradition was sought were ‘invalid’
and 3) the Minister was ‘constitutionally barred’ from
agreeing
to his surrender.
24.
Surprisingly, although he had never alleged
this during the extradition enquiry in 2017, he now claimed that he
had previously been
found not guilty on 44 of the 50 charges on which
he was being sought in the UK, and according to him the remaining 6
charges did
not constitute criminal offences in the UK. He claimed
that the UK police and prosecution services were aware of the
acquittals
and their pursuit of him was driven by homophobia and
malicious intent.
25.
He averred that he had obtained proof of
the acquittals a week before he deposed to his affidavit and referred
in this regard to
certain court and police records which he enclosed.
However, although this constituted grounds for him to seek a
rescission of
the order which had been made by the magistrate he did
not intend to do so ‘at this stage’ (sic) as he did not
have
the necessary ‘capital’ to pursue such an
application but might ‘nonetheless attempt to do so in the
future’
(sic).
26.
He further contended, without any apparent
acknowledgement of the irony involved, that he could not be
prosecuted in the UK because
the prosecution had failed to take the
necessary steps to have him rearraigned within 2 months of the
judgment of the Court of
Appeal, as it had directed. In addition, he
averred, once again, that the charges he was facing were still
‘obscure’
even though the Court of Appeal had admonished
the State to ensure that it furnished the necessary particularity.
And on some of
the charges (which he did not specify), he was not
‘even resident’ in the UK at the time.
27.
He then proceeded to comment on some of the
charges with reference to the complainants to whom they related. He
claimed that some
of these offences had already been pronounced upon
by the appeal court and the order for his retrial in respect of them
had ‘fallen
away’ (presumably because he had not been
re-indicted within 2 months). There was also no ‘assurance’
(sic) that
the charges he was facing pertained to conduct ‘different’
to that in respect of which he had previously been prosecuted.
Once
again, the irony is evident: whereas he contended in 2017 that he was
impermissibly being sought for retrial on charges which
were
different
to
those on which he had previously been tried, contrary to s 7(2) of
the UK Criminal Appeals Act of 1968, he now sought to contend
that he
was impermissibly being sought for trial in respect of offences which
were the
same
as those on which he had previously been acquitted.
28.
In
this regard, he now alleged that he had previously been acquitted by
the Crown Court of
Cardiff
(not Swindon) in October 1990 (i.e some 10 years before his trial in
the Bristol Crown Court in 2000), on several of the charges
he was
currently facing (these seem to comprise about 18 of the 50 charges
for which he is being sought
[14]
and pertain to 4 complainants), and could therefore not be extradited
to stand trial on them again.
29.
He also averred that certain of the charges
of ‘gross indecency’ he was facing were in respect of
offences which had
been found to be ‘inherently discriminatory’
and unconstitutional in the ‘language of South African law’
and amounted to the criminalization of homosexuality. According to
him, these offences stemmed from consensual sex he had with
other
adult males, none of whom had been below the age of consent at the
time.
30.
Lastly, in the final paragraph of his
affidavit he set out what he claimed were compelling humanitarian
reasons why he should not
be extradited. These included that he was
60 years old and had HIV, for which he had been receiving
anti-retroviral treatment since
1995, which had affected his liver
and kidney function, and he had been incarcerated for 4 years in a
correctional facility in
Cape Town after his earlier release on
‘house arrest’ had come to an end, when his bail had been
rescinded for breaching
the terms thereof.
31.
On 3 November 2021 Tucker’s new
counsel, Mr King SC, appeared before the magistrate, at which time he
declared that the matter
was before him because it had been directed
by the Court that Tucker had a ‘right to present evidence that
may be used for
the Minister’s decision’. Of course, this
was only true insofar as such evidence pertained to the allegedly
discriminatory
nature of British law and the media coverage to which
Tucker had been subjected. The terms of the order we made did not
give Tucker
licence to put anything before the magistrate which went
beyond that. Tucker had such a right only at the time of the original
hearing in 2017.
32.
Despite this, Mr King nonetheless sought
leave to hand up Tucker’s affidavit, with the aim that the
contents thereof should
be included by the magistrate in the record
of proceedings, for the attention of the Minister. He directed the
magistrate to those
portions of the affidavit in which Tucker claimed
that certain of the charges he was facing had been put against him in
‘blatant
disregard’ for the law, as he had been acquitted
of them by the Crown Court of Cardiff.
33.
When the magistrate rightly enquired
whether these averments could properly be raised in the proceedings
before him, Mr King responded
that the magistrate would surely never
send a person back to another country to stand trial on charges on
which he had previously
been acquitted. Although this was something
that the Minister was going to have to decide ‘as well’
(sic), the issue
was one which concerned extraditability, which did
not fall within the Minister’s authority and resorted within
the magistrate’s
remit.
34.
When the magistrate again expressed doubts
as to whether it was procedurally correct to raise these aspects in
the proceedings before
him, Mr King responded that as the magistrate
had decided the issue, if he ‘realized’ that a mistake
had been made
he should proceed in terms of ‘section 304’.
This was a reference to
s 304
of the
Criminal Procedure Act. After
the section had been read out to him the magistrate again commented
that from his understanding the proper way to remedy an alleged
irregularity was for the matter to be taken on review, and there was
nothing which had prevented Tucker from doing so.
35.
Mr King then alleged that there had been
further irregularities, in that the UK authorities sought to
prosecute Tucker in defiance
of the ‘absolute bar’ (sic)
which had been put in place by the Court of Appeal in regard to media
coverage, which had
been ‘ignored’. As is evident from
the judgment and order that was given by the Court of Appeal and from
what follows,
this statement was also not correct.
36.
In response to these submissions the
prosecutor rightly pointed out that the court had a very limited
function and was not there
to entertain a rehearing of the matter,
and it was clear from the judgment of the Court of Appeal (which
formed part of the extradition
papers) that Tucker had not been
acquitted on the 8 sexual offences on which he had been convicted in
the Bristol Crown Court and
these had merely been quashed on the
basis of a technical irregularity, and it had been directed that he
should be retried on them.
He contended that it had not been disputed
at the time of the original hearing in 2017 that the remaining
charges on which extradition
was sought concerned offences on which
Tucker had not previously stood trial. As far as the allegedly unfair
media coverage in
violation of the Court of Appeal’s injunction
was concerned, he submitted that whether this prevented Tucker from
having
a fair trial was something for the Bristol Crown Court to deal
with on his arraignment, and he reminded the magistrate that the
Court of Appeal had only decreed that pending a re-trial of
‘one or both’ of the accused, there was to be no
publication
of the proceedings
in the appeal court
. In
the light of the subsequent re-trial of Tucker’s co-accused
many years before Tucker’s arrest, the injunction no
longer
found application and had fallen away, and the media were not barred
from reporting on subsequent developments which pertained
to Tucker.
This too, was an aspect we dealt with in our judgment in 2019.
37.
At this juncture the magistrate remarked
that it had never been brought to his attention that there had been
such an order by the
Court of Appeal and that there was ‘quite
a lot’ that he had not been informed about. Given that the
judgment of the
Court of Appeal was included in the papers which were
before the magistrate at the time of the extradition hearing in 2017,
the
only conclusion that one can come to is not only that he failed
to have regard thereto at the time, but that in November 2021 he
also
failed to have regard for our judgment.
38.
In reply, Tucker’s counsel claimed
that the magistrate had been fed misleading information, be it
‘maliciously, negligently
or as a result of a pure oversight’,
which had led to him making a judgment that was ‘wrong’.
39.
At the conclusion of argument the
prosecutor asked for an opportunity to file a response from the
British prosecutors in relation
to the affidavit which had been made
by Tucker (as provided for in the order we made in 2019), and after
some to and fro the magistrate
indicated that he would be in a
position to give an indication on 19 November 2021 whether he had
enough information before him
in order to decide whether to send the
matter on review. To this end, the prosecutor undertook to provide an
answering affidavit
from the State before that date, whereupon the
matter was postponed
sine die
.
40.
On 12 November 2021 an affidavit in
response to the affidavit which had been submitted by Tucker was
furnished by the UK prosecution
service in the person of Mr Brendon
Scott Moorhouse, an independent barrister (who serves on the
Attorney-General’s Rape
and Serious Sexual Offences specialist
panel), who has been instructed to prosecute Tucker on the charges on
which he is sought
in the UK.
41.
He
confirmed, as per the averments which had originally been made by
Detective Constable Mildren in her affidavit of April 2016,
that
after a review and fresh investigation into Tucker’s criminal
activities subsequent to the decision of the Court of
Appeal in 2002,
a number of further charges were added in respect of offences on
which he had not previously stood trial. He reiterated
that although
some of these charges emanated from the selfsame complainants who had
previously testified against Tucker, they were
fresh charges, on
which he had not been prosecuted before. He also confirmed that a
number of additional complainants had come
forward with allegations
which formed the subject of some of the added charges, on which
Tucker had also not previously been prosecuted.
Moorhouse stated that
care had been taken by the prosecution authorities to ensure that
none of the offences in respect of which
Tucker’s extradition
was sought had been the subject of any previous prosecution, save for
those which the Court of Appeal
had directed that he be retried on.
In this regard he dealt,
[15]
in some detail, with all of the charges in respect of which Tucker’s
extradition was sought, with specific reference to each
of the
complainants to whom they related.
42.
In response to Tucker’s allegations
that he had previously been acquitted on certain charges involving
sexual offences in
the
Cardiff
Crown Court, Moorhouse indicated that no mention was made of this in
the extradition papers that were filed in 2016 because Tucker
was not
sought for retrial in respect of those offences and could not be
retried on them.
43.
From
the records which Tucker annexed to his affidavit, it appears that he
was in fact arraigned in the Crown Court at Cardiff,
on two
occasions.
[16]
On 24 May 1990
he was indicted on 10 counts of sexual offences against unidentified
males under the age of 16 years: these comprised
7 charges of gross
indecency, 2 of indecent assault and 1 of buggery, which had
allegedly been committed on specified dates between
18 March and 1
October 1989.
[17]
However it
appears he stood trial on 3 of these charges only: 2 counts of gross
indecency and 1 count of buggery, of which he was
acquitted on 11
October 1990, after the prosecution offered no evidence.
[18]
It is not apparent whether these charges pertained to more than one
complainant.
44.
In
September 1999 he was again committed for trial in Cardiff
[19]
on 10 counts, which included 6 charges of supplying Class A
controlled drugs
[20]
and 2
charges each of indecent assault and buggery of unidentified males,
who were under the age of 16 at the time, which had allegedly
been
committed between 1984-1985 and in January 1988, respectively. Once
again, it is not apparent how many individual complainants
these
charges related to. He was similarly acquitted on all the charges on
7 February 2000, as no evidence was put up by the State.
[21]
45.
As will be apparent from his affidavit,
Tucker only alleged that he was impermissibly being extradited in
respect of offences on
which he had previously stood trial in 1990,
and no such allegation was made in respect of the offences on which
he stood trial
in 1999. Strictly speaking therefore, whatever
happened in 1999 was not relevant and should probably be disregarded.
The difficulty
however is that the records pertaining to his
indictment in Cardiff in 1999 were included amongst the documents on
which he sought
to rely in support of his averment that he was being
sought for extradition in respect of offences on which he had
previously been
acquitted.
46.
Be
that as it may, given that the complainants on the offences on which
he was charged in Cardiff in 1990 and 1999 are not identifiable
from
the court records, these records are of little assistance and do not,
without more, serve to corroborate Tucker’s allegations
as to
his previous acquittals, in respect of offences pertaining to the
particular complainants which he referred to in his affidavit.
As for
the police records which he obtained,
[22]
these are from the South Wales police only, and from a perusal
thereof they also appear to be of little help. They consist of the
records of the processing of 4 ‘occurrences’ i.e.
complaints which were reported on 7 May 1999, in respect of incidents
of buggery which had taken place between 1984 and 1991. Four
complainants are identified in these records. (As one of them appears
to be a female
[23]
the entries
regarding her can be ignored, given that Tucker is only being
extradited on charges of having sexually abused identified
male
persons and her name does not appear amongst the complainants in
respect of the charges for which extradition is sought).
47.
In
regard to the remaining 3 complainants who are identified in the
police records (in order to protect their identity they will
simply
be referred to by their initials i.e. PC, CT and DB),
[24]
who are complainants in respect of some of the extraditable offences
in respect of which Tucker has been charged, Moorhouse pointed
out
that the offences which concern them are new offences which were
first disclosed by them in statements which they made to the
police
on 22 April 2015 (PC),
[25]
7
May 2015 (DB)
[26]
and 18
August 2015 (CT).
[27]
Consequently, Tucker could not previously have been tried for these
offences.
48.
Moorhouse’s affidavit was forwarded
to the magistrate by the prosecutor via email on the evening of 18
November 2021, under
cover of a detailed and comprehensive memorandum
in which the State sought to respond to the various submissions that
had been
made by Tucker in his affidavit of 12 October 2021.
49.
At the outset, it was contended therein
that the magistrate was bound to comply with the Order of this Court,
as confirmed by the
Constitutional Court, and there was no legal
basis for the matter to be sent on review in terms of the
Criminal
Procedure Act. In
this regard it was pointed out that this was not a
criminal matter and Tucker was not an accused person who had been
convicted
and sentenced, but an extraditee, who had been legally
represented.
50.
The
prosecutor also sought to make it clear that in seeking to respond to
Tucker’s allegations pertaining to his alleged prior
acquittals
the State was not to be understood as acceding to these submissions
being received by the magistrate and sought merely
to assist in order
to avoid the matter being sent erroneously on review, instead of to
the Minister for his decision. In regard
to these allegations, it was
in any event clear from Moorhouse’s affidavit that Tucker was
not being extradited in respect
of offences on which he had
previously been acquitted and this was not an issue on which our
Courts were required, or at liberty,
to pronounce upon and should be
raised by Tucker in the UK court before which he was to stand trial.
As for Tucker’s contentions
in relation to the allegedly unfair
media coverage, it was pointed out that the injunction of the Court
of Appeal was no longer
in force and the offences of which he was
charged had been committed more than 20 years ago, and any press
coverage subsequent
to his arrest was accordingly unlikely to
influence a jury. In this regard the prosecutor made reference to the
decision of the
UK Court of Appeal in 2006 in
Hamza
[28]
in which Lord Phillips CJ held
[29]
that English courts have not readily acceded to submissions that
pre-trial publicity will render a fair trial before a jury
impossible,
and are of the view that proper directions from the trial
judge to the jury together with the application of fair trial
procedures
will invariably result in the jury disregarding such
publicity, and there is no reason to believe that an English jury
will not
be able to consider a matter which is before it objectively
and impartially, on the evidence available. In
Hamza
the media had reported extensively
[30]
on the appellant during the course of a ‘media campaign’
which had been directed at him over a period of several years.
The
trial judge had accepted that the media had been hostile to the
appellant and had subjected him to coverage which was couched
in
particularly ‘crude’ terms. In order to minimize the
negative effect the coverage might have on the jury the trial
judge
directed that the matter should be adjourned for 6 months and once
the trial commenced, took great care to apprise the jury
of their
duties and to advise them what they were to disregard, throughout the
course of the proceedings. In the circumstances
the Court of Appeal
was of the view that the trial had been fair, and the jury’s
verdict was upheld.
The magistrate’s
‘judgment’ of 18 November 2021
51.
Instead of providing an indication to the
parties as to his view of whether the matter was to be sent on
review, as he had indicated
he would do, the morning after receiving
the DPP’s memorandum and the accompanying affidavit of
Moorhouse the magistrate
delivered a 17 page ‘judgment’
which was dated the day before, whereby he referred the matter to
this Court for ‘special
review’, in terms of
s 304(4)
of
the
Criminal Procedure Act. The
‘judgment’ made no
reference whatsoever to the affidavit of Moorhouse or the memorandum
from the DPP and was clearly
prepared without any regard thereto. On
that ground alone it was irregular and liable to be set aside, but
the contents of the
judgment are quite extraordinary, not only for
this reason.
52.
At the outset, immediately after quoting
the terms of the remittal order which had been made by this Court in
2019, the magistrate
stated, without any explanation, that despite
the clearly defined limits thereof Tucker had been given an
opportunity to present
an affidavit which went beyond it. On what
legal basis this was allowed, in violation of the order we made, was
not revealed. The
magistrate simply said that the affidavit brought
to light what could be sufficient details and grounds as to why
Tucker was ‘acquitted
or found not guilty’ (sic) by the
Court of Appeal (in 2002) viz that the (Bristol) indictment on which
he had been prosecuted
(in 2000) had not given any indication as to
the ‘precise’ allegations which gave rise to the
particular offences of
which he had been charged, save in the widest
possible terms. Aside from the error in incorrectly stating that
Tucker had been
‘acquitted’ by the Court of Appeal in
2002, how this justified entertaining an affidavit in 2021 which
breached the
terms of the remittal order of 2019 which authorized its
submission, is not apparent.
53.
The
magistrate said that after careful consideration of all the evidence
which had been presented and all the circumstances,
especially
Tucker’s latest affidavit,
he had a ‘serious lack of conviction’ as to whether
‘sufficient details’ of the offences on which Tucker
was
sought had been presented during the extradition hearing which had
taken place before him in November 2017. He was of the view
that
there had been an error (on his part?) in the assessment of the
information which had not only led to a failure of justice,
but which
demanded the court’s intervention, in the interests of justice.
Consequently, he was of the view that he had the
authority to
reconsider the order he had made in terms of which he held that
Tucker was liable to be extradited. In support of
this conclusion, he
referred to s 165 of the Constitution, which provides that the
judicial authority of the Republic is vested
in its courts, whose
powers must be exercised independently and impartially, without fear
or favour, and whose orders bind all
persons to whom they apply. On
any reading of it, s 165 does not afford a magistrate the power to
reconsider an order which he/she
has previously made. The source of
such a power can only lie in the provisions of the Magistrates’
Courts Act
[31]
and the rules
which have been made in terms thereof, or any other statutes which
confer such a power on a magistrate. The Extradition
Act is not such
a statute.
54.
The magistrate said that the fundamental
question which arose was whether the requesting State had presented
‘sufficient detail’
of the ‘evidence’ which
allegedly existed against Tucker, in order for the court to determine
whether he was liable
to be extradited. Given that he had already
made an order in 2017 that he was so liable and given that, as
previously pointed out,
s 10(2) of the Extradition Act provides that
a certificate from the competent prosecution authority in the
requesting state, which
declares that it has sufficient evidence on
hand to prosecute an extraditee, shall be accepted by a magistrate at
an extradition
enquiry as conclusive proof thereof and the magistrate
accepted such a certificate in 2017, the comments which were made by
him
in this regard in November 2021 do not make sense.
55.
The magistrate then proceeded to set out
the particulars of 16 of the 50 charges which were contained in the
indictments which are
included in the extradition papers. After
making reference to the provisions of s 35(3)(a) of our Constitution
and s 84 of our
Criminal Procedure Act
(‘CPA’), which
provide that an accused person in our country who goes on trial has
the right to be provided with sufficient
particulars of the charges
against him/her, with reference to the time and place when and where
the alleged offences have been
committed, he expressed the view that
the lack of particularity which the Court of Appeal had complained
about in 2002, still remained
in relation to the charges which Tucker
was now facing. Despite this finding of a lack of sufficient
particularity, at the end
of his judgment the magistrate held that
the offences with which Tucker had been charged in the ‘second’
(current)
indictment were ‘substantially identical’ to
those with which he had been charged in the first i.e. those in
respect
of which he stood trial in Bristol in 2000. Of course, this
would of necessity be true (only) in respect of the 8 offences for
which he was to be retried.
56.
These comments were not only unfounded,
given the evidence which was before the magistrate in the affidavits
of Mildren and Moorhouse,
but were also improper, on several levels.
57.
In
terms of s 10(1) of the Extradition Act there are 2 aspects which
must be determined by the magistrate at an extradition enquiry,
both
of which concern extraditability viz 1) whether the extraditee is
liable to be ‘surrendered’ i.e. extradited-this
is a
matter of law which is to be answered by reference to the terms of
the Extradition Act and any extradition treaty which has
been entered
into between the requesting foreign state and SA; and 2) whether
there is sufficient evidence to warrant the prosecution
of the
extraditee in the requesting state- this is a matter which is
determined by the terms of the s 10(2) certificate which is
provided
by the requesting state, or in the absence thereof, the evidence
which is put before the extradition enquiry.
[32]
It is not the magistrate’s function to determine contestations
beyond these 2 aspects, and it his therefore not his duty
to
determine the cogency, veracity or (the sufficiency of) the
particularity of the charges which the extraditee is to face in
the
requesting state. This is a function which falls on the court before
whom the extraditee is to be arraigned in the foreign
state.
58.
The
magistrate clearly failed to recognize that the presiding officer at
an extradition enquiry is required only to determine the
extraditability
of
an extraditee, not his or criminal
culpability
-that
is a matter for the trial court in the foreign state. Because of this
important distinction the Constitutional Court has confirmed
that the
fair trial rights which are provided for in terms of s 35 of our
Constitution (which have been given effect to
inter
alia
in
s 84 of our CPA), do not find application in extradition
enquiries.
[33]
59.
In
any event, on what grounds the magistrate came to the view that the
necessary particularity had not been provided in the charges
he
referred to, albeit according to our standards, is not understood. In
each of the charges which he referred to, detailed particulars
of the
period during when, and the place where the alleged offences were
committed, were provided. In fact, in almost all instances
not only
was the town or geographical area where the offences were committed
set out, but additional particularity was provided
in the form of a
description of the dwelling or apartment and/or the name of the road,
in which the offences were committed.
In
the judgment which we handed down in March 2019 we held
[34]
that the contents of Mildren’s affidavit, read together with
the Bristol indictment and the warrant from the North Avon
magistrate’s court adequately set out the charges against
Tucker with sufficient particularity as regards time and place for
him to know what he was alleged to have done, and when, and there was
no merit in the complaints raised in this regard, and any
further
‘niggles’ which Tucker had could be raised with the trial
court in the UK. The magistrate was bound to this
finding, yet it
seems he was oblivious to it, and this is clearly another indication
that he had no regard whatsoever for our judgment.
60.
Of great concern is that the magistrate
also went on a lengthy excursus in which he sought to criticize the
jury system in the UK
and the USA, particularly in relation to the
effect which media publicity may have on trials which juries are
required to adjudicate
upon. Given that the requesting state in this
matter is the UK, why the magistrate saw fit to express a view in
relation to the
application of the jury system in the USA, is beyond
comprehension.
61.
He
commenced his discussion by claiming that long before the abolition
of the jury system in SA in 1969, it was not used in our
courts due
to the likelihood of bias which was ‘embedded’ in its
application, as was the case ‘in most common
law
jurisdictions’. According to him, the majority of common law
jurisdictions in Asia had abolished jury trials on the grounds
that
‘jurists’ (sic) i.e. juries were susceptible to bias,
[35]
and the USA and UK were 2
of the ‘few’ common law jurisdictions which had retained
them. This is not correct. There
are several so-called common law, as
well as civil jurisdictions which make use of juries.
62.
He
further claimed that it could not be disputed that the jury system
had fundamental shortcomings in its workings, which could
be
detrimental to the right to a fair trial. What then followed
[36]
(and which he framed as if it was the product of an independent,
original commentary but which was in fact a wholesale but selective
copy-and-paste
ad
verbatim,
save for a few words and the odd sentence here and there, without the
necessary acknowledgement that it was such)- was material
taken from
two internet sources: archived commentary which was produced in 1994
by a Californian non-profit organization known
as the Constitutional
Rights Foundation,
[37]
and an
academic article
[38]
which was
published by J Brandwood in November 2000 in the New York University
Law Review.
[39]
63.
The
material which the magistrate quoted from, selectively, to bolster
his criticism of the jury system, dealt with a handful of
jury trials
which were held in the USA between 1807 and 1998, which were
considered by commentators for the possible negative effects
which
the publicity which accompanied them may have had on the juries which
heard them. There was not a single mention in the material
the
magistrate referred to, of any jury trial which was held before an
English
court. And importantly, the magistrate did not see fit to quote the
conclusion of the authors of these sources that despite the
possible
negative effects which media publicity may have on jury trials,
American courts have implemented a range of procedural
safeguards
[40]
which are aimed at ensuring the integrity of their verdicts. He
failed to disclose that from 1966
[41]
and until at least 2000 (when Brandwood’s article was
published) not a single verdict by a jury was apparently vacated by
the US Supreme Court on the basis that it was unsafe, for the reason
that the jury had been influenced by pre-trial publicity or
media
coverage of the accused and/or the trial in which the verdict was
delivered.
[42]
He also failed
to refer to Brandwood’s extensive discussion of the English
jury system,
[43]
and how it
has ably dealt with the effects of media publicity on juries, and
failed to point out that she concluded
[44]
that unlike the USA where criminal defendants may be subjected to
virtually unrestrained publicity, the British legal system
‘vigorously’
guards their rights by means of extensive
restrictions on reporting, often at the expense of freedom of speech.
64.
In
the circumstances, the magistrate’s treatment of this aspect
was also wholly unacceptable, for various reasons. It was,
firstly,
unacceptable because of its selective and biased copy-and-paste use
of others’ materials. In the second place it
failed to have
regard for important reported cases which were directly in point,
which supported a contrary thesis, particularly
the decision of the
English Court of Appeal in
Hamza,
[45]
which the DPP had referred him to.
65.
In
the third place, it was unacceptable because it is not for our
courts, let alone magistrates in extradition-related proceedings,
to
criticize the legal systems of other countries, whatever our view of
them may be. As was pointed out in our judgment of 2019,
extradition
is largely a process which is based on comity between foreign states,
and as such it is founded on the interstate recognition
of and mutual
respect for, each other’s legal systems, and it is accordingly
not for our courts
to attempt to impose our rules and standards on others. As we pointed
out in our judgment in 2019 both the European Court of Human
Rights
[46]
as well as the UK Supreme Court
[47]
have cautioned courts which deal with extradition matters to avoid
imposing their own country’s constitutional or fair trial
standards (or those contained in international treaties or
conventions) on states that are not party thereto.
66.
The jury system is one which has been in place in many foreign
jurisdictions, for many years, much longer than our judge-based
system
has been in place and were it not a reliable and acceptable
system for dealing with criminal matters in those jurisdictions in
which it is in use it would surely have been done way with by now.
For a magistrate in an extradition enquiry to express an adverse
view
in relation to a foreign, requesting state’s legal system is
inappropriate and a cause of judicial and political embarrassment.
67.
What makes the magistrate’s conduct
even more perplexing is that the workings of the English jury system
were never called
into question by Tucker, either during the
proceedings in 2017, or in 2021. There was accordingly no cause or
need for the magistrate
to express any view thereon, let alone in
respect of the American jury system.
The referral in terms
of s 304(4)
68.
Much of what needed to be said in relation
to the magistrate’s ‘judgment’, which formed the
basis for his referral
of the matter for review to this Court, has
already been dealt with in the preceding section. As I have pointed
out, and by way
of summary, the various ‘findings’ which
the magistrate arrived at in relation to the alleged lack of
particularity
in the charges for which Tucker is to be extradited and
his conclusion that they were substantially identical to those he has
previously
been acquitted on and the supposed insufficiency of the
evidence available to prove them, as well as his negative criticism
of
the English jury system, were inappropriate and fundamentally
flawed. On that basis alone his ‘judgment’ was arbitrary
and vitiated by gross misdirection and it cannot stand, and the
referral to this Court, which is based thereon, must collapse.
69.
But there are also other, fundamental
reasons why, as a matter of law, the entire exercise which the
magistrate engaged in was irregular
and the referral was incompetent.
As was previously pointed out the magistrate had no power, either
inherently at common law or
statutorily (in terms of the provision in
the Constitution on which he sought to rely or in terms of the
Magistrates’ Courts
Act and its rules or the Extradition Act),
to reconsider the decision which he had arrived at in 2017, or to
admit material into
the extradition record which went beyond the
terms of the remittal order which gave him the power to do so.
70.
After deciding the issues required of him
in terms of s 10(1) of the Extradition Act, at the extradition
enquiry which was held
before him in 2017 viz whether Tucker was
extraditable and whether there was sufficient evidence in the UK to
prosecute him on
the offences on which his extradition was sought,
the magistrate had exhausted his powers and was
functus
officio
. He was therefore no longer at
liberty to revisit those aspects and to pronounce on them again.
71.
The
only power which the magistrate could subsequently exercise, was the
one given to him in terms of the remittal order which we
made on 28
March 2019. That power was strictly limited to him receiving 1) an
affidavit from an expert on British law as to the
supposed
discriminatory features thereof in relation to homosexual offenders
and 2) documentary evidence pertaining to media coverage
which Tucker
had been exposed to; with a view to him forwarding this material to
the Minister together with the record, in terms
of s 10(4) of the
Extradition Act. That was the sole legislative objective he was still
enjoined to give effect to. As was pointed
out by Wallis JA in
Kouwenhoven
[48]
(albeit in the context of an order by the High Court on appeal to it
in relation to the outcome of an extradition enquiry), the
remittal
did not amount to an invitation to re-open issues on which the
magistrate had already made a decision, nor did it authorize
the
magistrate to deal with any new issues which had not previously been
before him.
72.
In the circumstances, when the affidavit
which Tucker had deposed to on 12 October 2021 was presented to him,
he should have pointed
out that save for those portions of it which
dealt with the issue of the media coverage which Tucker had been
exposed to, the rest
of it was inadmissible, as it did not fall
within the terms of the remittal order. He should have requested that
Tucker’s
counsel consequently provide him with a revised
affidavit in which only material which was admissible in terms of the
remittal
order was included, failing which the remaining portions of
the affidavit would be struck, or treated as
pro
non scripto.
73.
He had no power or right to deliver a
‘judgment’, either on the aspects he had previously
decided, or on the material
which was to be presented to him in terms
of the remittal order. The only, residual power which he had in
regard to such material
was the power to report on it for the
Minister, as provided for in s 10(4) of the Extradition Act. In doing
what he did the magistrate
acted outside of his powers and breached
the constitutional principle of legality.
74.
As
for the purported referral of the matter to this Court for ‘special’
review in terms of
s 304(4)
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, the
provision is clearly not one which finds application in extradition
proceedings. It provides that if in any criminal ‘case’
in which a magistrate has imposed a sentence which is not subject to
review in the ordinary course
[49]
it is brought to the notice of the provincial or local division which
has jurisdiction or any judge thereof, that the proceedings
in which
such sentence was imposed were not in accordance with justice, such
court or judge shall have the same powers in respect
of such
proceedings as if the record had been laid before them, in terms of
s
303
, or the section itself.
[50]
75.
Although
extradition proceedings have often been said to be proceedings which
are essentially criminal in
nature
,
[51]
as they are aimed at delivering up an extraditee for criminal
prosecution or the imposition of a penal sanction in a foreign state,
and this has often resulted in our courts holding that certain
provisions of the CPA are applicable to them
[52]
this does not mean that they constitute criminal
trial
proceedings,
[53]
or that they are to be treated as such, or that all the provisions in
the CPA are applicable to them. Once again, the reason for
this is
that they are precursor proceedings to an intended criminal trial and
to this end are concerned with the extraditability
of the subject
thereof i.e whether he/she should be surrendered to stand trial and
not their culpability or punishment.
[54]
The person who is the subject of such proceedings is not subjected to
a criminal trial and is not convicted or sentenced by the
magistrate
who presides over them. The magistrate simply determines whether
he/she is to stand trial in a foreign court.
76.
In the circumstances the magistrate who
presides over an extradition enquiry cannot refer it to the High
Court for review, in terms
of the provisions of
s 304(4)
of the CPA.
As the magistrate correctly sought to point out, before he was
wrongly persuaded otherwise, in the event that an extraditee
is
subject to an irregularity in the course of extradition proceedings
the remedy which is available to him is to take them on
appeal or
review, as Tucker did in 2017.
Towards a conclusion
77.
In the result the decision by the
magistrate to refer the matter to this Court for review in terms of
the aforesaid provision was
incompetent and falls to be set aside, as
it breaches the principle of legality. Although the DPP did not
expressly seek such an
order in terms of its notice of motion, in my
view in the exercise of our ancillary powers under the rubric of
further relief we
are similarly required to set aside the
magistrate’s ‘judgment’, which formed the basis of
the referral, in its
entirety, for the sake of good order and so that
there can be no confusion as to what can be considered by the
Minister when the
matter comes before him for determination, in terms
of s 11 of the Extradition Act.
78.
Emboldened by the magistrate’s
decision to refer the matter to this Court for review, immediately
after the ‘judgment’
was handed down Tucker sought to
make application to be released on bail.
T
he magistrate initially queried
whether he had jurisdiction to entertain it, but subsequently
inclined to the view that he did and
indicated that he would hear it
on 7 December 2021.
Although the DPP made it clear
that it intended to lodge a review of the magistrate’s referral
and requested that the application
should be stayed pending the
outcome thereof, Tucker nonetheless wished to press ahead with it.
This necessitated the DPP having
to make application to this Court as
a matter of urgency on 3 December 2021, for an order interdicting the
hearing of the bail
application by the magistrate, pending the
outcome of its review application, which was launched simultaneously
therewith. That
in turn prompted Tucker to launch a separate, urgent
application for bail, in this Court, which came before me on 10
December 2021,
at which time after hearing argument I directed that
the application be postponed for hearing together with the
magistrate’s
review in terms of s 304(4) and the DPP’s
review thereof, and that costs should stand over for later
determination.
79.
During
argument before us Mr King indicated that, in the event that we were
to rule in favour of the DPP, Tucker did not intend
to proceed with
his bail application. That was a sensible attitude to adopt. By his
own admission, Tucker is a fugitive from justice
who absconded from
his trial in England in 2000 when it became clear to him that he was
going to be convicted.
[55]
After coming to SA he purchased a property in Greenpoint, Cape Town
and took up employment as a helicopter pilot.
[56]
He served as a pilot for the helicopter on the SAS Agulhas, on its
voyage to Marion Island. A person with such skills obviously
has an
advantage regarding their ability to leave the country and thereby to
evade the long arm of the law. In the time that he
was living in SA
before application was made for his extradition he travelled to a
number of African countries. Save for an elderly
father (who is
currently 86-years old) it appears he has no family of note, and no
strong bond or connection with any relatives,
in the UK.
80.
Following
his arrest in March 2016 he made application to be released on bail,
which succeeded on the basis that he was to be confined
to his home
and was to wear an electronic monitoring and tracking device, a
privilege not afforded to ordinary arrestees. He breached
his bail
conditions by ‘tampering’ with the device, rendering it
inoperative, although he claimed this occurred accidentally.
[57]
81.
On
determining on 10 November 2017 that he was liable to be extradited,
the magistrate ordered that he should be committed to prison
pending
the Minister’s decision as to his surrender to the UK. An
application for bail pending the outcome of the Minister’s
decision, was unsuccessful, on the basis that he was a fugitive and a
flight risk. He lodged an appeal to this Court against the
refusal.
In his papers he indicated unequivocally that he did not intend to
return voluntarily to the UK to stand trial and intended
to do
everything legally possible to avoid being extradited.
[58]
The appeal failed on the basis that it had not been shown that the
magistrate had been wrong and there was a real likelihood that
he
would abscond again were bail to be granted. An application to appeal
the decision was refused, as was a petition to the SCA.
82.
In
my view, considering his circumstances, the nature and gravity of the
offences he is to be extradited for to the United Kingdom
and the
likely punishment he will receive in the event that he is found
guilty thereof (a conviction is very likely at least in
respect of
the 8 sexual offences on which he was previously tried and sentenced
to 8 years imprisonment), and that he previously
absconded in order
to avoid facing justice, and given further the decision which this
Court has come to in this matter, there is
an increased and very real
likelihood that, in the event that he were to be released on bail
now, pending the outcome of the Minister’s
decision, he will
abscond again. As was pointed out by Thring J in
S
v Myers
[59]
the fact that a person who seeks bail has previously absconded is a
major factor which militates against the grant of bail. Given
the
porosity of our borders and ineffective border control the likelihood
of him being able to flee the country without being apprehended,
thereby avoiding facing justice in the UK, is great.
83.
In
Ex
parte Graham
[60]
Harms J (as he then was) held that the power to grant bail in
extradition matters, post a committal order in terms of s 10(1),
should be exercised sparingly, and given the direction in the
subsection that in the event that a magistrate finds at the
conclusion
of an extradition enquiry that an extraditee is
extraditable he ‘shall’ issue an order committing him/her
to prison
to await the Minister's decision with regard to his or her
surrender, the intention of the legislature was primarily that such
an extraditee should be kept in custody, pending the Minister’s
decision.
84.
I agree with such an interpretation. In my
view, given the language used in the provision and applying a
purposive and contextual
interpretation thereto, an extraditee who is
held to be liable to be extradited should not ordinarily be on bail,
pending the Minister’s
decision, save in exceptional
circumstances. In this regard it may be noted that the offences for
which Tucker is being sought
in the UK are very serious offences in
our law which are listed in schedule 6 of the CPA and were he to be
standing trial on such
charges in this country, the onus would be on
him to show that exceptional circumstances existed which, in the
interests of justice,
permitted his release on bail.
85.
All
that remains are the issue of costs and the appropriate orders which
are to be made. Since the decision of the Constitutional
Court in
Harksen
[61]
it has become common for costs orders not to be made against an
unsuccessful extraditee in extradition-related appeals and reviews,
on the basis that they are essentially criminal proceedings in nature
and costs orders are not ordinarily made against persons
who are the
subject of such proceedings. Thus, in
McCarthy
[62]
Farlam AJA ( as he then was) confirmed that no costs order should be
made against an appellant who unsuccessfully sought to appeal
the
dismissal of an application for the review and setting aside of a
writ of arrest which had been issued in terms of s 5 of the
Extradition Act, and similarly in
Kouwenhoven
[63]
no order for costs was granted against an extraditee who had
unsuccessfully sought to appeal the findings and judgment of this
Court (that the state enjoyed a right of appeal in extradition
proceedings, on a point of law, in terms of s 310 of the CPA), on
the
basis that the appeal essentially concerned a ‘criminal’
proceeding.
86.
However,
this is not an inviolate rule or principle. In coming to the
conclusion in
Harksen
that costs orders are not ordinarily to be made against unsuccessful
extraditees in relation to extradition-related proceedings,
Goldstone
JA referred to the decision of the Constitutional Court in
Sanderson
,
[64]
where Kriegler J had held
[65]
that it would be inappropriate to make a costs order against an
appellant who had sought to appeal a decision refusing an application
for a permanent stay of prosecution, because the claim which he had
advanced in this regard concerned a ‘genuine complaint
on a
point of substance’ viz that the State had breached his
constitutional right to a fair trial. In arriving at this conclusion
Kriegler J referred to the decision of the Constitutional Court in
Motsepe
[66]
where Ackermann J
held
[67]
that one should be
cautious against awarding costs against litigants who seek to
legitimately enforce their constitutional rights
against the State,
lest such orders serve to inhibit other, deserving litigants from
seeking to do so. However, Ackermann J was
also at pains to point out
[68]
that such an approach
should not be allowed to develop into an inflexible rule which might
encourage litigants into believing they
are free to challenge the
constitutionality of statutory provisions in the Constitutional
Court, no matter how spurious their grounds
for doing so, or how
remote the possibility that the Court would grant them access. In
Motsepe
an adverse costs order was granted against the unsuccessful litigant,
in order to disabuse other potential litigants from the notion
that
they could always approach the Constitutional Court without any risk,
no matter how ‘groundless’ the merits of
their
application to the Court.
87.
That
the principle that costs orders should not ordinarily be made against
unsuccessful extraditees does not amount to an inviolate
rule which
is always applicable, contrary to the accepted principle that the
Courts have a discretion in this regard which must
be exercised on
the basis of the circumstances of the matters which are before them,
is borne out by the costs orders which were
recently made by this
division and the SCA in the two related
Kouwenhoven
decisions. Thus, in the first of these,
[69]
which involved an unsuccessful appeal against the finding of this
Court that s 310 of the CPA provides the State with a right of
appeal
on a point of law in respect of the proceedings in an extradition
enquiry, the SCA accepted (as this Court did) that a costs
order
should not be made, as the matter concerned proceedings which were
criminal in nature. It is apparent, if one considers the
facts of the
matter, that the issues which required determination concerned
important, arguable points of law which required finality
from the
SCA, and in seeking to appeal the decision of this Court on that
aspect the extraditee was not proceeding on spurious
grounds and
sought to protect his rights.
88.
In
contrast to that decision, in the second, related appeal to it by the
selfsame extraditee
[70]
in
which judgment was handed down on the same day, the SCA dismissed the
matter with costs, including the costs of 2 counsel. That
appeal was
concerned with the judgment and order of this Court
[71]
whereby it had similarly dismissed an application for the review and
setting aside of a warrant of arrest which had been issued
against
the extraditee, in terms of s 5 of the Extradition Act, with costs.
Clearly, the SCA endorsed the view that the fact that
the matter
concerned an appeal in an extradition-related matter i.e. in
proceedings which were essentially criminal in nature,
did not serve
to bar the making of a costs order against an extraditee in deserving
cases, in the exercise of the Court’s
discretion.
89.
In this matter the DPP seeks an order for
costs against Tucker on the basis that what occurred before the
magistrate was an unnecessary
and wholesale abuse of process, the
result of which compelled it to come to this Court, in order to set
aside the magistrate’s
incompetent and defective referral of
the 2017 proceedings for review. In my view the DPP’s
contentions are well-founded,
and a costs order is both justified and
necessary. In fact, Tucker can consider himself fortunate that a
costs order on a punitive
scale was not sought, because the
circumstances merit it.
90.
The exercise in which Tucker and his legal
representatives engaged before the magistrate was a vexatious one.
Notwithstanding that
the remittal order which we had made very
clearly only afforded him an opportunity to place documentary
evidence pertaining to
the alleged unfair media coverage to which he
had been subjected before the magistrate, by way of his own, personal
affidavit,
he ignored this, and proceeded to place an affidavit
before the magistrate in which he re-challenged his extraditability,
even
though this aspect had already been definitively ruled upon and
decided against him in 2017, by way of an order by the magistrate
which was confirmed by us on appeal, in 2019.
91.
In the circumstances, it was wholly
inappropriate and improper for such an affidavit to be placed before
the magistrate, and Tucker
and his legal representatives took
advantage of him by putting inadmissible material before him which
they were not allowed to
submit, which they suggested was true, which
they then utilized to persuade the magistrate to send the matter on
review to this
Court, on the basis of a provision in the CPA which
did not grant him such a power.
92.
In effect, by suggesting that the
magistrate send the matter on review in terms of the provisions of s
304(4), instead of himself
taking the proceedings on review, Tucker
managed to get the magistrate to engage in a defective and
incompetent process at considerable
and unnecessary expense to the
State.
93.
Consequently, I think that the DPP’s
counsel, Mr Stelzner SC, is correct when he says in his heads of
argument that, without
any valid basis in law for doing so, Tucker
thereby managed to get the magistrate to re-enter into the merits of
the extradition
order he had made, on the basis of inadmissible and
false or incorrect allegations in his affidavit (his averment that he
was to
be extradited on 44 charges on which he had previously been
acquitted was clearly false and untrue if one has regard for the
affidavits
of Mildren and Moorhouse), and caused the magistrate to
revisit several aspects that had been previously traversed and dealt
with
by him, as well as subsequently by this Court, on appeal to it.
In the circumstances this was nothing more than a spurious and
opportunistic attempt by Tucker to reverse his extradition order.
94.
It has, unfortunately, become commonplace
for extraditees who wish to avoid or delay being extradited from this
country, to challenge
extradition orders by means of ill-founded
appeals and reviews which have no merit in them, on the assumption
that they have nothing
to lose as they will not be at risk for costs
in the event that such tactics should backfire, because of the
practice that costs
orders are generally not made against extraditees
in such matters. As is so graphically illustrated by the
circumstances of this
matter, the result of such a strategy is that
many years go by and much unnecessary expense is incurred by the SA
state, in dealing
with applications for extradition from foreign
states, and this country is frequently criticized as being a haven
for fugitives.
95.
Consequently, in my view it is necessary
that it be made clear that our Courts will not allow themselves to be
misused by extraditees
who merely seek to delay repatriation to their
countries of origin in order that they might face justice, by means
of frivolous
or vexatious processes, and for those who engage in such
tactics there will be a price to pay. It seems to me that unless
undeserving
extraditees are at risk of having costs orders made
against them in the event that they abuse the process of our Courts
simply
in order to avoid being extradited, they will have no
disincentive for doing so, and will continue playing the delay and
frustrate
game at the expense of the SA state.
96.
As far as the costs pertaining to the
abortive bail application are concerned, which application Tucker
abandoned during argument
once his counsel saw which way the wind was
blowing, I am however prepared to accept that the ordinary principle
should apply.
Although this was also an opportunistic move, it was
one prompted by the magistrate’s irregular and defective
‘judgment’,
in which he sought to reverse the findings
and order he had previously arrived at. Consequently, in my view the
fair and proper
order to make on this aspect is that there should be
no order as to costs.
97.
Finally, the DPP has asked for an order
directing that the matter should be forwarded to the Minister, for
his decision, as soon
as possible, given the lengthy delay which has
taken place, and should not be remitted to the magistrate in order
for him to do
so under cover of an accompanying report to the
Minister.
98.
In my view, given the contradictory
findings and conclusions which the magistrate arrived at in 2017 and
2021 and his delivery of
an inappropriate ‘judgment’ (and
the comments and findings which he made therein in relation to the
English jury system
and the charges which Tucker is facing in the
United Kingdom), instead of forwarding the matter to the Minister
under cover of
a report in terms of s 10 (4) of the Extradition Act,
as he was supposed to do, it would not be proper to provide the
magistrate
with another opportunity to do so. In fact, given the
views expressed by him in his ‘judgment’, the magistrate
has
surely disqualified himself from providing a reliable, unbiased
and objective report to the Minister. Given that the application
for
Tucker’s extradition was made in 2016 and an extradition order
was made in 2017, and 5 years have elapsed since then
without the
matter yet having arrived at the Minister for his decision, I see no
purpose in remitting the matter to the magistrate
for him to forward
it on to the Minister.
Order
99.
In the result, I would make the following
Order:
1.
The referral by the magistrate on 18
November 2021 to this Court for review in terms of s 304(4) of the
CPA, of the decision and
order which he made on 10 November 2017
whereby he held that Mr Lee Nigel Tucker was liable to be extradited
to the UK and that
there was sufficient evidence to prosecute him
(in respect of charges which have been preferred against him in terms
of an indictment which was lodged with the Bristol Crown
Court on 31
March 2016 as well as in respect of the offences set out in the
warrant of first instance which was issued by the North
Avon
magistrates’ court on 26 February 2016)
, is
reviewed and set aside.
2.
The ‘judgment’ in terms of
which the magistrate made the referral which is set out in the
preceding paragraph to this
Court on 18 November 2021, is set aside,
in its entirety.
3.
The review in terms of s 304(4) of the CPA
is dismissed.
4.
Mr Lee Nigel Tucker shall be liable both
for the costs of the review in terms of s 304(4) of the CPA and for
the costs of the review
by the DPP of the magistrate’s referral
thereof to this Court, which costs shall include the costs of
counsel.
5.
The Registrar shall, with the assistance of
the office of the DPP, forward a copy of the complete record of the
proceedings in this
matter (which shall include a copy of this
judgment) to the Minister of Justice and Correctional Services,
within 15 days from
date hereof, for his decision as to the surrender
of Mr Lee Nigel Tucker to the UK, in terms of s 11 of the Extradition
Act, 67
of 1962.
ML SHER
Judge of the High
Court
I agree, and it is so
ordered.
MI SAMELA
Judge of the High
Court
Appearances
Applicant’s
counsel: R Stelzner SC
Applicant’s
attorneys: State Attorney (Cape Town)
Second respondent’s
counsel: W King SC, B Prinsloo
Second respondent’s
attorneys: Mathewson & Gess Inc (Cape Town)
[1]
Reported
sub
nom
Tucker
v Additional Magistrate, Cape Town & Ors
[2019]
2 All SA 852
(WCC);
2019 (2) SACR 166
(WCC).
[2]
Tucker’s
co-accused was subsequently re-tried and convicted on several of the
offences on which he had previously stood
trial and sentenced to 6
years imprisonment
[3]
In
terms of s 9 of the
Extradition
Act, 67 of 1962
.
[4]
In
terms of s 9(2).
[5]
Preparatory
examinations are provided for in terms of
ss 129
-
140
of the
Criminal
Procedure Act, 51 of 1977
. As we pointed out in paras 50-52 of our
earlier judgment, preparatory examinations
are
a species of judicial enquiry into the circumstances of an alleged
criminal offence, before a magistrate, which were previously
held as
a dress rehearsal for high court trials. They have long since fallen
into disuse.
[6]
As
per
Geuking
v President, Republic of South Africa & Ors
2003 (3) SA 34 (CC).
[7]
Para
71.
[8]
Section
7(2)(a).
[9]
Sections
7(2)(b)
and (c).
[10]
Vide
s
17 of the
UK
Extradition Act 2003 and
ss
2(3)(c) and 3(bis) of our Extradition Act and A
rt
14 of the European Convention on Extradition, which provide that an
extraditee shall not be prosecuted or sentenced for any
offence
which was committed prior to their surrender, other than that for
which they are extradited. A similar provision is to
be found in
Art
16 of the SADC Protocol on Extradition.
[11]
In
terms of the
provisions
of the Extradition Act read together with the European Convention on
Extradition, to which both SA and the UK are signatories.
[12]
Garrido
v Director of Public Prosecutions, Witwatersrand Local Division &
Ors
2007
(1) SACR 1
(SCA);
Geuking
n 6.
[13]
Director
of Public Prosecutions, Western Cape v Tucker
2021
(12) BCLR 1345 (CC);
2022 (1) SACR 339 (CC).
[14]
According
to paras 52-64 of his affidavit these charges constitute counts
25-43 of the (combined) indictment(s).
[15]
At
paragraphs 40-58 of his affidavit.
[16]
The
court and police records were not traversed by Tucker in his
affidavit or by his counsel in argument, with any degree of
particularity, and it was not possible to correlate them with the
contents of his affidavit without performing a careful analysis
of
their contents.
[17]
I
ndictment
no. T19900652/691 (717/730), pp 229-232 of the review record.
[18]
Id
,
p
233.
[19]
Under
indictment no. T19991451-1, pp 221-224 of the review record.
[20]
Cocaine,
heroin, amphetamines, and cannabis.
[21]
Pages
225-228
of the review record.
[22]
Id
,
pp
235-261.
[23]
Id
,
p
238.
[24]
Id
,
pp
235,
241 and 244.
[25]
Moorhouse
paras 47-49.
[26]
Id
,
paras 50-51.
[27]
Id
,
paras 53-54.
[28]
R
v Hamza
[2006]
EWCA Crim 2918; [2007] 3 All ER 451.
[29]
Id
,
para 90.
[30]
By
way of some 600 pages of newspaper reports, articles and comments
which covered Hamza’s activities and inflammatory speeches
which he had made in which he had exhorted the use of violence and
incited persons to commit murder.
[31]
Act
32 of 1944.
[32]
S
v Von Schlicht
2000
(10 SACR 558 (C)
[33]
Director
of Public Prosecution, Cape of Good Hope v Robinson
2005
(4) SA 1 (CC).
[34]
Note
1
para
70.
[35]
As
authority for this proposition reference was made to an entry in
Wikipedia.
[36]
At
paras 22-38 of the ‘judgment’.
[37]
Entitled
‘
Is
a Fair Trail Possible in the Age of Mass Media?’
The
Constitutional Rights Foundation
Bill
of Rights in Action Winter 1994;
https://www-crf-usa.org.za
.
Paras 22-26 of the judgment were copied from this source.
[38]
‘
You
say ‘Fair Trial’ and I say
‘
Fair
Press’: British and American Approaches to Protecting
Defendants’ Rights in High Profile Trials’.
Paras
27-37 of the judgment are a verbatim copy of extracts from pp
1412-1415, 1417, 1422-1423 and 1427-1430 of this article.
[39]
Vol
75:
1412-1451.
[40]
Ranging
from continuances, changes in venue,
voir
dires
(screening of jurors), sequestering of juries etc.
[41]
After
the
decision in
Sheppard
v Maxwell
384 U.S 333.
[42]
Brandwood
n 37 p 1421.
[43]
At
pp 1430-1462 of her article.
[44]
At
p
age
1451.
[45]
Note
28.
[46]
Al-Skeini
v UK
(2011)
53 EHRR 18
, para [141].
[47]
Lord
Advocate (representing the Taiwanese Judicial Authorities) v Dean
(Scotland)
[2018] 1 All ER 995
;
[2017] UKSC 44
,
para
[45].
[48]
Kouwenhoven
v Director of Public Prosecutions, Western Cape
[2021]
4 All SA 619
(SCA);
2022 (1) SACR 115
(SCA), para 84.
[49]
In
terms of s 302,
sentences
which are subject to review in the ordinary course are those which
exceed the imposition of a specified period of imprisonment
or a
fine exceeding a prescribed amount, in matters where an accused was
legally unrepresented (these start at terms of imprisonment
in
excess of more than 3 months and fines in excess of R 6000,
depending on the length of service of the magistrate who presided
in
the matter concerned).
[50]
In
terms of s 304(2)(c)(i)-(iv) these
powers
include the power to confirm, alter or quash a conviction or
sentence or any order imposed by a magistrate’s court,
and to
give any judgment or to make any order or impose any sentence which
such court ought to have given or imposed.
[51]
Kouwenhoven
n
48 para 38, in which references are provided to various earlier
decisions of the SCA and the CC on the point.
[52]
I
n
Director
of Public Prosecutions, Western Cape v Kouwenhoven; Kouwenhoven v
Director of Public Prosecutions, Western Cape and Others
[2021]
1 All SA 843
(WCC);
2021 (1) SACR 579
(WCC)
we
held that s 310 of the CPA, which provides the State with a right of
appeal on a point of law in criminal proceedings from
a magistrate’s
court, is a provision which applies to extradition proceedings, a
finding which was upheld by the SCA.
[53]
A
lthough
they are similar in nature they differ from criminal trials and,
when compared to them, are considered
sui
generis
vide
Kouwenhoven
n 48 paras 29-30, with reference to the decision in
Robinson
n 33 para 33.
[54]
Geuking
n
6 paras 2 and 44;
Kouwenhoven
paras 2,12 and 35.
[55]
Tucker
v S
[2018]
2 All SA 566
(WCC), para 6.
[56]
Id
,
para 7.
[57]
Id
,
para 14.
[58]
Id
,
paras 32-33.
[59]
1983
(1) SACR 383 (C).
[60]
Ex
parte Graham: In re USA v Graham
1987
(1) SA 368
(WLD) at 371E-F.
[61]
Harksen
v President of the Republic of South Africa & Ors
2000 (1) SACR 300 (CC);
2000 (2) SA 825 (CC).
[62]
McCarthy
v Additional Magistrate, Johannesburg
2000 (2) SACR 542
(SCA) para 51.
[63]
Note
48.
[64]
Sanderson
v Attorney-General, Eastern Cape
1998
(2) SA 38 (CC).
[65]
Id,
para
44.
[66]
Motsepe
v Commissioner for Inland Revenue
1997
(2) SA 898 (CC).
[67]
P
er
Ackermann J at para 30.
[68]
Id
,
para 32.
[69]
Kouwenhoven
n
48.
[70]
Reported
sub
nom Kouwenhoven v Minister of Police & Ors
[2021]
ZASCA 119.
[71]
Per
Cloete et Fortuin JJ in
Kouwenhoven
v Minister of Police & Ors
[2021]
4 All SA 768
(WCC);
2021 (1) SACR 167
(WCC).
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