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Gavin Millar QC

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Title: Gavin Millar QC


1
  • Gavin Millar QC
  • doughty street chambers
  • Heather Rogers QC
  • matrix chambers

www.doughtystreet.co.uk
2
PRODUCTION ORDERS LAW AND PRACTICE
  • POLICE AND CRIMINAL EVIDENCE ACT 1984
  • (PACE)
  • Section 9(1) police may obtain access to
    excluded or special procedure material for the
    purposes of a criminal investigation by
    application under PACE Schedule .
  • 700 applications each year (most uncontested)

www.doughtystreet.co.uk
3
PRODUCTION ORDERS PACE
  • journalistic material (section 13)
  • material acquired or created for the purposes
    of journalism in the possession of the person who
    so acquired or created it

www.doughtystreet.co.uk
4
PRODUCTION ORDERS PACE
  • excluded material (section 11)
  • journalistic material held subject to an express
    or implied undertaking to hold it in confidence
    and has been continuously so held since it was
    first acquired for journalistic purposes.

www.doughtystreet.co.uk
5
PRODUCTION ORDERS PACE
  • special procedure material (s14)
  • journalistic material, other than excluded
    material

www.doughtystreet.co.uk
6
PRODUCTION ORDERS PACE
  • So special procedure material
  • material acquired or created for the purposes of
    journalism in the possession of a person who so
    acquired or created it but
  • not held subject to an express / implied
    undertaking to hold it in confidence or
  • not so held continuously since first acquired for
    journalistic purposes.

www.doughtystreet.co.uk
7
PRODUCTION ORDERS PACE
  • Under Sch 1
  • Judge may make order for production of or
    access to journalistic material if satisfied one
    of two sets of access conditions is met.

www.doughtystreet.co.uk
8
PRODUCTION ORDERS PACE
  • First set of access conditions apply if
  • reasonable grounds for believing that the
    material in question consists of or includes
    special procedure material but does not also
    include excluded material

www.doughtystreet.co.uk
9
PRODUCTION ORDERS PACE
  • First set of conditions are fulfilled if
  • reasonable grounds for believing
  • indictable offence committed
  • material is likely to be of substantial value
  • material is likely to be relevant evidence
  • other methods of obtaining material tried without
    success or not tried because bound to fail
  • in the public interest that the material should
    be produced or access to it should be given
    having regard to
  • the benefit likely to accrue to investigation if
    material is obtained and
  • the circumstances under which the person in
    possession of the material holds it

www.doughtystreet.co.uk
10
PRODUCTION ORDERS PACE
  • Second set of access conditions apply if
  • reasonable grounds for believing that there is
    material which consists of or includes excluded
    material on the premises specified in the
    application
  • a search of the premises could have been
    authorised by the issue of a warrant to a
    constable under a pre-existing enactment
  • the issue of a search warrant would have been
    appropriate

www.doughtystreet.co.uk
11
PRODUCTION ORDERS PACE
  • discretion
  • even if access conditions met, the court
    retains a discretion as to whether or not to make
    the order sought bearing in mind the wider public
    interest considerations

www.doughtystreet.co.uk
12
PRODUCTION ORDERS PACE
  • PACE procedure
  • Police must make application for production
    order/ warrant inter partes (on notice) Sch 1,
    at 7
  • Application usually made by way of information
    sworn before Crown Court judge
  • Judge makes production order/warrant
  • Failure to comply contempt/warrant
  • Parties can apply to discharge/vary, if
    circumstances change
  • Can be application for judicial review

www.doughtystreet.co.uk
13
PRODUCTION ORDERS TERRORISM ACT
  • terrorism means the use or threat of action
    where
  • (a)     the action
  • (i) involves serious violence against a
    person,
  • (ii) involves serious damage to property,
  • (iii) endangers a person's life (other than
    the person committing the action),
  • (iv) creates serious risk to the
    health/safety of the public/section of the
    public, or
  • (v) is designed seriously to interfere
    with/to disrupt an electronic system.
  • (b)     the use or threat is designed to
    influence the government (or international
    governmental organisation) or to intimidate the
    public/section of the public, and
  • (c)     the use or threat is made for the purpose
    of advancing a political, religious or
    ideological cause

www.doughtystreet.co.uk
14
PRODUCTION ORDERS TERRORISM ACT
  • terrorist investigation (section 32) -
    investigation of
  • the commission, preparation or instigation of
    acts of terrorism
  • an act which appears to have been done for the
    purposes of terrorism
  • the resources of a proscribed organisation
  • the possibility of making an order proscribing an
    organisation (section 3(3))
  • commission, preparation or instigation of an
    offence under the Terrorism Act 2000 (or some
    offences under the Terrorism Act 2006)

www.doughtystreet.co.uk
15
PRODUCTION ORDERS TERRORISM ACT 2000
  • Schedule 5 at 5(1) police officer may apply
    to court for an order for the purposes of a
    terrorist investigation
  • Schedule 5 at 5(2) the application shall
    relate to particular material - or material of a
    particular description - which consists
    of/includes excluded material or special
    procedure material (as defined in PACE)
  • material subject to legal privilege is exempt (as
    under PACE)
  • 100 or so each year (under predecessor
    legislation) mostly unopposed

www.doughtystreet.co.uk
16
PRODUCTION ORDERS TERRORISM ACT 2000
  • Two access conditions apply Schedule 5
  • First access condition 6(2)
  • The order for production is sought for the
    purposes of a terrorist investigation and
  • There are reasonable grounds for believing that
    the material is likely to be of substantial
    value, whether by itself or together with other
    material, to a terrorist investigation

www.doughtystreet.co.uk
17
PRODUCTION ORDERS TERRORISM ACT 2000
  • Second access condition 6(3)
  • That there are reasonable grounds for believing
    that it is in the public interest that the
    material should be produced or that access to it
    should be given having regard-
  • To the benefit likely to accrue to the terrorist
    investigation if the material is obtained, and
  • To the circumstances under which the person
    concerned has any of the material in his
    possession, custody or power

www.doughtystreet.co.uk
18
PRODUCTION ORDERS TERRORISM ACT 2000
  • As under PACE, if the access conditions are
    fulfilled, the court has a discretion whether/not
    to make an order.

www.doughtystreet.co.uk
19
PRODUCTION ORDERS LAW AND PRACTICE
  • Resisting/challenging production orders
  • PACE applications are on notice (inter
    partes).
  • TA usually application to vary/discharge
    following service
  • Ex parte Salinger guidelines regarding
    information to be given to respondent
  • Is the respondent correct?
  • Are the terms of the order sufficiently
    certain/too wide?
  • Have the access conditions been met? (burden on
    police)
  • Exercise of the discretion Convention compliant?
    Arts 2, 3, 8, 10
  • PACE cases section 10 Contempt of Court Act 1981
    (necessity test for sources)
  • Art 6 and ex parte hearings special advocate?

www.doughtystreet.co.uk
20
PRODUCTION ORDERS LAW AND PRACTICE
  • Resisting/challenging production orders
  • Privilege against self-incrimination?
    (Pre-existing documents width of TA offences
    relating to information sections 38B, 19).
  • Five factors (Malik)
  • true benefit to investigation of material
  • importance of privilege itself convincing
    justification required
  • gravity of offence with which person required to
    surrender material might be charged
  • risk of prosecution (immunity given?)
  • bear in mind s78 PACE power to exclude.

www.doughtystreet.co.uk
21
TERRORISM ACT 2000 section 38B offence
  • If a person has information they know or believe
    might be of material assistance
  • (a)     in preventing the commission by
    another person of an act of terrorism, or
  • (b)     in securing the apprehension,
    prosecution or conviction of another person, in
    the United Kingdom, for an offence involving the
    commission, preparation or instigation of an act
    of terrorism.
  • They commit an offence if they do not disclose
    that information as soon as reasonably
    practicable to a police officer.
  • They have a defence if they prove they had a
    reasonable excuse for not making the disclosure.

22
TERRORISM ACT 2000 section 19 offence
  • If a person
  • (a)     believes or suspects that another
    person has committed an offence under any of
    sections 15 to 18 that is, various offences
    relating to funding of terrorism, and
  • (b)     bases their belief or suspicion on
    information which comes to his attention in the
    course of a trade, profession, business or
    employment.
  • That person commits an offence if they do not
    disclose to a police officer as soon as is
    reasonably practicable (a) their belief or
    suspicion and (b) the information on which it
    is based.
  • They have a defence if they prove that they had a
    reasonable excuse for not making the disclosure.

23
PRODUCTION ORDERS other statutory powers
include..
  • Proceeds of Crime Act 2002, sections 343-345
  • Extradition Act 2003, sections 157-160
  • Crime (International Co-operation) Act 2003,
    section 22

www.doughtystreet.co.uk
24
PRODUCTION ORDERS further reading
  • R v Middlesex Guildhall Crown Court ex parte
    Salinger 1993 QB 564
  • Code B Code of Practice for the Searching of
    Premises by Police Officers and the Seizure of
    Property found by Police Officers on Persons or
    Premises (http//police.homeoffice.gov.uk)
  • R v Central Criminal Court, ex parte Bright
    2001 1 WLR 662
  • R (on the application of Malik) v Manchester
    Crown Court and another 2008 EWHC 1362 (Admin)
    (19 June 2008)
  • Judgments available on www.bailii.org

www.doughtystreet.co.uk
25
PRODUCTION ORDERS further reading
  • European Court of Human Rights
  • www.echr.coe.int
  • Decisions on journalists sources include
  • Goodwin v UK
  • (27 March 1996)
  • Voskuil v Netherlands
  • (27 November 2007)
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