EXTRADITION AND MENTAL HEALTH IN UK LAW
(Criminal Law Forum (2019) 30:339–372)
Paul Arnell, Law School, Robert Gordon University, Garthdee Road,
Aberdeen AB107QE, Scotland. E-mail: p.arnell@rgu.ac.uk.
* The author wishes to thank Professor Clive Walker and the anonymous
referees for their comments on an earlier draft. The usual disclaimer applies.
ABSTRACT. The response of UK extradition law and practice to requested persons presenting with mental health disorders is multi-faceted and unnecessarily complex. There are a number of reasons for this. They centre upon the law failing to adequately recognise that mental health cases can give rise to concerns not present in physical health cases. The deficiencies of the law are found in the three applicable bars to extradition; oppression, human rights and forum. They also can be seen in the applicable rules of evidence and the practice of diplomatic assurances. The time has come for UK law to specifically and systematically respond to mental health disorders in the context of extradition.
INTRODUCTION
The response of UK extradition law and practice to requested persons presenting with mental health disorders is multi-faceted and unnecessarily complex. The issues raised are not consistently addressed. The reasons for this are manifold and inter-related. They are firstly that extradition law fails to adequately recognise that mental health cases can engender distinct concerns. This is seen in the similarity in approach taken to deportation and physical illness on the one hand and mental health disorders on the other. It is also manifest in the operation of the three different, intricate and at times overlapping bars which may prevent an extradition in mental health cases. The response to the evidential challenges arising in the area further illustrates the deficiency of the law. Secondly, where the law has specifically recognised that mental health cases may be distinct that acceptance is wanting. This recognition has occurred where requested persons may be at risk of suicide and within the substance of diplomatic assurances, including where an individual may be unfit to plead.
The law here has developed a bespoke set of "suicide-case" rules and employed diplomatic
assurances in response to some of the concerns. Whilst positive, these developments are inadequate
and inconsistent. Overall, the deficient nature of the law arises from its failure to systematically
recognise and coherently address the concerns that often arise in mental health cases. This article
analyses the response of UK extradition law to mental health disorders and uncovers the reasons
behind its deficiencies. In doing so it brings to the fore the steps needed to address the weaknesses
in the law. The applicable law and jurisprudence including the notable cases of Shiren Dewani,
Lauri Love
and Haroon Aswat
are described and analysed in this task. The article concludes by
bringing together the suggestions of how the law might be amended so that it responds more
appropriately to requested persons with mental health disorders.
EXTRADITION LAW
Extradition is a process whereby accused and convicted persons are lawfully transferred from one
territory to another for trial or, if already convicted, punishment.
It is largely governed in the UK
by the Extradition Act 2003 (2003 Act) and internationally by the European Arrest Warrant (EAW)
and bilateral extradition treaties.
The 2003 Act contains separate provision for EU and non-EU
extraditions. The main differences in law between the two are that under the EAW there is an
absence of political participation in the process and the Framework List of offences can act to satisfy
the double criminality requirement. Practically, the EAW has led to a material increase in the volume
of UK-EU surrenders, which in turn has given rise to a considerable jurisprudence. Extradition
jurisprudence, under the EAW or otherwise, arises from the fact that when an extradition request is
made to the UK a hearing must take place where a number of bars may be put forward in opposition.
If accepted by the judge, the extradition will not proceed, or be adjourned. There are three bars in
the 2003 Act that can act to stop an extradition on the basis of a mental health disorder. They are
based on oppression and injustice, human rights and forum.
The law sets high hurdles that must be
met for an extradition to be prevented under the bars. This is a consequence of both their terms per
se and their judicial interpretation. Recognition and consideration of mental health disorders in extradition law is relatively novel. Legislatively, mental health was referred to for the first time in the
2003 Act. Mental health extradition jurisprudence began to emerge around the same time, firstly in
the case law of the EctHR.
EXTRADITION AND DEPORTATION
Providing background and context to the response of extradition law to mental health disorders are
deportation and physical ill-health extradition jurisprudence. This follows the affinity between
extradition and deportation and the general conflation of mental and physical illness by extradition
law. For our present purposes, the main relevance of deportation is found the application of human
rights law. In Balodis-Klocko v Latvia
it was held that there is no distinction between the
immigration line of authority and that of extradition in the application of human rights.
A second
relevance of deportation is that diplomatic assurances are relied upon to address human rights
concerns where it is proposed, as with extradition. This relevance noted, it should not be forgotten
that extradition and deportation differ in their origins, purposes and applicable law. A request from
a third territory forms the origin of an extradition while a deportation is founded upon a UK decision
to expel an individual from its territory. The purpose of (outgoing) extradition is a prosecution or
imposition of a sentence abroad. Deportation acts to serve the UK public good. Legally, extradition
is generally governed by the 2003 Act and, in England and Wales, the Criminal Procedure
Rules
and the Extradition Act 2003 Police Codes of Practice.
Deportation is governed by the
Immigration Acts, the Immigration Rules
and a collection of Home Office Guides.
It is worth
keeping these facts in mind when deportation cases are relied upon or referred to in extradition cases.
Indeed, an argument can be made that in light of the considerable differences between the two
processes that there is a greater distinction between them, especially in mental health cases.
EXTRADITION AND HEALTH GENERALLY
Ill-health, mental and physical, has been a basis upon which an extradition can be prevented for a
relatively short time. It was the ground upon which the extradition of Augusto Pinochet to Spain was
blocked in 2000.
In part due to the controversy engendered by that case the extent of political
discretion in extradition cases to cover illhealth was limited and ss 25 and 91 were inserted into the
2003 Act. Termed the "lex specialis"
in cases of ill-health generally the sections prevent an
extradition where it is oppressive or unjust on the basis of the physical or mental condition of the
requested person (hereinafter the oppression bar). If an argument is accepted under the bar the
requested person is discharged or his hearing is adjourned. Illustrating the difficulty in meeting the
bar and the range of relevant considerations where physical health is put forward is Blaszak v
Poland.
Blaszak was sought on a conviction warrant. Subsequent to his sentence he suffered a stroke
which left him with limited strength, movement, speech and memory. He became epileptic and
suffered from regular seizures. He sought to rely on s 25. The court considered not only his ill-health
and prognosis but also the relevant safeguards and conditions under the law and in the prisons in
Poland. These were considered in light of certain presumptions arising from Poland’s membership
of the EU and the ECHR – in essence that it would adhere to its legal obligations.
The Court also
assessed Blaszak’s culpability and offences. The "exceptionally high bar" applying when ill-health
was put forward in opposition to imprisonment within the UK was held to apply to extradition and
his appeal against extradition was refused.
The human rights bar, a second ground which may cover illhealth, is also difficult to satisfy and can
entail judicial consideration of disparate factors. Two human rights are most commonly put forward,
found in articles 3 and 8 of the European Convention of Human Rights (ECHR). The former
prohibits torture and inhuman and degrading treatment and punishment and the latter guarantees
respect for private and family life. Demonstrating the high bar is the leading article 3 physical ill-health case of Nv UK.
Here the UK sought to deport N to Uganda. She was receiving treatment for
AIDS. The Grand Chamber of the ECtHR held that aliens could not in principle claim any
entitlement to remain in a state party in order to continue to benefit from medical, social or other
forms of assistance and services. A violation of article 3, it held, will not be established even if the
expulsion would interrupt treatment, lead to a deterioration in health or increase morbidity.
The
height of the bar in article 3 cases is such that it is limited to so-called "deathbed" cases.
What
needs to be emphasised about extradition and health generally are that human rights and oppression
may act as a bar, a high hurdle must be met to prevent an extradition under them, and that a wide
range of factors are considered by courts when they are put forward. Further and notably, courts have
not systematically recognised and considered the distinct issues that may arise where the disorder
is one of mental as opposed to physical health. It is suggested that this recognition is called for.
EXTRADITION AND MENTAL HEALTH
The first point to address in considering extradition and mental health within the UK is the scale of
persons extradited generally, the percentage of those who put forward mental health disorders and
the types of those disorders. The information available for each is these is very limited and/or
anecdotal. It is clear, though, that the scale of extradition and surrender is significant, particularly
under the EAW. In the calendar year 2016 the UK received 13,797 EAW requests and surrendered
1431 individuals to fellow EU member states.
Outside the EU the number is considerably smaller,
in the financial year 2012–2013 84 requests from Category 2 territories were made to England and
Wales.
The number of requested persons who were actually extradited over this period is not
available. Nor is the number of requested persons who put forward mental health disorders as a bar
to extradition, and the fate of such arguments. Anecdotally, however, it can be assumed that the
number of cases where mental health arguments are made is not insignificant. A considerable
number of reported extradition cases contain mental health-related arguments – these form the basis
of the analysis below. As to the mental health disorders affecting requested persons, again there is
no available information. From the present research, however, persons with autism, and in particular
Asperger’s Syndrome are prominent. Other disorders forming the basis of arguments against
extradition have included paranoid schizophrenia, depression, and post-traumatic stress disorder. In
Howes v HMA,
a leading case in Scotland on the issue, the requested person was diagnosed with
an adjustment disorder with the predominant symptoms of anxiety, panic attacks and compulsive
behaviour. Overall, the only point that can be made certainty is that there is a near complete dearth
of empirical information in the area. That noted, the response of extradition law to mental health
disorders is clear, albeit unsatisfactorily so.
The failure of the law to consistently and adequately consider the unique issues in mental health
cases is seen in the operation and terms of the oppression and human rights bars. Recognising those
issues, in the context of article 3, has been the Court of Appeal where it stated: "There has been some
debate in our domestic case-law as to the extent to which cases of mental illness… are analogous
to cases of physical illness for the purposes of the application of article 3. Whilst there may be
factual differences between the two types of case… the same principles are to be applied to them
both".
Confirming the general lack of differentiation between mental and physical cases are the
terms of the oppression bar. Section 25(2) inter alia provides that an extradition is barred, or should
be adjourned, where the extradition judge finds that "… the physical or mental condition of the
person… is such that it would be unjust or oppressive to extradite him". The same law applies in
spite of mental and physical health cases being – to an extent at least – factually dissimilar. It is not
suggested, of course, that the law must explicitly accommodate, legislatively or judicially, all
factually distinct cases – this is impossible. It is argued, however, that mental health extradition cases
do merit a degree of systematically bespoke legal consideration because of the scale of difference
between them, including a number of issues that arise in mental health cases that do not in physical
health cases. Further, it is suggested that where differentiation has taken place it has been
inconsistent and inadequate.
The factual differences between mental and physical health disorders in the context of extradition are such to merit an element of differentiation under the law. This is not to suggest that there are not similarities between them. Medical treatment is necessary in both. Arguments based upon the importance of the care one is receiving within the UK, the effect of its withdrawal, and the lesser nature of the medical treatment and facilities in the requesting state can therefore be made in each. As to the latter the ECtHR stated in Nv UK:
"The decision to remove an alien who is suffering from a serious mental or physical illness to a
country where the facilities for the treatment of that illness are inferior to those available in the
contracting state may raise an issue under Art.3, but only in a very exceptional case, where the
humanitarian grounds against the removal are compelling".
It is clear that both types of illness may call for medical facilities and / or drugs which may be
available in the UK and not, or to a lesser extent, in the requesting state.
To this extent mental and
physical health disorders are rightfully treated similarly. There are differences between the two,
however, in both degree and substance.
The underlying commonalities between mental and physical health extradition cases only go so far. There are issues which are attendant to mental health cases alone. Further, there are factors present in both which can be particularly pronounced within mental health cases. The latter arise from the fact that the process of extradition, including a foreign trial, detention and perhaps imprisonment, and indeed the transfer itself, is often likely to have a greater effect upon someone suffering from a mental illness than otherwise. In other words, the dislocation and hardship that all persons subjected to extradition experience may be considerably exacerbated for persons suffering from certain mental illnesses. This was held to be the case in Love v US, discussed below. Related to this is the likely enhanced effect of an extradition upon an individual with a mental health disorder due to the necessary separation from his home, family and support network in the UK. These differences between mental and physical cases are a matter of degree. The same circumstances befall those with mental and physical health disorders but it is more likely that they will have a greater impact on the former. More relevant in setting mental health cases apart from physical cases are the distinct issues that arise in them alone. These are particular evidential considerations, the risk of suicide and the fitness to plead of the requested person. Each of these issues will be specifically discussed below. Firstly, however, the failings of extradition law more generally as regards mental health will be exposed through a description and analysis of the three applicable bars to extradition. The inadequate and inconsistent recognition and accommodation of the differences between mental and physical health cases will be established. The weaknesses in the law will be seen to militate in favour of a rationalisation of the bars, in both application and number.
THREE GERMANE BARS
The three bars which may come into play where a requested person presents with a mental health disorder, oppression, human rights and forum, each have their own terms and jurisprudence. None of them were designed to specifically address mental health disorders. The bars are of different pedigree. The oldest is that based on oppression. Its origins are found in the Fugitive Offenders Act 1881. The newest is the forum bar, being inserted into the 2003 Act by the Crime and Courts Act 2013. Human rights as an explicit bar in UK law dates from 1 January 2004, when the 2003 Act entered into force. What the bars have in common, in addition to being applicable in mental health cases, is that they contribute to the complex and unsatisfactory response of the law in the area.
1. Oppression and Injustice
a. Derivation and meaning
Sections 25 and 91 of the 2003 Act contain the oppression bar for Category 1 (EU) and 2 (generally
non-EU) territories respectively. Kakis v Government of the Republic of Cyprus
is accepted as providing an authoritative interpretation of the words "oppression" and "injustice" in extradition. Here
Lord Diplock stated " Unjust’ I regard as directed primarily to the risk of prejudice to the accused
in the conduct of the trial itself, "oppressive" as directed to hardship to the accused resulting from
changes in his circumstances that have occurred during the period to be taken into consideration; but
there is room for overlapping, and between them they would cover all cases where to return him
would not be fair".
The adoption of this understanding, being made in the context of the passage
of time under the Fugitive Offenders Act 1967, is not particularly useful.
This is because it suggests
that the passage of time is an operative consideration. However, time may, or may not, be a relevant
factor. The bar requires a court to look at the fairness of extradition proceedings if a person is unfit
as well as the consequences of extradition were it to take place.
This includes taking into account
conditions in both the UK at the time of the hearing and within the requesting state, speculatively,
after extradition. Regard is to be had to "… all the relevant circumstances, including the fact that
extradition is ordinarily likely to cause stress and hardship [that] will inevitably vary from case to
case".
Conditions in the requesting state need not be similar to those within the UK, rather, the
court seeks to ascertain whether the difference in treatment is such that extradition would be
oppressive.
Clearly, mental and physical disorders are not distinguished in general understandings
of the bar.
b. Burden and standard of proof and threshold
Critical to the operation of the bar are the burden of establishing it, the required standard of proof
and the threshold at which courts hold it met. As regard the burden, it is clear that the onus falls upon
the requested person to establish that it would be oppressive or unjust to extradite him because of
his mental or physical health. The standard at which the burden is discharged is the balance of
probabilities, although there is dicta to suggest that there is in fact a higher standard.
As to the
threshold, the law struggles to clearly and precisely set a test that must be met where courts can hold
it successfully invoked. The law is that each case turns on its specific facts. In South Africa v
Dewani, for example, the court strongly discouraged the citation of previous decisions.
A degree
of judicial guidance on the requisite threshold is clearly needed, however. It is not difficult to find.
In Howes v HMA the High Court of Justiciary stated "… in practice a high threshold has to be
reached…".
That height reflects countervailing considerations including the public interest in
giving effect to treaty obligations in extradition cases and that the UK’s extradition partners "… are
likely to have adequate facilities available for treating the health problems of persons whose
extradition is requested".
Whilst the height of the threshold is established the question of whether it is fixed or relative is not.
This is relevant because if relative it could admit a degree of flexibility and accommodate differing
circumstances. Mental and physical health cases, for example, could be distinguished. This is what
happened in South Africa v Dewani. It was held that whilst an adjournment under s 91 was
appropriate where a person was recovering from an acute injury or physical illness because the
prognosis for recovery was certain, "… in other cases where the quantification of the degree of risk
to life is less certain and the prognosis is also less certain the interests of justice require consideration
of that person being brought to trial".
This is significant. It suggests that the threshold for an
adjournment is in fact higher in mental health cases than physical health cases. Whether this also
applies to a discharge is not stated. The court’s reasoning was that the greater uncertainty in the risk
to life and prognosis in mental health cases weighed in favour of extradition rather than against it.
It is suggested that, in such circumstances, it is not unreasonable to come to the opposite conclusion
– that in the face of greater uncertainty the threshold should lower, not rise.
c. Mental and physical health distinction
There has been limited recognition of the distinction between mental and physical health cases under
the oppression bar. As just seen, a higher threshold may attach to mental health cases than exists in
physical cases. More significantly, the law has recognised that two particular issues merit especial
consideration. These are fitness to plead and the risk of suicide.
Fitness to plead cases arise where
there is agreement on the matter at the extradition hearing; the position where there is disagreement
will be mentioned below.
In South Africa v Dewani, it was agreed Dewani was unfit for trial at the
time of his appeal and that it was not known when he would be fit in the future. The Court had to
decide whether it was oppressive or unjust to extradite in the circumstances. It held that it might be
oppressive or unjust to extradite Dewani without considering whether an assurance should be
required providing that he would be free to return to the UK after a specified period of time if he
remained unfit.
South Africa subsequently gave such an assurance (the period being 18 months)
and Dewani was extradited. This development is one of a select number that have accommodated
mental health disorders in extradition in a bespoke way. It has been applied inconsistently, however.
Contrasting with South Africa v Dewani is Lord Advocate v SN,
where Sheriff Crowe exercised
his discretion under s 71(2) of 2003 Act and refused to issue an arrest warrant where the requested
person was found permanently unfit to plead and travel. Of more relevance and concern is the fact
that there is no over-arching judicial, or indeed legislative, guidance on the practice of seeking fitness
to plead assurances. In certain cases extradition has taken place in the absence of assurances where
a requested person is unfit. The lack of guidance may give rise to inconsistency, and may operate to
the detriment of requested persons.
Whilst the law has come to accommodate fitness to plead and suicide cases under the oppression bar,
it has not distinguished more generally between mental and physical health cases. The terms of the
bar refer to them jointly and the jurisprudence provides that the likelihood of stress or hardship upon
a requested person, whether he presents with physical or mental health concerns, is not normally
relevant.
Courts normally respond to mental disorders as they do to physical illness. In Boudhiba
v Central Examining Court, where a requested person suffered from a psychiatric disorder and low
intelligence, the court stated:
"It is important, in my view, that the court should keep its eye firmly on the statutory question posed
by section 25. The question is not whether the appellant is suffering from a psychiatric disorder with
or without the added disadvantage of low intelligence; it is whether, by reason of his mental condition it would unjust or oppressive to extradite him".
The accommodation of mental health disorders under the oppression bar, therefore, only goes so far.
2. Human Rights
a. Derivation and meaning
Human rights form the basis of the second bar that can apply in mental health cases. It is found in
ss 21(1) and 87(1) of the 2003 Act. It provides that extraditions must be compatible with human
rights. If they are not the requested person must be discharged. Significantly, the protection extends
to possible future human rights violations within the requesting territory as well as those grounded
in the UK.
The leading ECtHR mental health removal case is Bensaid v UK.
It established that
a mental health disorder may form the basis of a human rights argument against removal. Bensaid
inter alia argued his deportation would violate articles 3 and 8 because he would receive a lesser
level of medical support in Algeria. The ECtHR began establishing the important point that article
3 could apply in a removal case even though the public authorities in Algeria were not directly or
indirectly responsible. This is particularly relevant in health cases because requesting states may not
"act" in the sense of doing or omitting to do something giving rise to the violation. That established,
the ECtHR held that the less favourable Algerian circumstances were not decisive. The risks he faced
were speculative (again a particularly germane point in mental health cases). There was not a
sufficiently real risk that his removal would be contrary to article 3.
Bensaid’s article 8 was also
rejected. Whilst the ECtHR held that mental health must be regarded as a part of private life, it was
not established that Bensaid’s moral integrity was affected so as to engage article 8.
b. Burden and standard of proof and threshold
The burden of proof under the human rights bar falls on the requested person. To meet the standard
of proof he must establish that there is a real risk of a violation of his rights, meaning a "… risk
which is substantial and not merely fanciful; and it may be established by something less than proof
of a 51% probability".
Once this is met the burden shifts to the requesting state to establish that the
violation will not take place. The court then is tasked with deciding whether the bar is satisfied.
Affecting its decision is a presumption that the UK’s extradition partners, particularly members of
the Council of Europe and the EU, will respect human rights.
The threshold test that a court applies
turns upon the right in question. Under article 3 the court must find strong grounds for believing that
there is a real risk the individual would be subjected to torture or inhuman treatment etcetera.
Where article 6 is argued, the court must find that the requested person has suffered or risks suffering
a flagrant denial of justice in the requesting state.
Under article 8 the court must decide if the
extradition unlawfully interferes with the person’s respect for his private and family life. As a
qualified right, courts must decide if the interference is prescribed by law, necessary in a democratic
society and for one of the purposes stated in the article. The essence of this examination is whether
the interference is outweighed by the public interest in extradition.
c. Mental and physical health distinction
Human rights jurisprudence has partially recognised a distinction between mental and physical health
disorders in extradition. This development is relatively novel and largely confined to ECtHR case
law.
It is found in Ahmad v UK
and Aswat v UK (No 1).
In these cases, the ECtHR has in effect
held that a degree of especial consideration of persons with mental health disorders is merited and
that in such cases relatively specific mental-health related assurances may be required.
This former
development falls short of a being a tailored rule, but rather is guidance on how the existing rules
apply in mental health cases. In considering the case of one of the complainants in Ahmad v UK,
Ahsan, in light of the highly restricted regime of imprisonment he faced if convicted, the ECtHR
stated: "… the assessment of whether the particular conditions of detention are incompatible with
the standards of art.3 has, in the case of mentally-ill persons, to take into consideration their
vulnerability and their inability, in some cases, to complain coherently or at all about how they are
being affected by any particular treatment. The feeling of inferiority and powerlessness which is
typical of persons who suffer from a mental disorder calls for increased vigilance in reviewing
whether the Convention has (or will be) complied with".
In spite of this especial consideration, it
was held Ahsan could be extradited. It did not appear that the psychiatric services available to him
in the US prison would be unable to treat his mental health disorder.
Again therefore, as with the
oppression bar, human rights jurisprudence fails to generally and systematically recognise that
mental health cases may give rise to distinct issues.
3. The Forum Bar
a. Derivation and meaning
The forum bar is the third bar that may act to prevent an extradition on the basis of a mental health
disorder.
Its origins are found in what were considered exorbitant claims to jurisdiction by the
United States, in particular as regards the prosecution of the so-called NatWest Three.
The forum
bar, found in ss 19B and 83A of the 2003 Act, provides that extradition is to be barred by reason of
forum if it would not be in the "interests of justice". An extradition is not in the interests of justice
if a substantial measure of the requested person’s relevant activity was performed within the UK and
that, having regard to "specified matters", the extradition should not take place. There are seven such
matters. Of particular relevance to mental health cases are the interests of victims and the
connections between the requested person and the UK. If a judge decides the bar is satisfied he must
order the person’s discharge. Illustrating the operation of the bar is the case of Lauri Love. The US
had sought his extradition for a number of hacking offences. Love suffered from Asperger syndrome.
He invoked the forum, human rights and oppression bars. The District Judge rejected Love’s
arguments, and his extradition was ordered. Love successfully appealed in the first case where the
bar was held to be satisfied, in Love v US.
The High Court disagreed with the District Judge on
three points, two of which related to Love’s mental health. Firstly, it found that Love’s extradition
would not be in the interests of victims because of the high risk that he would not be fit to stand trial
in the US. Secondly, the High Court placed greater weight on Love’s connection to the UK. It
construed "connection" to cover Love’s mental health disorder and medical treatment because of the
particular nature of his condition and treatment that connected him to the UK.
It concluded that the
factors against extradition, Love’s mental health and the possibility of a UK prosecution, outweighed
those in favour sufficiently clearly to bar his extradition.
b. Burden and standard of proof and threshold
The relative novelty of the forum bar makes a definitive iteration of the applicable burden and
standard of proof and threshold impossible. However, from the terms of the bar and the limited
jurisprudence, it appears that the burden firstly falls upon the requested person, as with the other
bars.
As regards the standard of proof, the requested person must meet a "gateway" condition –
namely to satisfy the judge that a substantial measure of his activity was performed in the UK, as
found in s ss 19B(2) and 83A(2).
Subsequently the court considers the "… ultimate test… whether
the extradition would not be in the interests of justice".
In applying that test the "court will be
engaged in a fact-specific exercise".
Only those matters listed in ss 19B(3) and 83A(3) can be taken
into account, no others. Each factor must be considered, but the judge has to "decide on the facts of
the case before him. There is no ranking of importance of the various factors… a value judgment
overall" has to be made.
That value judgment has been held to be very similar to that taken in
considering proportionality under article 8.
That exercise was authoritatively set out in Poland v
Celinski,
it entails an analysis of the facts as found for and against extradition followed by reasoned
conclusions as to why extradition should be ordered or the defendant discharged. The threshold
under the forum bar, then, is met where the factors in favour of extradition are outweighed by the
interests of justice as defined by the specified matters in the bar.
c. Mental and physical health distinction
Whether the forum bar differentiates between mental and physical health disorders is unexplored.
As seen, the terms of the bar do not explicitly refer to either mental or physical health. The particular
reasoning in Love v US, however, may be interpreted to suggest mental health disorders are of
particular import in establishing the forum bar. This follows the relevance of the requested person’s
connection with the UK under the bar. As noted, the High Court held that Love’s mental health led
to his relationship with his parents being especially important. Their necessary support strengthened
his connection to the UK. Whilst persons suffering from physical health concerns undoubtedly
benefit from the support of their families, in Love’s case this support was of a different order.
Further in Love’s case, the likelihood of suicide meant that the interests of victims might not be met
through extradition. These factors may support the contention that mental health disorders have been
distinguished from physical illness under the forum bar. It should be noted, however, that weighing
against this interpretation is Scott v US, where the requested person’s connection to the UK was one
of the main factors in substantiating the bar where neither mental nor physical health was at
issue.
The forum bar, then, appears to be akin to the oppression and human rights bars in not
generally recognising the distinction between mental and physical health disorders. Whilst this non-recognition exists across the three bars it is possible to discern an emerging approach which provides
that specific mental health-related circumstances fall under one or other bar.
THE THREE BARS AND MENTAL HEALTH DISORDERS
More than one of the three bars to extradition applicable in mental health cases are commonly put
forward in the same case.
This fact more often than not simply evidences the fact that extent of, and
circumstances covered by, each bar is not clear or delimited. The extent and circumstances may
overlap. Requested persons contesting extradition obviously wish to maximise the chances of their
transfer being barred. The invocation of multiple bars leads to unnecessary complexity in the law.
This follows, in part, from the variations between the standards of proof and thresholds under each.
Greater alignment between the bars would lead to a greater degree of clarity and consistency. This
could take the form of the firm acceptance of the distinction between the circumstances covered by
the bars – which is emerging in the jurisprudence – or preferably fewer applicable bars. It is
suggested that a single bar, that based upon human rights, is capable of acting in a manner that
satisfies the interests of requested persons and that of all the other conflicting interests in extradition
cases. In such a situation the law would become more focused and coherent.
As the law stands there are three applicable bars in mental health cases, and under them a degree of
discernment between them is arguably emerging. This is seen in Love v US and South Africa v Dewani.In Love v US all three bars were put forward. Whilst the High Court did not pronounce on the
human rights bar, unfortunately, it did find that the forum and oppression bars went to different
facets of his case. Particularly, Love’s connection with the UK was instrumental in establishing the
forum bar, whilst the measures put in place to prevent his suicide in the US substantiated the
oppression bar.
Somewhat similarly in South Africa v Dewani the oppression and human rights
bars were linked to distinct circumstances around Dewani’s extradition. Namely, the risk of suicide
went to the oppression bar and South African prison conditions were measured under the human
rights bar. His appeal was allow under the former, but not the latter. It must be noted that this type
of approach is rare. The breadth of the bars remains opaque and overlap is common. As will be seen
below, the risk of suicide is considered not only under the oppression bar but also the human rights
bar. Clearly the three bars have developed in an incremental and ad hoc manner legislatively, and
the relationship between them lacks authoritative judicial pronouncement. Further, the distinct issues
arising in mental health disorders have not been fully and systematically accommodated across the
three bars to extradition nor in regard to any single one. Cumulatively these factors militate in favour
of a rationalisation of the bars to extradition applicable in mental health cases, and more generally.
This lack of specific and tailored recognition under the bars is also found in the response of
extradition law and practice to mental health disorders evidentially.
EVIDENTIAL CHALLENGES
The second area where extradition law has failed to consistently and adequately recognise that
distinct issues may arise in mental health cases is evidence. Extradition mental health cases can often
face unorthodox and difficult evidential challenges. These challenges can contribute to the complex
and seemingly random nature of the law in the area. They arise from the necessity of adjudging the
mental health of a requested person within the context of the process, and the breadth and nature of
the subjects requiring decision. Four particular issues can be identified. These are the not uncommon
occurrence of discordant diagnoses, the unseen nature of mental health disorders, the fact that certain
decisions must be taken on a prospective and speculative basis and that mental health disorders
arguably evolve more quickly than physical illnesses. All of these issues exist simply because a
decision on the basis of mental health requires sufficient evidence to convince a court that the
applicable test is met. This necessitates not only an evaluation of the requested person’s mental
health but may also require decision on the suitability of transfer arrangements, the nature of medical
treatment, psychiatric hospitals and prison wards abroad, the likelihood of a requested person
remaining unfit to plead in foreign circumstances and the nature and value of diplomatic
assurances.
1. Discordant Diagnoses
The evidential difficulties attendant to extradition mental health cases arise, in part, from mental
health professionals not uncommonly disagreeing in their diagnoses and prognoses. In Polish
Judicial Authority v Wolkowicz, the Court concluded that the views of the two psychiatrists in the
case were irreconcilable.
The Senior District Judge was therefore obliged to weigh up both views
and come to conclusion in favour of one or the other. Notably, a different approach is taken where
medical opinions conflict in fitness to plead cases. In Edwards v US,
the practice under the
Extradition Act 1989 of allowing extradition in cases where there were differences in medical
opinion over fitness to plead was argued to have changed under the 2003 Act. This was rejected. The
Court held that where there was a genuine and legitimate dispute between medical experts on a
requested person’s fitness to plead the issue ought to be deter mined by the requesting state’s courts
as part of the trial process.
Where a decision is required to be taken, judges are tasked with deciding
complex issues on the basis of conflicting evidence. This is, of course, not unusual. However, it is
submitted that in extradition mental health cases where the consequences can be severe – indeed
matters of life and death – such position may be a concern. This is because, in part, decisions are
taken upon a non-criminal standard of proof. Further, affecting the decision making process is the
fact that diagnosis in mental health cases is based "… in most cases entirely on behavioral criteria,
defined here broadly to include cognitions (thoughts, beliefs), feelings, perceptions, desires, and
actions. There is no external standard, such as a biological or psychological marker, to which the
diagnostician can appeal to determine if the diagnosis is accurate".
This is not to suggest that the
process of adjudicating upon mental illness is wanting. Nor that the participating mental health
professions themselves are not robust and regulated.
It is rather to highlight that this factor can set
mental health cases apart from most physical health cases, and may be a concern in some instances.
2. Unseen Disorders
Challenges related to discordant diagnoses arising in mental health cases is based upon their non-physical, or unseen, nature. This may give rise to heightened and perhaps at times unwarranted
judicial scepticism when they are put forward. In Sbar v Court of Bologna, Italy, for example, the
Court noted "… the need for circumspection in evaluating the evidence when such an issue is raised
in case there is a perception that raising the issue is an easy way of avoiding extra dition".
The issue
being raised was the risk of suicide. In Bobbe v Poland, referring to the CJEU case of CK v
Slovenia,
the Divisional Court noted that the CJEU was conscious that those opposing removal
might exaggerate their condition or make statements to medical experts designed to generate the
evidence needed to defeat the threatened removal.
It stated that the CJEU noted that in such cases
the "authorities (and the courts) are bound to form their own considered judgment not only of the
quality of the evidence before them but also as to the risk that it has been exaggerated for forensic
ends".
This is a risk that is less likely to exist in physical health cases. It gives rise to the possibility
that courts may too readily extradite in response. Whilst of course courts must be aware that
individuals facing extradition may well feign mental illness they must also appreciate the distinct
nature of mental health disorders and the possible severe consequences subsequent to extradition.
3. Prospective and Speculative Decisions
Compounding the evidential challenge facing courts is the often prospective and speculative nature
of the decisions that must be taken in mental health cases.
In Maziarski v Lord Advocate the High
Court of Justiciary noted in this vein that "None of the psychiatrists before us was prepared to speak
in terms of certainty – and we can readily understand why. As Bean J observed in the Wrobel v
Poland [2011] EWHC B2 (Admin) … predictions by psychiatrists cannot, as I see it, be in terms of
certainty"’.
Speculation is necessary on a number of questions additional to the mental health per
se of the requested person. These include the efficacy of preventative measures in suicide cases, and
the effect of the transfer and foreign detention. These are impossible to definitively, or in some cases
even reasonably, adjudge. In Bobbe v Poland the Divisional Court noted that "… the evaluation is
not based upon an ability to form a certain or absolute conclusion. It is based upon the realistic
prospect of the requested person recovering within a reasonable time and the ability of a court ex
ante to make that assessment".
Prospective analyses of conditions abroad can also give rise to
concerns arising from the rules of evidence per se. A leading Scottish case here is Kapri v HMA,
where the High Court of Justiciary examined whether Kapri would receive a fair trial in Albania. In
response to a number of reports being lodged by both sides it stated "… there is no general provision
which allows the court to hold as proof of fact, merely by their production, the content of reports or
other papers emanating from foreign governments, international governmental or non-governmental
bodies, or academic or research institutions".
In this regard it is important to note that the rules of
evidence in England and Wales have been relaxed somewhat in extradition hearings in matters of,
inter alia, human rights.
4. Fluid Nature of Certain Mental Health Disorders
The final evidential issue that can affect the adequacy and consistency of decisions in extradition
mental health cases is their at times fluid nature. Certain mental health disorders can change
relatively quickly and unpredictably and, of particular concern, from the original hearing to the point
of appeal. The possibility of new evidence being admitted within an appeal therefore not
uncommonly arises. Governing the question are ss 27 and 29 and ss 104 and 106 of the 2003 Act.
They inter alia provide that evidence which was not available at the extradition hearing may be
admitted if, had it been available, it would have led the judge to decide the matter differently. The
leading case here is Hungary v Fenyvesi.
Evidence that was not available at the extradition hearing
was held to mean evidence that either did not exist at the time or that which was not at the disposal
of the party who wished to adduce it and which he could not with reasonable diligence have
obtained. The position, then, is that on appeal new evidence is often put to the Court. This fact is
reasonable in that it acts to facilitate the most informed and up-to-date decision.
Overall in regard to evidence in extradition mental health cases the point that must be made is that
unorthodox and difficult questions require decision. The position was aptly described by the High
Court of Justiciary in Howes v HMA, where it said its decision on oppression and mental health was
"… not however a technical issue of law, but requires the court to form an overall judgment upon
the facts of the particular case", with that judgment being one which "… is likely to reflect shades
of grey rather than black or white".
The concern in the extradition context is that such decisions
are affected by strong public policy reasons favouring extradition. In domestic criminal trials the
burden of proof and rules of evidence operate to provide a relatively high degree of protection to the
accused. This level of protection is absent where persons with mental health disorders are sought by
way of extradition. Developments that can serve to mitigate certain of these evidential concerns are
the production of joint medical reports and close liaison between medical professionals in both the
requesting state and the UK.
Clearly such concerted action is possible and should be taken
whenever beneficial. Standing in contrast to the general lack of specific accommodation of the
evidential challenges arising in mental health cases are those instances where a requested person is
a suicide risk. Here, under the oppression bar, a body of jurisprudence has developed that governs
the approach to be taken.
SUICIDE CASES
1. Oppression and Suicide Cases
The development of a set of suicide-related rules is one of the two ways in which extradition law has
specifically recognised the distinctiveness of mental health cases. These rules have been developed
in a series of cases where a risk of suicide is said to be a consequence of the process.
Whilst this
recognition of the risk of suicide as meriting especial consideration is appropriate, it is not beyond
criticism. This is firstly because the bar in such cases is set at a particularly high level. Secondly,
these suicide-specific rules have emerged and apply under the oppression bar alone, yet courts also
entertain the human rights and forum bars in such cases.
More positively, the importance of
preventative measures in suicide cases has been recognised across the jurisprudence.
The rules applicable in suicide cases under the oppression bar were summarised by the Divisional
Court in Polish Judicial Authority v Wolkowicz. This entailed an iteration of the seven propositions
set down in Turner v Government of the USA. They apply where an extradition may be oppressive
or unjust because of the substantial suicide risk of the requested person on account of his mental
health.
They are that the court has to form an overall judgment on the facts of the case, a high
threshold must be met to satisfy the bar and that the court must assess the mental state of the
individual and determine whether, if the extradition order were to be made, there would be a
substantial risk he would commit suicide whatever steps were taken. Further, the court must find that
the mental condition is such that capacity to resist the suicidal impulse is removed
and ascertain
whether the requesting state has appropriate arrangements in place to address the risk.
Finally,
courts must keep in mind the important factor of the public interest in giving effect to treaty
obligations.
These propositions are useful promoting consistency in suicide cases. They are also
open to criticism, however, by cumulatively setting the bar so high that only in the rarest of cases
will it be met.
2. Human Rights and Suicide Cases
The human rights bar is not uncommonly invoked alongside the oppression bar in suicide cases.
In South Africa v Dewani, for example, articles 2 and 3 were put forward in conjunction with the
oppression bar. On the human rights point, it was held that the assurances given and the facilities
available meant that there was no real and immediate threat to his life if he was extradited.
As with
human rights violations generally within extradition, the risk of suicide can relate to different aspects
of the process. In Bobbe v Poland
the transfer was the concern. Whilst the Court accepted that a
transfer could in certain circumstances amount to inhuman and degrading treatment the steps taken
by the National Crime Agency (NCA) in Bobbe’s case addressed the concerns.
These included
inter alia a private flight, liaison with the Polish authorities and readiness for a possible suicide
attempt. A suicide case focusing upon the conditions within the requesting state and demonstrating
the lack of clarity in the relationship between the human rights and oppression bars is LMN v
Turkey.
Here it had been conceded that LMN’s suicide risk did not provide a basis for a challenge
under s 91 given the stringency of the test. On appeal however, it was successfully argued that the
risk was relevant to article 3. The Divisional Court accepted that there was a high risk of suicide in
the event of extradition and held that the suicide risk together with a failure to meet LMN’s mental
healthcare needs would in the circumstances attain the minimum standard of severity necessary to
breach his article 3 rights.
Relevant in the case was the then recent Turkish coup, the absence of
formal Turkish assurances and the admission of new medical evidence as to LMN’s mental health.
The appeal was allowed and LMN was discharged. Mirroring the criticisms of the law made above,
it is unfortunate that the suicide-case jurisprudence does not clearly distinguish between the
applicability of the oppression, human rights and forum bars in the suicide context. What is called
for is a rationalisation of applicable bars. Ideally, a single bar, that based upon human rights, would
exist to offer protection in suicide cases. In such a case the rules akin to those developed under the
oppression bar could be adopted under articles 3 and/or 8. In the meantime, or failing a
rationalisation of the bars to extradition applicable in mental health cases, a clear and consistent
judicial demarcation of the applicability of the three bars is required. Both the nature of protection
offered suicidal requested persons and the law itself would benefit from such a development.
DIPLOMATIC ASSURANCES AND MENTAL HEALTH
The second instance where the law has explicitly accommodated mental health-related concerns is
found in its reaction to requested persons who are unfit to plead. This has taken place through diplomatic assurances. A further assurance-related development can be seen in their being tailored to
address several specific mental health related issues. This latter point is matter of degree rather than
a specific accommodation, however, because relatively detailed assurances have been used in a
variety of cases. Generally, diplomatic assurances are employed in extradition (and deportation) as
a "quick, efficient and largely honoured mechanism of cooperation and regulation of multilateral and
bilateral inter-State relations".
They are designed to ensure that an individual being removed from
a country will not be treated, or indeed will be treated, in a certain way.
Diplomatic assurances
have come to be used in mental health cases in a distinct way by addressing some of the issues
particular to them. It is this specific focus, as well as their conditional application in fitness to plead
cases, that allows them to be distinguished from assurances more generally. This is to be welcomed.
However their use raises concerns. These go to their seemingly ad hoc usage and questions over
compliance and verifiability.
Further, they may be criticised on account of their non-binding nature
and because they might lead to the circumvention of human rights obligations in fact.
1. Conditional Nature
The first assurance-related development in mental health cases to be noted is that they have been
utilised in a conditional way. This has arisen in fitness to plead cases. As mentioned above, here the
requesting state agrees to receive the requested person provisionally. If the proviso or condition is
not met within a certain period of time the requesting state is obliged to return the individual to the
UK. This type of assurance was used or considered in the fitness to plead cases of Dewani v South
Africa and Arshad v Malta.
In Dewani v South Africa
the Divisional Court considered South
Africa’s undertakings in this regard. They provided that Dewani would be allowed to return to the
UK if, having been found unfit, the judge concludes that there is no realistic prospect of him
becoming fit within eighteen months. Further, South Africa promised that if a judge embarks to
determine whether Dewani committed the crime he was accused of, he would be free to return.
Summers QC, for Dewani, unsuccessfully challenged several aspects of these assurances. The
Divisional Court held that the undertakings bound South Africa in international law, that they were
properly made and that they meant that if a judge could not decide whether Dewani would remain
unfit in 18 months he would be allowed to return to the UK. This conditional type of assurance was
designated a "Dewani-type" assurance in Bobbe v Poland – a case which touches upon one of the
two general criticisms of assurances made below, their seemingly random usage.
2. Specification of Assurances
The second relevant feature of assurances in mental health cases is the degree of distinct
specification that has been sought and given.
Clearly illustrating this development is the series of
cases involving Haroon Aswat, decided by the ECtHR and the English Divisional Court. Aswat was
sought by the US on terrorist related offences. The process leading to his eventual extradition took
almost a decade, during which the issuance of specific and tailored assurances was central. Indeed,
over the period assurances were given by the US on four separate occasions. In them the US inter
alia guaranteed that Aswat would not be tried by a military commission in Guantanamo Bay, nor
subjected to the death penalty if convicted.
It then guaranteed that Aswat would be able to argue
he was not fit to plead, would have his competency assessed, and that that assessment could be
appealed. Assurances concerning his pre-trial detention and the accommodation of his mental state
if convicted were also given.
The ECtHR considered these assurances and found them lacking. In
doing so it reiterated the point that where an individual suffers from a mental health disorder
"increased vigilance in reviewing whether the Convention has (or will be) complied with" is called
for.
Subsequently the US issued a further eleven undertakings addressing the concerns raised.
These inter alia related to Aswat’s transfer to the US, his arrival and the role of his treating clinician.
Following these assurances, and a further clarification, both the Divisional Court
and subsequently
the ECtHR
held that Aswat could be extradited.
Clearly, in this instance the "increased vigilance" led to assurances of a high degree of specification designed to address concerns arising in mental health cases.
3. Varied Practice
A criticism that can be made of assurances is their random usage and the lack of a regulatory framework governing them.119 Requests for assurances normally follow judicial concern that an extradition would engender a human rights violation in the requesting state or be oppressive. There is not clear guidance or practice governing when they will be sought or, related to this, whether there may be an obligation upon a court to seek them. This appears to be particularly relevant as regards Dewani-type assurances. In Bobbe v Poland it was agreed that Bobbe was unfit to plead. His counsel argued that the judge at Bobbe’s hearing should have obtained a conditional assurance and that its absence led to his extradition being unjust and oppressive. Whilst the NCA had sought such an assurance the Polish Judicial Authority’s response did not specifically and precisely address its terms. The Divisional Court held, however, there was no inevitable legal obligation to obtain assurances in the case of requested persons who were presently unfit to plead.120 The test governing the seeking of assurances, it held, was fact sensitive and only in certain circumstances was an assurance necessary. In Dewani v South Africa, the Court noted, it was relevant that the appellant had no connection to South Africa and that there was the possibility that he might be permanently unfit to plead.121 The circumstances were different in Bobbe v Poland. His mental health condition was not thought permanent, and somewhat unusually, he was sought on both conviction and accusation warrants. He faced, therefore, a period of imprisonment where treatment would be available. The point made here is that in certain mental health cases assurances are sought and others not – with the distinction turning on the facts of each case. Whilst this is not unreasonable, the law lacks a clear and authoritative judicial pronouncement upon their use and content. Such a
4. Compliance and Verifiability
The final and general concern in the area of assurances relates to requesting state compliance and
verifiability. Whilst these are not specific to mental health cases they are, of course, included. In
Aswat v Secretary of State, for example, counsel for Aswat argued that since the management of
Aswat’s US trial would be under the jurisdiction of a District Judge there could be no certainty the
steps proposed by other United States authorities will be fulfilled. This was summarily rejected.
Although the executive gives the assurances and cannot bind the judiciary, the Court noted, "… the
judiciary is part of the State which gives assurances… a judge being aware of those assurances can
reasonably be expected to see that his State is not put in breach of its assurances by his or her own
actions".
Justice Mitting continued "I regard it fanciful to suggest that a judge would deliberately
and for no good reason put at risk the mental health of a defendant in breach of such assurances".
More generally, the House of Lords Select Committee on Extradition has stated that "… assurances
should always be handled carefully and subjected to rigorous scrutiny… the importance of ensuring
that they are genuine and effective cannot be overestimated".
It is clear, though, that once an
individual has been extradited compliance with assurances ultimately turns on the good faith of the
requesting state. Verification by the UK that they have been followed, if allowed by the requesting
state, is resource intensive.
Overall, diplomatic assurances in extradition mental health cases are
a mixed blessing. They may usefully ensure that requested persons are not subjected to human rights
violations and oppressive and unjust treatment. They also can act to prevent an individual who is
unfit to plead from remaining too long in a requesting state untried. However, their use is ad hoc and
they entail a risk of non-compliance. What is needed is greater standardisation and consistency in
their usage. This would almost certainly act to ameliorate at least some of their failings.
CONCLUSION
Mental health disorders in UK extradition law and practice are inconsistently and inadequately addressed. The law applying to them is multi-faceted and unnecessarily complex. It is accordingly unpredictable and seemingly random. This position flows from the law’s failure to adequately recognise that mental health cases may raise issues not arising in physical health cases. That much is clear. The steps needed to improve the law, however, will not be easily achieved. This is because, in part, extradition necessarily entails an accommodation of conflicting interests. The desire to address international criminality and to adhere to international extradition agreements can be at odds with the human rights and welfare of requested persons. Simply, the cooperative and protective facets of the process cannot be wholly reconciled. Mental health disorders introduce a new and complicating factor into this equation. The facts of each case are, of course, different. Legislatively or judicially pronouncing upon even common situations is not possible. Too many variables are at play. That noted, greater clarity and consistency are achievable. Legislative simplification of the applicable bars to extradition is one way that this can be done. Ideally, the law would contain a single applicable bar to extradition based upon human rights. This would be applicable in mental health cases and generally. This is not as radical as it may seem. As the law stands the human rights bar generally accommodates circumstances also falling under the oppression and forum bars. If those bars were to be removed from the law the inherent flexibility under the human rights bar would almost certainly admit situations not presently covered. In the absence of this type of legislative intervention, an authoritative judicial pronouncement upon the circumstances in which the bars to extradition apply, and the relationship between them, is needed. This would most likely go some way in improving the law.
Overlap and inconsistency in the application of the bars to extradition in mental health cases is but
one facet of the law requiring consideration. Evidentially, greater use of joint medical reports as well
as regular communication between medical professionals abroad and in the UK are required. The
acceptance by the law that mental health cases can give rise to distinct issues is a first step in
mitigating the evidential concerns existing presently. This would loosen the evidential shackles in
extradition cases, and permit more holistic analyses. As indeed would the acceptance of extradition
hearings themselves as sui generis quasi-criminal proceedings.
Particularly related to the need for
a rationalisation of the bars to extradition are suicide cases. A single applicable bar, which failing
an authoritative judicial pronouncement, is needed to clarify and standardise the rules applying to
requested persons at risk of suicide. Presently, the three applicable bars serve the cause of
obfuscation as much as the law and individuals concerned. A similar process of standardisation is
also called for in the use and content of diplomatic assurances, especially in cases where fitness to
plead is an issue. Here, as above, coherence and consistency are served through law that is settled
and therefore applied similarly in different cases. Overall, it is clear that the law has tentatively
recognised the particular issues arising in extradition mental health cases. This is to be welcomed.
It is now time, however, for the law to take stock of that recognition and to legislatively and
judicially accept that a number of the issues arising within mental health cases are distinct and
demand specific and systematic regulation.
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