WELCH v. THE UNITED KINGDOMDISSENTING OPINION OF MM. SOYER, MARTINEZ, MRS. LIDDY,
Doc ref: • ECHR ID:
Document date: October 15, 1993
- Inbound citations: 0
- •
- Cited paragraphs: 0
- •
- Outbound citations: 0
DISSENTING OPINION OF MM. SOYER, MARTINEZ, MRS. LIDDY,
MM. GEUS, and MARXER
We agree with the majority of the Commission that regard must be
had to the essential nature and object of a measure both as stated in
domestic law and as revealed in practice but also consider the effect
relevant. Where a sanction or measure is not strictly speaking a
penalty, it may nonetheless have a similar purpose or effect which may
bring it within the ambit of Article 7 of the Convention (No. 5155/71,
Dec. 1.6.73, unpublished).
As noted by the majority, the 1986 Act provides for drastic
assumptions in assessing the amount to be subject to a confiscation
order, in particular that all money passing through the defendant's
hands in the past six years will be assumed to be the benefit of drug
trafficking. The draconian nature of the provisions has been commented
upon by the domestic courts, which have taken steps to mitigate the
provisions by for example insisting on the criminal standard of proof
applying to the prosecution as regards whether a person has benefitted
from drug trafficking (cf. paras. 31-36 above). Nonetheless, once the
initial step of establishing that a defendant has b nefitted has been
accomplished by the prosecution, the burden of proof effectively
switches to the defendant to prove that particular assets were in fact
not derived from drug trafficking and therefore should not be included
in the calculation of the proceeds to be confiscated (see eg. Dickens
(1990) 91 CAR 164).
We find force in the applicant's argument that the true nature
and object of the confiscation is punitive since in practice it goes
beyond reparation and prevention in the scope of the proceeds which
it can attach ie it is not limited to the actual enrichment or profit.
Further, expenditure by the defendant is in fact capable of being added
to the total figure assessed. While the severity of the order,
combined as it is with sentence of imprisonment in default, is not
decisive in itself, it is nonetheless a significant factor in assessing
whether the measure is punitive in its essential effect. There was no
sentence of imprisonment in default in the M. case referred to above
(see para. 44).
The Commission in the case of M. took into account, in finding
the measure preventive, that the confiscation was not linked to a
finding of guilt or part of criminal proceedings. In the present case,
the confiscation was contingent upon a finding of guilt. It could not
be imposed or must fall away if for whatever technical reason a
defendant is acquitted or successful on appeal against conviction. As
an example, it is apparent that if an international drug trafficker
succeeded in securing an acquittal by virtue of a finding of insanity
it would not be possible to confiscate any of the proceeds of his
trafficking.
We are aware that the United Kingdom system could be regarded as
giving a high standard of procedural protection to suspects as a result
of linking confiscation to criminal proceedings with a correspondingly
higher burden of proof on the prosecution. However, that link to the
criminal conviction combined with the stringency of the measure,
particularly the sentence of 2 years' imprisonment in default, leads
us to the view that such confiscation is a measure which in practice
is essentially punitive in its nature and effect.
Consequently, we consider that the confiscation order imposed on
the applicant was a penalty within the meaning of Article 7 para. 1 of
the Convention. We would emphasise however that this conclusion is not
a criticism of confiscation itself as a means of combatting the
problems of drug trafficking: merely that the imposition of such a
penalty cannot under the terms of the Article be imposed
retrospectively.
Or.English
LEXI - AI Legal Assistant
