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31 July 2020
DEMOCRACY IN THE UK HAS COME TO A GRINDING HALT: UK GOVERNMENT REFUSES TO RELEASE INFORMATION ABOUT ASSANGE JUDGE WHO HAS 96% EXTRADITION RECORD
K
UK government refuses to release information about Assange judge who has 96% extradition record
By Matt Kennard and Mark Curtis• 31 July 2020
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange leaves Westminster Magistrates Court in
London, 13 January 2020. (Photo: EPA-EFE/ Facundo Arrizabalaga) Less
The United Kingdom’s Ministry of Justice is blocking the release of
basic information about the judge who is to rule on Julian Assange’s
extradition to the US in what appears to be an irregular application of
the Freedom of Information Act, it can be revealed.
Matt Kennard and Mark Curtis
Declassified
has also discovered that the judge, Vanessa Baraitser, has ordered
extradition in 96% of the cases she has presided over for which
information is publicly available.
Baraitser was appointed
a district judge in October 2011 based at the Chief Magistrate’s Office
in London, after being admitted as a solicitor in 1994. Next to no
other information is available about her in the public domain.
Baraitser has been criticised for a
number of her judgments so far concerning Assange, who has been
incarcerated in a maximum security prison, HMP Belmarsh in London, since
April 2019. These decisions include refusing Assange’s request for emergency bail during the Covid-19 pandemic and making him sit behind a glass screen during the hearing, rather than with his lawyers.
Declassified recently revealed that Assange is one of just two of the 797 inmates in Belmarsh being held for violating bail conditions. Over 20% of inmates are held for murder.
Declassified
has also seen evidence that the UK Home Office is blocking the release
of information about home secretary Priti Patel’s role in the Assange
extradition case.
The
only known photograph of district judge Vanessa Baraitser — who will
rule on Julian Assange’s extradition to the US — in the public domain. Anonymisation by Declassified. (Photo: Instagram)Request denied A request under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) was sent by Declassified to
the Ministry of Justice (MOJ) on 28 February 2020 requesting a list of
all the cases on which Baraitser has ruled since she was appointed in
2011. The MOJ noted in response that it was obliged to send a reply
within 20 working days.
Two months later, on 29 April 2020,
an information officer at the HM Courts and Tribunals Service responded
that it could “confirm” that it held “some of the information that you
have requested”. But the request was rejected since
the officer claimed it was not consistent with the Constitutional Reform
Act. “The judiciary is not a public body for the purposes of FOIA… and
requests asking to disclose all the cases a named judge ruled on are
therefore outside the scope of the FOIA,” the officer stated.
The officer added that the
“information requested would in any event be exempt from disclosure…
because it contains personal data about the cases ruled on by an
individual judge”, and that “personal data can only be released if to do
so would not contravene any of the data protection principles” in the
Data Protection Act.
A British barrister, who wished to remain anonymous, but who is not involved with the Assange case, told Declassified:
“The resistance to disclosure here is curious. A court is a public
authority for the purposes of the Human Rights Act and a judge is an
officer of the court. It is therefore more than surprising that the
first refusal argued that, for the purposes of the FOIA, there is no
public body here subject to disclosure.”
The barrister added: “The alternative
argument on data doesn’t stack up. A court acts in public. There is no
default anonymity of the names of cases, unless children are involved or
other certain limited circumstances, nor the judges who rule on them.
Justice has to be seen to be done.”
Despite the HM Courts and Tribunals Service invoking a data protection clause, Declassified was able to view a host of cases with full names and details in Westlaw, a paid-for legal database. The press has also reported on a number of extradition cases involving Baraitser.
An internal review into the rejection of Declassified’s freedom of information (FOI) request upheld the rejection.
Identical request
On 10 April 2020 Declassified sent an identical information request to the MOJ asking for a case list for a different district judge, Justin Barron, who was appointed on the same day as Baraitser in October 2011.
This request was answered by the MOJ
swiftly, within 17 days, compared to two months with Baraitser. The
information officer also noted that it “holds all the information you
have requested” rather than “some” in the case of Baraitser. It is
unclear why the HM Courts and Tribunals Service would hold only partial
information on Baraitser, but not on Barron.
On this occasion, the request was not
blocked. Instead, the information officer asked for further
clarification about the information being sought, suggesting issues such
as final hearing dates, the defendants’ names and what the defendants
were charged with.
Declassified clarified that it wanted the list to include “the date, the defendant, the charge and the judge’s decision”.
The officer eventually declined the
request, stating that it “would exceed the cost limit set out in the
FOIA”, but adding: “Although we cannot answer your request at the
moment, we may be able to answer a refined request within the cost
limit.”
With Baraitser’s identical records,
the possibility of refining the search was never offered – two
“absolute” exemptions being applied to the request from the start.
Baraitser’s record
Despite the rejection by the MOJ, Declassified
has found 24 extradition cases that Baraitser ruled on from November
2015 to May 2019, discovered using the media archive Factiva and
Westlaw. Of these 24 cases, Baraitser ordered the extradition of 23 of
the defendants, a 96% extradition record from publicly available
evidence.
Baraitser has ordered the extradition
of defendants to at least 11 countries in this period, including one
person to the US. Six of the extraditions, or 26% of the rulings, were
successfully appealed. In one case, Baraitser’s decision to
extradite was overturned because the appeal judge “attached considerable
weight to the likely impact of extradition upon the health and
wellbeing of the defendant’s wife”, who “will be left with very little
support”.
Recently, Baraitser controversially refused to guarantee anonymity to Assange’s partner, Stella Moris, which led her to publicly reveal her relationship with Assange and their two children.
The appointment of Baraitser to
preside over the Assange case remains controversial and the decision
untransparent. It is likely that Chief Magistrate Lady Emma Arbuthnot
was involved in the decision to appoint Baraitser to the case.
A
list of all the extradition cases District Judge Vanessa Baraitser has
ruled on that are publicly available. (Compiled by Declassified)The chief magistrate has a “leadership responsibility”
for the roughly 300 district and deputy judges across England and
Wales. Arbuthnot hears “many of the most sensitive or complex cases in
the magistrates’ courts and in particular extradition and special
jurisdiction cases”.
Arbuthnot’s role also includes
“supporting and guiding” district judges such as Baraitser and
“liaising with the senior judiciary and presiding judges” on the cases
they are ruling on.
But Arbuthnot’s role in the Assange
case is mired in controversy and conflicts of interest due to her
family’s connections to the British military and intelligence
establishment, as Declassified has previouslyrevealed. Arbuthnot has personally received financial benefits from partner organisations of the UK Foreign Office, which in 2018 called Assange a “miserable little worm”.
Arbuthnot directly ruled on the
Assange case in 2018-19 and has never formally recused herself from it.
According to a statement given to Private Eye, she stepped aside because of a “perception of bias”, but it was not elucidated what this related to.
Since Arbuthnot has not formally
recused herself, Assange’s defence team cannot revisit her rulings while
it also could have left open the possibility of her choosing which of
her junior judges was to preside over the Assange case.
In a key judgment
in February 2018, Arbuthnot rejected the findings of the United Nations
Working Group on Arbitrary Detention – a body composed of international
legal experts – that Assange was being “arbitrarily detained”,
characterised Assange’s stay in the embassy as “voluntary” and
concluded Assange’s health and mental state was of minor importance.
In a second ruling a week later, Arbuthnot dismissed
Assange’s fears of US extradition. “I accept that Mr Assange had
expressed fears of being returned to the United States from a very early
stage in the Swedish extradition proceedings but… I do not find that Mr
Assange’s fears were reasonable,” she said.
In May 2019, soon after Assange was
seized from his asylum in the Ecuadorian embassy by British police, the
US government requested his extradition on charges that could see him
imprisoned for 175 years.
Lady
Arbuthnot attends the Queen’s garden party at Buckingham Palace in May
2017 with her husband Lord Arbuthnot, a former Conservative defence
minister with links to the British military and intelligence
establishment. Anonymisation by Declassified. (Photo: Instagram)More silence
Declassified
also made a request under the Freedom of Information Act for a list of
all the cases heard at Woolwich Crown Court, near Belmarsh, for 2019.
Baraitser had controversially moved Assange’s hearing to Woolwich —
which is often used
for terrorism cases — before the Covid-19 pandemic hit. It has now been
moved back to the Old Bailey, the central criminal court of England and
Wales.
This request, sent on 31 March 2020,
was again rejected. The MOJ officer stated: “I can confirm that the MOJ
holds the information that you have requested. All of the information is
exempt from disclosure under section 32 of the FOIA because it is held
in a court record.”
It added that: “Section 32 is an absolute exemption and there is no duty to consider the public interest in disclosure.”
Despite daily lists of the cases heard at Woolwich being freely available online, including names of defendants, an internal review conducted at Declassified’s request reached the same conclusion. On 15 May 2020, Declassified sent
a further FOI request, this time to the Home Office, asking for
information on any phone calls or emails made or received by the current
Home Secretary Priti Patel concerning the Assange case.
The Home Office replied: “We neither
confirm nor deny whether we hold any information, within the scope of
your request.” It added that the reason was “to protect personal data”.
But, in January 2020, Declassified
had requested the same information for the period when Sajid Javid was
home secretary, April 2018 – July 2019. In this case, the Home Office
responded: “We have carried out a thorough search and we have
established that the Home Office does not hold the information that you
have requested.”
The responses from the Home Office
appear to indicate that Patel has had communications regarding Assange
during her tenure as home secretary, but that the government is
reluctant to disclose this information. The Assange case continues to
set a legal precedent in being mired in opacity and conflicts of
interest.
Patel — who is alsolinked to Arbuthnot’s husband, Lord Arbuthnot — will sign off Assange’s extradition to the US if it is ordered by Baraitser. DM
Matt Kennard is head of
investigations, and Mark Curtis is editor, at Declassified UK.. Sign up to receive Declassified’s monthly newsletter here.
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