The Scotsman

Financial crime investigat­ors granted more time

- Andrew Sackey

Law enforcemen­t agencies probing suspected financial crimes have the right to additional time when necessary to properly investigat­e, a Scottish court has ruled.

The landmark decision handed down by the Sheriff Appeal Court underlines the emphasis placed by courts on “allowing law enforcemen­t the time and space to complete their inquiries”.

It comes after the Appeal Court unanimousl­y held that Italian chef Cristian Picco had been validly excluded from a hearing on whether his bank account should remain frozen while investigat­ors probed suspected money laundering.

The court heard that Picco first had his TSB account frozen in April 2019 after he received €181,000 from the sale of a property in Italy. TSB reported suspicious activity to the National Crime Agency (NCA), which refused to allow transactio­ns on the account.

Under the relevant terms of the 2002 Proceeds of Crime Act (POCA), investigat­ors then had an initial 31 calendar-day moratorium period in which to examine the account before it was unfrozen.

The NCA successful­ly requested an extension to the moratorium at a Sheriff Court hearing that excluded Picco and his legal representa­tives. Picco was made aware of the extension request but was refused details on the material to be discussed.

At his appeal, Picco maintained that the court had no power to issue a blanket exclusion that prevented him from appearing at any part of the hearing and argued that his rights under the European Convention of Human Rights (ECHR) had been infringed. He maintained he was at least entitled to be provided with "the general gist of the allegation­s against him sufficient to allow him to instruct representa­tion in opposition”.

The court held that POCA gave it power to exclude an interested party “from any part

of ” a hearing, including the whole proceeding­s. The court said that the hearing had been “proportion­ate in balancing the rights of the appellant and the interests of the state in avoiding money laundering” and had not contravene­d Picco’s ECHR rights.

Parliament’s aim to support complex investigat­ions of money laundering, where confidenti­ality is important, justified the exclusion. Moreover, Picco had “sufficient informatio­n to understand the gist of what was being investigat­ed”.

The court made it clear that an interested party must be given “satisfacto­ry notice” of an applicatio­n to exclude them from a hearing, whether in whole or part, so that they can make “meaningful representa­tions” and “appear at a hearing with a view to considerat­ion of whether exclusion should take place for the whole hearing or simply for the part of the hearing where sensitive informatio­n was disclosed”.

The case is the first to deal with an appeal under these provisions of POCA and as such there will be a widespread interest. The court’s acceptance that, in effect, the investigat­ors’ ends justified the means on the facts of this case is worth noting.

The court relied on establishe­d principles of interpreta­tion in reaching its conclusion­s and, crucially, on the obligation on the Crown to demonstrat­e that its investigat­ion was being carried out diligently and expeditiou­sly. Any delays are likely to make things far more difficult to justify.

Andrew Sackey, partner and tax and white collar fraud specialist at Pinsent Masons

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 ?? ?? 0 Proceeds of Crime Act extension granted
0 Proceeds of Crime Act extension granted

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