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Taken To The Cleaners
The money's not dirty but
we'll have it anyway
Since 1986, the courts have had the power to seize assets of people
convicted of certain offences. Their powers were extended in 1988 and again
in 2002.
Upon conviction, the CPS makes an application for a Criminal Confiscation
Order and – in the case of
Geoff, an innocent man – a whole new nightmare
begins for him and his family.
What happens is that the CPS produces what it calls the Benefit Figure,
the financial benefit of carrying out the crime. In Geoff’s case it says the
benefit is £2.2million - the value of 77kg of cocaine at 80 per cent
purity. We then enter an Alice In Wonderland scenario whereby this Benefit
Figure is then multiplied by the number of people convicted of being part of
the plot, thus magically turning £2 million into £6 million. This crazy logic
is, at the time of writing, being contested by defence barristers and the
House of Lords is expected to rule on the matter at the beginning of 2008.
[Since this was written the House of Lords has decided that the law still
stands, the CPS can still multiply the Benefit Figure by the amount of
people accused of committing the crime.]
In any event, the CPS will then call in a financial investigator who will
examine the finances of each of the defendants and produce a second figure -
the total assets of the person convicted. This Section 16 document contains
an account of what the person owns: property, pensions, cash, vehicles –
everything. It is important to point out that Cantero and Town don't have
any assets so one has been ordered to pay £10.00 and the other £5.00.
However the CPS still need to collect £2.2 million and are looking at
Geoff's hard earned assets.
If the assets figure is greater than the benefit, the CPS says the person
should pay an amount equal to the benefit; if the assets figure is less,
then this is the amount the person is asked to pay. If he doesn’t, he has
his sentence extended.
What is important to understand is that it doesn’t matter if the
financial investigator is satisfied that the assets can all be seen to have
come from legitimate means – the order will still be made for that amount.
There is no need to prove that any of it is dirty money.
And this is what happened when the investigator looked at Geoff’s books –
everything he owned was clearly the product of four decades of hard work, he
was clean as a whistle.
It is also interesting to note that this process is not carried out
before trial – surely if there is evidence of dubious financial transactions
going on the jury might want to hear about it. And more importantly, in
Geoff’s case, the fact that there was nothing untoward going on in his
finances would have been further evidence of his innocence, but this
information – sourced by the prosecution and therefore beyond doubt - was
never put in front of the jury.
As for the confiscation order that was called for at the time
Geoff was sentenced, that has been delayed for nearly a year by the
CPS. Because the matter has not been settled in court as of yet. We
have been advised not to comment.
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