Quadripartite Select Committee Minutes of Evidence


Examination of Witnesses (Questions 160-179)

MR MARK FUCHTER, MR GUY WESTHEAD, MR DAVID RICHARDSON AND MR DAVID GREEN QC

1 MARCH 2007

  Q160  Mike Gapes: Would it not be helpful to publish the names of those who have paid the compounding penalties? That would act as even more of a deterrent.

  Mr Fuchter: HM Customs and Excise of old did used to publish names in certain cases that were laid down by Peter Lilley when he was the Paymaster in 1989. Events have overtaken us. The Commissioners for Revenue and Customs Act prevents us from doing so. We have clear legal advice that we cannot publish the names. What we still do—and in these two cases—we are publicising details without the names, so we are publicising in general terms that there has been a case concluded involving these factors and this sort of behaviour but we are still looking to publish information on that basis. One of the two has yet to be publicised.

  Q161  Judy Mallaber: Mr Fuchter, you mentioned warning letters earlier and, as we understand it from evidence from the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, that is the sanction you use most frequently. In 2005 and 2006 nearly 50 were issued. Coming back to this question of publication, you have explained you cannot provide full details in some cases because publication might identify the persons concerned and so breach your requirement on confidentiality, but as I understand it you are satisfied that these people who you have warned have breached the Export Control Act 2002 and are therefore liable for criminal prosecution. You may say to me you are not allowed legally to publish that but why should their names be withheld?

  Mr Fuchter: They are not at the stage where there is sufficient evidence for anyone to conclude that they have committed an offence. In the warning letter process, we do use the words "you may have". We cannot say that you have because, as you say, they would have committed an offence. This is an efficient and effective way of concluding cases where it is not clear whether or not an offence has been established and there are insufficient grounds to say either way.

  Q162  Judy Mallaber: Your argument on not publishing would just be that it is not clear they have committed an offence?

  Mr Fuchter: They have not been arraigned for anything. They are not subject to criminal prosecution. They are just under the broader umbrella of taxpayer confidentiality in that sense.

  Q163  Judy Mallaber: Where you do send someone a warning letter, what happens after? Do you check up on whether they have mended their ways and are better people in future?

  Mr Fuchter: Yes, we do. There are two angles on this. Firstly, we conclude a lot of cases by warning letter but I want to emphasise we feel the warning letter is quite a powerful tool if it goes to a company—it may be quite a large company—with an export control department. It may not achieve much in terms of deterring others and we do not think it does; it is really about preventing and deterring and perhaps steering that company and its employees towards improved compliance.

  Q164  Judy Mallaber: You say you are not clear at that stage whether you have sufficient evidence for a criminal prosecution. How serious does their offence have to be? Would it be helpful to find some way of publicising the circumstances in which letters are issued in order to act as a deterrent to others?

  Mr Fuchter: On the first point, I am sure it will vary across the cases that I am aware of. The weight of evidence will vary. In some cases where we have not been able to proceed with a prosecution—we have discontinued it, for example—if we really feel that there is no chance ever of sufficient evidence emerging or there is a fatal flaw in the potential evidence, we would conclude that case by a warning letter. The advantage for us operationally in terms of enforcement is that we have then made clear to the company the details of the law and that should help assist our enforcement approach next time.

  Q165  Judy Mallaber: Do you require them to report back to you on what they do as a result of getting your letter?

  Mr Fuchter: Only as part of the follow-up approach. I have not answered the second part of your question: do we take any follow-up action? All warning letters will be referred to our local inland audit staff in one or other of our operational directorates. They will pursue any potential breaches or any issues arising from that warning letter in their follow-up audit of that company's books and records.

  Mr Westhead: Maybe this is in keeping with the direction in which you would like us to travel: we could consider carrying out some further publicity, either local or national, which would focus on the type of offences that are being carried out and that generate the warning letter and therefore provide some further publicity of the types of things that exporters are doing that are clearly potentially in breach of the Export Control Act. Exporters need to take that on board and learn lessons from it.

  Judy Mallaber: That would be very helpful as part of what the Committee has found, that very often exporters are not aware of the rules. I am not sure if that is something that you would wish to pursue further after the meeting, Chair.

  Chairman: I think so, yes.

  Q166  John Battle: I am increasingly not comfortable with this because, as far as I understand it, if people break the rules on this they can be criminally liable. Is that right?

  Mr Fuchter: Yes.

  Q167  John Battle: As my colleague reminds me, if a person does not fill their tax form in on time, the Inland Revenue gets quite heavy with posters everywhere. If you get an ASBO your picture is in the paper, but are we going pretty soft really and pussy footing around companies that ought to know what the rules are and that, if they break them, it should be transparent and publicly known that they are stepping over that line. Otherwise, if I am not clear that it is a criminal act, you might think it is a bit of corporate irresponsibility and not really a criminal act. What we are talking about is weapons being sold to places. We have said it is out of order. If they get there and cause an amazing amount of damage, I just wonder whether we are tough enough in our insistence on compliance.

  Mr Fuchter: In terms of enforcement, I do not consider that we are going soft. The matters under which we operate are criminal. There are no civil offences under which we can proceed. There are in other Revenue and Customs regimes and that is a separate issue. We can act and we do act. I do not think we are going soft. We have something like nine active cases on the stocks at the moment in our criminal investigation department and we have already concluded four last year. We do have to secure enough evidence to a sufficient standard and that is the bottom line.

  Mr Richardson: The point I would make about the suggestion of going soft is that when a case is referred to the Revenue and Customs Prosecutions Office, after we have gone through the evidential test, is there sufficient evidence, the next part of the test is the public interest. If you have a weapons case, the public interest is very high. If you have sensitive goods that are WMD end-user, the public interest is very high and quite rightly so. If you have legitimate goods to a legitimate destination but the issue is one of regulation and licensing, the public interest maybe is not so high and it may be more appropriate for HMRC to consider a compound or a warning letter or some other disposal. Your concern is an entirely legitimate concern about the nature of the goods and the harm they do. It is a key part of the public interest test that we will always take into account.

  Q168  Chairman: The Committee has raised the question in the past about how Revenue and Customs exchange information with other EU countries with an experience of prosecuting export control breaches. During a recent debate in the House, the Minister said that the Revenue and Customs Prosecutions Office has recently met with Eurojust colleagues and other EU prosecutors. What has been the outcome?

  Mr Green: As Mr Richardson went, I will let him answer that.

  Mr Richardson: We did go and have a meeting, hosted by Eurojust, last month. We had prosecutors and investigators from the Netherlands, France, Spain and Germany there. They are all key countries in terms of export control. One of the concerns of this Committee last year was, if I can put it crudely, that other countries find this easier and we find it difficult. The conclusion that we took away from the meeting with our colleagues was that, although other people face different challenges, they find it difficult as well. They still have to deal with intelligence material forming the basis of these investigations. They still have to deal with issues of licensing and what is the appropriate licensing regime. They still have to deal with getting sufficient evidence from jurisdictions where it may be less easy to get evidence from. Some of those countries will put their focus on civil or administrative penalties or on having a particularly onerous and bureaucratic licensing regime to stop people wanting to apply. Other countries do not have the same disclosure regime that we do. When asked the question, "What do you do when there is exculpatory material sitting in the background?" I have to say they were scratching their heads a bit and not quite sure what they would do with it. One of the advantages of the system that we have and that we have talked to the Committee about before in relation to the disclosure regime is that we do have quite a clear and well practised regime where prosecutors and judges know and understand the issues that are in play and can deal with them.

  Q169  Chairman: Is there anything that we have learned from other EU countries where you think we could do that and that would be an improvement in the UK system or is it just recognising that different countries do things differently and we do not see any need to change in the light of that exchange? That may be the right answer, of course.

  Mr Richardson: It may well be.

  Q170  Chairman: Is that the gist of it? We all do things a bit differently. We have had an exchange but as a result of that we have no suggestions to make for doing things differently.

  Mr Richardson: I need some time to digest the notes we made of the session in The Hague. The suggestion I have is that one of the most powerful things is knowing who your opposite numbers are in the other countries and being able to talk to them. I know that in some cases we have made extensive use of Crown Prosecution Service liaison magistrates in Paris and in Madrid. They have been extremely helpful by putting us in touch with the right people. The main benefit of a session like the one we had is knowing who our opposite numbers are and understanding their understanding of our regime so that we can better explain to them when we make mutual legal assistance requests.

  Q171  Mike Gapes: Can I ask about the catch-all provisions for non-listed goods with regard to weapons of mass destruction. In your memorandum you said that when you detect non-listed goods going to end-users of concern you normally cannot seize these goods unless there is evidence that the exporter has grounds to suspect that there is an end-use which is weapons of mass destruction. Instead, you often just get the goods withdrawn from export or brought into the licensing system. Can you clarify that for us?

  Mr Fuchter: Apologies for drafting which, on reflection, probably looked a bit garbled. That certainly was not the intention. We were trying to explain how goods were dealt with once we had detained them. I think we said last time that we will target non-listed goods in this area because the catch-all is a very important provision and works well. It is a question of our powers, that we cannot seize goods without evidence that the exporter was aware of the intended use. In many cases the exporter genuinely is not aware, but it is fair to say of those numbers that we reported in our annual report, 38 occasions in one year and 42 in the other, those are cases where the DTI has subsequently rated the goods in that consignment as licence required. On the point about coming into the licensing system, the exporter may have applied for a licence and may even have been given one. We think that is a success from our point of view because it has given the Government the chance to consider whether or not those goods should be permitted to go forward.

  Q172  Mike Gapes: Do you assess that the current law is strong enough to deal with this area?

  Mr Fuchter: We think it is, yes. The point for HM Revenue and Customs is that, where we report our seizure statistics, cases like this will not appear on them so we have started to include these figures just as a sentence in our annual reports to reflect that this is activity going on that we think is valuable, but that is a minor point, I accept.

  Q173  Mike Gapes: Do you sometimes give the exporter the impression that you might be taking legal action just to force them to apply for a licence?

  Mr Fuchter: That is certainly not our intention, no. It works on the basis of our understanding of the intelligence assessment, in terms of what non-listed goods might be moving through export control. We are coming at it from that point of view. Officers are then detaining goods and contacting the DTI who then consider whether the goods should be subject to licence.

  Q174  Mike Gapes: We heard evidence from the UK Working Group who asked for a change in the current regulations to have a new catch-all requirement and they gave us the example of the Predator unmanned aerial vehicles which use civilian technologies and which are not subject to control, but which can clearly have a serious military use. Do you see any practical problems with their proposal about bringing in a new requirement?

  Mr Fuchter: That control is part of an EU regulation. The lead departments would need to establish whether or not there is a question of EU competence to be resolved. The UK may not be able to go it alone. It may be that we do not know exactly where the Working Group is coming from, but some of these goods might be already controlled by the existing military end-use if they are going to an embargoed destination. The main point in terms of the practical problems would be that any extension of the military end-use control, either to extend its breadth to cover more countries or to extend the list of goods, would obviously raise questions on the impact of the vast majority of trade that is going through export controls, in particular if it led to us detaining more goods which were then held up whilst the DTI rating unit had to examine them and conclude whether or not the catch-all should be invoked. If lots of goods were subsequently released on that basis, traders might legitimately challenge us. The flip side of that would be the enforcement costs for ourselves and other departments in policing such a scheme. We certainly can see the potential in the point you are making to extend the military end-use control in the way you have described. I understand that issue will be part of the up and coming review of export controls and that is the sort of issue we would expect to debate in some detail with our colleagues in DTI.

  Q175  Sir John Stanley: Mr Fuchter, when you came in front of this Committee last year you put into the public domain for the first time that you were considering a prosecution of a weapons of mass destruction trafficking and brokering case. Can you tell us whether any charges have been made and, if not, why not?

  Mr Green: I can assist there. The case is still open. It is a complex matter covering several jurisdictions. Treasury Counsel is advising on evidence and we are examining the disclosure position very closely. The case is still with us.

  Q176  Sir John Stanley: Does the case involve UK individuals who are citizens or residents?

  Mr Green: I am sorry, I cannot answer that question.

  Q177  Sir John Stanley: You cannot answer because you do not know the answer or you do not want to disclose the answer?

  Mr Green: I do know the answer but I cannot give you it because of the confidentiality provisions of the Commissioners for Revenue and Customs Act.

  Q178  Sir John Stanley: Can you confirm that these offences, if they are offences, have been committed overseas, in the UK or a combination of both?

  Mr Green: I would have to give the same answer.

  Q179  Sir John Stanley: Can you tell us whether your existing powers enable you to prosecute for trafficking and brokering overseas by UK citizens or residence? This is without regard to the case. Do your powers enable you to prosecute actions committed overseas by UK citizens which, if committed in the UK, would be criminal offences?

  Mr Richardson: Yes. There is a number of extraterritorial controls in the orders made under the Export Control Act 2002 which contain offences relating to acts done by individuals in the UK or by UK persons, whether they are natural persons or companies, who are outside the UK. Provided the evidence exists and effectively hits the targets in the orders in that they are moving around restricted or prohibited items, yes, the powers exist to prosecute those individuals.


 
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