1. Introduction
1. Put simply, the purpose of
this report is to help ensure that crime does not pay. Huge accumulated
(and still accumulating) profits from crime empower criminals. The
criminals’ resources enable them to bribe and put pressure on politicians,
law-enforcement officials and witnesses and to distort entire markets
by distorting and even eliminating competition. Such power threatens
the stability of even the most solid of our democracies and the
social contract on which our societies are based: the people pay
taxes and contributions and in return the State provides for security
and social protection. Confiscating these ill-gotten gains has multiple
benefits: first, criminals are generally in business for the money.
If they lose it, and the lavish life-style that comes with the money,
crime loses much of its allure. Second, confiscation of criminal
assets saps the power bestowed on criminals by their riches. Third,
profits from one crime are often needed as “seed money” for the
next. Breaking the financing cycle is therefore good crime prevention.
Last but not least, the confiscated criminal assets can be put to
good use to compensate victims and rebuild communities destroyed
by crime, in a way reasserting the social contract broken by the
criminals.
2. As indicated in the motion for a resolution underlying this
report,
organised
criminals and criminal organisations have illegally accumulated
huge assets – sometimes larger than the gross domestic product (GDP)
of many countries. Estimates by the United Nations place the
annual total amount of criminal
profits at about US$2.1 trillion in 2009 (or 3.6% of global GDP
in the same year).
In Italy alone,
annual organised crime revenues were estimated at €150 billion in
2011. For the United Kingdom, the estimate for 2006 was £15 billion. According
to the United Nations, the global drug trade alone generated US$321
billion in 2005 in illegal profits. The Council of Europe places
revenue from trafficking in human beings at US$42.5 billion annually.
The global profits from counterfeit goods were estimated at up to
US$250 billion per year by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation
and Development (OECD). The main illicit markets in the European
Union – drugs and fraud – alone generate about €110 billion per
year – approximately 1% of GDP.
The accumulation of these
amounts over 5, 10 or 20 years generates almost unimaginable wealth
– such is the financial “firepower” of organised criminal groups
worldwide that the resources available to all but the largest States
look insignificant in comparison. As the motion for a resolution
underlying this report rightly stresses, such wealth under the control of
crime groups and corrupt individuals threatens democracy and the
rule of law as we know them, everywhere.
3. In comparison with the huge profits generated by crime, the
criminal assets actually confiscated by member States look modest,
if not insignificant. For example, in the United Kingdom in 2006
£125 million were recovered by the State. In 2009, confiscated assets
for example amounted to €185 million in France, £154 million in
the United Kingdom, €50 million in the Netherlands – this figure
has increased to €402 million in 2016:
and
€281 million in Germany.
According to Europol,
European Union agencies freeze an estimated €2.4 billion worth of
criminal assets on average each year, out of a total value of illicit
crime markets of €110 billion. A report published by Europol’s Criminal
Assets Bureau in 2016
indicates that while around €2.4
billion (2.2% of the estimated total) was provisionally seized annually,
only about half of this was ultimately confiscated. Europol noted
that “the amount of money currently being recovered in the European
Union is only a small proportion of the estimated criminal proceeds:
98.9% of estimated criminal profits are not confiscated and remain
at the disposal of criminals”. In other words, crime still pays
– a lot.
4. New measures are therefore urgently needed to facilitate confiscation
of illegal assets. Several countries have already passed relevant
laws and a number of international instruments have been adopted
in order to fight organised crime, corruption and money laundering
more effectively. At the international level, the World Bank and
the European Union have taken important initiatives to improve international
co-operation in this field. In the present report, I intend to examine
the main results of work already done in this field and identify
good practices that the Assembly should recommend to all member
States of the Council of Europe, and beyond.
2. Examples
of member States’ efforts to facilitate confiscation of instruments
or products of crime by reversing the burden of proof
5. Several countries, including
member States of the Council of Europe, have passed measures to
facilitate the confiscation of instruments or products of crime,
by facilitating or even reversing the burden of proof as to the
criminal origins of an asset. I should like to briefly present the
solutions developed in this respect by Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands
and the United Kingdom.
2.1. Ireland
6. In Ireland, two laws introduced
the reversal of the burden of proof for confiscation purposes: the Proceeds
of Crime Act (PoCA) and the Criminal Asset Bureau (CAB) Act (both
adopted in 1996, in the context of a spike in organised crime in
Ireland). Whilst PoCA provides for the legal basis for the State
to attack proceeds of crime, the CAB Act sets up the institutional
framework ensuring the PoCA’s implementation. The introduction of
a civil forfeiture regime including a reversal of the burden of
proof, without the need for a criminal conviction, was seen as marking
a transition from “reactive” conviction-based confiscation to a
“proactive” crime control strategy, as a response to the serious
threat organised crime poses to society. The constitutionality of
PoCA was challenged on a number of grounds, but it was upheld by
the Irish courts.
In addition to the civil
forfeiture regime, Ireland also has a conviction-based regime for
forfeiture of proceeds derived from drug- and terrorism-related
offences under the Criminal Justice Act. A lower standard of proof (balance
of probabilities rather than beyond reasonable doubt) applies for
the link between an asset and the crime in question. When there
is sufficient evidence for a criminal conviction, the conviction-based
forfeiture regime is given preference.
7. The implementation of the PoCA is the task of the CAB, a multidisciplinary
agency with officials seconded from the police and the tax and social
welfare authorities, who pool their access to all relevant information
available to their home institutions. The objective of the CAB is
“to identify assets, wherever situated, or persons who derive or
are suspected to derive, directly or indirectly, from criminal conduct,
to take appropriate action to deprive those persons of such assets
in whole or in part and to carry out any investigation or preparatory
work in relation to any proceedings under Act” (Preamble of the
CAB Act). The Revenue Services have been explicitly enabled to share
tax information with the CAB (Disclosure of Certain Information for
Taxation and other Purposes Act of 1996). The PoCA also authorises
the CAB to ensure that the proceeds of criminal or suspected criminal
activity are subject to taxation. Some of the best-known crime figures
in Ireland were successfully targeted in this way, and also deprived
of social welfare benefits.
In order to effectively carry out these
tasks, the CAB has been granted strong investigative powers, including
that to search, seize and detain any property if there are reasonable
grounds for suspicion (Section 14 CAB Act).
8. The “proceeds of crime” under PoCA are defined to “include
any property obtained or received at any time, whether before or
after the passing of the legislation, by or as a result of or in
connection with criminal conduct” (PoCA, Part 2 Section 3.a). “Criminal conduct” is defined
to include any offence that has taken place inside the State, or
that would constitute an offence if it occurred in the State, or
an offence against the law of that State or if the property resulting
from that offence is situated within the State. The inclusion of
proceeds from offences committed outside the jurisdiction that were
at any time held in Ireland was added by a 2005 amendment of the
PoCA after the Irish courts had found such legislative intent lacking
in the original PoCA.
9. The civil forfeiture procedure has three stages: first, an
application for an interim order is addressed to the High Court
by an officer of the CAB. The CAB must show by the civil standard
of proof – balance of probabilities – that 1) a person is in possession
or control of property, 2) that this property constitutes directly or
indirectly the proceeds of crime and 3) that its value is greater
than €13 000. If the court is satisfied that there are reasonable
grounds to believe that the property in question is the proceeds
of crime, it will issue an interim order prohibiting the respondent
from disposing of or otherwise dealing with the property during
21 days. If such an order is improperly made, the State can be ordered
to pay compensation.
10. The second phase is the interlocutory (or restraining) order.
The CAB must provide evidence to the court as for an interim order
(above). If the court is satisfied that there are reasonable grounds
to believe that the property is proceeds of crime, it grants an
interlocutory order unless the respondent
provides evidence proving that the property does not constitute
the proceeds of crime. Unless successfully appealed (or
the parties have agreed otherwise), the interlocutory order remains
in effect for seven years. During this period, a receiver may be
appointed to administer the property and the court may issue an
order, on application by the respondent or his or her dependants,
to cover reasonable living (and legal) expenses from the restrained
property.
11. The third phase of the Irish civil forfeiture procedure is
the disposal order, ordering the final confiscation of property.
The law has two safeguards to protect the assets of innocent persons:
1) the court must give an opportunity to every person claiming to
own part of the property to tender sufficient evidence to satisfy
the court that the property should not be confiscated; and 2) the
court has the discretion not to issue a disposal order if there
is a “risk of serious injustice”. The final decision will transfer
the title to the Irish State.
12. The Irish model has been considered a real success, also at
the European and international level. The Council of Europe’s Group
of States against Corruption (GRECO) stated that it was “impressed
by the civil forfeiture scheme which has provided the Criminal Asset
Bureau with effective tools to identify and seize proceeds of crime”.
According
to representatives of the CAB, many organised criminals moved their
activities outside of Ireland, especially during the first five
years of the PoCA’s implementation, resulting in a significant reduction
of crime rates in Ireland. It would appear that the success of the
Irish system is largely due to the strong role of the CAB. The CAB
initially targeted well-known criminals and crime bosses who had
accumulated large amounts of property with no apparent legitimate
sources of income, but against whom there was insufficient evidence
for a criminal conviction. The criminal groups responded by relocating
their operations to neighbouring countries (in particular the Netherlands
and Spain).
Later, the CAB also
pursued small and middle-ranking criminals having a significant
impact on the community: confiscated properties included high-end
cars owned by drug dealers so that “mothers would be able to point
to their growing children and say that crime does not pay”. The
statistical data published by the CAB show that the CAB initiated
an average of 10 cases per year (between 1988 and 2009), most of
which eventually led to successful forfeiture of assets to the State.
The assets recovered by the CAB substantially exceed the resources
received from the parliament, the largest amounts of funds having
been recovered by the CAB’s taxation powers.
13. The success of PoCA is attributed to the CAB’s excellent multidisciplinary
teams, bringing together the powers of, the information available
to and personnel from three different government agencies. The CAB’s total
staff is about 60-80 employees, who enjoy an excellent reputation
of professionalism and probity. The High Court also appoints a judge
to work on forfeiture cases for a period of at least two years,
assisted by a special registrar. This is considered as an important
factor contributing to the high success rate of civil procedure
proceedings, together with the careful selection and preparation
of the cases by the CAB.
14. As summed up in the previously mentioned Comparative Evaluation,
the
strengths of the Irish PoCA are: i) it is a comprehensive forfeiture
law that enables the CAB to forfeit proceeds derived from any criminal conduct;
ii) it does not have a requirement of a predicate offence, it is
sufficient for the State to show that there are reasonable grounds
to believe that the respondent has been engaged in unlawful activity;
iii) it reverses the burden of proof onto the respondent to show
the legitimacy of his or her assets; and iv) it provides for a discovery
order, whereby a court can order the respondent to disclose any
assets he or she owns or controls and their source.
15. The Irish civil forfeiture system has been challenged before
the Supreme Court. The reversal of the burden of proof onto the
respondent has been termed a violation of the presumption of innocence
and the “discovery order” as a violation of the privilege against
self-incrimination. Also, the admissibility of a statement by an
authorised officer that there are reasonable grounds to believe
that the respondent owns or controls property that is proceeds of
crime as evidence (“belief evidence”), the provisions safeguarding
the anonymity of CAB members and of witnesses on whom the CAB relies
and more generally the CAB’s wide access to the investigative resources
of several powerful State bodies has been criticised as jeopardising
the “equality of arms” principle and opening up the possibility
of abuse of these powers. Finally, PoCA was also challenged as a
violation of Article 40.3 of the Irish Constitution as not protecting
private property from an unjust attack.
16. But the Supreme Court found that the requirement placed on
the State to first make a
prima facie case of
the property being proceeds of crime before the burden is placed
on the respondent to prove that the property is legitimate, and
the prohibition to use the information disclosed following a discovery
order for purposes of criminal prosecution
provide sufficient protection of the
respondent’s constitutional rights. The Supreme Court also pointed
out that in civil forfeiture proceedings, no one is pronounced guilty,
or tried for the commission of a specific offence, which is why
criminal law principles such as the presumption of innocence are
not applicable. Regarding the protection of private property, the
Court held that whilst civil forfeiture admittedly affects the property
rights of the respondent, it does not rise to the level of an “unjust
attack” considering that the State must first show that the property
constituted the proceeds of crime. The Court also held that the
right to private ownership cannot hold a place so high in the hierarchy
of rights that it protects the possession of assets illegally acquired;
and the erosion of the protection of private property must be balanced against
the public interest.
17. These positive findings were facilitated by the fact that,
in practice, the CAB and the High Court proceed very cautiously:
an application for an interim or interlocutory order presents a
comprehensive overview of the respondent’s lifestyle (income and
expenditure analysis prepared by forensic accountants) and presents reasonable
grounds to suspect that the respondent has been involved in criminal
conduct. All the evidence is presented to the court when an application
is made, and its credibility can be challenged by the respondent, including
by cross-examining the witnesses, before it is determined by the
court. During the first 14 years of implementation of the PoCA,
there have never been any accusations or media reports of potential
abuses of the Act.
18. As a result, the Irish Supreme Court, whilst recognising the
PoCA’s broad nature, has justified it as a measured and proportionate
response to crime and the threat it poses to society.
2.2. Italy
19. Italy is one of the first countries
to enact confiscation measures as a tool to attack the financial
power of organised crime and confiscate the profit acquired from
criminal enterprises. The measures in question shift the burden
of proof to the property owner to justify the legitimacy of the
property; they do not require prior conviction; and all assets for
which lawful origin cannot be justified can be seized and subsequently
forfeited. Italian law distinguishes between “extra judicial” (non-conviction-based)
property-related or preventive measures and conviction-based “judicial”
confiscation orders imposed in the course of criminal proceedings.
20. For preventive (administrative) measures, introduced for the
first time in 1956 as “personal preventive measures”
and extended to include confiscation
of assets of suspected mafia members by the Rodogne-La Torre Act
of 1982, the mere suspicion that a person was a member of a mafia-type
organisation was sufficient at first. Following criticism that such
measures took on a more and more penal character, evidentiary requirements
were made more stringent. Currently, two conditions are required
for seizure: 1) assets must be directly or indirectly at the disposal
of the suspect; and 2) there must be a discrepancy between the suspect’s wealth
and his or her income or there must be sufficient evidence that
the assets are the proceeds of crime or the use thereof. The suspect
is required to present sufficient evidence to justify that his or
her assets are not the proceeds of crime.
21. For conviction-based confiscation (Article 240 of the Criminal
Code), the first requirement is the imposition of a conviction for
a criminal offence, with the standards of evidence of regular criminal
proceedings (“beyond reasonable doubt”). Under Article 12-5 of Law
No. 356 (1992), those convicted of an offence associated with the
mafia (including drug offences, organised crime and money laundering)
are required to demonstrate the lawful source of their income and
property. If they are unable to do so, they may be imprisoned for
up to five years
and the forfeiture
of part or all of their assets is compulsory. This paragraph – which
in fact operates a reversal of the burden of proof even for the
imposition of a criminal sanction, up to five years in prison –
was found unconstitutional in 1994 (as violating the presumption
of innocence). It was replaced by the adoption of Article 12-6 in
the same year. The new text makes forfeiture compulsory in case
of conviction for certain crimes (delinquent mafia-type association,
extortion, kidnapping for ransom, loan sharking and money laundering).
In addition, the property must be disproportionate to the assets
stated in the tax declaration and the income made from (legal) economic
activities. There is no need to establish a causal link between
the assets to be confiscated and a specific offence.
22. Whilst these rules appear to be quite strong, the results
in terms of number and value of confiscated assets seem to be meagre.
Confiscation measures have reached peaks between 1982 and 1985 and
between 1992 and 1994 – i.e. after the adoption of the Rodogne-La
Torre Act in 1982 (paragraph 20 above) and after the enactment of
Article 12-5 and the murder of two famous anti-mafia judges (Falcone
and Borselino). The new Article 12-6 replacing Article 12-5 was
used so sparingly by the courts that confiscated assets reached only
3% of those confiscated under the previous law that had been declared
unconstitutional.
2.3. The
Netherlands
23. The Dutch confiscation regime
is mainly conviction-based, with some civil forfeiture elements
in certain circumstances (reversal of the burden of proof and confiscation
of proceeds of crime without the need to link them to a particular
offence)
24. An act of parliament (nicknamed the “strip them Act”) was
passed in 1993 in order to deprive those involved in criminal offences
of the economic advantage or financial benefits of their crimes.
Article 36e of the Dutch Criminal Code distinguishes between two
types of confiscation, namely “Ordinary Confiscation”
and “Special
Confiscation”.
The former is an additional
sanction when a defendant has been convicted of any criminal offence;
the latter allows the court to order payment of a sum of money to
the State when the defendant has made illegal profits from 1) the
offence for which he was convicted, 2) from similar offences when
there is “sufficient evidence” to assume that they were also committed
by the defendant, or 3) from other offences, if it is shown
that either the offence
for which the defendant has been sentenced
or other serious offences have in one
way or another resulted in the convicted offender obtaining unlawful
gains.
25. Most importantly, in order to assess the profits made by the
defendant from “other offences” than those for which the person
was convicted, the courts may use abstract methods of calculation
which include elements of reversal of the burden of proof. The court
first determines whether the increase in the defendant’s assets over
a period of six years can be explained on the basis of legal sources
of income. If the defendant cannot provide satisfactory evidence
to prove legal origin, the court may assume that the unexplained
increase of assets was derived from illegal activities.
In order to establish whether illegal
assets have been obtained, a “special criminal financial investigation”
may be conducted. In such an investigation, special investigative powers
(surveillance, searches, etc.) may be deployed. Importantly, again,
with the above-mentioned provisions on “special confiscation”, Dutch
law allows for “value confiscation”, meaning that the defendant
can be ordered to pay a sum of money equivalent to the (calculated)
value of the proceeds of crime. Confiscation can also be enforced
against third parties, if they knew or should have reasonably suspected
that the assets they obtained represent the proceeds of crime.
26. To facilitate the implementation of the confiscation law,
the Netherlands have set up, within the regional prosecutors offices,
specialist units (initially called the “Prosecution Service Criminal
Asset Deprivation Bureau”’ (Dutch acronym: BOOM)). These units make
their special expertise available to local prosecutors for tracking
criminal assets and they are entrusted with administering and disposing
of seized assets.
27. A new trend, since a legislative reform adopted in 2012, is
to assess suspected proceeds of crime for purposes of income tax.
This allows for the use of the considerable expertise and investigative
resources of the tax authorities and confiscation of a large portion
of such proceeds, taking into account top tax rates and applicable
penalties for failure to declare.
28. In the same way as prosecution of crimes themselves, seizure
of assets is discretionary in the Netherlands. It is even subject
to transactions and settlements between the prosecution and the
defendant. This is true also outside of criminal proceedings, which
the settlement can then serve to avoid (such cases could be seen
as non-conviction-based forfeiture). Seizure of assets is reportedly
extensively applied in the Netherlands, in particular in organised
crime cases.
2.4. United
Kingdom
29. The United Kingdom’s Proceeds
of Crime Act of 2002 (POCA) foresees four different procedures for
the confiscation of proceeds or instruments of crime, namely: 1)
conviction-based confiscation; 2) civil asset recovery; 3) taxation
of gains suspected of being derived from crime and; 4) confiscation
by police of cash suspected of being the proceeds of crime.
30. Conviction-based confiscation under Chapter 2 of POCA can
be initiated by the public prosecutor or ex officio by
the court after the defendant has been convicted of a crime, according
to the normal rules on burden of proof (“beyond reasonable doubt”,
to be established by the prosecution). After conviction, the court
must first establish whether the defendant has benefited from the
crime; if so, the court must determine whether he or she has a “criminal
lifestyle”, for which one of the following three conditions must
be fulfilled: first, the offence must have been committed over a
period of at least six months and the benefit derived must exceed
£5 000; second, the defendant’s conduct from which he/she benefited
must form part of a course of criminal activity (e.g. conviction
for three or more offences); and third, the defendant is convicted
for offences unlikely to be committed only once (e.g. human trafficking,
money laundering, drug and arms trafficking). In order to facilitate confiscation,
POCA foresees the following “statutory assumptions”: that any property
transferred to the defendant over the past six years is assumed
to derive from crime; and that any property transferred to or obtained
by the defendant is considered to be free of any interest (of innocent
third parties) – unless the court considers this will give rise
to a serious injustice, or unless the defendant can prove that the
assumptions are incorrect. If the court finds that the criminal
lifestyle standard is not met, it can still calculate the profit
gained from the particular offence, for which the defendant was
convicted, in which case the prosecutor must prove beyond reasonable
doubt the causal link between that offence and the benefit derived
from it.
31. Whether or not the “statutory assumptions” following a finding
of a “criminal lifestyle” constitute a reversal of the burden of
proof is disputed. GRECO concluded in its 2004 evaluation report
on the United Kingdom that this is the case, whereas representatives
of the competent authorities of the United Kingdom themselves consider
this as a mere application of the civil standard of proof (balance
of probabilities).
32. Non-conviction-based forfeiture (civil recovery) under Part
V of POCA empowers the Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA) to
apply to the High Court for the confiscation of property obtained
through unlawful conduct for offences committed in the United Kingdom,
in the following cases: where there is not sufficient evidence to
pursue criminal charges or no criminal charges are made due to public
interest; conviction-based confiscation proceedings have failed,
or the defendant is beyond reach (dead, or abroad with no reasonable prospect
of extradition); the recoverable property must be worth at least
£10 000 and must have been obtained within the last 12 years, and
recovery of the property must have a “significant local impact on
communities”; and critically, there must be evidence for criminal
conduct of the defendant by the civil law standard (balance of probabilities).
The SOCA has considerable investigative powers (including search
and seizure, account monitoring and, in particular, “disclosure”
orders to ask any person to produce documents, provide information or
answer questions related to an investigation). In sum, the burden
of proof is on the SOCA to prove (but only on the “balance of probability”
standard) that the property in question is recoverable and was obtained
through unlawful conduct. It is not necessary to prove that the
particular property was derived from a specific crime, or type of
crime. The respondent has the burden to prove a lawful source of
the property or otherwise rebut the allegation that the property
is recoverable.
33. Cash forfeiture under POCA is intended to deprive criminals
of the proceeds of crime in the most direct way; evaluation reports
show that success rates vary depending on the level of training
received by police forces in different regions.
34. Taxation of the proceeds of crime under POCA was introduced
as an alternative to civil recovery. If there are reasonable grounds
to believe that income or accrued profits are a result of a person’s
criminal conduct, SOCA can assess them for taxation purposes. No
evidence is needed that the profit was derived from a specific crime,
or that the source of income can be identified. Inland Revenue,
the national tax authority, has lent staff to SOCA to enhance sharing
of information and experience.
35. Altogether, the effectiveness of the measures under the POCA
has been disappointing. The procedures take too much time and run
into many legal challenges. For example, for 2004-2005, out of £15
million seized, only £5.6 million was finally confiscated. Nevertheless,
the courts rejected legal challenges related to lack of proportionality,
violation of the presumption of innocence and of the double jeopardy
rule. They confirmed that civil recovery is by nature not a criminal,
but a civil procedure and is merely intended to recover property obtained
through unlawful conduct and not to penalise any person. It therefore
does not trigger legal protections applicable to criminal proceedings.
Safeguards intended to ensure that POCA respects the standards of
the European Convention on Human Rights (ETS No. 5) include the
provision of legal aid to ensure that all respondents have legal
representation and to provide for compensation in cases of judgments wrongfully
authorising confiscation.
3. International
efforts to facilitate confiscation of criminal assets
36. National efforts to crack down
on criminal wealth, some of which we have seen above, tend to produce declining
results as the criminal networks become more sophisticated and better
at hiding their assets, especially abroad. National measures must
therefore be supplemented by international efforts. Such efforts have
been made at international level (United Nations, World Bank,
FATF)
and at European level (Council of Europe and European Union). To
date, these efforts have produced some good results, but there is
still a lot of scope for improvement. In particular, as our expert
Mr Perez Enciso explained during the exchange of views on 13 November
2017, the legal framework is still deficient, not least because
many countries have still not signed up to the relevant conventions,
and numerous practical problems persist related to the differences between
national confiscation regimes, overly burdensome bureaucratic and
reciprocity requirements, difficulties in accessing information
or using special investigative tools across national borders, and
often still a lack of trust between the competent authorities even
among European Union and Council of Europe member States.
3.1. Relevant
United Nations and Council of Europe conventions
37. The 1988 United Nations Convention
against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances
is the first international legal
instrument combating crime that gives a key role to the confiscation of
the proceeds of criminal activity. In its Preamble, the Convention
recognises the danger that the large profits and wealth generated
by illicit traffic “penetrate, contaminate and corrupt the structures
of government, legitimate commercial and financial business and
society at all its levels” and, for the first time, explicitly calls on
States to consider reversing the burden of proof as to the illicit
origin of suspect assets (Article 5.7).
38. The 1990 Council of Europe Convention on Laundering, Search,
Seizure and Confiscation of the Proceeds from Crime, as updated
by the 2005 Council of Europe Convention on Laundering, Search,
Seizure and Confiscation of the Proceeds from Crime and on the Financing
of Terrorism (CETS No. 198) calls on all States Parties to adopt
measures to enable them to confiscate the instruments and proceeds
of crime. In its Article 3.4, the 2005 Convention indicates that
States Parties “shall” adopt measures to “require that … an offender
demonstrates the origin of alleged proceeds or property liable to
confiscation”. This constitutes another positive (“shall”) reference
to the reversal of the burden of proof as a means to facilitate
confiscation of suspect assets.
39. The 2000 United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized
Crime
and the 2003 United Nations Convention
against Corruption invite States to take further measures to enable
the confiscation of instrumentalities and proceeds of crime from
offences covered by these conventions. Article 12.7 of the 2000 UN
Convention and Article 31.8 of the 2003 UN Convention refer to the
possibility of reversal of burden of proof, in the same terms as
the above-mentioned 1988 UN Convention.
3.2. EU
efforts aimed at facilitating forfeiture
40. In terms of EU legislation,
the most important text is the 2014 EU Directive on the freezing
and confiscation of instrumentalities and proceeds of crime. The
directive promotes conviction-based confiscation as a general rule,
with a limited number of exceptions for non-conviction-based confiscation.
It introduces minimum standards for all relevant issues that were
to be implemented by EU member States by October 2016. The European
Parliament and the Council have recognised a number of shortcomings
and called on the European Commission to make new proposals on mutual
recognition of freezing and confiscation orders and to analyse the
feasibility of further harmonisation of member States’ rules on
confiscation, including non-conviction-based confiscation. Before
the 2014 Directive, the Council adopted a number of Framework Decisions
(2001/500/JHA on money laundering, the identification, tracing,
freezing, seizing and confiscation of instrumentalities and the
proceeds of crime, 2003/577/JHA on the execution in the European
Union of orders freezing property or evidence, 2005/212/JHA on confiscation
of crime-related proceeds, instrumentalities and property, 2006/783/JHA
on the application of mutual recognition to confiscation orders,
and 2007/845/JHA concerning co-operation between Asset Recovery
Offices in the field of tracing and identification of proceeds from,
or other property related to, crime).
41. In terms of practical assistance for co-operation among law-enforcement
authorities, Eurojust plays an important role. Its Financial and
Economic Crime (FEC) team is providing advice to national authorities
relating to the implementation for example of the 2014 EU Directive
and the Council’s above-mentioned Framework Decisions and organises
seminars for practitioners and other stakeholders to share information
and best practices (e.g. the Eurojust seminar in Palermo in May
2012 on “Confiscation and Organised Crime: procedures and perspectives
in international judicial cooperation” and the Eurojust strategic
seminar and meeting of the Consultative Forum in December 2014 on
“Towards greater cooperation in freezing and confiscation of the
proceeds of crime: a practitioner’s approach”). The FEC team also
works closely with the Camden Assets Recovery Inter-agency Network
(CARIN) and the Informal Platform of EU Asset Recovery Offices (AROs),
which meet regularly in order to exchange information and co-operate
on identification and tracking of criminal assets.
4. Compatibility
of non-conviction-based/civil forfeiture-type confiscation regimes
with the European Convention on Human Rights
42. Opponents of non-conviction-based/civil
forfeiture-type confiscation regimes put into doubt their compatibility
in particular with Article 6 of the European Convention on Human
Rights (presumption of innocence, strict criminal law “beyond reasonable
doubt” evidence requirements) and Article 1 of Protocol No. 1 to
the Convention (ETS No. 9) (peaceful enjoyment of possessions).
43. The Court’s case law on this matter is quite accommodating,
to the point that a number of applications by persons whose assets
were seized under such laws were rejected as inadmissible for being
manifestly ill-founded.
Ever since a case from
the 1970s (
Engel v. the Netherlands ),
the Court uses a number of “tests” to determine whether or not restrictive
measures taken by the State have a criminal law character. Under
these tests, civil or non-conviction-based forfeiture of criminal
assets does not have such a character and therefore need not be
subjected to strict criminal law evidentiary rules.
44. Regarding the right to peaceful enjoyment of possessions (Article
1 of Protocol No. 1), the Court has granted member States a wide
margin of appreciation in determining the necessary proportionality
between the interference with the right to property and the general
interest pursued by the interference. In
Arcuri
v. Italy, the
Court “points out that the impugned measure forms part of a crime-prevention
policy; it considers that in implementing such a policy the legislature
must have a wide margin of appreciation both with regard to the
existence of a problem affecting the public interest which requires
measures of control and the appropriate way to apply such measures.
The Court further observes that in Italy the problem of organised
crime has reached a very disturbing level. The enormous profits
made by these organisations from their unlawful activities give
them a level of power which places in jeopardy the rule of law within
the State. The means adopted to combat this economic power, particularly
the confiscation measure complained of, may appear essential for the
successful prosecution of the battle against the organisations in
question (see the Raimondo judgment cited above, p. 17, paragraph
30, and the Commission decision in the
M. v.
Italy case cited above, p. 101). The Court cannot therefore
underestimate the specific circumstances which prompted the action
taken by the Italian legislature”.
45. A Council of Europe expert, in a research paper she prepared
for a joint European Union/Council of Europe project on criminal
assets recovery in Serbia, concluded that “[t]he overarching consensus
of both the national courts and the [European Court of Human Rights]
is that civil forfeiture is compatible with human rights law”.
Having
looked at the cases myself, I would agree with this analysis. As
long as forfeiture requires that the competent authority makes a
reasonable case that the assets in question are the products or
instruments of criminal activity and grants the target person the
opportunity, in fair proceedings before an independent and impartial
tribunal, to rebut the resulting factual presumption that the assets
were indeed derived from criminal activities, forfeiture violates
neither the presumption of innocence (Article 6 of the Convention)
nor the protection of property rights (Article 1 of Protocol No.
1).
5. Conclusions
and recommendations
46. We have seen that individual
States and the international community, especially under the auspices
of the European Union and the World Bank, have made and are still
making
considerable
efforts to facilitate the confiscation of criminal assets. But the
scarce statistics available show that the results still leave a
lot of room for improvement. Even within the European Union, which
has made impressive progress in setting up comparable and compatible
legal and institutional frameworks, practical obstacles for cross-border confiscations
are still formidable – so formidable that authorities sometimes
do not even try. According to the most recent estimates, 98.9% of
estimated criminal profits are not confiscated and remain at the
disposal of criminals.
This tends to produce a politically unacceptable
result, namely that the law-enforcement bodies set up to trace and
confiscate criminal assets mainly go after the “small fry” of local
criminals, whilst sophisticated, internationally operating “big
fish” get off the hook. Local criminal groups should certainly not
be neglected, as their activities cause a lot of damage to communities
and their highly visible luxurious “criminal lifestyle” – oftentimes
enjoyed whilst collecting welfare benefits – is a provocation in
the eyes of honest local citizens and taxpayers. But the fundamental
threat to the rule of law and democracy posed by the massive financial resources
accruing in the hands of transnational organised criminal groups
urgently requires that the overwhelming majority of States that
are not (yet) under the influence of these networks fully co-operate
among themselves in order to seize a sizeable chunk of these criminal
assets, year after year, so that the financial power of the criminals
can be contained and even rolled back.
5.1. Possible
improvements at national level: good practices to follow and lessons
learnt
47. The countries, such as Ireland,
Italy, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom, which have adopted legislation
to facilitate confiscation of criminal assets by lowering or even,
under certain conditions, reversing the burden of proof (or by establishing
rebuttable factual presumptions) have had far more success in freezing and
confiscating criminal assets than those which have maintained the
need for the State to prove a link between the target’s wealth and
his or her criminal activities, or, as is still the case in some
States, even between a particular crime and a particular asset targeted
for confiscation.
48. The law should also allow for the recovery of assets on the
basis of an “equivalent value confiscation” provision. This allows
for the confiscation of the assessed value of the products of crime
when illicit assets have been transformed or converted, or intermingled
with property acquired from legitimate sources, when they were lawfully
acquired by third parties, or when assets have simply disappeared.
A related strategy, which has been applied with some success in
the Netherlands, is to tax the profits from crime. As criminals
seldom declare their profits, the taxes themselves, plus back interests
and penalties can make quite a dent in their illicit gains.
49. As we have seen, legislation helping to overcome these obstacles
has passed the test of the highest national courts and, not least,
that of the European Court of Human Rights. In order for confiscation
to be compatible with human rights, the factual presumption of criminal
origin must be based on solid evidence presented by the competent
authorities at least up to a civil “balance of probabilities” standard,
and the presumption must be rebuttable. Proceedings leading to confiscation
must be fair and subject to scrutiny by an independent and impartial
tribunal. If the tribunal finds that an asset freeze or confiscation
was unlawful, it must also be able to grant compensation to the
victim of such an error. Finally, in order to make the judicial
remedy truly effective, legal aid should be available to putative
victims of unlawful freezes or confiscations who cannot afford proper
legal representation – a situation that may well be caused by the
very asset freezes in dispute.
50. Other good practices I was able to observe included the establishment,
in Ireland, of a multidisciplinary group – the Criminal Assets Bureau
(CAB) – bringing together experts from the police, the customs and
tax authorities and the social welfare offices. In this way, the
CAB has rapid access to information available to different branches
of government, whose representatives work together in a highly professional multidisciplinary
team. The CAB enjoys excellent support among the Irish people also
because it has succeeded in focusing on criminal groups generally
loathed for the damage they have done to local communities and in
avoiding unjust seizures.
51. Asset recovery offices must continually adapt their working
methods to evolving avoidance strategies by criminal groups. In
particular, they may need to move on from the confiscation of material
goods (movables, such as cash, luxury cars, yachts, aircraft, or
immovables such as villas, apartments, plots of land) to that of immaterial
goods (in particular bank accounts of all types, investment portfolios,
trusts, shell companies, shares in businesses, etc.). This requires
more progress in the identification of the true owners (final beneficiaries)
of the myriad of legal constructions carefully designed to obfuscate
the true ownership situation. The ongoing work in this respect in
the European Union
is
therefore of particular importance and should be extended to more
non-EU member States. Asset recovery offices should have at their
disposal effective special investigative tools, such as access to
financial information held by other public bodies, undercover operations, and
real-time monitoring of bank accounts.
52. The specialised body set up in each jurisdiction should have
the capacity to administer frozen assets in such a way as to preserve
their value until they are definitively confiscated, and to dispose
of confiscated assets so as to maximise the benefit for society
as a whole. The practical difficulties in this respect should not be
underestimated, but they are not insurmountable. For example, when
threats by criminal groups deter private individuals from buying
assets confiscated from them. Italy has shown the way – for example,
large villas confiscated from mafia bosses have successfully been
turned into orphanages or public conference centres. But continuous
vigilance is necessary. A report published in November 2015 by the
Washington D.C.- based libertarian Institute for Justice entitled
“Policing for Profit”
describes
a number of egregious cases of alleged abuses of civil forfeiture,
mostly at State and local levels, especially where confiscated assets
directly benefit the local police force. This report rightly recalls
that perverse incentives – basically, conflict of interest situations
– must be avoided and that effective legal remedies must be available
to victims of purported abuses. But I do not agree with the authors’
radical libertarian conclusion that civil forfeiture should be abolished altogether.
53. Last but not least, asset recovery offices should regularly
inform the general public both of operations successfully carried
out and of problems encountered. Detailed statistics should be kept
and regularly published by asset recovery offices, notably on target
persons and their affiliations, on the types of predicate offences
and the categories and quantities of assets frozen or confiscated.
This would help the competent authorities target operations more
effectively and adjust priorities and tactics in good time.
5.2. Possible
improvements at international level – making cross-border co-operation
more effective
54. Criminal organisations have
responded to robust rules permitting confiscation of their assets
in some countries by moving their assets abroad. It is therefore
vital that law-enforcement authorities also co-operate across borders.
Much has been done, again, primarily at EU level, in order to promote
international co-operation in this field. For obvious reasons, such
co-operation must urgently be extended to non-EU member States.
55. An excellent avenue is the promotion of international networks
of competent officials, such as the CARIN (Camden Asset Recovery
Inter-Agency Network) and the ARO (Asset Recovery Offices) platform
or other relevant fora. CARIN is an informal network of contacts
and a co-operative group dealing with all aspects of confiscating
the proceeds of crime. Its network includes practitioners from 53
jurisdictions and nine international organisations.
It has established itself as a centre
of expertise in this field, promoting the exchange of information
and good practices, and makes recommendations to international bodies
such as the European Commission and the Financial Action Task Force
(FATF); it also advises other appropriate authorities and facilitates
training in all aspects of confiscating the proceeds of crime, recommending
that all States set up asset recovery offices. Within the European
Union, the ARO platform
encourages co-operation between
relevant bodies within the European Union and a number of relevant
third States (including the United States, Israel, Serbia, the Russian
Federation and Turkey). Similar platforms and structures exist in
other parts of the world, as strongly encouraged by the World Bank-led
“Stolen Assets Recovery (StAR) Initiative”.
It
is obvious that when competent officials get to know each other
better, they can develop mutual trust, which is a key ingredient
of successful co-operation. They can also assist each other in overcoming
bureaucratic obstacles, react rapidly and waive formal reciprocity
requirements as appropriate. I tend to agree with our expert, Mr Perez
Enciso, that spontaneous exchange of information is crucial, beyond
the usual “self-serving” information sharing when a State’s authorities
need feedback from a foreign authority in order to further their own
investigation. As our expert explained, a “great dose of generosity”
is needed to stop criminal organisations taking advantage of the
weak flow of information between competent judicial authorities
across national borders.
56. International co-operation should also not be dependent on
whether or not the requested State has the same confiscation regime
as the requesting one (i.e. criminal or civil forfeiture, conviction-based
or not), as long as the minimum requirements regarding fairness
of proceedings and judicial review are fulfilled. This can be presumed
for member States of the Council of Europe, provided they properly
implement the European Convention on Human Rights.
57. Competent authorities should set up and use more frequently
joint investigation teams such as those being currently set up with
the assistance of Eurojust and Europol. Such teams should also involve
non-member States of the European Union more often.
Joint investigation teams should include
asset recovery among their objectives and involve financial investigators
as part of the team. A legal framework for this already exists,
namely the (2001) Second Additional Protocol to the Council of Europe’s
(1959) European Convention on Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters
(ETS Nos. 182 and 30).
58. Special investigative techniques such as access to financial
information,
undercover
operations (including the possibility for undercover agents to open
and use bank accounts), and real-time monitoring of bank accounts
should be available also in cross-border investigations.
59. Last but not least, clear rules should be defined for the
sharing of successfully confiscated assets among the countries involved.
Amounts above a certain threshold (for example €10 000), which may
be kept by the executing State, should be shared fairly between
the requesting and the executing State. In my view, unless a special
agreement is reached in advance depending on who has to carry the
bulk of the investigative burden, a 50/50 distribution would seem
to be reasonable.
60. These possible improvements, at both national and international
levels, are reflected in the operative part of the draft resolution.
It will then be up to us as members of our own national parliaments
to pick up the ball and promote these improvements in our own countries.
Let us be clear that human rights are not an obstacle for progress
in this field, quite the contrary: checking the power of organised
crime by tackling its financial foundations is a positive step,
needed to protect human rights, the rule of law and democracy as
we know them.