o
SPECIAL COURT
FOR SIERRA LEONE
TRIAL
CHAMBER II
Before: |
Justice Richard Lussick, Presiding Judge Justice
Teresa Doherty Justice
Julia Sebutinde Justice El Hadji Malick Sow, Alternate
Judge |
Registrar: |
Herman
von Hebel |
Case No.: |
SCSL-03-1-T |
Date: |
27
February 2009 |
|
PROSECUTOR v. Charles
Ghankay |
Decision on
Public Urgent Defence Motion Regarding a Fatal Defect in the Prosecution’s
Second Amended Indictment Relating to the Pleading of JCE -
Dissenting
Opinion of Justice Richard Lussick
Office
of the Prosecutor: |
|
Defence
Counsel
for Charles G. Taylor: |
Brenda J. Hollis Nicholas Koumjian |
|
Courtenay Griffiths, Q.C. Terry Munyard Andrew Cayley Morris Anyah |
DISSENTING OPINION OF JUSTICE
RICHARD LUSSICK
Introduction
1.
I
have had the opportunity of reading the Majority Decision of my learned
colleagues and have to say that I agree with their finding that the Defence has
shown good cause for the late filing of the Motion. I dissent, however, from
their finding that the joint criminal enterprise responsibility of the Accused
has been properly pleaded in the Indictment.
2.
I agree with the views expressed in the Majority
Decision regarding the applicable law on the pleading requirements for indictments
generally and for joint criminal enterprise specifically. Such views are well
founded in the international jurisprudence of the ad hoc tribunals. Nevertheless, a proper application of those
pleading principles leads to the conclusion, in my opinion, that the Indictment
has been defectively pleaded with respect to joint criminal enterprise.
Defective
Pleading of Joint Criminal
3.
The
initial Indictment in this case was filed on 7 March 2003[1].
An Amended Indictment was filed with leave on 17 March 2006. In that indictment, joint criminal enterprise
is pleaded in the following terms:
The ACCUSED, by his
acts or omissions, is individually criminally responsible pursuant to Article
6.1. of the Statute for the crimes referred to in Articles 2, 3 and 4 of the
Statute as alleged in this Amended Indictment, which crimes the Accused planned,
instigated, ordered, committed, or in whose planning, preparation or execution
the Accused otherwise aided and abetted, or
which crimes amounted to or were involved within a common plan, design or
purpose in which the Accused participated, or were a reasonably foreseeable
consequence of such common plan, design or purpose.[2]
4.
A Second Amended Indictment - which did not alter the wording of the
pleading of joint criminal enterprise contained in the Amended Indictment - was
filed on 29 May 2007[3].
(Hereinafter, unless otherwise indicated, a reference to “Indictment” will be a
reference to the Second Amended Indictment, which is the current indictment.)
5.
It
is notable that the Indictment fails to identify any specific common purpose in
respect of which the Accused is alleged to be criminally responsible. Hence, in my view, the Indictment is not
sufficiently specific to clearly inform the Accused of the case he is required
to meet in relation to joint criminal enterprise and is thus defective.
6.
It is well established
in international law that an indictment alleging the participation of the
accused in a joint criminal enterprise must plead the nature of the common
purpose of the joint criminal enterprise as a material fact, otherwise the
indictment is defective[4]. The
Appeals Chamber has found that “[e]stablished case law on the pleading of joint
criminal enterprise requires that an indictment must allege the nature of the
enterprise, the time period, the persons involved, and the nature of the
accused’s participation in the joint criminal enterprise.”[5] The
Appeals Chamber has also found that “determination of whether the Prosecution properly
pleaded a crime must be determined on the basis of whether the Prosecution pleaded
all the material facts in the Indictment”.[6]
7.
On 3 August 2007 the
Prosecution filed an Amended Case Summary, no doubt with the intention
compensating for the deficiencies of the Indictment. The Prosecution claims
that by virtue of this Amended Case Summary it cannot be said that “the
Prosecution has failed to allege a common purpose to commit a crime within the
Statute[7].” The
Amended Case Summary provided (inter alia)
the following details of the alleged common purpose:
Between about 1988 and
about 18 January 2002, the Accused and others agreed upon and participated in a
common plan, design or purpose to carry out a criminal campaign of terror, as
charged in the Second Amended Indictment, in order to pillage the resources of
Sierra Leone, in particular the diamonds, and to forcibly control the
population and territory of Sierra Leone.[8]
8.
The specific objective
of the joint criminal enterprise detailed in the Amended Case Summary is
obviously a material fact which should have been pleaded in the Indictment. The
Amended Case Summary purports to change the count against the Accused by
substituting a common purpose which was not charged in the Indictment. In my
opinion, this cannot cure the defect in the Indictment. Material facts must be
pleaded in an indictment - not in a case summary - and can only be amended by
leave of the Trial Chamber under Rule 50. Since the indictment is the primary
accusatory instrument, it is not possible for the Prosecution to cure a
defective indictment by amending a case summary[9].
9.
I disagree with the
Majority Decision that “[r]eading the Indictment as a whole, (….) the
Prosecution has adequately fulfilled the pleading requirements of the alleged
Joint Criminal Enterprise in the Indictment.” One cannot argue
with the proposition that the Indictment should be read as a whole, but I do
not agree that in the present case, reading together paragraphs 5, 9, 14, 22,
23, 28, 33 and 34 of the Indictment is sufficient to fulfil the requirements
for pleading joint criminal enterprise.
10. (i)
Members of the
Revolutionary United Front (RUF), Armed Forces Revolutionary Council (AFRC),
AFRC/RUF Junta or alliance, and/or Liberian fighters, including members and
ex-members of the NPFL (Liberian fighters),
assisted and encouraged by, acting in
concert with, under the direction and/or control of, and/or subordinate to
the ACCUSED, burned civilian property, and committed the crimes set forth below
in paragraphs 6 through 31 and charged in Counts 2 through 11, as part of a campaign to terrorize the
civilian population of the Republic of Sierra Leone.[10]
(ii)
Paras 9, 14, 22, 23, 28, under the heading of the particulars of each count of
the Indictment, make reference to “members of the RUF,
AFRC, AFRC/RUF Junta or alliance, and/or Liberian fighters, assisted and
encouraged by, acting in concert with, under the direction and/or control of,
and/or subordinate to the ACCUSED.”[11]
(iii)
The
ACCUSED, by his acts or omissions, is individually criminally responsible
pursuant to Article 6.1. of the Statute for the crimes referred to in Articles
2, 3 and 4 of the Statute as alleged in this Amended Indictment, which crimes
the Accused planned, instigated, ordered, committed, or in whose planning,
preparation or execution the Accused otherwise aided and abetted, or which crimes amounted to or were involved
within a common plan, design or purpose in which the Accused participated, or
were a reasonably foreseeable consequence of such common plan, design or
purpose.[12]
11. The
plain language of those paragraphs does not, in my opinion, support the
Majority finding that paragraph 5 provides that the common plan, design or
purpose of the joint criminal enterprise was “to terrorize the civilian
population of the
12. Furthermore,
paragraph 5, when read with paragraph 33, does not clearly identify a common
purpose. The campaign "to terrorize the civilian population of the
13. Moreover,
in view of the difference between the objective stated in paragraph 5 of the
Indictment and the objective stated in the Amended Case Summary, it follows
that not even the Prosecution would agree with the Majority theory of a common
purpose.
14. I
do not interpret the Appeals Chamber Decisions in Norman
and in the AFRC Appeal Judgement
as meaning that the Appeals Chamber has adopted pleading principles which are
any less stringent than those of other international courts nor, in particular,
that it has departed from well established pleading principles by deciding that
the common purpose of a joint criminal enterprise need not be clearly specified
in an Indictment. Such an interpretation would obviously be an infringement of
the statutory right of the Accused to be informed clearly of the charges
against him so that he may prepare a defence.
15. My final point is that
the Accused should not be required to undergo the brain-twisting exercise of
reading together paragraphs 5, 9, 14, 22, 23, 28, 33 and 34 of the Indictment
in order to fathom what facts are most likely to form the basis for his alleged
joint criminal enterprise liability. An indictment which requires an accused to
do so is obviously defective in that it fails to clearly inform the accused of
the case he is required to meet[14].
Remedy
16. Having
found the Indictment to be defective in respect of its pleading of joint criminal
enterprise, it is nonetheless clear that the Accused was given ample notice by
the Prosecution in its various supporting documents, initial indictment and
opening statement that he was to be charged with participation in a joint
criminal enterprise, even though the objective of that enterprise was not
always expressed in the same way.
17. The
initial Indictment, filed on 7 March 2003, stated that “the common plan,
purpose or design (joint criminal enterprise)” was “to take any actions
necessary to gain and exercise political power and control over the
18. The
Amended Indictment filed on 17 March 2006, and the Second Amended Indictment
filed on 29 May 2007, charged the Accused with being criminally responsible for
crimes which “amounted to or were involved within a common plan, design or
purpose in which the Accused participated, or were a reasonably foreseeable
consequence of such common plan, design or purpose”[16], but no
common plan, design or purpose was specified.
19. The
initial Case Summary filed on 7 March 2006 provided the following details of
the common plan, design or purpose:
42.
This shared common plan, design or purpose was to take any actions necessary to
gain and exercise political power and political and physical control over the
43.
The Common plan, design or purpose included taking any actions necessary to
gain and exercise physical and political control over the population of Sierra
Leone in order to prevent or minimize resistance to their geographic control,
and to use members of the population to provide support to those persons engaged
in achieving the objectives of the common plan, design or purpose. This common
plan, design or purpose amounted to, or involved the commission of, the crimes
alleged in the Amended Indictment. The alleged crimes, amounting to or involved
within the common plan, design or purpose, were either intended by the ACCUSED,
or were a foreseeable consequence of the common plan, design or purpose.
44.
The ACCUSED participated in this common plan, design or purpose as part of his
continuing efforts to gain access to the mineral wealth of Sierra Leone, in
particular diamonds, to destabilize the Government of Sierra Leone in order to
facilitate access to such mineral wealth, and to install a government in Sierra
Leone that would be well disposed toward, and supportive of, the ACCUSED’s
interests and objectives in Liberia and the region.
20. The
Prosecution’s Pre-Trial Brief, filed on 4 April 2007, set out the alleged joint
criminal enterprise responsibility
of the Accused at some length. The common plan, design or purpose was
particularised as follows:
The
Emergence of the Common Plan, Design or Purpose (Common Plan)
Prior
to the commencement of the armed conflict in Sierra Leone, and throughout the
armed conflict, the Accused participated in a common plan, design or purpose to
gain and maintain political power and physical control over the territory of
Sierra Leone, in particular the diamond mining areas, in order to exploit the
natural resources of the country.
Implementation of this common plan included overthrowing the government
of
This
common plan amounted to or involved the commission of the crimes alleged in the
Amended Indictment (Indictment). From
its inception, the Accused and the other participants in the common plan used
criminal means to achieve and hold political power and physical control over
the civilian population of
The
Accused, as leader of the NPFL was instrumental in the creation of this common
plan. The Accused and Foday Sankoh, the
leader of the RUF (Revolutionary United Front), made common cause to assist
each other in their respective countries to achieve the common plan. From the outset, the Accused and his forces
worked virtually as one with Sankoh and his RUF forces, and with the organised
armed groups and forces that later evolved.
To that end, Sankoh and his RUF forces assisted the Accused during the
Liberian armed conflict which commenced in 1989.[19]
21. The
Amended Case Summary, filed on 3 August 2007, alleged joint criminal enterprise
in the following terms:
42. Between about 1988 and about 18 January
2002, the Accused and others agreed upon and participated in a common plan,
design or purpose to carry out a criminal campaign of terror, as charged in the
Second Amended Indictment, in order to pillage the resources of Sierra Leone,
in particular the diamonds, and to forcibly control the population and
territory of Sierra Leone.
43.1 The crimes charged in Counts 1 through 11
of the Second Amended Indictment were
within the common plan as it existed from 30 November 1996 through 18 January
2002. The Accused and the other
participants in the common plan intended the commission of each of the charged
crimes.
43.2 Alternatively, from 30 November 1996
through about 18 January 2002, the following crimes were within the common
plan, design or purpose: acts of terror against civilians in
22. The
Prosecutor, in his opening statement on 4 June 2007, addressed joint criminal
enterprise in this way:
The
accused is responsible the development and execution of a plan that caused the
death and destruction in
Further on in his opening statement, the Prosecutor asserted
that “the evidence will show that the accused’s plan to control territory in
Later in his address, the Prosecutor reiterated that
A
plan was there formulated by the Accused and others to take over political and
physical control of Sierra Leone in order to exploit its abundant natural
resources and to establish a friendly or subordinate government there to
permit—to facilitate this exploitation. This was part of a larger strategy that
included helping other militarily in their respective revolutions to take over
their respective countries, and the first one was to be Liberia…The agreement
made by the accused and Sankoh was to begin…in Liberia with the help of
Sankoh’s forces, and Liberia would then be used as a base from which to move
into Sierra Leone with the help of the forces of the accused…access to Sierra
Leone’s abundant resources was a primary objective, but Sierra Leone would also
be a source of manpower.[22]
23. Thus,
notwithstanding the defective indictment, an appraisal of the above material
leaves no doubt that the Accused was put on notice at a very early stage in the
case that he was going to have to answer an allegation of participating in a
joint criminal enterprise. Although there are some obvious differences in the
way the various materials describe the common purpose, such divergences are not
so diffuse as to deprive the Accused of a fair opportunity to prepare his
defence. Accordingly, I believe the justice of the case would be met by
ordering the Prosecution to amend the indictment.[23]
Disposition
24. For
the foregoing reasons, I would have determined as follows:
(i) The claim of the Defence that joint
criminal enterprise is defectively pleaded in the Second Amended Indictment is
upheld.
(ii) The Defence prayer for severance is
denied.
(iii) The Prosecution is ordered to file within
14 days a further amended indictment which pleads clearly and unambiguously as
a material fact the common plan, design or purpose of the joint criminal
enterprise in which the Accused is alleged to have participated.
|
Justice
Richard Lussick |
|
[Seal of the
[1] Pleading of joint criminal enterprise in the initial Indictment is mentioned infra in the “Remedy” section.
[2] Amended Indictment dated 16 March 2006, filed on 17 March 2006, para. 33 [emphasis added].
[3] Second Amended Indictment, para 33.
[4] Kupreskic Appeal Judgement, paras 88, 114; Blaskic (AC) Judgement, 29 July 2004, para 220; Kronjelac (AC) Judgement, 17 September 2003, para 116; Ntagerura (AC) Judgement, 7 July 2006, para 24; Prosecutor v. Kvocka et al., IT-98-30/1-A, 28 February 2005, [“Kvocka Appeal Judgement”], paras 28, 42; Niyitegeka Appeal Judgement, para. 194; Prosecutor v. Gacumbitsi, ICTR-2001-64-A [“Gacumbitsi Appeal Judgement”], para. 162; Prosecutor v. Krnojelac, IT-97-25-PT, Decision on the Form of the Second Amended Indictment, 11 May 2000 [“Krnojelac Decision”], para. 16; Prosecutor v. Milutinovic, Sainovic, Odjanic, IT-99-37-PT, Decision on Defence Preliminary Motion Filed by the Defence for Nikola Sainovic, 27 March 2003 [“Milutinovic Decision”], p. 4; Prosecutor v. Hadzihasanovic et al; Case No. IT-01-47-PT, Decision of Form of Indictment, 7 December 2001, para 10; Gacumbitsi Appeal Judgement, para. 167; Prosecutor v. Brdanin & Talic, Case No. IT-99-36-PT, Decision on Objections by Radoslav Brdanin to the Form of the Amended Indictment, 23 February 2001, para 13; Prosecutor v. Furundzija, IT-95-17/1-A, 21 July 2000, Judgement, 21 July 2001, para. 147; Blaskic Appeal Judgement, para. 215; Prosecutor v. Kordic and Cerkez, IT-95-14/2-A, 17 December 2004, para. 129; Cyangugu Appeal Judgement, para. 23.
[5] AFRC Appeal Judgement, footnote 164.
[6] AFRC Appeal Judgement, para 84.
[7] Response, para. 10.
[8] Case Summary Accompanying the Second Amended Indictment (“Amended Case Summary”), para 42.
[9] Prosecutor v. Hadzihasanovic et al; Case No. IT-01-47-PT, Decision of Form of Indictment, 7 December 2001, para 12; Prosecutor v. Rasevic, IT-97-25/1-PT, Decision Regarding Defence Preliminary Motion on the Form of the Indictment, 28 April 2004.
[10] Second Amended Indictment, para. 5 [emphasis added].
[11] Second Amended Indictment, paras 9, 14, 22, 23, 28 [emphasis added].
[12] Second Amended Indictment, para. 33 [emphasis added].
[13] See Amended Case Summary, para 42; see also Motion, para 27.
[14] Kupreskic Appeal Judgement, paras 88,114; Kvocka Appeal Judgement, para 28; Ntakirutimana Appeal Judgement, para 470; Niyitegeka Appeal Judgement, para 195; Ntagerura Appeal Judgement, para 22.
[15] Indictment, filed on 7 March 2003, para 23.
[16] See paragraph 33 of both documents.
[17] Exs. 1.011; 1.018.
[18] Wits. TF1-020; 071;
139; 227; 334; 336; 366; 532; Ellis. Exs. 1.020; 1.021; 1.067; 1.082; 1.095; 1.152; 1.155; 1.156; 1.157;
1.159; 1.169; 1.170; 1.177; 1.178; 1.184; 1.295.
[19] Wits. TF1-168; 274;
275; 515; 532; 542; Ellis. Exs. 1.058; 1.138; 1.141; 1.157; 1.232; 1.254; 1.261; 1.269.
[20] Prosecution Opening Statement, 4 June 2007, p. 30, lines 9-20.
[21] [21] Prosecution Opening Statement, 4 June 2007, p. 34, lines 9-12.
[22] Prosecution’s Opening Statement, 4 June 2007, p. 41, lines 12-29.
[23] Kvocka Appeal Judgement, para 32.