Earlier this week, the second Kenyan case at the
International Criminal Court came to an end with the granting of a motion by
the two accused claiming that there is ‘no case to answer’. This is a pretty
standard concept in adversarial proceedings. When the prosecution concludes its
evidence and confirms that it has nothing further to add in order to make
evidence of guilt, it becomes the turn of the defence to call evidence. But
first the defence may contend that the evidence of the prosecution is insufficient to
provide the basis for a conviction. If it succeeds, it is in principle entitled to an acquittal on the charges.
In the Ruto and Sang decision, two of three judges
agree with the defence that the prosecution evidence is insufficient to
establish guilt. The decision is somewhat strange and perhaps even
unprecedented in international criminal law in that we have three separate
judgments by the three judges. Dissenting judge Carbuccia even claims ‘that the decision of the majority of the
Chamber contains insufficient reasoning, since Judge Eboe-Osuji and Judge Fremr
have both given separate reason’. But that is clearly wrong because Judge Eboe-Osuji and Judge Fremr agree that there is no case to answer. Furthermore, Judge
Eboe-Osuji, in his judgment, says he accepts Judge Fremr’s review of the facts.
The real
novelty in this decision is the remedy. According to Judge Eboe-Osuji, it is a ‘mistrial’.
Judge Fremr doesn’t use the word ‘mistrial’, and he says ‘I do not consider the
impact to have been of such a level so as to render the trial null and void’. But
he agrees with Judge Eboe-Osuji that it is ‘appropriate to leave open the
opportunity to re-prosecute the accused, should any new evidence that was not
available to the Prosecution at the time of the present case, warrant such a
course of action’.
The
consequence, then, is that the two majority judges agree that the prosecutor
has been unable to produce enough evidence to convict but that she should be
given a second chance. I suspect that the Prosecutor is very relieved to send
the end of the Kenya nightmare and that this will be the last we hear of the
situation. Were there ever an attempt to prosecute Ruto and Sang again, they
would have strong arguments to challenge the legality of the determination by
the majority.
This is the
first time that a ‘mistrial’ has been declared in international criminal law. It
is a term that is used in common law adversarial proceedings where juries are
present and where a trial is in effect aborted and the prosecution given the
chance to start anew. I am unaware of any examples of a mistrial outside the
context of a jury trial. Presumably if there were any, Judge Eboe-Osuji, who is
a meticulous and thorough researcher, as his many constructive and creative
opinions demonstrate, would have found them and cited them in his reasons.
The first problem
is that there is no notion of a ‘mistrial’ in the Rome Statute, the Rules of
Procedure and Evidence, the Regulations of the Court, and previous practice of
other international criminal tribunals. When prosecutors and defence counsel
have tried to argue that certain procedural mechanisms exist by virtue of
article 21, and in the absence of express provision in the Rome Statute, they
have met with rejection by the Appeals Chamber. Judge Eboe-Osuji’s contention
that this novel and hitherto unknown concept can be derived from article 64(2)
and the duty of a Trial Chamber to ensure a fair trial is not very convincing.
His case would be more compelling if he could find examples in national
practice for a ‘mistrial’ where the prosecution is unable to make out its case.
Suppose that
instead of making a ‘no case to answer’ motion, the defence had simply said it
had no evidence to call on its own behalf. In other words, the defence would
invite the Trial Chamber to issue a verdict based upon the prosecution’s
evidence without calling any of its own witnesses. The result would have to be
an acquittal. Why does this tactical decision by the defence put Ruto in a Sang
in a position that is inferior to the one that they would be in had their
counsel said they had no evidence to call?
Perhaps,
according to Judge Eboe-Osuji’s theory, the ‘mistrial’ would still be available
even at the verdict stage. But it seems extraordinary that a Trial Chamber
could decline to issue a verdict of guilty or not guilty and instead declare a ‘mistrial’,
thereby inviting the Prosecutor to try again. There is also a serious obstacle
to all of this in the Rome Statute itself. Article 20(1) states: ‘Except
as provided in this Statute, no person shall be tried before the Court with respect to conduct which formed the
basis of crimes for which the person has been convicted or acquitted by the Court.’
Article 84 of the Rome Statute poses another obstacle. It allows a revision of a judgment of conviction in the event of new evidence being available. There is no similar procedure in the case of acquittal. Allowing the Prosecutor to get a second chance if new evidence comes available is not consistent with this provision and with the vision of the drafters of the Statute. Suppose, for example, that instead of evidence of interference with prosecution witnesses being available at the 'no case to answer' stage, as it is in Ruto in Sang, this only became available after an acquittal, would the Prosecutor be entitled to demand a new trial? This is simply not allowed by the Statute.
Judge Eboe-Osuji is quite right to be shocked at the evidence of interference with the
trial but his attempt to find an original remedy is troublesome. He is probably
right to see article 70 proceedings for offences against the administration of
justice to be an inadequate answer. But it cannot be ruled out that the ‘mistrial’
remedy may actually have the opposite effect. If a trial can be aborted in this
way because of interference with witnesses, is that not an invitation to those
who do not want justice to run its course? In this case, the defendant clearly
would prefer an acquittal to a second trial. But in many cases, the defendant
will prefer a second trial to the prospect of a conviction. Those who seek to
avoid a conviction have now been provided with a mechanism.
Perhaps at some point another Chamber or another court will have to interpret this judgment. It should be construed as holding that based upon all of the Prosecutor's evidence there is 'no case to answer' and that this is equivalent to an acquittal. That the majority judges attempt to reserve the right of the Prosecutor to start again is not provided for by the Rome Statute and is in fact forbidden by article 20(1). They have gone beyond their authority in so doing. Subject to an appeal by the Prosecutor, Ruto and Sang are 'not guilty'.
Very interesting, I did not know the notion of mistrial. My only fear is that the ICC will continue to suffer criticism towards its impartiality, neutrality with such creative but strange solutions.
ReplyDeleteDo you think they did it because of true possibilities of new evidence to appear in the future? Or to ensure the door will stay open? (regardless of legal support in the Statute)
Heloisa Miura