Orders to States for producing documents or information

Notion(s) Filing Case
Decision on Request of the USA for Review - 12.05.2006 MILUTINOVIĆ et al.
(IT-05-87-AR108bis.2)

25. The Appeals Chamber considers that requiring an applicant to make a showing that he has exhausted all other possible avenues that may provide access to the information is too onerous and could inhibit the right to a fair trial. However, the Appeals Chamber recalls that it has held that a Trial Chamber’s binding order to a State to produce documents or information must be “strictly justified by the exigencies of the trial”[1] in light of the reliance of the International Tribunal on “the bona fide assistance and cooperation of sovereign States.”[2] Therefore, the Appeals Chamber holds that it is reasonable under the necessity requirement for an applicant to demonstrate either that: 1) it has exercised due diligence in [trying to obtain] the requested materials elsewhere and has been unable to obtain them; or 2) the information obtained or to be obtained from other sources is insufficiently probative for a fair determination of a matter at trial and thus necessitates a Rule 54bis order.

[1] Kordić and Čerkez Review Decision, para. 41 (internal citation omitted).

[2] Blaškić Judgement on Review Request, para. 31 (internal citation omitted).

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ICTY Rule Rule 54 bis
Notion(s) Filing Case
Decision on Request of the USA for Review - 12.05.2006 MILUTINOVIĆ et al.
(IT-05-87-AR108bis.2)

At para. 27, the Appeals Chamber confirmed the Trial Chamber’s finding that “[a] State cannot arrogate to itself the right to limit the request of an applicant to material that it considers to be favourable to the Applicant’s case”[1] but that, rather, it is “for the Applicant to determine which documents, if any, of those produced should be used in his case.”[2] The Appeals Chamber held that this is so as “it is the requesting party under Rule 54bis who is best placed to determine whether certain material, even seemingly inculpatory material, may be useful for its case.”[3]

[1] Impugned Decision, para. 23.

[2] Ibid.

[3] Decision, para. 27.

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ICTY Rule Rule 54 bis
Notion(s) Filing Case
Decision on Request of the USA for Review - 12.05.2006 MILUTINOVIĆ et al.
(IT-05-87-AR108bis.2)

At para. 38 of the Impugned Decision, the Trial Chamber had found:

The target of such an Order [under Rule 54bis] is material that the organisation possesses. Questions of ownership and whether the material was initially obtained by another are irrelevant. As the Appeals Chamber explained in the Blaškić Subpoena Decision [Blaškić Judgement on Review Request], “the obligation under consideration [that of Article 29] concerns [inter alia] action that States may take only and exclusively through their organs (this, for instance, happens in case of an order enjoining a State to produce documents in the possession of one of its officials).” This applies equally to material received by one State from another. Of course, should a third-party holder of sensitive material assert that its legitimate security interests would be adversely affected by an order for production, it may seek appropriate protective measures.

The Appeals Chamber found that the Trial Chamber “erred […] when summarily dismissing the issues of ownership and origination of information as irrelevant to a Rule 54bis order.” (para. 43). It held:

43. […] Nothing in the text of Rule 54bis or the jurisprudence concerning the International Tribunal’s power to issue compelling orders to States[1] precludes consideration of these matters or indicates that the only question of concern for a Trial Chamber is whether or not the State is in possession of the requested information or documents. Furthermore, the Appeals Chamber recalls that the Rules of the International Tribunal have been intentionally drafted to take into account certain State interests and to provide safeguards for them in order to encourage States in the fulfilment of their obligation to cooperate with the International Tribunal under Article 29 of the Statute.[2] Indeed, under Rule 54bis, a Judge or a Trial Chamber is required to consider the national security interests raised by a State in determining whether to issue a Rule 54bis order or whether to direct, on national security interests grounds, protective measures for the documents or information to be produced by a State under a Rule 54bis order.[3]

It then held that “a properly tailored Rule 54bis order would necessarily avoid requiring production of information over which the United States does not have ownership” (para. 45).

See paras 44-45 for the complete reasoning.

[1] The Trial Chamber’s reliance upon Blaškić for this holding is inapposite. In that decision, the Appeals Chamber was considering what State actions are implicated by the Article 29 obligation on States to cooperate with the International Tribunal. The Appeals Chamber held that the obligation concerns both “action that States may take only and exclusively through their organs” and “action that States may be requested to take with regard to individuals subject to their jurisdiction.” Blaškić Judgement on Review Request, para. 27. By way of example, the Appeals Chamber noted that a State may be enjoined to produce documents in the possession of one of its officials. Ibid. The Appeals Chamber was not considering the question of whether a State may be enjoined to produce documents in its possession that was shared with it by another State.

[2] See supra paras. 33-34.

[3] See Rule 54bis (E)(iii), (F)(i), and (I).

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ICTY Rule Rule 54 bis
Notion(s) Filing Case
Decision on Request of the USA for Review - 12.05.2006 MILUTINOVIĆ et al.
(IT-05-87-AR108bis.2)

23. Furthermore, the Appeals Chamber does not agree with the United States that the necessity requirement under Rule 54bis stipulates that an applicant must make an additional showing that the requested materials in fact exist.[1] The necessity requirement obliges the applicant to show that the requested materials, if they are produced, are necessary for a fair determination of a matter at trial. Requiring an additional showing of actual existence would be unreasonable and could impinge upon the right to a fair trial given that these materials are State materials, often of a confidential nature. In many cases, it would be impossible for an applicant to prove the existence of these materials. All that is required is that an applicant make a reasonable effort before the Trial Chamber to demonstrate their existence. […]

[1] Request, p. 8. The Appeals Chamber cautions that its rejection of such an obligation under the necessity requirement should not be interpreted in any way to undermine the overriding principle with regard to Rule 54bis orders to produce that they should “be reserved for cases in which they are really necessary,” Blaškić Judgement on Review Request [Prosecutor v. Blaškić, Case No. IT-95-14-AR108bis, Judgement on the Request of the Republic of Croatia for Review of the Decision of Trial Chamber II of 18 July 1997, 29 October 1997 (“Blaškić Judgement on Review Request”)], para. 31 (internal citation omitted).

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ICTY Rule Rule 54bis
Notion(s) Filing Case
Decision on Request of the USA for Review - 12.05.2006 MILUTINOVIĆ et al.
(IT-05-87-AR108bis.2)

Under Rule 54bis (A)(iii) and (B)(ii), a party requesting an order under Rule 54bis that a State produce documents or information must demonstrate that he has taken “reasonable steps” for making that request. In the present case, the Trial Chamber had found that a party is entitled to request an order pursuant to Rule 54bis even if the State has proposed to grant access to the requested materials under Rule 70 of the Rules. The Appeals Chamber considered that the Trial Chamber erred and held:

31. [A]n applicant may not be found to have met the reasonable steps requirement under Rule 54bis where he or she refused the same requested documents or information when they were volunteered by a State under Rule 70.

 At paras 32-38, the Appeals Chamber gave reasons for the above finding. It inter alia reviewed the States obligation to cooperate with the Tribunal (para. 32), the law applicable to Rule 70 (paras 33 and 38), and the law applicable to Rule 54bis (para. 34).

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ICTY Rule Rule 54 bis
Notion(s) Filing Case
Decision on Request of the USA for Review - 12.05.2006 MILUTINOVIĆ et al.
(IT-05-87-AR108bis.2)

After recalling that “the State from whom the documents are requested does not have locus standi to challenge their relevance” to a trial[1]  and that a State may not challenge whether, on the basis of the request, the Trial Chamber was able “to accurately determine the relevance of the documents sought”,[2] the Appeals Chamber held that “the same rule applies with regard to challenging the necessity of documents or information for a fair determination of the trial” (para. 21).[3]

[1] Decision, para. 21, quoting Kordić and Čerkez Review Decision [Prosecutor v. Kordić and Čerkez, Case No. IT-95-14/2-AR108bis, Decision on the Request of the Republic of Croatia for Review of a Binding Order, 9 September 1999], para. 40.

[2] Ibid.

[3] See also footnote 43: “This rule does not, however, prevent a State from challenging the necessity of the requested information or documents on grounds demonstrating that there was no real necessity for the applicant to request the material from it because, for example, the material could have been or has already been obtained elsewhere. A State simply may not challenge whether the requested material is relevant or necessary for a fair trial in the circumstances of a particular case.”

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ICTY Rule Rule 54 bis
Notion(s) Filing Case
Decision on Request of the USA for Review - 12.05.2006 MILUTINOVIĆ et al.
(IT-05-87-AR108bis.2)

At paras 15 and 17, the Appeals Chamber recalled that categories of documents can be requested:

15. [A] request for production under Rule 54bis should seek to “identify specific documents and not broad categories”[1] but that the use of categories is not prohibited as such.[2] This is because “[the] underlying purpose of the requirement of specificity is to allow a State, in complying with its obligation to assist the Tribunal in the collection of evidence, to be able to identify the requested documents for the purpose of turning them over to the requesting party.”[3] Therefore, a category of documents may be requested as long as it is “defined with sufficient clarity to enable ready identification” by a State of the documents falling within that category.[4]

17. [T]he Trial Chamber did not err in granting Ojdanić’s Application even though he could not specify the exact time, place, date or content of any one of the intercepted communications for which he seeks information. “The Trial Chamber may consider it appropriate, in view of the spirit of the Statute and the need to ensure a fair trial […] to allow the omission of those details if it is satisfied that the party requesting the order, acting bona fide, has no means of providing those particulars.”[5]

[1] Prosecutor v. Blaškić, Case No. IT-95-14-AR108bis, Judgement on the Request of the Republic of Croatia for Review of the Decision of Trial Chamber II of 18 July 1997, 29 October 1997 (“Blaškić Judgement on Review Request”), para. 32.

[2] Kordić and Čerkez Review Decision, para. 38.

[3] Id.

[4] Id., para. 39.

[5] Blaškić Judgement on Review Request, para. 32. 

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ICTY Rule Rule 54 bis
Notion(s) Filing Case
Decision on Request of the USA for Review - 12.05.2006 MILUTINOVIĆ et al.
(IT-05-87-AR108bis.2)

At para. 6, the Appeals Chamber recalled the standard of review of decisions rendered pursuant to Rule 54bis of the Rules:

The Appeals Chamber recalls that Rule 54 and Rule 54bis allow a party in proceedings before the International Tribunal to request a Judge or a Trial Chamber to order a State to produce documents or information for the purposes of an investigation or the preparation or conduct of a trial. The Appeals Chamber considers that a Judge or Trial Chamber’s decision on a Rule 54bis request is a discretionary one.[1] Therefore, the Appeals Chamber will not conduct a de novo review of a Rule 54bis decision and the question before it is not whether it “agrees with that decision” but “whether the Trial Chamber has correctly exercised its discretion in reaching that decision.”[2] It must be demonstrated that the Trial Chamber has committed a “discernible error”[3] resulting in prejudice to a party. The Appeals Chamber will overturn a Trial Chamber’s exercise of its discretion only where it is found to be “(1) based on an incorrect interpretation of governing law; (2) based on a patently incorrect conclusion of fact; or (3) so unfair or unreasonable as to constitute an abuse of the Trial Chamber’s discretion.”[4] The Appeals Chamber will also consider whether the Trial Chamber “has given weight to extraneous or irrelevant considerations or that it has failed to give weight or sufficient weight to relevant considerations [. . .]” in reaching its discretionary decision.[5]

[1] See The Prosecutor v. Kordić and Čerkez, Case No. IT-95-14/2-AR108bis, Decision on the Request of the Republic of Croatia for Review of a Binding Order, 9 September 1999 (Kordić and Čerkez Review Decision”), paras. 19, 40 (holding that a Trial Chamber’s determination of whether documents requested by a party from a State would be admissible and relevant at trial such that a binding order for production of those documents may be warranted is an issue that “falls squarely within the discretion of the Trial Chamber”); see also Prosecutor v. Milošević, Case Nos. IT-99-37-AR73, IT-01-50-AR73, and IT-01-51-AR73, Reasons for Decision on Prosecution Interlocutory Appeal from Refusal to Order Joinder, 18 April 2002 (“Milošević Joinder Decision”), para. 3 (stating that a Trial Chamber exercises its discretion in “many different situations – such as when imposing sentence, in determining whether provisional release should be granted, in relation to the admissibility of some types of evidence, in evaluating evidence, and (more frequently) in deciding points of practice or procedure.”).

[2] Milošević Decision of 6 April 2006, para. 16 (internal citations omitted).

[3] Ibid.

[4] Ibid.

[5] Ibid.

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ICTY Rule Rule 54 bis
Notion(s) Filing Case
Decision on Review - 19.03.2009 NALETILIĆ Mladen
(IT-98-34-R)

33. With respect to the request to have access to all correspondence prior to 1997, the Appeals Chamber also notes that any request to order a State to produce documents or information is subject to the provisions of Rule 54 bis of the Rules and that the Applicant fails to indicate whether any reasonable steps were previously taken to obtain the documents or information from Croatia.[1]

[1] Rule 54 bis of the Rules provides, in part: “(A) A party requesting an order under Rule 54 that a State produce documents or information shall apply in writing to the relevant Judge or Trial Chamber and shall: (i) identify as far as possible the documents or information to which the application relates; (ii) indicate how they are relevant to any matter in issue before the Judge or Trial Chamber and necessary for a fair determination of that matter; and (iii) explain the steps that have been taken by the applicant to secure the State’s assistance.”

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ICTY Rule Rule 54 bis
Notion(s) Filing Case
Judgement on Request of Croatia for Review - 29.10.1997 BLAŠKIĆ Tihomir
(IT-95-14-AR108 bis)

32. […] Any request for an order for production of documents issued under Article 29, paragraph 2, of the Statute, whether before or after the commencement of a trial, must:

(i) identify specific documents and not broad categories. In other words, documents must be identified as far as possible and in addition be limited in number. […] [W]here the party requesting the order for the production of documents is unable to specify the title, date and author of documents, or other particulars, this party should be allowed to omit such details provided it explains the reasons therefor, and should still be required to identify the specific documents in question in some appropriate manner. The Trial Chamber may consider it appropriate, in view of the spirit of the Statute and the need to ensure a fair trial referred to in Rule 89 (B) and (D), to allow the omission of those details if it is satisfied that the party requesting the order, acting bona fide, has no means of providing those particulars;

(ii) set out succinctly the reasons why such documents are deemed relevant to the trial; if that party considers that setting forth the reasons for the request might jeopardise its prosecutorial or defence strategy it should say so and at least indicate the general grounds on which its request rests;

(iii) not be unduly onerous. As already referred to above, a party cannot request hundreds of documents, particularly when it is evident that the identification, location and scrutiny of such documents by the relevant national authorities would be overly taxing and not strictly justified by the exigencies of the trial; and

(iv) give the requested State sufficient time for compliance; this of course would not authorise any unwarranted delays by that State. Reasonable and workable deadlines could be set by the Trial Chamber after consulting the requested State.

[ON 17 NOVEMBER 1999, RULE 54BIS WAS ADOPTED.]

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ICTY Statute Article 29 ICTY Rule Rule 54 bis
Notion(s) Filing Case
Judgement on Request of Croatia for Review - 29.10.1997 BLAŠKIĆ Tihomir
(IT-95-14-AR108 bis)

33. […] As stated above, the International Tribunal is not vested with any enforcement or sanctionary power vis-à-vis States. It is primarily for its parent body, the Security Council, to impose sanctions, if any, against a recalcitrant State, under the conditions provided for in Chapter VII of the United Nations Charter. However, the International Tribunal is endowed with the inherent power to make a judicial finding concerning a State’s failure to observe the provisions of the Statute or the Rules. It also has the power to report this judicial finding to the Security Council. […]

See also paras 34-37.

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ICTY Statute Article 29 ICTY Rule Rule 7 bis
Notion(s) Filing Case
Decision on Subpoena Application - 01.07.2003 KRSTIĆ Radislav
(IT-98-33-A)

23.     […] It is common place in the law that, where the documents to be produced are the documents of either a State or a corporation, only the State or the corporation can be required to produce them, and that it is for the State or the corporation to do so through its proper officer. […]

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ICTY Statute Article 29
Notion(s) Filing Case
Decision on Request for Review of Order - 09.09.1999 KORDIĆ & ČERKEZ
(IT-95-14/2-AR108bis)

20. [T]he RequestingState had no right to be notified or to be heard before the Binding Order was issued to it.

See also paragraphs 18-19.

In paragraph 34, the Appeals Chamber recalled that a binding order to a State for the production of documents must satisfy four criteria.

38. […] The requirement of specificity [i.e. the first criterion] clearly prohibits the use of broad categories, which, of course, in itself is a relative term.  It does not […] prohibit the use of categories as such.

[…]

40. The second criterion states that the requested documents have to be relevant to the trial of the accused.  The Appeals Chamber takes the view that it falls squarely within the discretion of the Trial Chamber to determine whether the documents sought are relevant to the trial.  Furthermore, the State from whom the documents are requested does not have locus standi to challenge their relevance.  […]

41. The third criterion states that a binding order must not be unduly onerous.  This criterion must be read together with the clearly illustrative statement that “a party cannot request hundreds of documents, particularly when it is evident that the identification, location and scrutiny of such documents by the relevant national authorities would be overly taxing and not strictly justified by the exigencies of the trial”.[1]  Contrary to the assertion of the Requesting State, this criterion does not automatically exclude all requests that involve the production of hundreds of documents.  […]  It entails the striking of a balance between the need, on the one hand, for the Tribunal to have the assistance of States in the collection of evidence for the purpose of prosecuting persons responsible for serious violations of international humanitarian law and the need, on the other hand, to ensure that the obligation upon States to assist the Tribunal in the evidence collecting process is not unfairly burdensome.  […] [T]he crucial question is not whether the obligation falling upon States to assist the Tribunal in the evidence collecting process is onerous, but whether it is unduly onerous, taking into account mainly whether the difficulty of producing the evidence is not disproportionate to the extent that process is “strictly justified by the exigencies of the trial”.[2] 

[…]

43. The fourth criterion states that a State shall be given sufficient time for compliance with a binding order.  [I]t does not follow from this requirement that a State is entitled to be heard prior to the issuance of the binding order.  It simply sets out the obvious in the sense that a State must be given a reasonable time-frame in which to comply.  It follows from the statement that “[r]easonable and workable deadlines could be set by the Trial Chamber after consulting the requested State”,[3] and that it falls within the discretion of the Trial Chamber to do so. […]

[On 17 November 1999, Rule 54bis was adopted.]

 

[1] [Prosecutor v. Tihomir Blaškić, Case No. IT-95-14-T, Judgement on the Request of the Republic of Croatia for Review of the Decision of Trial Chamber II of 18 July 1997, 29 October 1997 (“Judgement”)], para. 32. 

[2] Judgement, para. 32.

[3] Judgement, para. 32.  (Emphasis added.)

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ICTY Rule Rule 54 bis