I correctly predicted that there was a violation of human rights in CHUDALOVY v. RUSSIA.

Information

  • Judgment date: 2020-09-22
  • Communication date: 2012-12-17
  • Application number(s): 796/07
  • Country:   RUS
  • Relevant ECHR article(s): 3, 6, 6-1, 6-3-c, 13
  • Conclusion:
    Violation of Article 3 - Prohibition of torture (Article 3 - Torture) (Substantive aspect)
    Violation of Article 3 - Prohibition of torture (Article 3 - Effective investigation) (Procedural aspect)
    Violation of Article 3 - Prohibition of torture (Article 3 - Degrading treatment
    Inhuman treatment) (Substantive aspect)
    Violation of Article 3 - Prohibition of torture (Article 3 - Effective investigation) (Procedural aspect)
    Violation of Article 6 - Right to a fair trial (Article 6 - Criminal proceedings
    Article 6-1 - Fair hearing)
  • Result: Violation
  • SEE FINAL JUDGMENT

JURI Prediction

  • Probability: 0.809163
  • Prediction: Violation
  • Consistent


Legend

 In line with the court's judgment
 In opposition to the court's judgment
Darker color: higher probability
: In line with the court's judgment  
: In opposition to the court's judgment

Communication text used for prediction

The applicants, Mr Muslim Chudalov and Ms Tabarik Chudalova, are Russian nationals, who were born in 1979 and 1951, respectively.
The first applicant is currently serving his imprisonment term in correctional colony IK-4 in the Saratov Region.
The second applicant is residing in Grozny, the Chechen Republic.
They are represented before the Court by lawyers of Stichting Russian Justice Initiative (“SRJI”), an NGO based in the Netherlands with a representative office in Russia, and Mr. B. Elmurzayev, a lawyer practicing in Grozny.
The facts of the case, as submitted by the applicants, may be summarised as follows.
Mr Muslim Chudalov, the first applicant, is a son of Ms Tabarik Chudalova, the second applicant.
A.
The first applicant’s arrest and alleged ill-treatment in 2005 The description of the events below is based on the information contained in the application form and the documents submitted by the applicants, including two written statements by the first applicant dated 29 December 2005 and 22 November 2006.
At about 12.30 p.m. on 8 January 2005 traffic police officers stopped the first applicant’s car at the Kurpskiy checkpoint and arrested him as a person whose name had been put on a wanted list.
After that he was taken to the Terpskiy Department of the Interior where he was held until the evening of the same day.
At about 7 p.m. on the same day several police officers handcuffed the first applicant and drove him to the Leninskiy Department of the Interior in the town of Grozny (hereinafter also “the Leninskiy ROVD”).
On their way the police officers hit and kicked him on his head, using also their handcuffs.
After their arrival at the Leninskiy ROVD the applicant was taken to an office where police officers put a black plastic bag on his head and connected electric wires to his ears.
His hands were cuffed behind his back and he was hit on his kidney area with a truncheon and on his fingers with a green ruler.
The police officers requested that he confessed to several crimes but the first applicant denied his involvement in them and they renewed the beatings.
They also administered electric shocks through the wires attached to the first applicant’s body which made him feel like something sharp was cutting him inside and following which he fainted.
However, they brought him back to consciousness and continued with the ill-treatment, taking turns once any of them got tired.
There were about ten police officers involved in the first applicant’s ill-treatment.
After several hours of such treatment the first applicant, who could not bear it any longer, agreed to sign some papers that they gave him.
His interrogation and ill-treatment continued until 2 a.m. on 9 January 2005, when he was brought to one of the cells of the police ward (изолятор временного содержания) of the Leninskiy ROVD.
In the morning of 9 January 2005 the first applicant was brought back to the same office, where police officers made him sit on a chair, tied his hands behind his back, put a plastic bag over his head and continued their interrogations, hitting him in the liver area and strangling him with the plastic bag.
On each occasion when they realised that he was close to fainting, they stopped the ill-treatment, brought him back to consciousness and continued mistreating him.
At about noon on the same day investigator E.S.
of the prosecutor’s office of the Leninskiy District of Grozny (hereinafter also “the district prosecutor’s office”) entered the office and requested that the first applicant signed some documents concerning a murder.
The latter refused, requesting a lawyer and denying his involvement in any crimes.
E.S.
got angry, ordered the police officers “to continue working on the first applicant” and left.
After that they put the first applicant with his face against the floor, cuffed his hands behind his back, removed his shoes and hit him on the feet soles with their truncheons, two police officers sitting on his back.
They continued ill-treating him in that way until the evening, when officers R.Kh.
and I.A.
had another idea and pressed the right side of his face against a heated cast-iron movable wood stove.
Despite the first applicant’s cries for mercy, they continued torturing him and, unable to withstand the treatment, he signed further papers they requested him to sign.
In his submission, such treatment continued during two days without respite and from the officers who tortured him he specifically memorised officers R.Kh.
and A.I.
who were particularly cruel.
On 9 January 2005 the first applicant signed some 15 self-incriminating statements, confessing to his involvement in various crimes.
The related interrogations were conducted by I.Abdur., A.A. and M.Kh., officers of the Leninskiy ROVD, in the absence of a lawyer for the first applicant.
From the documents submitted by the first applicant, which are mostly illegible and whose typed versions he furnished, it follows that on 9 January 2005 he gave at least seven “explanations” (объяснение) to officer I. Abdur.
of the Leninskiy ROVD, in which he confessed to having participated in several episodes of explosions of military vehicles, murder of several persons, participation in an extremist group and unlawful possession and carrying of arms and explosives.
Copies of seven further documents, also entitled “explanations” and mostly illegible, two of them dated 7 and 9 August 2005, two others – 4 and 10 January 2006 (in the applicant’s typed version) and the remaining three apparently undated, contain the first applicant’s confessions to having committed further violent crimes.
In so far as the documents in question are legible, it appears that those explanations were given by the applicant to police officers A.A. and M.Kh.
of the Leninskiy ROVD.
According to the applicant, during the two days of his continued ill-treatment the police officers of the Leninskiy ROVD made him repeat his self-incriminating statements, so that he learnt them by heart and was able to reproduce them later and threatened him that, should he denounce them, the ill-treatment would continue.
On 10 January 2005 investigator E.S.
requested the Bar Association of the Chechen Republic to appoint a lawyer for the first applicant.
On 11 January 2005 lawyer B. was issued with a representation mandate (ордер) to represent the first applicant.
On 11 January 2005 the Leninskiy District Court of Grozny authorised the first applicant’s placement in custody in the presence of investigator E.S.
and lawyer B.
At the hearing the first applicant did not raise the ill‐treatment issue before the court, fearing reprisals from the Leninskiy ROVD police officers because he knew he would be returned there after the hearing.
On 11 and 13 January 2005 the first applicant signed two documents entitled interview records of the accused (протокол допроса обвиняемого) and containing further self-incriminating submissions.
The copies of the related documents are mostly illegible.
On 3 February 2005 officers I.A.
and R.Kh.
beat the first applicant up before taking him to a hearing in a criminal case against M.L.
and Mr Vladovskiy and requesting that he testified against the latter.
According to the applicant, following the beatings, he could barely walk and two officers had to assist him in moving around when he was brought to the hearing on the same date.
Fearing further ill-treatment and given the presence of police officers of the Leninskiy ROVD in the courtroom, he testified against M.L.
and Mr Vladovskiy, as instructed.
According to a copy of the hearing record, Mr Vladovskiy’s lawyer T.U.
requested that the trial court ordered the first applicant’s medical examination with a view to verifying whether he was testifying under duress.
That request was turned down.
On 7 February 2005 the first applicant was transferred to remand prison SIZO 20/1 in Grozny.
In his submission, after his arrest on 8 January 2005 and before his transfer to that remand prison a month later officers of the Leninskiy ROVD had continued mistreating him on a regular basis, so that he learnt by heart the self-incriminating statements they had made him sign earlier.
Subsequently, the applicant was transferred back to the Leninskiy ROVD and was held there on the following dates: (a) from 28 February to 12 March 2005, (b) from 22 March to 30 April 2005; (c) from 23 May to 1 June 2005, and (d) from 17 June to 18 July 2005.
According to the first applicant, on 28 February 2005 officers of the Leninskiy ROVD cuffed his left hand with the right foot and the right hand with the left foot, put a plastic bag on his head and hit him with wooden sticks on his hands and feet, punishing him for his complaint to the Supreme Court of the Chechen Republic about his previous ill-treatment – apparently in the proceedings against Mr Vladovskiy.
After those beating the first applicant could barely walk on his own and the police officers kept him at the Leninskiy ROVD so as to let his injuries disappear.
However, they were nonetheless recorded upon his admission on 12 March 2005 to the temporary isolation ward of the Ministry of the Interior in Grozny.
On 4 March 2005 the investigation of the criminal case against the first applicant (case file no.
40021) was entrusted to investigator G. of the district prosecutor’s office.
On 22 March 2005, following his transfer back to the Leninskiy ROVD, police officers again put a plastic bag on his head, cuffed his hands behind his back and hit on his toes with a hammer.
The policemen wanted the first applicant to confirm his previous self-incriminating statements on 24 March 2005 in the presence of G., the new investigator in charge of his criminal case, and his lawyer, which the applicant did, as requested.
On 23 May 2005 police officers of the Leninskiy ROVD again beat up the first applicant, punishing him for his complaints about the ill-treatment and requesting that he confirmed his self-incriminating statements to G. on the following day.
On 24 May 2005 the first applicant asked G., in the presence of his lawyer, to put an end to his ill-treatment and the latter promised him that no one would beat him up if he signed more papers which the first applicant did.
On 17 June 2005, after his transfer to the Leninskiy ROVD, the first applicant was again severely beaten up.
He had his hands and feet cuffed behind his back and a plastic bag put on his head to make him suffocate.
The police officers also administered electric current to his body, pushed him on the ground and hit him with wooden sticks on the soles of his feet.
Unable to stand the treatment, the applicant signed further documents requested of him.
B.
Proceedings concerning the first applicant’s alleged ill-treatment in 2005 On 12 January 2005 the first applicant’s lawyer B. complained to the prosecutor’s office of the Leninskiy District of Grozny that on 11 January 2005 he had noticed on the right side of the head of his client several abrasions covered with crust which the latter explained by having fallen on the ground, denying having been subjected to beatings by police officers.
B. insisted that the first applicant’s explanation was unsatisfying and requested that the matter be investigated and that the first applicant’s medical examination be conducted.
On 14 January 2005 investigator E.S.
instructed the Forensic Bureau of the Chechen Republic (hereinafter also “the forensic bureau”) to verify whether the first applicant had any bodily injuries.
In its report no.
29 of 14 January 2005 the forensic expert indicated that “... on the [first applicant’s] body were found the following injuries: bruise on the right side of the skull, swelling on the right side of the face...”.
It appears that the forensic examination was carried out on the premises of the Leninskiy ROVD.
On the same date investigator E.S.
interviewed officers R.Kh., I.A.
and I.Abdur.
of the Leninskiy ROVD as witnesses.
It follows from their interview records, in so far as they are legible, that they all stated that the first applicant had been arrested on 8 January 2005 and on the same date brought to the Leninskiy ROVD.
R.Kh.
denied having participated in the first applicant’s interrogations or having applied physical force to him and stated that he himself was a victim of one of the crimes (an explosion of a military convoy) of which the first applicant was suspected.
I.Abdur.
submitted that he had participated in the first applicant’s interrogations; that no psychological or physical pressure “beyond what had been permitted” had been applied to the applicant, and that during an interrogation the applicant had fainted and fallen on the ground, touching a hot metal stove, following which he had burnt his face.
Officer I.A.
stated that he had participated in the first applicant’s interrogations together with R.Kh.
and I.Abdur; that I.A.
had not applied physical or psychological pressure to the first applicant “beyond what had been permitted”, and that the first applicant had burnt his face as a result of having fallen on a hot stove.
On 15 January 2005 E.S.
compiled the first applicant’s interview record, according to which the latter stated that he had burnt his face because he had fallen on a hot stove, without involvement of any third persons.
The interview record contains the first applicant’s signature.
By a decision of 20 January 2005 investigator E.S.
refused to open a criminal case into the first applicant’s alleged ill-treatment.
He referred to the statement by I.Abdur., according to which the first applicant had fainted during an interrogation and, when falling, had hit the hot stove and noted that officer I.A.
had given a similar statement.
E.S.
further observed that the first applicant’s medical examination had discovered a wound on the right side of his face in the cheekbone region and abrasions on the right side of his face, which could have been caused by thermal impact at the time and in the circumstances described by the first applicant, that is, by falling on a burning surface with an ensuing sliding of the right side of the face against the protruding part of a movable wood stove.
On the same date E.S.
sent letters to the first applicant’s lawyer B. and the second applicant informing them of his decision and of their right to challenge it before a higher-ranking prosecutor or a court.
On 10, 16, 17 and 21 February 2005 the first applicant complained in detail to the Prosecutor of the Chechen Republic (hereinafter also “the republican prosecutor”) that he had been repeatedly subjected to torture and ill-treatment by officers of the Leninskiy ROVD during his detention in that facility in the time span between 8 January and 7 February 2005, with a view to obtaining his self-incriminating statements.
He submitted that he was deliberately held in that facility for prolonged periods of time, so as to make the visible traces of injuries disappear.
He claimed, however, that his co-detainees in the ROVD had witnessed the marks of ill-treatment on his body and the fact that he could barely move on his own and requested that they be identified and interviewed and that his thorough medical examination be conducted.
He further requested that an independent criminal investigation into his allegations be opened, those responsible for his ill-treatment be punished and that his self-incriminating statements, as well as his statements against M.L.
and Mr Vladovskiy be disregarded as given under torture.
Lastly, the first applicant sought a ban on his transfer back to the Leninskiy ROVD, submitting that he risked further ill-treatment and feared for his life.
In the first applicant’s submission, on 18 February 2005 the Supreme Court of the Chechen Republic examining the case against Mr Vladovskiy held a hearing on the premises of remand prison SIZO 20/1 in Grozny with the first applicant’s participation.
At the hearing the first applicant informed the court that he had been tortured to incriminate himself and also M.L.
and Mr Vladovskiy and requested it to declare the impugned statements, including those given on 3 and 4 February 2005 inadmissible as given under torture.
By decision of 21 February 2005 investigator E.S.
of the district prosecutor’s office dismissed as unfounded the first applicant’s complaints about the alleged ill-treatment addressed to the republican prosecutor.
The decision stated that the applicant’s submissions concerning his ill-treatment had already been verified, that the first applicant had given his statements voluntarily and that all investigative steps involving him had been carried out in the presence of a lawyer.
By letter of the same date E.S.
informed the first applicant that his complaint of 10 February 2005 had been also dismissed.
By three decisions of 25 February 2005 investigator E.S.
refused to institute criminal proceedings into the first applicant’s alleged ill-treatment, following the complaints by the latter to the republican prosecutor’s office and the Supreme Court of the Chechen Republic, forwarded to the district prosecutors’ office.
In so far as those documents are legible, E.S.
concluded, in a concise manner, that the first applicant’s allegations were unfounded.
On the same date he sent to the first applicant two letters informing him of those decisions.
On 1 March 2005 the district prosecutor’s office received the second applicant’s complaint to investigator M. about her son’s ill-treatment in the Leninskiy ROVD, in which she described in detail how the first applicant had been tortured, including the burning of his face.
The complaint was transferred to investigator E.S., who, by a decision of 3 March 2005 refused to open a criminal case into those allegations, stating that they had already been examined and dismissed as unfounded.
By decision of 18 March 2005 investigator G. of the district prosecutor’s office dismissed the first applicant’s complaints about his alleged ill‐treatment, forwarded to him by the Supreme Court of the Chechen Republic.
He referred to previous refusals to institute criminal proceedings into the first applicant’s alleged ill-treatment and concluded that his allegations were unfounded.
By a letter of 10 May 2005 investigator G. of the district prosecutor’s office informed the first applicant that he had examined his complaints about the alleged ill-treatment forwarded by Office of the Prosecutor General of the Russian Federation and that he had refused to open a criminal investigation into those allegations.
On an unspecified date in 2005 the second applicant complained about her son’s ill-treatment to prosecutors of various levels.
By decision of 3 January 2006 investigator B. of the prosecutor’s office of the Chechen Republic refused to open a criminal case into the first applicant’s alleged ill-treatment with reference to the statements by investigator G. of the district prosecutor’s office, interviewed by B., and officers R.Kh., I.A., M.Kh., A.A., T.T.
and Z.T.
of the Leninskiy ROVD, interviewed by the Supreme Court of the Chechen Republic, apparently during the examination of the first applicant’s criminal case (see below).
On 20 March 2006 the prosecutor’s office of the Chechen Republic replied to the second applicant that the inquiry into her son’s alleged ill-treatment had been thorough and the decision of 3 January 2006 refusing to institute criminal proceedings was well-founded.
On 31 March 2006 the first applicant and on an unspecified date the second applicant requested access to the case-file concerning the inquiry into the first applicant’s ill-treatment complaint dismissed on 3 January 2006.
This request was turned down on 11 April 2006.
By decision of 17 November 2006 the Zavodskoy District Court of Grozny dismissed the second applicant’s complaint under Article 125 about the decision of 3 January 2006.
The court considered that the impugned decision was well-founded and that the arguments concerning the ill‐treatment of the first applicant were effectively refuted by the findings of the domestic courts which had convicted him by a final judgment of 15 June 2006 (see below).
C. The first applicant’s trial On an unspecified date in 2005 the criminal case against the first applicant was sent for trial to the Supreme Court of the Chechen Republic.
The charges against the first applicant included participation in an organised armed group, eight counts of aggravated murder, two counts of terrorism, two counts of aggravated assault against law-enforcement officials and unlawful acquisition, storage and carrying of arms and explosives committed in an organised group.
1.
Relevant information from the trial court hearing record Before the trial court the first applicant consistently submitted that he had given his self-incriminating statements under torture, referring to specific dates and methods used, as well as naming some of the alleged perpetrators.
Among other things, he referred to his ill-treatment between 8 and 11 January, on 3 and 28 February, 23 March and 24-25 May 2005.
He further asserted that officers I.A.
and R.Kh.
of the Leninskiy ROVD had beaten him up before his participation as a witness in a hearing in a criminal case concerning L.M.
and Mr Vladovskiy, so as to secure his testifying against them on 3 February 2005, which he ultimately did.
He asserted that he had been ill-treated by officers of the Leninskiy ROVD each time he had been transferred to its premises and that, whilst those police officers had initially mistreated him with a view to obtaining his confessions, they then tortured and beat him up so that he confirmed his earlier statements, including during the on-the-spot verifications of his statements, and also in reprisal for his complaints about the ill-treatment.
The first applicant asserted that he was only able to raise the issue of ill-treatment while outside the premises of the Leninskiy ROVD and the control of its police officers but that his continued transfers back to that authority had exposed him to further ill-treatment, so that he had to sign further self-incriminating statements, even in the presence of his lawyer because he knew that the latter could not protect him from torture once he was left alone with the Leninskiy ROVD police officers.
In connection with the first applicant’s allegations of ill-treatment the trial court summoned and interviewed several police officers of the Leninskiy ROVD, as well investigator E.S.
of the district prosecutor’s office.
Police officers M.Kh, R.Kh., I.A.
and A.A. and investigator E.S.
flatly denied having ill-treated the first applicant or “applied any unlawful methods” to him or having seen anyone in their presence do so.
In their submission, he had voluntarily given detailed information concerning the offences of which he stood charged in court.
According to the trial hearing record, I.A.
also stated that the first applicant had burnt his face because he had fainted during an interrogation and had fallen on a hot stove.
I.A.
was unable to explain why the first applicant had suddenly fainted while being interviewed.
A.A. submitted that he had witnessed the applicant’s fall on the stove and had tried to prevent him from falling but had not succeeded in doing so.
A.A. also specified that the police officers had collected the first applicant’s “explanations” without a lawyer and that when the first applicant was interviewed by the investigator, a lawyer was generally present.
E.S asserted that all investigative steps were carried out in the presence of the first applicant’s lawyer, that he had carried out an inquiry into the applicant’s allegations of ill-treatment, including the circumstances in which the applicant had sustained the burn, and had concluded that his submissions were unfounded.
2.
Inquiry initiated by the trial court On 11 October 2005 the presiding judge granted the request of the prosecution and instructed the prosecutor’s office of the Chechen Republic to examine the first applicant’s allegations that he had been repeatedly ill‐treated by officers of the Leninskiy ROVD, including officers I.A.
and R.Kh., with a view to obtaining his confessions.
On 17 October 2005 the inquiry was entrusted to the deputy prosecutor of the district prosecutor’s office Mr D., who interviewed officers I.A.
and R.Kh.
of the Leninskiy ROVD and investigators E.S.
and G. of the district prosecutor’s office in the time span between 24 and 30 October 2005.
Their statements, as contained in their written “explanations”, can be summarised as follows.
I.A.
denied having applied physical force to the applicant and stated that all investigative steps involving the latter had been carried out in accordance with the law and in the presence of a lawyer.
R.Kh.
denied having applied physical or psychological pressure to the applicant and stated that he had burnt his face when he had fallen at a stove after having fainted during an interrogation.
E.S.
and G., in their identically worded explanations, denied having applied “unlawful methods of investigation” to the applicant or having been aware that such methods had been applied to him.
According to them, all investigative steps involving the first applicant had been carried out in the presence of a lawyer and neither E.S.
nor G. had received during the preliminary investigation any complaints from the first applicant or his lawyer concerning his alleged ill-treatment.
By decision of 30 October 2005 D. refused to institute criminal proceedings into the first applicant’s alleged ill-treatment.
The decision relied on the statements by officers I.A.
and R.Kh.
and investigators E.S.
and G. who denied having ill-treated the first applicant or having received complaints from him or his lawyer to that effect during the preliminary investigation.
It further stated, with reference to conclusions of earlier inquiries, that the applicant must have sustained the injuries to his face after having fainted during an interrogation and having fallen on a stove and without involvement of the police officers.
The decision also contained references to the logbook of the police ward of the Leninskiy ROVD concerning admitted detainees.
According to an entry of 10 January 2005, the applicant was admitted to the facility at 5.20 p.m. with “complaints about health; bruises on the face and back”.
Another entry dated 23 October 2005 indicated: “complaints about headache, dizziness.
[Medical] assistance provided”.
Having regard to the foregoing, deputy prosecutor D. concluded that the applicant’s allegations of ill-treatment in the Leninskiy ROVD were unfounded.
The documents of the inquiry were appended to the criminal case-file.
3.
The trial court judgment of 26 December 2005 By judgment of 26 December 2005 the trial court found the first applicant guilty of having participated in an organised armed group founded by an individual in respect of whom criminal proceedings had been severed in a separate criminal case, six counts of aggravated murder, participation in terrorist attacks and assaults on law-enforcement officials and one count of unlawful acquisition, possession and carrying of arms and explosives.
In finding the first applicant guilty the trial court relied in the first place on the his pre-trial statements given on 9, 11, 13 and 24 January 2005; 2 February, 24 March, 25 May, 1 and 8 July 2005, as well as during the on-the-spot verification of his statements on 15 January 2005.
In respect of those statements the court noted that it considered them to contain detailed accounts of how the applicant had committed the offences of which he stood accused and that his allegations that they had been given under torture were a defence strategy adopted by him.
Moreover, his allegations of ill-treatment had been verified and dismissed as unfounded by the prosecutors in the course of an inquiry.
The police officers interviewed by the trial court denied having mistreated the first applicant and asserted that he had confessed to the imputed crimes of his own free will.
According to the medical examination, the bruise and the abrasions on the first applicant’s face could have been sustained as a result of his falling on the hot stove.
The applicant gave his statements in the presence of his lawyers.
The trial court went on to note that on 3 February 2005 the first applicant had participated in a hearing in a separate criminal case against M.L.
and Mr Vladovskiy, where he had acknowledged that he pad participated, in concert with those two individuals, in an explosion against a military convoy in autumn 2002.
Although in the ensuing hearing on 18 February 2005 in that case the first applicant had withdrawn that statement as given under duress, it was confirmed by a pre-trial statement by M.L.
to the effect that M.L.
and the first applicant had in concert murdered Kh.
and had committed two terrorist acts and two assaults against law-enforcement officials.
Accordingly, the trial court accepted the first applicant’s statement of 3 February 2005 as reliable.
The trial court further held that the first applicant’s guilt was also confirmed, among other things, by a number of pre-trial statements by M.L., statements by investigator E.S.
and police officers of the Leninskiy ROVD in which they submitted that the first applicant had confessed to all crimes of his own will; (pre-trial) statements by several victims who submitted that they had discovered their relatives’ corpses or learnt from other persons that they had been killed; statements by several persons who submitted that unknown persons had exploded military vehicles, and a number of crime scene inspection and ballistic reports and medical forensic examinations.
The trial court also referred to the “information” from the Chechen Department of the Federal Security Service (hereinafter also “the FSB”) and the Operational and Search Bureau no.2 to the effect that in 2002 the first applicant had joined an illegal organised armed group and had participated in its activities.
The trial court sentenced the first applicant to twenty five years’ imprisonment, to be counted as from 9 January 2005.
By a decision of 26 December 2005 the trial court terminated the applicant’s criminal prosecution on charges of theft, one count of murder and one count of unlawful possession of arms following the prosecution decision to withdraw those charges.
The applicant appealed against his conviction, arguing, among other things, that he had been convicted on the basis of his self-incriminating statements obtained under torture.
He stressed that although at the pre-trial stage the police officers of the Leninskiy ROVD had obtained his confessions to having committed fifteen offences, they chose to advance before the trial court charges concerning only six of those crimes.
He further stressed that the materials of the case file unequivocally indicated that L.M.’s incriminating statements against him concerning their participation, together with Mr Vladovskiy, in explosive attacks against military forces had been likewise obtained under torture and that, despite the torture, Mr Vladovskiy had not confessed, although he had had to cut his veins.
The first applicant further stressed that police officers of the Leninskiy ROVD had, in fact, admitted having applied force to him, stating that “it was not beyond what was permitted”.
4.
Appellate court judgment of 15 June 2006 By judgment of 15 June 2006 the Supreme Court of Russia found that the trial court’s conclusions in respect of the first applicant’s conviction regarding his participation in several episodes of explosion of military vehicles, qualified as terrorist acts and assaults on law-enforcement officials were contradictory.
Accordingly, it set aside the trial court’s judgment in that part and sent it for a fresh examination by the trial court.
The court upheld the judgment of 26 December 2005 in the remaining part and decreased the first applicant’s imprisonment term to twenty years.
Finding that the case-file contained evidence that the first applicant had been arrested on 8 January 2005, the appellate court held that that date, and not 9 January 2005, was to be taken as the starting date for the applicant’s serving the sentence.
5.
The trial court judgment of 13 October 2006 By judgment of 13 October 2006 the Supreme Court of the Chechen Republic found the first applicant guilty of assault at law-enforcement officials and terminated the proceedings as regards the connected charges of participation in terrorist acts and further assaults because the prosecution had withdrawn them.
Having regard to those conclusions and the appellate court judgment of 15 June 2006, the trial court sentenced the first applicant to twenty one years’ imprisonment.
It is unclear if the first applicant appealed against that judgment.
D. The first applicant’s alleged ill-treatment in 2012 and the related proceedings At about 11 a.m. on 25 April 2012 several persons wearing masks entered cell no.
2 of the punishment ward of colony IK-4 in the Saratov Region, where the first applicant was held at the material time with other inmates, and started beating them up.
Shortly thereafter they took the first applicant to cell no.
13 where they cuffed his hands, suspended him to the ceiling and started kicking and hitting him with their truncheons.
A.K., head of one of the departments of the Saratov branch of the Federal Service for the Execution of Sentences (hereinafter also “the FSS”), as well as officers S.D., D.Sh.
and V.R.
of the correctional colony participated in the first applicant’s beatings.
After a while the first applicant fainted.
A nurse was called to him, checked his arterial tension which had significantly dropped, made an injection and left.
Following her departure the first applicant was again suspended by handcuffs and the beatings continued, the officers cursing at the first applicant and humiliating him.
After a while they took him back to cell no.
2 where they put him on his knees, his hands cuffed behind his back.
The first applicant started having heart problems, following which a nurse was called again to him and made an injection.
In the first applicant’s submission, all those events were recorded on a video camera and his co-detainees F.A.
and S.Ya.
had witnessed his state after the beatings.
In the evening on the same day when the first applicant and other detainees were recuperating their mattresses, they were ordered to run and, while running, were kicked with truncheons on their legs.
The same events occurred in the morning of 26 April 2012 when the first applicant woke up and during his walk on that day.
At the time of those beatings A.K., S.D.
and D.Sh allegedly said that the first applicant and his mother were to be shot dead, cursing them and using abusive language.
During the entire day they made the first applicant squat down and do the press-ups, humiliating him.
In the first applicant’s submission, this treatment continued until 27 April 2012.
On 4 May 2012 M.B., member of the Public Supervisory Commission of the Chechen Republic, wrote to the prosecutor of the Saratov Region, the regional ombudsman, the head of the Saratov branch of the FSS and the head of the FSS of Russia, submitting that she had been alerted by the first applicant’s mother to her son’s ill-treatment on 25-26 April 2012 by officers A.K., S.D., D.Sh.
and V.R.
The letter stated that on 3 May 2012 the first applicant had been visited by a lawyer, who had confirmed the fact of his client’s ill-treatment, stating that the first applicant’s entire body had been covered with bruises, that both his hands had borne marks of handcuffs by which he had been suspended during the beatings and that his left hand had been severely damaged.
M.B.
requested that the bodies to which she was addressing her letter examined the situation and took the necessary measures.
By letter of 10 May 2012 the deputy prosecutor of the Saratov Region informed the first applicant’s mother that following her complaints, on 5 May 2012 officials of the prosecutor’s office had visited colony IK-4 to verify her submissions.
During the on-the-spot check they had examined the relevant documentation and interviewed the first applicant and other inmates who alleged that officers of the correctional colony had applied “unlawful means” to them.
Following the check, the relevant materials had been sent to the competent bodies with a view to deciding whether a criminal case was to be opened.
On 12 May 2012 the first applicant’s lawyer A.M. complained to the prosecutor supervising penitentiary institutions in the Saratov Region and the investigating department of the investigative committee of Russia in the Saratov Region that on 25 and 26 April 2012 the first applicant had been subjected to ill-treatment, describing it in detail and enclosing the first applicant’s detailed description of it.
A.M. further submitted that when he had managed to visit his client on 11 May 2012, despite being hindered in this by the colony officials under various pretexts, he had noticed numerous bruises on his back, forearm and legs, traces of cuffing on his arms and an injury to the joint of the left shoulder.
When A.M. talked to the head of the colony S.D., the latter allegedly told him that he had beaten the first applicant up and would continue doing so.
A.M. requested that the first applicant’s forensic medical examination be immediately conducted and that a criminal case be opened with a view to bringing A.K., S.D., D.Sh.
and V.R., responsible for his client’s ill-treatment, to justice.
On 12 May 2012 an expert of the Forensic Medical Expert Bureau of the town of Pugachev examined the first applicant on the colony premises.
According to his report no.
298 of the same date, the first applicant submitted that he had been hit with a truncheon on 26 April 2012.
He complained about pain in the liver region and in the left shoulder.
The expert established that the first applicant had four extended yellowish‐purple bruises measuring from 3×1 cm to 7×1 cm on the front external parts of his hips.
The report further noted that, according to the first applicant’s medical file, at 3 p.m. on 26 April 2012 he was examined by a prison doctor “in connection with eventual injuries sustained as a result of application of special means”; his state of health was considered “satisfactory”, and the following injuries were recorded: “traces of handcuffs on both wrists, numerous bruises of linear form (4) and purple colour [measuring] about 3,0×8,0 cm on the hips and buttocks”.
Having examined the first applicant, his medical file and his submissions, the expert concluded that at the time of his examination the applicant had four bruises on front external part of his hips and that, according to the medical file, the first applicant had had bruises on his buttocks.
The expert considered that the bruises on the hips could have been caused by an impact of a blunt solid object or objects more than twelve to fourteen days but less than twenty-one days prior to the examination and that the bruises on the buttocks could have been sustained in the time span of one day prior to the first applicant’s examination by the prison doctor.
Accordingly, he concluded that the above-mentioned injuries could have been sustained on the date and the circumstances described by the first applicant.
By a letter of 15 May 2012 investigator A.K.
of the Pugachevskiy Interdistrict investigating department (hereinafter also “the investigating department”) informed the first applicant and other detainees that by a decision of the same date he had refused to institute criminal proceedings into their allegations of ill-treatment.
The letter stated that the decision was enclosed and that it was amenable to a review by higher-ranking investigating authorities or a court.
A copy of the decision of 15 May 2012 was not provided to the Court.
On 26 May 2012 a letter along the same lines was sent to the first applicant’s mother.
By letter of 29 June 2012 the prosecutor’s office of the Saratov Region informed the first applicant’s mother that on 4 June 2012 head of the investigating department had set aside the decision of 15 May 2012 refusing to institute criminal proceedings into her son’s alleged ill-treatment and ordered that an additional inquiry be carried out.
On 13 June 2012 another refusal to open a criminal case had been issued and on 29 June 2012 it had been, yet again, quashed by the head of the investigating department who instructed his subordinates to carry out an additional inquiry.
In the meantime, on 14 May 2012 the first applicant had been transferred to correctional colony OTB-1 in the Saratov Region with a view to having his state of health examined by doctors.
By letter of 5 July 2012 the investigating department informed the first applicant’s mother that on an unspecified date it had decided not to institute criminal proceedings into her son’s alleged ill-treatment and that she could challenge it before higher-ranking prosecutors or a court.
The decision refusing to open a criminal case was not enclosed to the letter.
By letter of 9 August 2012 the prosecutor’s office of the Saratov Region informed the first applicant’s mother that the refusal to open a criminal case into the ill-treatment of her son issued on 13 June 2012 had been set aside on 23 July 2012 and that an additional inquiry ordered in that connection was under way.
COMPLAINTS In his application form the first applicant complains under Article 3 of the Convention that he was continuously ill-treated and tortured in the Leninskiy ROVD in Grozny in the period from 8 January to 7 February 2005, as well each time he was subsequently placed there or was otherwise under the control of the police officers of that authority and, in particular, on 28 February, 22 March and 23 May 2005.
Under the same Convention provision he complains that the authorities failed to carry out an effective investigation of his alleged ill-treatment.
The first applicant further submits under Article 5 that his repeated prolonged detention in the police ward of the Leninskiy ROVD was in breach of Article 5 § 1 of the Convention and that his detention after conviction was unlawful because the conviction itself was unfair.
Under Article 6 §§ 1 and 2 of the Convention the first applicant complains that he was convicted on the basis of self-incriminating statements obtained under torture and that the domestic courts incorrectly assessed the evidence before them.
He also complains under Article 6 § 1 that the examination of the complaint against the refusal to institute criminal proceedings issued on 3 January 2006 had been unfair, without providing further details.
The first applicant further submits that he was deprived of effective remedies in respect of his complaints under Article 3 concerning his ill‐treatment in the Leninskiy ROVD and the lack of investigation, as well as the complaints under Article 5 concerning his detention there and his complaints under Article 6 about the criminal proceedings against him, in breach of Article 13 of the Convention.
The second applicant complains under Article 3 that she endured mental suffering because of the first applicant’s ill-treatment and the authorities’ refusal to investigate it.
In his letters of 24 July and 11 September 2012 the first applicant complains under Article 3 that on 25 and 26 April 2012 he was ill-treated by officers of colony IK-4 in the Saratov Region and that the authorities refused to investigate his alleged ill-treatment.

Judgment

THIRD SECTION

CASE OF CHUDALOVY v. RUSSIA
(Application no.
796/07)

JUDGMENT

STRASBOURG
22 September 2020
This judgment is final but it may be subject to editorial revision.
In the case of Chudalovy v. Russia,
The European Court of Human Rights (Third Section), sitting as a Committee composed of:
Alena Poláčková, President,Dmitry Dedov,Gilberto Felici, judges,and Olga Chernishova, Deputy Section Registrar,
Having regard to:
the application (no.
796/07) against the Russian Federation lodged with the Court under Article 34 of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the Convention”) by two Russian nationals, Mr Muslim Musayevich Chudalov (“the first applicant”) and Ms Tabarik Chudalova (“the second applicant”), on 15 December 2006;
the decision to give notice to the Russian Government (“the Government”) of the complaints concerning the alleged ill-treatment of the first applicant from 8 January to 18 June 2005 and from 25 to 26 April 2012, the ineffectiveness of the investigation into those incidents, the unfairness of the criminal proceedings against the first applicant on account of the use of evidence allegedly obtained under duress and in the absence of a lawyer, and the complaint concerning the lack of effective domestic remedies to complain of ill-treatment in 2005;
the parties’ observations;
Having deliberated in private on 1 September 2020,
Delivers the following judgment, which was adopted on that date:
INTRODUCTION
1.
In his application the first applicant complained, in particular, of his ill-treatment at the hands of police in 2005 and then in a correctional colony in 2012, and the authorities’ failure to carry out effective investigation into those allegations. He also complained of the unfairness of the criminal proceedings against him on account of the use of evidence allegedly obtained under ill-treatment and in the absence of a lawyer. Lastly he submitted that he had no effective domestic remedies through which to complain of police ill-treatment. THE FACTS
2.
The first and the second applicants (a son and his mother) were born in 1979 and 1951, respectively. The first applicant is currently serving his term of imprisonment in correctional colony no. IK-4 in Saratov Region. The second applicant lives in the town of Grozny in Chechnya, Russia. The applicants were represented by lawyers of the Stichting Russian Justice Initiative NGO in partnership with Astreya (SRJI/Astreya), a non‐governmental organisation. 3. The Government were initially represented by Mr G. Matyushkin, Representative of the Russian Federation to the European Court of Human Rights, and then by his successor in that office, Mr M. Galperin. 4. The facts of the case, as submitted by the parties, may be summarised as follows. 5. On 30 June 2002 the Grozny prosecutor opened a criminal case into the murder of Ms An. In the context of that case the first applicant was charged with aggravated murder and put on a wanted list on 29 March 2004. 6. Referring to the arrest record (see paragraph 15 above), the Government submitted that the first applicant had been arrested at 4 p.m. on 9 January 2005 in the presence of two attesting witnesses. The police officers who arrested him had informed him of his right to consult a lawyer and to remain silent. Later that day the first applicant was assigned B. as counsel. 7. Following his subsequent transfer to the Leninskiy police station in the town of Grozny (hereinafter “the Leninskiy ROVD”) the first applicant was questioned by the investigators. During the questioning he lost consciousness and fell face-first onto a hot stove located in the investigators’ office, burning himself. 8. When the first applicant was taken to the holding cells of the Leninskiy ROVD at about 5.20 p.m. on 10 January 2005, the staff on duty examined him and recorded in the logbook that he complained of abrasions on his face and back. 9. At about 12.30 p.m. on 8 January 2005 traffic police stopped the first applicant’s car, arrested him and took him to the police station in Terpskiy. Several hours later, at about 7 p.m. a group of police officers transported the first applicant to the Leninskiy ROVD. On their way the police officers hit and kicked him on the head. 10. On arrival at the Leninskiy ROVD the first applicant was taken to an office where police officers put a black plastic bag over his head and connected electric wires to his ears. His hands were cuffed behind his back and he was hit on his kidney area with a truncheon and on his fingers with a green ruler. The police officers ordered him to confess to several crimes, but the first applicant denied his involvement in them. To force his confession the police officers passed an electric current through his body. When he lost conscious, police offices brought him back to consciousness and continued with the ill-treatment, taking turns once any of them got tired. After several hours of ill-treatment the first applicant agreed to sign the papers that the officers gave him. His interrogation and ill-treatment continued until 2 a.m. on 9 January 2005, when he was brought to a holding cell in the Leninskiy ROVD. 11. In the morning of 9 January 2005 the first applicant was brought back to the same office where he had been ill-treated. Police officers forced him to sit on a chair, tied his hands behind his back, put a plastic bag over his head and interrogated him, hitting him on the liver area and suffocating him with the plastic bag. 12. At about noon on the same day Investigator E.S. of the Leninskiy district prosecutor’s office in Grozny (hereinafter “the district prosecutor’s office”) entered the office and requested that the first applicant sign some documents concerning a murder. When the latter refused and requested a lawyer the investigator got angry, ordered the police officers “to continue working on the first applicant” and left. After that they put the first applicant with his face against the floor, cuffed his hands behind his back, removed his shoes and hit him on the soles of his feet with their truncheons as two police officers sat on his back. They continued ill-treating him until the evening, when Officers R.Kh. and I.A. pressed the right side of his face against a heated cast-iron movable wood stove to obtain a self-incriminating statement. As he was unable to withstand the treatment, the first applicant signed the extra papers that ordered him to. 13. On 9 January 2005 the first applicant signed some fifteen self‐incriminating statements and confessing to various crimes, including murders and attacks on the federal forces. 14. From the documents submitted by the first applicant it appears that on 9 January 2005 he gave at least seven “explanations” in which he confessed to having participated in several attacks on military vehicles, including one committed on Krasnoflotskaya St. in Grozny in 2002, murders, participation in an illegal armed group, and unlawful possession and carrying of arms and explosives. Those “explanations” were given in the absence of a lawyer. Copies of seven other documents, also entitled “explanations” dated 7 and 9 August 2005, 4 and 10 January 2006 or having no dates on them, contained the first applicant’s confessions to several other violent crimes. 15. At some point the police officers prepared the first applicant’s arrest record, stating that the arrest had taken place at 4 p.m. on 9 January 2005. Two days later, on 11 January 2005, the first applicant was assigned a lawyer, B. 16. On 11 January 2005 the Leninskiy District Court of Grozny authorised the first applicant’s detention pending investigation. 17. On 11, 13 and 24 January 2005 the first applicant was interviewed and in the presence of his lawyer, B. fully acknowledged his guilt in respect of the alleged offences. When asked about the origin of the injuries on his body, the first applicant replied that he had fainted at the investigators’ office and fallen on a hot stove. 18. On 15 January 2005 in the presence of his lawyer and two attesting witnesses the first applicant indicated the places where he had committed his crimes. 19. According to the first applicant, on 3 February 2005 Officers I.A. and R.Kh. beat him up before taking him to a hearing in a criminal case against M.L. and Mr V. The officers ordered him to give evidence against those people. Fearing more ill-treatment, the first applicant followed the order. 20. On 7 February 2005 the first applicant was questioned in the Leninskiy ROVD. He admitted his guilt in respect of a criminal offence committed together with Mr V. The applicant’s lawyer, who was present during the interview, asked his client if he had been ill-treated. The first applicant stated that no undue pressure had been put on him. 21. Later that day the first applicant was transferred to remand prison SIZO 20/1 in Grozny. According to him, before that transfer officers of the Leninskiy ROVD mistreated him. 22. Subsequently the first applicant was taken back to the Leninskiy ROVD on several occasions. He submitted that at that time his ill-treatment continued. Thus, according to him, on 28 February, 22 March, 23 May and 17 June 2005 police officers of the Leninskiy ROVD put a plastic bag over his head, cuffed his hands behind his back and hit on his toes with a hammer or administered electric current to his body. After the beating the police officers kept him at the Leninskiy ROVD so as to let his injuries heal. The first applicant submitted that his injuries had been nonetheless recorded upon his admission on 12 March 2005 to the holding cells of the police station in Grozny. No copy of that record has been submitted to the Court. 23. On 12 January 2005 the first applicant’s lawyer, B., complained to the prosecutor’s office that on 11 January 2005 he had noticed on the right side of the head of his client several abrasions, which the latter explained as the result of a fall. B. insisted that the first applicant’s explanation had been unsatisfying and requested that the matter be investigated and that the first applicant’s be examined by a doctor. 24. On 14 January 2005 Investigator E.S. instructed the Forensic Bureau of the Chechen Republic (hereinafter “the forensic bureau”) to verify whether the first applicant had any bodily injuries. 25. In its report no. 29 of 14 January 2005 the forensic medical expert indicated that the first applicant had “wounds” (skin injuries) on his right cheekbone and a bruise on the right side of his face. He concluded that the injuries could have been inflicted on 8 January 2005 in the result of a fall on a hot stove. 26. On the same date the investigator questioned Officers R.Kh., I.A. and I.Abdur. as witnesses. The first officer stated that he had not seen the first applicant after the arrest. The two other officers stated that they had not put any physical or mental pressure on the first applicant and that during an interview he had lost consciousness and fallen to the ground. During the fall he had touched his face against the hot stove and burnt it. The applicant confirmed the aforementioned statements in his interview on 14 January 2005. 27. On 20 January 2005 Investigator E.S. refused to open a criminal case into the first applicant’s alleged ill-treatment. 28. On 10, 16, 17 and 21 February 2005 the first applicant complained to the Prosecutor of the Chechen Republic that he had been repeatedly subjected to ill-treatment by officers of the Leninskiy ROVD during his detention in that facility. 29. By a decision of 21 February 2005 and three subsequent decisions of 25 February 2005 Investigator E.S., to whom the applicant’s complaints had been referred, refused to institute criminal proceedings into the alleged ill‐treatment, having concluded that the first applicant’s submissions were unfounded. 30. On 1 March 2005 the district prosecutor’s office received the second applicant’s complaint concerning her son’s ill-treatment in the Leninskiy ROVD. The complaint was transferred to Investigator E.S., who, in a decision of 3 March 2005, refused to open a criminal case, stating that the allegations of ill-treatment had already been dismissed as unfounded. 31. On 18 March 2005 Investigator G. of the district prosecutor’s office dismissed the first applicant’s complaint of ill‐treatment, referring to previous refusals to open a criminal case. 32. On an unspecified date in 2005 the second applicant complained of her son’s ill-treatment to prosecutors at various levels. 33. In a decision of 3 January 2006 Investigator B. of the prosecutor’s office of the Chechen Republic refused to open a criminal case into the first applicant’s ill-treatment with reference to the statements by Investigator G. in an interview with B., and Officers R.Kh., I.A., M.Kh., A.A., T.T. and Z.T. of the Leninskiy ROVD, given to the Supreme Court of the Chechen Republic during the examination of the first applicant’s criminal case. 34. On 20 March 2006 the Prosecutor’s Office of the Chechen Republic dismissed the second applicant’s complaints concerning the thoroughness of the pre-investigation inquiry and upheld the decision of 3 January 2006. 35. On an unspecified date the second applicant appealed against the decision of 3 January 2006 to the Zavodskoy District Court, which dismissed her claim on 17 November 2006, adjudging that the impugned decision was well-founded and that the allegation of ill-treatment had been effectively refuted by the domestic court’s finding reflected in the judgment of 15 June 2006 (see paragraph 55 below). 36. On 14 March 2007 the Supreme Court of the Chechen Republic upheld the above judgment on appeal. 37. On an unspecified date in 2005 the criminal case against the first applicant was sent for trial to the Supreme Court of the Chechen Republic. The charges against the first applicant included membership in an illegal armed group, eight counts of aggravated murder, two counts of terrorism, two counts of aggravated assault against law-enforcement officials (including that on Krasnoflotskaya St, in Grozny) and unlawful acquisition, storage and possession of arms and explosives committed in an organised group. 38. During the trial the first applicant consistently submitted that he had given his self-incriminating statements under torture, referring to specific dates and methods used, and naming the alleged perpetrators. 39. In connection with the first applicant’s allegations of ill-treatment the trial court summoned and interviewed several police officers of the Leninskiy ROVD, as well Investigator E.S. Officers M.Kh, R.Kh., I.A. and A.A. and Investigator E.S. flatly denied having ill-treated the first applicant or “applied any unlawful methods” to him or having seen anyone in their presence do so. 40. According to the trial hearing record, I.A. also stated that the first applicant had burnt his face because he had fainted during questioning and had fallen on a hot stove. I.A. was unable to explain why the first applicant had suddenly fainted while being interviewed. A.A. submitted that he had witnessed the applicant’s fall on the stove and had tried to prevent him from falling but had not succeeded in doing so. A.A. also specified that the police officers had collected the first applicant’s “explanations” without a lawyer present and that when the first applicant had been interviewed by the investigator, a lawyer had generally been present. E.S asserted that all investigative steps had been carried out in the presence of the first applicant’s lawyer, that he had carried out a pre-investigation inquiry into the first applicant’s allegations of ill-treatment, including the circumstances in which the applicant had sustained the burn, and had concluded that his submissions were unfounded. 41. On 15 March 2005 the presiding judge in the applicant’s case informed the Prosecutor of the Chechen Republic of the first applicant’s allegation of ill-treatment by police officers, which he had made during the trial. The judge forwarded the first applicant’s complaint to the Prosecutor. 42. The prosecutor’s office carried out a pre-investigation inquiry into the matter. The investigators questioned the police officers who denied the first applicant’s ill-treatment, examined the medical report of 14 January 2005 which suggested that his injuries could have resulted from a fall on the hot stove and the case-file material which suggested that lawyer B. had been present during every investigative action. They concluded that the allegations of ill-treatment were unfounded. On those grounds they refused to institute criminal proceedings into the matter on 22 March 2005. 43. On 9 August 2007 the head of the district prosecutor’s office annulled the above decision as ill-founded and premature and ordered the investigators to ensure that the first applicant was given a forensic medical examination and to examine the Leninskiy ROVD registration logs. Subsequently, the investigators refused to open a criminal case on 14 and 22 August, and 3 September 2007. Those decisions were annulled by the supervising authority on 20 and 23 August 2007 and 14 February 2013 respectively for the failure of the investigators to carry out basic investigative steps (to obtain a copy of the Leninskiy ROVD registration logs, question an officer who had made an entry in respect of the first applicant’s injuries and the applicant’s lawyer, or to examine copies of the trial-court records, where the first applicant described his ill-treatment). It appears that the pre-investigation inquiry is still ongoing. 44. On 11 October 2005 the presiding judge instructed the office of the Prosecutor of the Chechen Republic to examine the first applicant’s allegations that he had been repeatedly ill‐treated by officers of the Leninskiy ROVD. 45. Between 27 and 30 October 2005 the deputy head of the district prosecutor’s office obtained written statements by Officers I.A. and R.Kh. and Investigators E.S. and G. They denied having applied physical force to the first applicant and stated that all investigative steps involving the latter had been carried out in accordance with the law and in the presence of a lawyer. According to the statements, the first applicant had burnt his face when he had fallen on a stove after losing consciousness during an interrogation. 46. On 30 October 2005 the investigators refused to institute criminal proceedings into the matter. 47. On 29 April 2011 the Leninskiy district prosecutor annulled the above decision as ill-founded and ordered the investigators to ensure an expert examination of the first applicant’s medical documents and to question the person who had recorded the first applicant’s injuries in the Leninskiy ROVD registration logs. 48. On 14 May 2011 the investigators questioned that person. He confirmed that the first applicant had had injuries on his face and his back and that he had stated that those injuries had been inflicted on him during the arrest. 49. On 16 May and 6 October 2011 the investigators refused to open a criminal case into the alleged ill-treatment. Those decisions were subsequntly annulled by the Leninskiy district prosecutor on 4 October 2011 and 14 February 2013 respectively for being ill-founded and premature. It was noted, in particular, that the investigators had failed to fully comply with the order of 29 April 2011 or to question the first applicant’s cellmate in the Leninskiy ROVD holding cells. 50. In a judgment of 26 December 2005 the trial court found the first applicant guilty of having participated in an illegal armed group, of six counts of aggravated murder, of participation in terrorist attacks and assaults on law‐enforcement officials (including that on Krasnoflotskaya St.) and one count of unlawful acquisition, possession and carrying of arms and explosives. In finding the first applicant guilty the trial court relied on his pre-trial statements given on 9, 11, 13 and 24 January 2005, 2 February, 24 March, 25 May, and 1 and 8 July 2005, and his statements given at the crime scenes on 15 January 2005. The court specified that on 9 January 2005 the first applicant had made submissions concerning his participation in murders, unlawful acquisition of arms, and acts of terrorism. The court was convinced by his self-incriminating statements. It noted that his allegation of ill-treatment had been verified and dismissed as unfounded in the course of a pre-investigation inquiry. Moreover, the police officers during the trial denied having mistreated him. According to the medical examination, the injuries on the first applicant could have been sustained as a result of his falling on a hot stove. 51. The trial court went on to note that the first applicant’s guilt was also confirmed by, among other things, a number of pre-trial statements by Investigator E.S. and police officers of the Leninskiy ROVD, in which they had submitted that the first applicant had confessed to all the crimes of his own will; (pre-trial) statements by several victims, who submitted that they had discovered their relatives’ corpses or learnt from other people that they had been killed; statements by several individuals who submitted that unknown individuals had blown up military vehicles; and a number of crime scene inspection and ballistic reports and medical forensic examinations. The trial court also referred to the “information” from the Chechen office of the Federal Security Service and Operational and Search Bureau no. 2 (“ORB‐2”) to the effect that in 2002 the first applicant had joined an illegal organised armed group and had participated in its activities. 52. The trial court sentenced the first applicant to twenty-five years’ imprisonment, to be counted as from 9 January 2005. 53. By a decision of 26 December 2005 the trial court terminated his criminal prosecution on charges of theft, one count of murder and one count of unlawful possession of arms following the prosecution decision to withdraw those charges. 54. The first applicant appealed against his conviction, arguing, among other things, that he had been convicted on the basis of self-incriminating statements obtained under torture and in the absence of a lawyer. 55. In a judgment of 15 June 2006 the Supreme Court of Russia found contradictory the trial court’s conclusions in respect of the first applicant’s conviction regarding his participation in several episodes of military vehicles being blown up (including the attack on Krasnoflotskaya St) qualified as terrorist acts and assaults on law-enforcement officials. It set aside the trial court’s judgment in that part and remitted it for a fresh examination by that court. The court upheld the judgment of 26 December 2005 in the remaining part (including unlawful possession and carrying of arms and explosives) and decreased the first applicant’s imprisonment term to twenty years. The court also established that the first applicant had been arrested on 8 January 2005 and that, accordingly, that date and not 9 January 2005, was to be taken as the starting date for the calculation of his sentence. 56. In a judgment of 13 October 2006 the Supreme Court of the Chechen Republic found the first applicant guilty of the attack of law-enforcement officials on Krasnoflotskaya St and terminated the proceedings as regards the connected charges of participation in acts of terrorism and other attacks because the prosecution had withdrawn them. As a result the first applicant received a sentence of twenty-one years’ imprisonment, which was calculated from 8 January 2005. 57. The court briefly referred to the first applicant’s “self-incriminating statements given during the pre-trial investigation”, “self-incriminating statements given in the presence of his lawyer”, his submissions during a check of his statements at the crime scenes, witness submissions, expert reports and other pieces of evidence. The court did not specify the dates when the aforementioned self-incriminating statements had been made. Instead it referred to certain pages in the case file. Those pages are not available for the Court. 58. According to the Government, the trial court read out the first applicant’s statements of 11, 13, and 24 January, 2 February, 24 March and 25 May 2005 and used only that evidence which had been obtained in the presence of his lawyer. The Government did not provide copies of the relevant trial-court records. 59. The applicant appealed against his conviction, stating that he had given self-incriminating statement under duress and that he had not committed the offences in question. 60. On 18 January 2007 the Supreme Court of Russia dismissed the first applicant’s appeal. It noted that his allegation of ill-treatment had been rebutted by the results of the pre-investigation inquiry into the matter. 61. According to the first applicant, at about 11 a.m. on 25 April 2012 a group of men in balaclavas entered punishment cell no. 2 of correctional colony IK-4 in Saratov Region, where he was being held at the time with two cellmates (F.A. and S.Ya. ), and started beating them up. Then they took the first applicant to cell no. 13, where they cuffed his hands, suspended him from the ceiling and started kicking and hitting him with their truncheons. A.K., head of one of the departments of the Saratov branch of the Federal Service for the Execution of Sentences, and Officers S.D., D.Sh. and V.R. of the correctional colony participated in the beatings. After a while the first applicant went unconscious. A nurse was called to resuscitate him. When she left, the first applicant was again suspended by handcuffs and the beatings continued, the officers cursing at the first applicant and humiliating him. After a while they took him back to cell no. 2, where they put him on his knees with his hands cuffed behind his back. The first applicant started having heart problems. A nurse was called again and gave him an injection. In the first applicant’s submission, all those events were recorded on a video camera and his cellmates witnessed his condition after the beatings. 62. In the evening on the same day the first applicant and other detainees were ordered to run. While running, they were kicked by prison officers with truncheons on their legs. The same events occurred in the morning of 26 April 2012 when the first applicant woke up and during his walk on that day. Throughout the entire day prison officers made the first applicant squat down and do press-ups, humiliating and threatening him. This treatment continued until 27 April 2012. 63. According to the Government, on 26 April 2012 the first applicant’s cell was searched by prison guards, including Officer P. The first applicant refused to undergo a full body search and resisted. To overcome his resistance Officer P. had to use a rubber truncheon. He inflicted four blows on the first applicant. Then the first applicant stated that he would inflict injuries on himself. The prison officers handcuffed him to prevent him from doing so. On the same day Officer P. reported the incident to the prison management. 64. On 27 April 2012 the prison management carried out an internal investigation into the incident. Referring to the report prepared by Officer P., they established that on 26 April 2012 a group of prison guards, including that officer, had searched the first applicant’s cell. The latter had refused to undergo a body search and had resisted. Then he had been warned that, in the event of continued resistance, the prison guards would use a rubber truncheon on him. The applicant had not followed that order and had grabbed a prison guard by his uniform. Then Officer P. had hit the first applicant with the truncheon four times on the “soft parts of his body”. The applicant had tried to avoid the blows and had been crushed against prison furniture. After that he said that he would injure himself. He had been warned that the prison guards would handcuff him, but he had repeated his threats. Officer P. had had to handcuff the first applicant for ten minutes, between 2.20 p.m. and 2.30 p.m. On the same day the first applicant had been invited to submit a written statement on this matter, but he had refused to do so. The prison management concluded that the use of a rubber truncheon and handcuffs against the applicant had been appropriate and lawful. 65. On 4 May 2012 a member of the Public Supervisory Commission of the Chechen Republic wrote to the prosecutor of the Saratov Region, the regional ombudsman, and other authorities, submitting that she had been alerted by the first applicant’s mother to her son’s ill-treatment on 25‐26 April 2012 by Officers A.K., S.D., D.Sh. and V.R. She requested that a pre-investigation inquiry be conducted into her allegations. 66. On 5 May 2012 officials of the prosecutor’s office visited correctional colony IK-4 to verify her submissions. During the on-the-spot check they examined the relevant documentation and interviewed the first applicant and other inmates, who alleged that officers of the correctional colony had applied “unlawful means” to them. Following the check, the relevant material had been sent to the competent bodies with a view to deciding on whether a criminal case was to be opened. 67. On 12 May 2012 the first applicant’s lawyer, A.M., complained to the prosecutor supervising penal institutions in Saratov Region and the investigation department of the investigative committee of Russia in Saratov Region that on 25 and 26 April 2012 the first applicant had been subjected to ill-treatment. He furthermore submitted that when he had managed to visit his client on 11 May 2012, he had noticed numerous bruises on his back, forearm and legs, marks from cuffing on his arms and an injury to his left‐shoulder joint. When A.M. spoke with the head of the facility, S.D., the latter allegedly told him that he had beaten the first applicant up and would continue doing so. A.M. requested that a forensic medical examination in respect of the first applicant be immediately conducted and that a criminal case be opened with a view to bringing A.K., S.D., D.Sh. and V.R., who were responsible for his client’s ill-treatment, to justice. 68. On 12 May 2012 an expert of the Forensic Medical Expert Bureau in the town of Pugachev examined the first applicant. According to his report no. 298 of the same date the first applicant submitted that he had been hit with a truncheon on 26 April 2012. He complained of pain in the liver region and in his left shoulder. The expert established that the first applicant had four extended yellowish‐purple bruises measuring from 3 by 1 cm to 7 by 1 cm on the front external parts of his hips. The report furthermore noted that, according to the first applicant’s medical file, at 3 p.m. on 26 April 2012 he was examined by a prison doctor “in connection with eventual injuries sustained as a result of application of special means”; his state of health was considered “satisfactory”, and the following injuries were recorded: “marks from handcuffs on both wrists, [and] numerous bruises of linear form (4) and purple colour [measuring] about 3 by 8 cm on his hips and buttocks”. Having examined the first applicant, his medical file and his submissions, the expert concluded that at the time of his examination the applicant had four bruises on the front external part of his hips and that, according to the medical file, the first applicant had had bruises on his buttocks. The expert considered that the bruises on the hips could have been caused by an impact of a blunt solid object or objects more than twelve to fourteen days but less than twenty-one days prior to the examination and that the bruises on the buttocks could have been sustained in the time span of one day prior to the first applicant’s examination by the prison doctor. Accordingly, he concluded that the above-mentioned injuries could have been sustained on the date and the circumstances described by the first applicant. 69. On various dates more than ten prisoners, including the first applicant’s cellmates, submitted oral or written complaints concerning unjustified beatings or ill-treatment by prison guards during 25-26 April 2012. 70. On 15 May 2012 Investigator A.K. of the Pugachevskiy inter-district investigation department (hereinafter “the investigation department”) refused to open a criminal case into the allegations of ill-treatment. On 4 June 2012 the head of the investigation department annulled the decision of 15 May 2012 and ordered that an additional pre-investigation inquiry be carried out. Subsequently, the investigators refused to open a criminal case into the incident on 13 June and 22 August 2012. The aforementioned decisions were annulled on 23 July and 9 October 2012 respectively for being premature and ill-founded. 71. On 15 November 2012 the investigators refused to open a criminal case for the fourth time, concluding that the first applicant’s allegations were unfounded. According to the investigators, the first applicant’s injuries had been inflicted by Officer P., who had used a rubber truncheon and handcuffs against the applicant on 26 April 2012 because the latter resisted a lawful search. That conclusion had been based on Officer’s P. report, medical documents, the conclusion of the internal investigation of 27 April 2012, and statements by almost forty prisoners, who had not been subjected to prison guards’ violence or heard about it, fifteen prison guards, who had denied excessive use of force or ill‐treatment, and prison staff. The investigators dismissed the allegations of ill-treatment submitted by other detainees as being unsubstantiated. They noted in particular that four of them, who had heard cries of pain, had not been eyewitnesses to the events in question. 72. On 12 February 2013 the above decision was annulled for being ill‐founded and premature, particularly because the investigators had failed to join the first applicant’s medical documents to the case file and to question the first applicant’s lawyer. It appears that the pre-investigation inquiry is still ongoing. RELEVANT LEGAL FRAMEWORK and the council of europe material
73.
For a summary of the relevant provisions of the Criminal Code and the Code of Criminal Procedure of the Russian Federation, see, in so far as relevant, Ryabtsev v. Russia (no. 13642/06, §§ 42-52, 14 November 2013) and Lyapin v. Russia (no. 46956/09, §§ 99-102, 24 July 2014). 74. On 10 July 2003 Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (the “CPT) made Public statement concerning the Chechen Republic of the Russian Federation (CPT/Inf (2003) 33), which in the relevant part reads as follows:
“4.
In the course of the CPT’s visits to the Chechen Republic in 2002 and, most recently, from 23 to 29 May 2003, a considerable number of persons interviewed independently at different places alleged that they had been severely ill-treated whilst detained by law enforcement agencies. The allegations were detailed and consistent, and concerned methods such as very severe beating, the infliction of electric shocks, and asphyxiation using a plastic bag or gas mask. In many cases, these allegations were supported by medical evidence. Some persons examined by the delegation’s doctors displayed physical marks or conditions which were fully consistent with their allegations. Documentation containing medical evidence consistent with allegations of ill-treatment during periods of detention in law enforcement agencies was also gathered. The allegations of ill-treatment received by the CPT concerned law enforcement establishments (Departments of Internal Affairs and certain Federal Security Service facilities) throughout the territory of the Chechen Republic and related to both official and unofficial places of detention. ...
5.
One establishment stands out in terms of the frequency and gravity of the alleged ill-treatment, namely [ORB-2].”
75.
On 13 March 2007 the CPT made other Public statement concerning the Chechen Republic of the Russian Federation (CPT/Inf (2007) 17), which in the relevant part reads as follows:
“15.
In the course of the visits to the North Caucasian region in 2006, the CPT’s delegation once again received many credible allegations of recent ill-treatment of detained persons by members of law enforcement agencies and security forces in the Chechen Republic. The ill-treatment alleged was frequently of such a severity that it could be considered to amount to torture; the methods involved included extensive beating, asphyxiation using a plastic bag or gas mask, electric shocks, suspension by the limbs, hyperextension and, more rarely, the infliction of burns by cigarettes, lighters or other devices. Accounts were also received of threats of execution or of sexual abuse in order to obtain a confession or information. The general picture which emerged was that any detained person who did not promptly confess to the crime of which he was suspected (or provide information being sought by those responsible for the detention) would be in imminent danger of being ill-treated...
As regards official law enforcement structures, a particularly high number of allegations of ill-treatment continue to relate to [ORB-2] in ... Other law enforcement structures where there would appear to be a particularly high risk of ill-treatment include ... [the Leninskiy ROVD]...”
THE LAW
76.
The first applicant complained that he had been ill-treated in the Leninskiy ROVD in Grozny and later in IK-4 in Saratov Region. He also complained that no effective investigation into his complaints had been carried out. The applicant relied on Article 3 of the Convention, which reads as follows:
“No one shall be subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.”
77.
The Government argued that the first applicant’s complaints were manifestly ill-founded. 78. The first applicant maintained his complaints. 79. The Court finds that the first applicant’s complaints are neither manifestly ill-founded nor inadmissible on any other grounds listed in Article 35 of the Convention. They must therefore be declared admissible. 80. The Government submitted that the investigative authorities had carried out an effective investigation into the allegations of ill-treatment in the Leninskiy ROVD and in IK-4. The investigators had concluded that those allegations had been unfounded. In particular, the investigation demonstrated that the first applicant had injured his face as a result of an accident in January 2005, when he had lost consciousness and fallen on a hot stove. 81. The Government also stated that during his detention in IK-4 the first applicant had refused to undergo a body search and had resisted the prison guards’ orders. The latter had had to use a rubber truncheon and handcuffs to overcome his resistance. Their actions had been proportionate to the first applicant’s behaviour. 82. The first applicant maintained his complaints. Referring to the finding of the Chechen Supreme Court of 15 June 2006 (see paragraph 55 above), he claimed that he had been arrested on 8 January 2005, and not on 9 January 2005 as submitted by the Government. According to the applicant, the Government had failed to provide a plausible explanation for his injuries sustained in the Leninskiy ROVD. The assertion that he had fallen on the hot stove was untenable. The investigating authorities had never attempted to explain why he had lost consciousness during a police interview. The ensuing investigation had been neither prompt, nor independent nor thorough. Investigator E.S. had coordinated his ill‐treatment and subsequently investigated it. Having made no meaningful attempt to establish the circumstances in which the first applicant had been injured, the investigating authority had issued thirteen refusals to open a criminal case during the first eighteen months of the pre-investigation inquiry. 83. As regards the events of April 2012, the applicant pointed out that his injuries had been sustained as a result of ill-treatment, which had been humiliating and disproportionate to his conduct. He noted that during the investigation into the matter the investigators had not questioned all of the detainees who had also been victims of the alleged ill-treatment by prison guards. (a) General principles
84.
The relevant general principles have been summarised by the Court in Bouyid v. Belgium ([GC], no. 23380/09, §§ 81-90 and 114-23, ECHR 2015), Jevtović v. Serbia (no. 29896/14, §§ 74-77, 3 December 2019), Lyapin (cited above, §§ 109-15) and Tali v. Estonia (no. 66393/10, §§ 55‐61, 13 February 2014). (b) Application of the above principles to the present case
(i) Alleged ill-treatment in the Leninskiy ROVD
(1) Credibility of the allegations of ill-treatment and presumption of fact
85.
It is not in dispute between the parties that before the arrest on 8 January 2005 the first applicant had no injuries on his body. Two days later, at the time of his admission to the Leninskiy ROVD, injuries on his face and back were noted (see paragraph 8 above). Later a forensic expert concluded that the facial injuries might have been sustained on 8 January 2005, on the day of the first applicant’s arrest (see paragraph 25 above). 86. In view of the foregoing, taking into account detailed description of the alleged ill-treatment provided by the applicant, his consistent and detailed complaints to the authorities about such ill-treatment and bearing in mind the CPT’s Public statements (see paragraphs 74 and 75 above), the Court considers that his injuries could arguably have resulted from the violence suffered by him on 8-9 January 2005. This is sufficient to give rise to a presumption in favour of the first applicant’s account of ill-treatment during the first days of his arrest and to satisfy the Court that his allegation was credible. (2) Whether an effective investigation was carried out into the allegations of ill-treatment
87.
The Court observes that the first applicant’s consistent allegations of ill‐treatment in the the Leninskiy ROVD, which were supported by medical evidence were rejected as a result of the pre‐investigation inquiry, which is the initial stage in dealing with a criminal complaint under Russian law and should normally be followed by the opening of a criminal case and the carrying out of an investigation if the information gathered has disclosed elements of a criminal offence (see Lyapin, cited above, § 129). 88. The Court reiterates its finding that the mere carrying out of a pre‐investigation inquiry under Article 144 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of the Russian Federation is insufficient if the authorities are to comply with the standards established under Article 3 of the Convention for an effective investigation into credible allegations of ill‐treatment in police custody. It is incumbent on the authorities to institute criminal proceedings and conduct a proper criminal investigation in which a full range of investigative measures are carried out and which constitutes an effective remedy for victims of police ill-treatment under domestic law (see, among many other authorities, Lyapin, cited above, §§ 129 and 132-36; Devyatkin v. Russia, no. 40384/06, § 34, 24 October 2017; and Olisov and Others v. Russia, nos. 10825/09 and 2 others, §§ 80-82, 2 May 2017). 89. There is no reason to hold otherwise in the present case, which involves credible allegation of ill-treatment of which the authorities were promptly made aware. As a result of the refusal to conduct a fully-fledged criminal investigation, such important investigative activities as confrontations, identification parades and examinations of witnesses were never carried out. Furthermore, no meaningful attempt was made to explain the injuries on the first applicant’s back recorded in the Leninskiy ROVD’s logbook or to establish why the applicant had allegedly lost consciousness during questioning as submitted by the police officers. 90. The aforementioned elements are sufficient to conclude that the State has failed to carry out an effective investigation into the first applicant’s allegations of police ill-treatment, as required by Article 3 of the Convention. Therefore, there is no need to examine the other shortcomings in the investigation mentioned by the first applicant. (3) Whether the Government provided explanations capable of casting doubt on the applicants’ account of events
91.
As a result of the deficient investigation the Government failed to provide a sound explanation of the origin of the first applicant’s injuries. The Government submitted that they had resulted from a fall on a hot stove, when the applicant lost consciousness during the police interview of 8 January 2005. However in the absence of any explanations of the surrounding circumstances, including concerning the applicant’s having been questioned beside a hot stove and his sudden fainting, that version does not appear to be credible. That is particularly so taking into account that that version of events did not cast light on the origin of the injuries on the first applicant’s back recorded in the Leninskiy ROVD’s logbook (see paragraph 8 above). Accordingly, the Court concludes that the Government has not discharged their burden of proof. (4) Legal classification of the treatment
92.
Having regard to the violence suffered by the first applicant, including beatings and his face being pressed against a hot stove with the aim of extracting confession to crimes, the Court finds that such treatment amounted to torture (see Lyapin, cited above, §§ 119-20). 93. There has accordingly been a violation of Article 3 of the Convention under its substantive and procedural limbs. 94. In view of the above finding, the Court does not consider it necessary to examine separately the allegations concerning subsequent episodes of the first applicant’s ill-treatment in the Leninskiy ROVD which are not supported by medical evidence and the allegations concerning the lack of effective investigation into those episodes (see paragraphs 21 and 22 above) (for a similar approach see Lyalyakin v. Russia, no. 31305/09, §§ 80‐82, 12 March 2015, and Chenchevik v. Ukraine [Committee], no. 56920/10, §§ 93-94, 18 July 2019). (ii) Alleged ill-treatment in IK-4
(1) Credibility of the allegations of ill-treatment and presumption of fact
95.
It is not disputed by the parties that the prison guards inflicted several injuries on the first applicant. However, the applicant and the Government provided different versions of the surrounding circumstances. According to the applicant, the prison guards had ill-treated him on 25 and on 26 April 2012 by kicking and hitting him on various parts of the body, suspending him by handcuffs, and humiliating him (see paragraphs 61 and 62 above). According to the Government, the prison guards had hit him with a rubber truncheon four times and then handcuffed him owing to his active resistance to a personal search and his threatening to injure himself (see paragraph 63 above). 96. The Court observes that the medical documents at its disposal confirm the existence of four extended yellowish‐purple bruises on the first applicant’s hips and marks from handcuffs on his wrists (see paragraph 68 above). The number, location and origin of those injuries corresponded to the Government’s account of the events and refute that of the first applicant, particularly because no other evidence of alleged ill-treatment lasting two days was found on his body. 97. Although the Court recognises that it may prove difficult for detainees to obtain evidence of ill‐treatment by their warders (see, mutatis mutandis, Labita v. Italy [GC], no. 26772/95, § 125, ECHR 2000‐IV), it finds the Government’s account of events to be more credible than that of the first applicant and accepts it. 98. The Court will now examine whether the use of force by prison guards against the applicant as described by the Government was excessive in breach of the requirements of Article 3 of the Convention. (2) Whether there has been excessive use of force by prison guards
99.
The Court reiterates that in respect of a person who has been deprived of his or her liberty, or, more generally, is confronted with law‐enforcement officers, any recourse to physical force which has not been made strictly necessary by his or her own conduct diminishes human dignity and is, in principle, an infringement of the right set forth in Article 3 (see Bouyid, cited above, §§ 88). 100. In the present case the first applicant sustained several blows from a rubber truncheon which resulted in bruises on his hips. Even were the Court to accept that he did resist a personal search and grabbed one of the prison guards by the uniform, Officer P.’s reaction was disproportionate to the first applicant’s conduct. That is particularly so taking into account that the unarmed applicant faced a group of fully equipped and trained prison guards. Beating him with a rubber truncheon was aimed at punishing him rather than preventing an attack on the officers. The latter goal could have been achieved by simple immobilisation of the first applicant (compare Borodin v. Russia, no. 41867/04, §§ 106-10, 6 November 2012 and Artyomov v. Russia, no. 14146/02, §§ 169-73, 27 May 2010). Accordingly, the use of force against the first applicant was excessive. 101. The Court considers that such excessive use of force resulting in bodily injuries amounted to inhuman or degrading treatment, prohibited by Article 3 of the Convention. (3) Whether an effective investigation was carried out into the use of force by prison guards
102.
The first applicant’s injuries, of which the prison authorities were promptly informed, called for an effective investigation into the matter as required by the procedural limb of Article 3 of the Convention. 103. Although the investigating authorities did not remain idle, and carried out a number of investigative steps, the key issue –whether the force used against the applicant had been strictly necessary and proportionate – had never been properly investigated: the investigators did not question the prison guards on that specific issue and did not assess their actions from that point of view in a meaningful manner (see Şakir Kaçmaz v. Turkey, no. 8077/08, § 90, 10 November 2015). Such an assessment would have been essential to determining whether the police had acted within the confines of domestic law, and, indeed, whether they had breached Article 3 of the Convention (see Yusiv v. Lithuania, no. 55894/13, § 72, 4 October 2016). In the absence of a thorough investigation into the necessity and the proportionality of the use of force, the Court cannot conclude that the investigation met the requirements of Article 3 of the Convention. (4) Conclusion
104.
There has accordingly been a violation of Article 3 of the Convention under its substantive and procedural limbs. 105. The first applicant claimed that his conviction had been based on self‐incriminating statements obtained under torture and that some of those statements had been made in the absence of a lawyer in breach of Article 6 §§ 1 and 3 (c) of the Convention, which in the relevant part reads as follows:
“In the determination of ... any criminal charge against him, everyone is entitled to a fair ... hearing ... by [a] ... tribunal ...
3.
Everyone charged with a criminal offence has the following minimum rights:
...
(c) to defend himself in person or through legal assistance of his own choosing or, if he has not sufficient means to pay for legal assistance, to be given it free when the interests of justice so require ...”
106.
The parties did not explicitly comment on the admissibility of the first applicant’s complaint. 107. The Court notes that this complaint is neither manifestly ill‐founded nor inadmissible on any other grounds listed in Article 35 of the Convention. It must therefore be declared admissible. 108. The Government submitted that the impugned proceedings had been fair. They stated that the first applicant’s conviction had been based on an ample body of evidence, including witness evidence and expert reports, as well as his self-incriminating statements dated 11, 13, and 24 January, 2 February, 24 March and 25 May 2005. No evidence obtained in the absence of the first applicant’s lawyer had been used against him. 109. The first applicant maintained his complaints. He stated that fifteen testimonies and confessions obtained on 9-10 January 2005 as well as other confessions self-incriminating statements obtained under duress had been admitted in evidence in his case and constituted a basis for his conviction. (a) Alleged violation of Article 6 § 1 of the Convention
110.
The Court reiterates that the admission of confession statements obtained as a result of torture or of other ill-treatment in breach of Article 3 as evidence to establish the relevant facts in criminal proceedings renders the proceedings, as a whole, unfair. This finding applies irrespective of the probative value of the statements and irrespective of whether their use was decisive in securing the defendant’s conviction (see Belugin v. Russia, no. 2991/06, § 70, 26 November 2019, and Ryabov v. Russia, no. 2674/07, § 57, 17 July 2018). The Court furthermore reiterates that the use of evidence, allegedly obtained as a result of ill-treatment, always raises serious issues as to the fairness of the proceedings, even if the admission of such evidence was not decisive in securing a conviction (see, for example, Özcan Çolak v. Turkey, no. 30235/03, § 43, 6 October 2009, and Örs and Others v. Turkey, no. 46213/99, § 60, 20 June 2006). 111. The Court notes that during the first days of his arrest in January 2005 the first applicant was tortured by police officers (see paragraph 92 above) and made a number of self-incriminating statements. In particular, he acknowledged his guilt in respect of several offences, including unlawful possession of arms and participation in an assault on law-enforcement officials on Krasnoflotskaya St. (see paragraph 14 above). 112. That statement was explicitly used by the Supreme Court of Chechnya as a basis for the first applicant’s conviction on 26 December 2005 (see paragraph 50 above), which was later upheld on appeal by the Supreme Court of Russia on 15 June 2006 (see paragraph 55 above). 113. The subsequent conviction by the Supreme Court of Chechnya on 13 October 2006 on account of the first applicant’s participation in the attack on the Krasnoflotskya St. referred to self-incriminating statements made at the pre-trial investigation, without mentioning the dates when those statements had been made. Bearing in mind that the confession of 9 January 2005 had not been declared inadmissible and had been excluded from the case-file, the Court considers that the domestic court took that statement into account. The Court cannot accept the Government’s argument that the statement of 9 January 2005 was not used against the first applicant, because the Government have failed to substantiate it, by, for example, submitting a copy of the trial-court records. 114. Accordingly, the first applicant’s convictions were made on the basis of his statements obtained under torture. That rendered the criminal proceedings against him as a whole unfair. 115. It follows that there has been a violation of Article 6 § 1 in the present case. (b) Alleged violation of Article 6 §§ 1 and 3 (c) of the Convention
116.
In the light of the above, the Court considers that it is not necessary to examine whether, in this case, there has been a violation of Article 6 §§ 1 and 3 (c) of the Convention (see Belugin, cited above, § 81). 117. The first applicant complained, under Article 13 of the Convention in conjunction with Article 3, that the authorities had failed to carry out an effective investigation into his alleged ill-treatment in police custody. Article 13 reads as follows:
“ Everyone whose rights and freedoms as set forth in [the] Convention are violated shall have an effective remedy before a national authority notwithstanding that the violation has been committed by persons acting in an official capacity.”
118.
The Government contested that claim, arguing that the applicant had been able to challenge the investigators’ decisions or their alleged inaction in court and that he had made use of that opportunity. 119. The Court notes that the complaint submitted under Article 13 of the Convention is closely linked to the issue raised under the procedural aspect of Article 3 of the Convention and that, therefore, this complaint should be declared admissible. However, having regard to the finding of a violation of Article 3 under its procedural head on account of the respondent State’s failure to carry out an effective investigation into the alleged ill‐treatment (see paragraph 93 above), it considers that it is not necessary to examine this complaint separately under Article 13 of the Convention in conjunction with Article 3. 120. Lastly, the first applicant complained that his detention in the holding cells of the Leninskiy ROVD had been in breach of Article 5 § 1 of the Convention and that his detention after his conviction had been unlawful. 121. Under Article 6 §§ 1 and 2 of the Convention, he complained of the unfairness of the proceedings regarding his allegation of ill-treatment and of the assessment of evidence in the criminal proceedings against him. 122. The first applicant furthermore submitted that he had been deprived of effective remedies in respect of his complaint under Articles 5 and 6 of the Convention, in breach of Article 13. 123. The second applicant complained, under Article 3, that she had endured mental suffering because of the first applicant’s ill-treatment and the ineffectiveness of the ensuing investigation. 124. The Court has examined those complaints. However, in the light of all the material in its possession, and in so far as the matters complained of are within its competence, the Court finds that they do not disclose any appearance of a violation of the rights and freedoms set out in the Convention or its Protocols. It follows that this part of the application is manifestly ill-founded and must be rejected in accordance with Article 35 §§ 3 (a) and 4 of the Convention. 125. Article 41 of the Convention provides:
“If the Court finds that there has been a violation of the Convention or the Protocols thereto, and if the internal law of the High Contracting Party concerned allows only partial reparation to be made, the Court shall, if necessary, afford just satisfaction to the injured party.”
126.
The applicants claimed 100,000 euros (EUR) jointly in respect of non-pecuniary damage. 127. The Government submitted that the finding of a violation would constitute sufficient just satisfaction for the applicants’ sufferings. 128. The Court considers that in the circumstances of the case the first applicant’s sufferings cannot be compensated for by the mere finding of a violation. Making its assessment on an equitable basis, the Court considers that EUR 67,600 shall be paid to the first applicant, plus any tax that may be chargeable on that amount, in respect of non-pecuniary damage. 129. The applicants claimed EUR 5,539 jointly in respect of costs and expenses incurred in the proceedings before the Court to be paid into the bank account of the applicants’ representative. They submitted a legal‐service agreement of 24 February 2013 signed by the second applicant, but not by their representative, and an invoice prepared by their representative. 130. The Government submitted that the legal-service agreement between the applicants and their representative was invalid because it had not been sealed and signed by the applicant’s representative. The Government also stated that the claim was not supported by any documents confirming that the payment of the costs and expenses had been made. 131. According to the Court’s case-law (see Merabishvili v. Georgia [GC], no. 72508/13, § 370, ECHR 2017 (extracts)), an applicant is entitled to the reimbursement of costs and expenses only in so far as it has been shown that these have been actually and necessarily incurred and are reasonable as to quantum. In the present case, regard being had to the documents in its possession and the above criteria, the Court considers it reasonable to award the first applicant the sum of EUR 2,000 in respect of costs and expenses, plus any tax that may be chargeable on that amount, to be paid into the bank account of the applicants’ representative as indicated by the applicants. 132. The first applicant asked the Court to indicate to the Government in the operative part of the judgment that the criminal proceedings against the first applicant should be reopened. 133. The Government did not comment on the issue. 134. The Court refers to its settled case-law to the effect that when an applicant has suffered an infringement of his rights as guaranteed by Article 6 of the Convention, he or she should, as far as possible, be put in the position in which he would have been had the requirements of that provision not been disregarded, and that the most appropriate form of redress would, in principle, be the reopening of the proceedings, if requested (see, mutatis mutandis, Öcalan v. Turkey [GC], no. 46221/99, § 210, ECHR 2005‐IV, and Popov v. Russia, no. 26853/04, § 264, 13 July 2006). The Court notes, in this connection, that Article 413 of the Code of Criminal Procedure provides a basis for the reopening of the proceedings if the Court finds a violation of the Convention. It therefore considers that it is not necessary to make a separate ruling on the issue. 135. The Court considers it appropriate that the default interest rate should be based on the marginal lending rate of the European Central Bank, to which should be added three percentage points. FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT, UNANIMOUSLY,
(a) that the respondent State is to pay the first applicant, within three months, the following amounts, to be converted into the currency of the respondent State at the rate applicable at the date of settlement:
(i) EUR 67,600 (sixty seven thousand six hundred euros) to the first applicant, plus any tax that may be chargeable, in respect of non-pecuniary damage;
(ii) EUR 2,000 (two thousand euros), plus any tax that may be chargeable, in respect of costs and expenses to be paid into the applicants’ representative’s bank account as indicated by the applicants;
(b) that from the expiry of the above-mentioned three months until settlement simple interest shall be payable on the above amounts at a rate equal to the marginal lending rate of the European Central Bank during the default period plus three percentage points;
Done in English, and notified in writing on 22 September 2020, pursuant to Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Olga Chernishova Alena PoláčkováDeputy RegistrarPresident