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Supreme Court of Queensland - Court of Appeal |
Last Updated: 29 September 2023
CITATION:
|
R v NAF [2023] QCA 197
|
PARTIES:
|
R
v NAF (applicant) |
FILE NO/S:
|
CA No 274 of 2021
SC No 843 of 2021 SC No 841 of 2021 SC No 166 of 2021 SC No 1338 of 2021 |
DIVISION:
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Court of Appeal
|
PROCEEDING:
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Application for Extension (Conviction)
Sentence Application |
ORIGINATING COURT:
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Supreme Court at Brisbane – Date of Sentence: 13 October 2021 (Wilson
J)
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DELIVERED ON:
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29 September 2023
|
DELIVERED AT:
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Brisbane
|
HEARING DATE:
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24 August 2023
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JUDGES:
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|
ORDERS:
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|
CATCHWORDS:
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CRIMINAL LAW – APPEAL AND NEW TRIAL – APPEAL AGAINST CONVICTION
RECORDED ON GUILTY PLEA – where the applicant pleaded
guilty to one
count of maintaining a sexual relationship with a child, in addition to
28 other sexual offences and 10 drug offences
– where the applicant
seeks an extension of time within which to appeal his conviction in respect of
the maintaining count
– where the applicant submits that had he had a
clear knowledge of the duration of the maintaining count, he would not have
entered a plea of guilty in respect of it – whether the applicant entered
his plea of guilty to the maintaining count voluntarily
and with full knowledge
of the nature and extent of that count
CRIMINAL LAW – APPEAL AND NEW TRIAL – APPEAL AGAINST SENTENCE
– GROUNDS FOR INTERFERENCE – SENTENCE MANIFESTLY
EXCESSIVE OR
INADEQUATE – where the applicant received a head sentence of 15 years
imprisonment on the maintaining count, and
lesser concurrent periods of
imprisonment on the remaining counts – where the sexual offending was
committed against the applicant’s
biological daughter between the ages of
seven and 13 years – where the applicant entered early pleas of guilty
– where
the sentencing judge recorded the applicant’s treatment of
the complainant was degrading and inhumane – where the sentencing
judge
recorded it was difficult to accept a contention that the applicant did not
have a general interest in children sexually –
where the applicant
submits, inter alia, in respect of one occasion where the applicant gave
the complainant wine before filming his sexual acts, the complainant was neither
forced nor coerced into consuming the wine; that there was no physical violence
or threats or verbal abuse during the episodes; that
the recordings did not show
any penile-anal or penile-vaginal penetration; and that the offending after the
use of wine was not premeditated,
but opportunistic in nature after the
complainant became intoxicated – whether the sentencing judge overlooked,
undervalued,
misunderstood or over-estimated some salient feature of the
evidence – whether, in all the circumstances, the sentence imposed
was
manifestly excessive
|
COUNSEL:
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The applicant appeared on his own behalf
C M Cook for the respondent |
SOLICITORS:
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The applicant appeared on his own behalf
Director of Public Prosecutions (Queensland) for the respondent |
Offences
Extension of time to appeal against conviction
Leave to appeal against sentence
Sentencing remarks
Consideration
Orders
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/qld/QCA/2023/197.html