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[2020] NSWCCA 222
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R v Askarou [2020] NSWCCA 222 (31 August 2020)
Last Updated: 31 August 2020
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Court of Criminal Appeal Supreme Court
New South Wales
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Case Name:
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R v Askarou
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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Hearing Date(s):
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19 August 2020
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Decision Date:
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31 August 2020
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Before:
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Gleeson JA at [1] Rothman J at [54] Price J at [55]
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Decision:
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(1) Crown appeal against sentence
allowed. (2) The sentence imposed by Judge Bourke
SC in the District Court on 6 March 2020 be set
aside. (3) In lieu, sentence the respondent to 19
years imprisonment consisting of a non-parole period of 13 years commencing on
12 January
2018 and expiring on 11 January 2031, with the balance of term of 6
years commencing on 12 January 2031 and expiring on 11 January
2037. The
respondent is eligible for release on parole on 11 January 2031.
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Catchwords:
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CRIME – Crown appeal against sentence – where asserted manifest
inadequacy – shoot with intent to murder –
Crimes Act 1900
(NSW) s 29 – where primary judge found offence was within high range of
objective seriousness – where victim suffered catastrophic
and permanent
injury – where offender’s subjective circumstances generally not
positive – residual discretion –
offender re-sentenced
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Legislation Cited:
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Cases Cited:
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Category:
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Principal judgment
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Parties:
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Director of Public Prosecutions (NSW) (Appellant) Naramsin Askarou
(Respondent)
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Representation:
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Counsel: B Baker (Appellant) A Francis
(Respondent)
Solicitors: Solicitor for Public Prosecutions (NSW)
(Appellant) Bannisters Lawyers (Respondent)
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File Number(s):
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2018/12583
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Publication Restriction:
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Nil
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Decision under appeal:
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Court or Tribunal:
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District Court of New South Wales
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Jurisdiction:
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Criminal
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Citation:
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Date of Decision:
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6 March 2020
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Before:
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Bourke SC DCJ
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File Number(s):
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2018/12583
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JUDGMENT
- GLEESON
JA: Late in the evening on 28 July 2016, the respondent,
Mr Naramsin Askarou, fired three shots at Mr Zia Kryo from close range
in the
driveway of the victim’s home at Prairiewood, hitting him once in
the torso. The victim suffered a catastrophic spinal injury
and is now a
paraplegic. The respondent was charged on indictment with the offence of
shooting with intent to murder and, in the
alternative, the offence of
discharging a firearm with intent to cause grievous bodily harm. The respondent
pleaded not guilty to
these charges. At a trial in the District Court in
August 2019 the jury found him guilty of the offence of shooting with intent to
murder. The offence, which was contrary to s 29 of the Crimes Act
1900 (NSW), carried a maximum penalty of 25 years, and a standard non-parole
period of 10 years is prescribed: Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act 1999
(NSW), Pt 4, Div 1A.
- On
6 March 2020 the trial judge, Judge Bourke SC, sentenced the respondent to
imprisonment for 15 years and 6 months, with a non-parole
period of
10 years and 6 months. His Honour backdated the sentence to commence on 12
January 2018, being the date upon which the
respondent was arrested for this
offence.
- The
Director of Public Prosecutions (NSW) has appealed under s 5D of the
Criminal Appeal Act 1912 (NSW) against the sentence imposed on the
respondent on the ground that it is manifestly inadequate. For the reasons that
follow,
I am of the view that the Director has established his challenge to the
inadequacy of the sentence, and the Court should intervene
to set aside the
sentence and re-sentence the respondent.
Circumstances of the
offending
- The
respondent was sentenced on the basis of the facts found by the sentencing judge
consistent with the verdict of the jury. The
following summary is taken from his
Honour’s remarks on sentence: R v Askarou [2020] NSWDC 68.
- The
respondent and the victim had known each other for approximately 14 years
having attended the same high school and became friends;
the respondent was in
the year above the victim. They drifted apart from about 2012.
- On
28 July 2016, the victim left his home in Prairiewood shortly after 5 pm and
returned at about 10.20 pm. He reversed his Toyota
Hi-Lux into the driveway of
his home, exited the vehicle and approached the front door of the house. As he
did so, the respondent,
who was wearing a face covering, and who had been lying
in wait for the victim, approached the victim and shot him three times from
close range. The victim was struck by one bullet, which entered the left side of
his body. The calibre of the bullet was nine millimetre.
The respondent ran away
from the scene and fled in a getaway car, which had been parked nearby. He
quickly disposed of the firearm
which was not found in his possession when he
was stopped by police shortly after midnight.
- The
victim was taken to hospital in a critical condition and placed in an induced
coma. The bullet removed from his body had punctured
his lung and severed his
spinal cord. He was placed on a ventilator and remained in a coma for a number
of weeks. The catastrophic
consequences of his spinal injury are apparent from
the sentencing judge’s reasons referred to below.
- The
respondent was arrested on 12 January 2018; he was refused bail and remained in
continuous custody until his trial in July and
August 2019.
Sentencing judge’s reasons
- The
sentencing judge referred to the legislative guideposts provided by the maximum
penalty and standard non-parole period for the
s 29 offence, the objective
gravity of the offending, and the subjective circumstances of the respondent.
- Directing
himself to the objective seriousness of the offending, his Honour found
that:
(1) the offence was not the result of a sudden loss of control
in the heat of anger, but rather “the offender carried out an
attempted
execution of Mr Kryo”: at [7];
(2) the offence involved some planning: the respondent had prepared himself
for the shooting by obtaining a firearm and had laid in
wait for the victim; he
had also taken steps to disguise himself by wearing a face covering, most likely
a balaclava, and a getaway
car was also parked nearby, providing the means for
the respondent to flee the scene of the shooting: at [7] and [9];
(3) the offence was significantly aggravated by reason of permanent
consequences for the victim, which his Honour found “can
only be regarded
as catastrophic” having regard to the medical evidence and victim impact
statement, summarised at [9] and
[10] as follows:
[9] ... More significantly however are
the permanent consequences for Mr Kryo which are set out in the reports of Dr
Shetty. In
short, the spinal cord injury has resulted in a permanent loss of
function of Mr Kryo’s lower limbs including impaired control
to his
bowel and sexual functioning. He also requires intermittent
self-catheterisation. Due to his loss of feeling in lower limbs,
he is at
ongoing risk of skin breakdown due to pressure, trauma or burns. Mr Kryo is now
able to mobilise only with the assistance
of a wheelchair and will require
lifelong follow-up, and review to ensure that he does not develop bladder,
bowel, respiratory or
pain implications which commonly occur after spinal cord
injury.
[10] In a Victim Impact Statement admitted on sentence Mr Kryo
confirmed these matters and explained the devastating consequences
which he
faces on a daily basis which not only affect him but, inevitably have had a very
significant impact on his family. ...
(4) the offence was further aggravated (under Crimes (Sentencing
Procedure) Act, s 21A(2)(j)) by reason of the respondent being subject to
conditional liberty at the time of the offending, having been released on bail
for charges
of drug supply and possession: at [10].
- His
Honour concluded the offending was comfortably above the mid-range of objective
seriousness and within the high range of objective
seriousness: at [10].
- After
considering the evidence of the victim, his mother and Mr Labib Warda, a school
friend and neighbour, his Honour found that
“the shooting was motivated by
the offender’s long-held belief that the victim was responsible for the
theft of his safe
and its contents in 2012”: at [16].
- Addressing
the respondent’s subjective circumstances, the sentencing judge made the
following findings and observations:
(1) the respondent was 24 years
old at the time of the offence and 28 years old at the time of sentencing:
at [19];
(2) the respondent was born in Australia and is of Assyrian heritage; he grew
up in a loving and supportive family. While he did not
complete his HSC, he was
undertaking an apprenticeship in his father’s automotive business, where
he worked up until the time
of his arrest: at [18];
(3) the respondent has a criminal history which “although not
extensive” dates back to 2012 and includes drug offences,
an offence of
behaving in an offensive manner, and an offence of having custody of a knife
near a school: at [19];
(4) during his psychological assessment, the respondent gave a history that
he had experimented with the use of cannabis from his
early teenage years, he
had used ecstasy for a number of years from the age of 17 and he had used
cocaine primarily on weekends:
at [20];
(5) the psychological report of Ms De Santa Brigida expressed the opinion
that the respondent indicated a relatively unremarkable
psychological profile
other than some history of anxiety and the onset of depressive symptoms in the
past. Nonetheless, the respondent
had no history of admission to any mental
health facilities: at [20];
(6) whilst the respondent had called an impressive array of character
evidence from his family, friends and associates who did not
believe that the
respondent was capable of committing this offence, their views, although
genuinely held, could only be given limited
weight having regard to the
jury’s verdict: at [21];
(7) the respondent did not express any contrition or remorse, having
continued to maintain his innocence: at [22];
(8) the respondent had been party to a deliberate attempt to present false
evidence by two witnesses, Ms Rahal and Mr George that
he had been
with them at the time he shot the victim, which was not regarded by his Honour
as an aggravating factor, but was taken
into account as relevant to the
respondent’s prospects of rehabilitation, the need for personal deterrence
and community protection,
and whether there is any evidence of contrition: at
[18].
(9) the respondent’s prospects of rehabilitation and risk of
reoffending must be considered “guarded”, given the
cold-blooded
nature of the offence and the respondent’s history of drug offences: at
[22];
(10) a finding of special circumstances should be made on the basis of the
respondent’s relatively young age and the fact that
this would be his
first time in custody: at [24].
- In
his concluding remarks the sentencing judge noted the importance of not imposing
a “crushing” sentence on a relatively
young man, observing at
[24]:
Whilst I have found that the offence is in the high range of objective
seriousness and must receive a stern sentence, I have in accepting
the terms of
that sentence, endeavoured to avoid imposing a sentence which might be regarded
as crushing, especially on the relatively
young man who is serving his first,
and hopefully his last, term of imprisonment.
The Crown
appeal – manifest inadequacy
- The
claim of manifest inadequacy is a conclusion and does not depend on the
identification of specific error in the reasoning of the
sentencing judge:
Dinsdale v The Queen (2000) 202 CLR 321; [2000] HCA 54 at [6]. It is
necessary in order to establish manifest inadequacy to demonstrate that the
sentence appealed against was “unreasonable
or plainly unjust”:
Markarian v The Queen (2005) 228 CLR 357; [2005] HCA 25 at [25].
- The
Director does not contend that there is any specific error in the sentencing
judge’s reasons. Rather, the Director submitted
that the shooting offence
was one of very high objective seriousness, which was not substantially
mitigated by any factor in the
respondent’s subjective case, and a
proportionately severe penalty was required to deter future offending of this
kind, to
denounce the respondent’s conduct and to recognise the extent of
the harm caused to the victim. In these circumstances, and
having particular
regard to the legislative guideposts, which are indicative of the extremely
serious criminality involved in offences
of this kind, the Director submitted
that the sentence imposed upon the respondent was unreasonable or plainly
unjust.
- Counsel
for the respondent submitted that the sentence imposed upon the respondent is
not derisory and is appropriate for a relatively
young offender, who has the
potential for rehabilitation and reform. In oral argument, counsel submitted
that the sentence reflected
an element of mercy, particularly the
“lenient” non-parole period.
Consideration
- The
question is not whether the sentence is lenient. As R A Hulme J said in
R v Jennar [2014] NSWCCA 331 at [71] (Leeming JA and McCallum J
agreeing), reasonable minds may legitimately vary as to this. The question is
whether the result is unreasonable
and plainly unjust. In this case, the focus
is on whether the sentence was manifestly too short: Dinsdale v The Queen
at [6].
Objective seriousness
- The
starting point in assessing whether manifest inadequacy has been demonstrated by
the Director is the significance of the finding
of the sentencing judge that the
offence was within the high range of objective seriousness. That finding was
well supported by the
objective circumstances of the offending. The offence was
a premeditated attempt by the respondent to execute the victim. The deliberate
discharge of a firearm at close range towards a person’s torso, as in this
case, is an extremely grave example of an offence
under s 29: Chaouk v R
[2017] NSWCCA 295 at [67]. The offending also involved a number of aggravating
factors.
- One
was planning on the part of the respondent: Crimes (Sentencing Procedure)
Act, s 21A(2)(n). The respondent obtained a firearm in advance,
disguised himself with a face covering and arranged a getaway car parked nearby
to
flee the scene.
- Another
aggravating factor is the harm to the victim: Crimes (Sentencing Procedure)
Act, s 21A(2)(g). The catastrophic consequences to the victim are apparent
from the medical evidence of Dr Shetty and the victim impact statement:
see
[9(3)] above. Those consequences are permanent and include a very significantly
reduced quality of life and lost employment opportunities
due to the
victim’s injuries. Victims of violent shooting offences are especially
vulnerable, as in this case, where the victim
was shot at close range in the
driveway of his home. It is important that sentences imposed for s 29 offences
recognise the harm done to the victim of the crime: Crimes (Sentencing
Procedure) Act, s 3A(g).
- A
further aggravating feature is that the respondent was on bail for other
offences at the time of this offence: Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act,
s 21A(2)(j).
Subjective circumstances
- Contrary
to the respondent’s submission, the objective seriousness of the offending
was not substantially mitigated by any factor
in the respondent’s
subjective case, which was generally not positive and did little to assist him
on sentence, as is apparent
from the findings by the sentencing judge referred
to at [12] and [13] above.
- The
substantial volume of character evidence tendered on the respondent’s
behalf was correctly given limited weight by the sentencing
judge, in light of
the jury’s verdict that the respondent had shot the victim with the
intention to kill him. And although
not expressly mentioned by the sentencing
judge, the respondent’s criminal record and his reported history of
illicit drug
use also reduced the weight which could properly be given to this
evidence: Williams v R [2012] NSWCCA 172 at [54]- [56].
- This
is not a case in which the respondent’s mental functioning affected his
ability to control his actions or to appreciate
that they were wrong. As
mentioned, the sentencing judge found that the psychologist’s assessment
indicated that the respondent
had a relatively unremarkable psychological
profile.
- No
criticism is made of the sentencing judge in noting the importance of not
imposing a “crushing” sentence upon the respondent
in the sense that
it would induce a feeling of hopelessness and destroy any expectation of a
useful life after release: R v WC [2008] NSWCCA 268 at [61]. Nonetheless,
the Director correctly submitted that such an assessment requires regard to a
number of circumstances which include,
the maximum penalties and standard
non-parole periods, the objective and subjective factors, as well as application
of principles
of totality: Haines v R [2012] NSWCCA 238 at [57] (Bellew
J, McClellan CJ at CL and Barr AJ agreeing); Paxton v R [2011] NSWCCA
242; (2011) 219 A Crim R 104 at [132] (Johnson J, Tobias AJA and Hall J
agreeing).
- In
this case, no question of totality arises because the sentence is for a single
offence. Allowance for the respondent’s relative
youth was made by the
sentencing judge’s finding of special circumstances; otherwise there was
nothing to suggest that the
offending was attributable to the respondent’s
youth or immaturity.
Other sentencing decisions
- Reference
to other sentencing decisions for offences under s 29 provides limited
assistance in this case. First, there are not many cases, and the Director
correctly acknowledged that there are
an insufficient number of cases to allow a
“range” to be identified.
- Second,
the s 29 cases referred to in the Director’s submissions are different
from this case.
- In
R v Jennar the victim was shot in the abdomen during a robbery in
a bowling club and recovered from subsequent surgical procedures.
- In
Devaney v R [2012] NSWCCA 285 the victim, an ex-girlfriend of the
offender, was shot at three times at a gym, two shots hitting her in the abdomen
and one perforated
her colon. The victim was discharged after one week in
hospital and eventually made a good recovery.
- In
R v Koloamatangi [2011] NSWCCA 288 the victim suffered no injury.
- And
in Jennar and Devaney, both offenders had reduced moral
culpability, unlike in the present case.
- The
three cases referred to were not relied upon by the Director to test the claim
of manifest inadequacy by reference to an examination
of sentences imposed in
cases most closely comparable to this case: Hili v The Queen (2010) 242
CLR 520; [2010] HCA 45 at [62]. Rather, the Director relied upon these cases to
illustrate sentences imposed in the case of less serious injuries to the victim
than that suffered by the victim in this case, and where the offender had
markedly reduced culpability by reason of disadvantaged
background, unlike the
respondent in this case. To that extent the significant sentences in these three
cases provide support for
the Director’s submission of manifest
inadequacy.
- The
Director also referred to two sentencing decisions for offences under s
33A(1)(a) of discharging a firearm with intent to cause
grievous bodily harm,
where the maximum penalty is 25 years imprisonment and a standard non-parole
period of 9 years is prescribed.
This offence is objectively less serious than
the s 29 offence, as the s 33A(1)(a) offence does not involve premeditation or
the intent to kill.
- In
Melbom v R [2011] NSWCCA 22, after a 25 per cent discount for pleading
guilty to one offence under s 33A(1)(a), as well as eight other offences, and
two further
offences were taken into account on a Form 1, for the s 33A(1)(a)
offence, the offender was sentenced to imprisonment for 15 years
with a
non-parole period of 9 years and 6 months, which sentence was upheld on appeal.
The notional starting point for this sentence
was 20 years. The offending
involved a violent altercation between the offender and his partner outside her
home during which he
fired a firearm at her house and when approached by nearby
residents fired a single shot at them, hitting one woman in her leg. She
suffered bone and tissue trauma and her leg was subsequently amputated. The
offender was on conditional liberty at the time of his
offending and had a
criminal history.
- In
Chaouk v R, after a 15 per cent discount for pleading guilty to one
offence under s 33A(1)(a), as well as three other offences, the offender
was
re-sentenced on appeal; for the s 33A(1)(a) offence the Court recorded an
indicative sentence of 14 years and 6 months. The notional
starting point for
this sentence was approximately 17 years. The s 33A(1)(a) offence occurred
during an armed robbery when a man
in a nearby home heard the gun shots and
approached the offender who shot the man in the chest from close range, causing
a spinal
injury which rendered him paraplegic. The offender was 23 years
old and had a relatively insignificant criminal history. He was found
to have
reasonable prospects of rehabilitation.
- These
s 33A(1)(a) sentencing cases underscore the seriousness of offences involving
the use of firearms, particularly where serious
harm is caused to the victim. In
Melbom the victim suffered the amputation of a leg; in Chaouk the
victim was rendered a paraplegic. These cases provide support for the
Director’s submission of manifest inadequacy in this
case.
Conclusion - manifest inadequacy is demonstrated
- When
regard is had to the parameters of the legislative guideposts of the maximum and
standard non-parole periods for the s 29 offence, and the objective and
subjective factors referred to above, I am satisfied that the sentence imposed
upon the respondent
was manifestly too short.
Residual
discretion
- The
Crown must also satisfy the Court that what has been called the “residual
discretion” to decline to intervene and
resentence the respondent should
not be exercised in the present case: Green v The Queen; Quinn v The
Queen (2011) 244 CLR 462; [2011] HCA 49 at [35]- [36] (French CJ,
Crennan and Kiefel JJ); CMB v Attorney-General for New South Wales
(2015) 256 CLR 346; [2015] HCA 9 at [33] (French CJ and Gageler J) and [54]
(Kiefel, Bell and Keane JJ). The “residual discretion” arises from s
5D(1) of the Criminal Appeal Act which
provides:
The Attorney-General or the Director of Public Prosecutions may appeal to the
Court of Criminal Appeal against any sentence pronounced
by the court of trial
in any proceedings to which the Crown was a party and the Court of
Criminal Appeal may in its discretion vary the sentence and impose such sentence
as to the said court may seem proper (Emphasis added).
- The
applicable principles concerning the exercise of the residual discretion were
summarised by this Court in R v Reeves [2014] NSWCCA 154 at [12]- [19]
(Bathurst CJ, Hall and R A Hulme JJ). For present purposes, it is sufficient to
reproduce [14]-[16] of that summary:
[14] In Green v R; Quinn v R it was noted by the
plurality (French CJ, Crennan and Kiefel JJ), quoting Griffiths v The
Queen [1997] HCA 44; 137 CLR 293 at 310 [53] (Barwick CJ), that the primary
purpose of Crown appeals against sentence is "to lay down principles for the
governance and guidance of courts having the duty of sentencing convicted
persons": at [1]. This was similarly expressed in R v Borkowski
[2009] NSWCCA 102; 195 A Crim R 1 at [70]:
"... the purpose of a Crown appeal is not
simply to increase an erroneous sentence imposed upon a particular individual.
It has a
wider purpose, being to achieve consistency in sentencing and the
establishment of sentencing principles. That purpose can be achieved
to a very
significant extent by a statement of this Court that the sentences imposed upon
the respondent were wrong and why they
were
wrong."
[15] This purpose is a "limiting purpose" that does not extend
to the general correction of errors made by sentencing judges. Rather,
it
provides a framework within which to assess the significance of factors relevant
to the exercise of the discretion: Green v R; Quinn v R at [36].
[16] Accordingly, it has been held that it may be appropriate
for the appellate court, in the exercise of its discretion, to dismiss
a Crown
appeal where "circumstances may combine to produce the result that if the
appeal is allowed the guidance provided to sentencing judges will be limited
and
the decision will occasion injustice": Green v R; Quinn v R at
[2].
- Turning
to the factors that may favour the exercise of the residual discretion in the
present case.
- First,
as to delay, the respondent was sentenced on 6 March 2020 and the solicitor
for the Director gave prompt notice by email to
the respondent’s solicitor
on 13 March 2020 that the Crown was considering an appeal against sentence. The
notice of appeal
filed on behalf of the Director on 30 April 2020 was served on
the respondent on 1 May 2020. The delay, such as it is, by the Crown
in the
filing of the appeal and notifying the respondent has not caused prejudice to
the respondent: R v Hallocoglu (1992) 29 NSWLR 67 at 79-80 (Hunt CJ at
CL, Grove and Sharpe JJ agreeing).
- Second,
the respondent’s release on parole is not imminent – he is not
eligible for release on parole until 11 July 2028:
Green v The Queen; Quinn v
The Queen at [43].
- Third,
given the continuing absence of any remorse or contrition shown by the
respondent, this is not a case where resentencing would
have an effect on
progress towards the respondent’s rehabilitation: Green v The Queen;
Quinn v The Queen at [43].
- Fourth,
nor is this a case where the Crown’s conduct on the sentencing hearing
fell below what was reasonably required to assist
the sentencing judge to avoid
a sentence which was manifestly too low: CMB v Attorney-General for New South
Wales at [38].
- Recognising
the primary purpose of Crown appeals as noted in Green v The Queen; Quinn v
The Queen at [36], I have concluded that if the sentence was allowed to
stand it would be an affront to the administration of justice which
risks
undermining public confidence in the criminal justice system: Green v The
Queen; Quinn v The Queen at [42]. In my view, the Crown has negated any
reason to decline to resentence the respondent in the exercise of the residual
discretion:
Everett v The Queen [1994] HCA 49; (1994) 181 CLR 295 at 306; [1994] HCA 49.
Re-sentence
- For
the purposes of re-sentence, it is not in dispute that the objective seriousness
of the offence was within the high range of objective
seriousness. As I have
said, this offence of violence is an extremely grave example of an offence of
this type with substantial aggravating
factors.
- I
accept the findings of the sentencing judge with respect to the
respondent’s subjective case. Allowance for the respondent’s
relatively young age and his first time in custody will be made by a finding of
special circumstances on these grounds.
- I
have taken into account and given limited weight to the respondent’s
affidavit dated 18 August 2020 concerning his conditions
of incarceration since
his arrest, including his inability to undertake drug and alcohol rehabilitation
courses, or to advance his
education, and the effect of Covid-19 restrictions
since March 2020 on visitation by family and friends.
- The
sentence imposed must recognise the very serious nature of this offence of
violence and the necessity that it be visited by condign
punishment to provide a
general deterrent to future offences of this kind, to denounce the conduct of
the respondent, and to recognise
the very substantial and permanent harm done to
the victim. Both a longer head sentence and non-parole period is required. A
lengthy
period of parole should be provided to promote the rehabilitation of the
respondent.
- In
my view, a sentence of 19 years imprisonment should be imposed for this
offending. Making the same finding of special circumstances
as the sentencing
judge, I would impose a non-parole period of 13 years.
Orders
- I
propose the following orders:
(1) Crown appeal against sentence
allowed.
(2) The sentence imposed by Judge Bourke SC in the District Court on
6 March 2020 be set aside.
(3) In lieu, sentence the respondent to 19 years imprisonment consisting of a
non-parole period of 13 years commencing on 12 January
2018 and expiring on 11
January 2031, with the balance of term of 6 years commencing on 12 January 2031
and expiring on 11 January
2037. The respondent is eligible for release on
parole on 11 January 2031.
- ROTHMAN
J: I agree with the reasons of Gleeson JA and with the orders his Honour
proposes.
- PRICE
J: I agree with Gleeson JA.
**********
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