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Supreme Court of New South Wales |
Last Updated: 11 September 2001
NEW SOUTH WALES SUPREME COURT
CITATION: R v SEE [2001] NSWSC 776
CURRENT JURISDICTION:
FILE NUMBER(S):
70095/00
HEARING DATE{S): 10 August 2001
JUDGMENT DATE:
07/09/2001
PARTIES:
Regina
Choon Hai SEE
JUDGMENT OF:
Hulme J
LOWER COURT JURISDICTION: Not Applicable
LOWER
COURT FILE NUMBER(S): Not Applicable
LOWER COURT JUDICIAL OFFICER: Not
Applicable
COUNSEL:
Crown: Mr P Miller
Prisoner: Ms L
Flannery
SOLICITORS:
Crown: SE O'Connor
Prisoner: Legal Aid
Commission of NSW
CATCHWORDS:
ACTS CITED:
DECISION:
See paragraph 29
JUDGMENT:
- 12
-
IN THE SUPREME COURT
OF NEW SOUTH WALES
CRIMINAL
DIVISION
70095/00
HULME J
Friday, 7 September
2001
R v Choon Hai SEE
REMARKS ON SENTENCE
1 His Honour: On 30 July 2001, Choon Hai See was indicted on a
charge that on 12 September 2000 he attempted to use an offensive weapon namely
a knife with intent to assault Zee Wei Ang, also known as Simon Ang, thereby
occasioning him actual bodily harm. To this charge
he pleaded
guilty.
2 He was then indicted on a charge that on 12 September 2000 he
did murder Han Cheat Ang, also known as Jack Ang. To this charge
the Prisoner
pleaded not guilty. On 10 August last, a jury found him not guilty of murder,
but guilty of manslaughter and he now
stands to be sentenced for both offences.
Pursuant to s33B of the Crimes Act, the lesser charge carries a maximum penalty
of 12
years. Under s24, the maximum penalty for manslaughter is 25
years.
3 It falls to me to decide, in a manner consistent with the
jury’s verdict, the facts upon the basis of which the Prisoner is
to be
sentenced. Insofar as any matters are to be used adversely to the Prisoner, I
must be satisfied of them beyond reasonable
doubt. In summary the circumstances
of the offences were as follows.
4 The Prisoner and the two victims
were employees of a Chinese restaurant which operated within the premises of the
Mingara Recreation
Club at Tumbi Umbi. The three also lived together in
premises rented by the proprietor of the restaurant for such employees. For
some period prior to 12 September, the Prisoner had been the butt of some
puerile teasing. He had been kicked on the behind three
times while squatting
and an apple core or egg shells had been thrown at him twice. The Prisoner
seems to have mentioned that he
had a girlfriend and the deceased said the
Prisoner was old and any young girl would fall in love with the deceased rather
than the
Prisoner. On one occasion the deceased, who was only 17, said the
Prisoner’s private part was very small, a remark which elicited
laughter
from others nearby.
.
5 Other incidents arose out of the fact that the
Prisoner and the deceased were in Australia on 3 months tourist visas and were
not
supposed to be working. Apparently Immigration officials had on at least
one prior occasion raided the premises in which the 3 persons
lived. The
Prisoner had come to Australia to earn money and had paid some $2,500 to an
agent in Malaysia for the airfare and a job
and did not want to lose the benefit
of this. To minimise the possibility of being caught at his residence, the
Prisoner adopted
the practise of leaving home early, many hours before he was
due to commence work. The deceased, who would seem to have been instrumental
in helping the Prisoner obtain the job at the restaurant, laughed at that and
said that if he got caught, he would dob the Prisoner
in.
6 There seem
also to have been two occasions where the deceased raised the topic of stabbing
the Prisoner to death. On one occasion
he showed the Prisoner a knife on some
nail clippers and asked him whether he believed that that knife could stab him
to death.
On another occasion, talking on a phone in the Prisoner’s
presence, he said he would do so. These incidents caused the Prisoner
to feel
scared, although it is not clear for how long.
7 On 12 September there
had been some further teasing involving the deceased and a co-worker Wilson
Ming. The Prisoner and the deceased
were moving goods. Mr Ming suggested that
the deceased not help the Prisoner. The deceased acquiesced to the extent of
refusing
to help with heavy items. The Prisoner complained, Mr Ming offered to
fight him and both went outside the restaurant and engaged
in some physical
conflict. Although neither seems to have been significantly hurt, the evidence
indicated that the Prisoner was
getting the better of Mr Ming when others
intervened. Both went back to work but Mr Ming said to the Prisoner words to
the effect,
“tonight when we go home, I will assault you to death.”
Later the deceased said to the Prisoner that he deserved to
be assaulted by Mr
Ming and indicated he was looking forward to seeing a show when they went home.
The deceased said he would be
visiting the Prisoner in a hospital or the police
station and if he died he would give the Prisoner’s family $10.00,
“dead
people’s money.” I have no doubt that these matters
introduced a degree of fear in the Prisoner.
8 Some time later and while
the Prisoner was in the kitchen using what can best be described as a pointed
carving knife to cut lemons,
the deceased repeated teasing along these lines.
The deceased also remarked that he had wanted for some time to hit the Prisoner
and said something to the effect “if you dare, you come over to chop
me”.
9 The Prisoner charged at him and did so. The evidence is not
clear as to the details of the early stages of the fight which ensued
although
it would seem that the early injury to the deceased was in the mouth area.
There was a scuffle during which both were on
the floor. At some stage while
the deceased was lying on the ground, the Prisoner stabbed him a number of times
in the chest. Others
induced the Prisoner to surrender the knife. Then the
Prisoner grabbed a meat cleaver and chopped or swung at the deceased with
this
several times.
10 The evidence of Dr Oettle established that the deceased
suffered 30 stab or incised wounds. These included a wound to the
deceased’s
neck which Dr Oettle described as deep, cutting through the
wind pipe and left carotid artery and 115 millimetres long; 2 stab wounds
to the
chest, one 160mm deep and penetrating the right lung, the other 170 mm deep and
penetrating both lungs - T233; 3 longitudinal
wounds to the face, two about 70
mm long and the third extending from the mouth to the lateral aspect of the left
cheek, and 2 incised
wounds to the abdomen, one 110 and the other 190 mm long
through which part of the contents of the abdominal cavity protruded. I
am
satisfied that the two wounds to the abdomen and that to the neck were inflicted
by the meat cleaver.
11 The Prisoner then ran upstairs. I am not
satisfied that he had any particular intention at that time but having arrived
on the
next floor, he saw Simon Ang by whom he had also been teased. Still
armed with the meat cleaver he commenced to chase this victim
through the
restaurant and in the presence of its patrons and staff. In the course of this
chase, one of the patrons called out
to the Prisoner who stopped dead in his
tracks and then handed over the meat cleaver. Others then escorted the Prisoner
away, he
was treated by ambulance officers and a little later arrested. He has
been in custody ever since.
12 One issue which falls for determination is
whether in respect of the offence of manslaughter, the Prisoner should be
sentenced
upon the basis merely of having caused death by an unlawful and
dangerous act or upon the basis of provocation reducing murder to
manslaughter.
Neither the Crown nor Counsel for the Prisoner contested that the latter finding
should be made and I am certainly
satisfied that it should. The question then
arises whether the Prisoner had an intention to kill or merely an intention to
do grievous
bodily harm. Although I am not sure that, in the circumstances of
this case, it matters, I am not satisfied that the Prisoner had
an intention to
kill. My reason for that conclusion is as follows. During at least much of the
attack, the Prisoner was utterly
out of control. In these circumstances I do
not regard evidence as to what happened during the latter stages as providing
any foundation
for a conclusion that at the beginning his intent was to kill.
The ferocity of the attack from shortly thereafter was such as to
make me doubt
whether at that stage the Prisoner was thinking with sufficient clarity to have
in mind an intent to kill as distinct
from merely wreaking great damage on the
deceased.
13 Lest it be thought the matter has been overlooked, I
should refer to the fact that at times the Prisoner said that he had attacked
the deceased to teach him a lesson by giving him a cut and to scare him. Except
insofar as it is limited by reference to “a”
cut, the former
statement is not inconsistent with what I regard as the explanation for the
attack. The Prisoner’s personality
and/or history were such that there
were limits to what he could endure. He was pushed beyond those limits and
reacted. Stopping
the teasing or punishing the offender may well have been in
his mind but I do not regard these things as a total explanation. I
do not
regard the Prisoner’s intention at the relevant time as limited to
scaring.
14 Before I turn to the significance of these findings, it is
convenient to say something of the Prisoner’s subjective circumstances.
He has no criminal record. He was born on 18 April 1971. He lived in a fishing
village, leaving school when he was about 17. His
father did not earn much and
the Prisoner worked from the time he was 8, giving his earnings to his mother.
At age 19 he went to
Singapore to work in a shipyard. There he earned enough
money to purchase a house for his parents in their village. He considered
work
in the shipyard dangerous, so he took out insurance policies also, at least in
part, in their interests. He seems to have been
teased – he used the
terms “bullied and intimidated” - in the shipyard and in 1997
resigned.
15 Not long after, when his mother became ill, he decided to
return to Malaysia to look after her and there purchased a van with a
view to
starting a business. That did not succeed. He also started a relationship with
a girl. His parents disapproved and in
consequence the relationship broke up.
In July 2000 he came to Australia to earn some money in the circumstances I have
indicated.
In the restaurant, the Prisoner earned $400 per week working from
10am to 9pm with two 20 minute and one 1½ hour breaks during
the
day.
16 The theme of being the butt of teasing or bullying recurs during
the evidence. In the witness box the Prisoner said that during
all of his life
people had been picking on him. He said something similar in his ERISP. In a
letter tendered during the sentencing
proceedings, the Prisoner’s mother
and father said that at school the Prisoner was often bullied and would
sometimes return
home in tears. He did not fight but was beaten up, was not
happy and was rarely seen smiling. In other respects they confirmed
much of
what the Prisoner had said concerning his past.
17 During the course of
the trial, Dr Lucas, a psychiatrist gave evidence that at the time of the
offence, the Prisoner was suffering
from an adjustment disorder with a
depressive condition falling short of a major depressive episode though of
moderate severity.
Dr Lucas attributed this largely to the stressors which I
have mentioned. The doctor pointed out that whereas in Singapore the
Prisoner
could escape work place problems by avoidance, his circumstances here –
financial, working illegally on a visitor’s
visa and unable to speak
English – did not permit the same response. In a later report Dr Lucas
said that the Prisoner did
not have characteristics suggesting a high risk of
future dangerous conduct but given the incident with which I am concerned, the
risk of future offending is slightly above that of a similar aged male who has
not offended in the past.
18 In custody the Applicant has acquired some
certificates for courses in reading and writing and oral expression.
Nevertheless,
I have no doubt that relative unfamiliarity with the English
language will make time in prison harder for him than otherwise, as
will the
fact that he is away from family and friends. This is not a case where, putting
aside the migration laws, the Prisoner
has come to Australia to offend and both
of the matters mentioned argue for some consideration in sentencing. It is, of
course,
his first time in custody and, in totality, these matters justify a
finding of special circumstances. In accordance with authority,
I ignore the
fact that at the conclusion of his incarceration, the Prisoner is likely to be
deported.
19 Shortly after the Prisoner was taken aside at the
Recreation Club, he expressed sorrow to his employer for what had occurred.
He
freely admitted his involvement during his interview with the police and did so
in the witness box. Some weeks before the trial
he had given instructions to
plead guilty to manslaughter and although an offer to this effect, I infer in
full satisfaction of the
indictment, was rejected by the Crown, the defence case
was run on the basis that he was guilty of manslaughter. He did not give
evidence on sentence but a letter from the prison chaplain records that the
Prisoner is remorseful. Having regard to his nature
as revealed from his
history, I accept that he is remorseful for what he did. That fact will be
reflected in the sentence.
20 In Thompson and Houlten [2000] NSWCCA 309; (2000) 115 A
Crim R 104 the Court of Criminal Appeal laid down as a guideline that a court
should allow and be seen to allow a discount from the sentence
which would
otherwise be imposed for the utilitarian value of a plea. Because the Crown
would not accept the plea offered in this
case, there was no value to the
justice system in the offer. Nor was it repeated by the Prisoner’s plea
entered at the commencement
of the trial. On the other hand, the trial was run
as I have indicated. Because of the absence of any, or any significant
utilitarian
value, and despite the other matters to which I have referred, it
seems to me inappropriate to allow any discount on account of any
utilitarian
value. And, despite what was said in Thompson and Houlten as to the
strength of the Crown case in this connection, it seems to me relevant in
circumstances such as here to bear in mind that
the difficulties of opposing a
manslaughter verdict were insuperable.
21 Many of the factors relevant to
sentencing in a case such as this were adverted to by Hunt CJ at CL in
Alexander (1994) 78 A Crim R 141. Particularly because both victim and
offender and their families are foreign or of foreign extraction, it may be
appropriate to
repeat them:-
“The sentence to be imposed for any
crime must take into account the many different purposes which that sentence is
expected
to serve – the protection of society, personal and public
deterrence, retribution and reform. But, as the High Court in Veen (No.
2) went on to point out:
“The purposes overlap and none of them
can be considered in isolation from the others when determining what is an
appropriate
sentence in a particular case. They are guideposts to the
appropriate sentence but sometimes they point in different
directions.”
In the present case, I am satisfied that there could
be no concern for the protection of society, and no need for personal deterrence
or reform, so far as this prisoner is concerned. I am satisfied that he is
never likely to react in this way again.
It is nevertheless always
important in seeking to determine the sentence appropriate to a particular crime
to have regard to the gravity
of the offence viewed objectively, for without
such an assessment the other factors requiring consideration before arriving at
the
proper sentence to be imposed cannot properly be given their place. Except
in well defined circumstances such as the youth or the
mental incapacity of the
offender, public deterrence is generally regarded as the main purpose of
punishment, and the subjective
considerations relating to the particular
prisoner (however persuasive) are necessarily subsidiary to the duty of the
courts to see
that the sentence which is imposed will operate as a powerful
factor in preventing the commission of similar crimes by those who
may otherwise
be tempted by the prospect that only light punishment will be imposed.
Retribution, or the taking of vengeance for
the injury which was done by the
prisoner, is also an important aspect of sentencing. Not only must the
community be satisfied that
the offender is given his just desserts, it is
important as well that the victim, or those who are left behind, also feel that
justice
has been done.
The tensions involved in the imposition of the
appropriate sentence in a provocation case – where necessarily there has
been
at the same time both a loss of self control and an intention to kill or to
inflict grievous bodily harm – were discussed by
the former Chief Justice,
Sir Laurence Street, when speaking for the Court of Criminal Appeal in 1981, in
a passage which bears quotation
in full:-
“The circumstances
leading to the felonious taking of human life being regarded as manslaughter
rather than murder can vary
infinitely, and it is not always easy to determine
in any given case what should be done in the matter of sentence. At the start
it should be recognised that the felonious taking of a human life is recognised
both in the Crimes Act 1900 (NSW) and in the community at large as one of the
most dreadful crimes in the criminal calendar. The courts have, however, over
the decades gradually manifested a willingness to recognise factual contents
which provide some basis for understanding the human
tragedies that can lead to
the taking of a life. The manifestation of this humanitarian tendency is
necessarily attended by the
utmost caution. It can be seen to be constantly
written in the decisions of the courts and in the enactments of the legislature
that the taking of a human life is a grave action calling for a correspondingly
grave measure of criminal justice being meted out
to the guilty party.
In
a case such as the present, where there is material justifying a degree of
understanding and of sympathy towards the appellant,
the task of sentencing is
particularly difficult. It is necessary to evaluate the demands of the criminal
justice system, the expectations
of the community at large, the subjective
circumstances of the person coming forward for criminal judgment and the
interest of society
in protecting itself and its members from criminal activity
amounting, as in the present case, to the taking of a
life.”
22 Alexander also indicates that attention should be
directed to:-
“ (i) the degree of provocation offered (or,
alternatively, the extent of the loss of self-control suffered), which when
great
has the tendency of reducing the objective gravity of the offence;
(ii) the time between the provocation (whether isolated or cumulative in its
effect) and the loss of self control, which, when short
also has the tendency of
reducing the objective gravity of the offence; and
(iii) the degree of
violence or aggression displayed by the prisoner, which when excessive has the
tendency of increasing the objective
gravity of the offence.”
23 On
any objective standard, it is impossible to describe the degree of provocation
here as more than moderate. I referred to some
of it as puerile. Much
certainly reminds one of school-boy teasing although there were the aspects
calculated to cause fear or at
least apprehension. On the other hand, the loss
of self control was great. It was also immediate by reference to the last of
the
cumulative acts of provocation. The degree of violence or aggression was
extreme although it must be recognised that the first weapon
was in the
Prisoner’s hand quite innocently before the incident occurred.
24 In this case the purposes of protection of society, personal
deterrence and reform have little, although I do not say no, part
to play. The
Prisoner clearly needs to address, hopefully with the assistance of counselling
in prison, his responses to others.
Experience shows that among some groups,
those who react to teasing rather than laughing it off or letting it pass them
by, are
the most likely to be teased. Furthermore, a significant element in the
offence is that the Prisoner simply lost his temper. Clearly
he needs to be
able to control it albeit it must be recognised that his history suggests that
lack of control has not been a problem
in the past.
25 It is
considerations of general deterrence and retribution that dominate the
sentencing exercise here. A human life has been lost
and not only because the
Prisoner lost his temper, but because he also used a knife. Such crimes are far
too frequent.
26 The maximum penalty is, as I have said, 25 years
imprisonment. That maximum “is intended for cases falling within the
worst
category of cases for which the penalty is prescribed: Ibbs v R
[1987] HCA 46; (1987) 163 CLR 447 - Veen v R (No. 2) [1988] HCA 14; (1988) 164 CLR 465 at 478.
Statistics kept by the Judicial Commission show that the mean of full and
minimum terms of sentences imposed for manslaughter
where the offender has no
prior record and has pleaded not guilty are 7 and 4 years respectively. It must
be recognised that, because
of the wide variety of factual circumstances in
which manslaughter occurs, the statistics are of limited assistance. For the
purposes
of this case and another which is before me also today, I have read a
large number of other judge’s decisions, some of which
are summarised in a
schedule to these Reasons.
27 I acknowledge that a number of those cases
argue for a lower penalty than I intend to impose although R v Dally
[2000] NSWCCA 162 and perhaps R v Sherry [2000] NSWCCA 35 are in line
with my views. Be that as it may, as was said in another context, “In
determining the proper penalty ... the fundamental
consideration is rather the
degree by which, having regard to the maximum penalties provided by the Act in
question, the Respondent’s
conduct would offend against the legislative
objective of suppressing the illicit traffic in the prohibited drug” -
R v Peel (1971) 1 NSWLR 247 at 262. The central feature of all cases of
manslaughter is the taking of another’s life and while making all
allowance for
the features of this case favouring leniency, the Prisoner’s
response to the teasing he suffered was so out of proportion as
to require
substantial punishment. I certainly would not place it in the bottom quarter of
manslaughter offences requiring full
time custody. Despite all that has been
said about the seriousness of knife attacks, there is no obvious decline in
their frequency.
In my view general deterrence and retribution require the
sentence I intend to impose. Otherwise the “just desserts”
and the
importance of those left behind the victim feeling that justice has been done,
of which Hunt CJ at CL spoke in Alexander will not have been
satisfied.
28 Having regard to the fact that the Prisoner’s attack
on Zee Wei Ang was part of the same loss of control, that no damage
was
inflicted on that victim and the circumstances of the Prisoner desisting from
that attack, I propose to make his sentence on
the lesser charge concurrent.
Because it will be concurrent, it will be a fixed term.
29 The conclusion at which I have arrived is as follows. I
am satisfied, as s5(1) of the Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act contemplates,
that the circumstances are such that no penalty other than imprisonment is
appropriate. I am further satisfied that that imprisonment
should be full time.
Choon Hai SEE, for the manslaughter of Han Cheat Ang, I impose a total sentence
of 7 years, including a non-parole
period of 4½ years, both periods to date
from 12 September 2000; on the charge of attempting to use an offensive weapon
namely
a knife with intent to assault Zee Wei Ang, thereby occasioning him
actual bodily harm, I impose a fixed term of imprisonment of
1 year, also dating
from 12 September 2000.
SCHEDULE
R v Choon Hai
SEE
NOTE: Unless otherwise indicated, all of the cases referred to are
ones where manslaughter on the basis of provocation was the offence
being dealt
with.
R v Alexander (1995) 78 A Crim R 141
In this matter the
sentence imposed was one of 6 years including a minimum term of 2½ years.
Hunt J recorded that “after
almost 10 years of the most extraordinary
conduct by the deceased towards the 2 young children of the prisoner’s
first marriage
... and after a prolonged argument with the deceased in which
she taunted the prisoner with threats to take the 3 children of the
present
marriage away from him, suggested that the only solution to the situation was to
shoot her, and accused him of being gutless
during their 10 years of marriage
– the prisoner stormed out of the room, spent a very short period of time
outside and then
returned, picked up a rifle which had been left there ready to
be discharged the previous evening by the deceased herself, aimed
it at her and
pulled the trigger.” Hunt J had found the deceased’s conduct
amounted to “very extreme and grave
provocation”.
There were
strong subjective features. Hunt J appended to his judgment a schedule of
sentences in prior cases. In the case of those
since the commencement of the
Sentencing Act 1989, the median full term was 6 years.
A Crown appeal
(unreported, CCA, 24 February 1995) was dismissed.
R v Azar 1991 56 A
Crim R 414
In this matter the Court of Criminal Appeal dismissed an
appeal against a sentence of an effective term of 6 ½ years including
a
minimum term of 5 years. There had been a brawl between a group of young
persons including the Appellant and the deceased. At
one stage during the
fight, the deceased ran at the Appellant, punched him to the face and causing
the Appellant to fall to the ground.
The Appellant got up, went into a nearby
house and obtained a kitchen knife, returned with the knife and rejoined the
fight. The
deceased was fatally stabbed with the knife.
The Appellant
was a man of good character with no relevant criminal history and was unlikely
to offend again. He was regarded as
having genuine contrition.
Recourse
to the remarks on sentence of Newman J made on 14 December 1990 reveal that the
issue of manslaughter had been left to the
jury upon the basis of both an
unlawful and dangerous act and provocation and that in the course of sentencing,
His Honour did not
consider it necessary to make a specific finding as between
the two possibilities.
R v Dally [2000] NSWCCA 162
In this
matter the Court of Criminal Appeal dismissed an appeal against an effective
sentence of imprisonment for minimum and additional
terms of 6 and 2 years
respectively. During the course of an altercation during which the deceased
kept haranguing and abusing the
Appellant and pushing and pulling him, the
Appellant stabbed the deceased once with a large carving knife he had little
earlier obtained
from another room in the house. The trial judge had found that
the Appellant had stabbed the deceased deliberately but had not been
satisfied
that there was any intention to kill. The deceased was taller and of much
heavier build than the Appellant and the provocation
included threats of
physical violence.
The offender had a lonely and unhappy past, was not
disposed to violence and had no significant record although he had an alcohol
abuse disorder. He notified the authorities immediately he discovered the
deceased’s death and gave the police a full account
of what had occurred.
He felt a considerable degree of remorse and was unlikely to commit any similar
offence again. He was 49.
R v Diamond [2000] NSWSC 1212
This
offender was sentenced to imprisonment for 6 years including a non-parole period
of 4 ½ years. While intoxicated, the offender
had been teased by a group
and had a T-shirt and cap which he valued taken from him, the first mentioned
article being thrown into
a tree. He walked away frustrated and humiliated but
soon after became angry. He went to a friend’s house, procured a steak
knife, concealed it, and returned to the scene of the confrontation. He asked
where his shirt and hat was and when the victim responded
by dismissive or
contemptuous words, the offender brought the knife out, raised his right hand
above his shoulder and plunged it
into the victim’s left upper chest.
Badgery-Parker AJ found that the offender intended to inflict grievous bodily
harm but
was not prepared to find that that intent had been formed until the
time of the killing.
At the time of the offence, the offender was 22
years old. He had behavioural problems since he was younger than 8. As a child
he
had been diagnosed as having a severe personality disorder and exhibited
aggression, anti-social and disruptive behaviour. At about
12 he was sent to
Boys Town because no other school would accept him. His aggressive tendencies
manifested themselves in a number
of offences of violence for which he had
previously been before the courts. Alcohol had a tendency to aggravate his
aggressive tendency
and there was a risk of violence in the future. The
offender had generally been unemployed. He had undertaken self improvement
programs in gaol, a matter regarded as giving some hope for rehabilitation.
R v Howard [1999] NSWSC 1228
In this matter the sentence
imposed included minimum and additional terms of 5 years and 1 ½ years
penal servitude. Over a period
and for a variety of reasons, the offender had
developed growing resentment towards the deceased. On the night of his death,
the
deceased forced his way into the Prisoner’s residence, knocking him to
the floor. The deceased threatened the Prisoner and
said to another person
present “Sit the fuck down or I’ll kill you too.” Things then
calmed down but the Prisoner
walked to the kitchen, picked up a carving knife,
ran towards the deceased and stabbed him twice. The Prisoner immediately ran
away
in distress and exhibited almost immediate remorse. He was of good
character and had a good employment history. He offered to plead
guilty to
manslaughter at an early stage and was regarded as having good prospects of
rehabilitation. He was 31.
R v Gulam Mohammad Khan (1996) 86 A Crim R
552
In this case the Court of Criminal Appeal increased to 6 years
including a minimum term of 4 years a sentence imposed by Hidden J.
The
offender discovered that the deceased whom he had taken into his home and with
whom he had become friends was having an affair
with the offender’s wife.
On the night in question the offender had surreptitiously returned home and
waited to see whether
anything transpired and an hour or so later, heard the
deceased come home and intercourse occur. Appalling injuries were inflicted
upon the deceased including some 59 knife wounds.
It was accepted that
the deceased’s conduct constituted grave provocation and that the offender
was otherwise of excellent prior
character, placid in temperament, a stranger to
aggression and deeply remorseful. He was aged 45 years.
R v MHN (No
2) (unreported, Kirby J 20 November 1998)
In this case the sentence
imposed was for a fixed term of 4 years, this being the minimum term which,
apart from matters not presently
relevant, the Judge would have imposed as part
of a longer sentence.
The offender aged 17 years and 8 months at the time
was been attacked by a number of youths, spoiling for a fight. One of those was
the deceased who introduced a knife into the fight. The offender managed to
take hold of the knife, removed it from its sheath and
thereafter blindly and
with a loss of self control thrust the knife towards his assailants killing
one.
The offender had led an unhappy and deprived life spending his early
years in an institution. He was sent to Australia to join his
father when aged
12 and found adjustment difficult, particularly because he did not speak
English. He ran away from home, living
on the streets and with friends. He
suffered from depression to the extent it was a psychiatric illness. He was
charged with the
offence following a confession he had volunteered.
R
v Sherry [2000] NSWCCA 35
Holding that a sentence of 5 years and
particularly a minimum term of 2½ years which had been imposed on the
Respondent was
manifestly inadequate, the Court of Criminal Appeal increased
each of these periods by one year. Because it was a Crown appeal,
the court
imposed a lesser sentence than would otherwise have been appropriate.
The
deceased and the Respondent had been in a volatile defacto relationship marked
by violence and drunkenness. In the course of
one altercation, the Respondent
obtained a knife, returning to the vicinity of the deceased. The report is not
completely clear
what happened then but the knife entered her neck. The
majority in the Court of Criminal Appeal proceeded on the basis that it had
been
very dangerous for the Respondent to bring the knife very close to the
deceased.
R v Vandersee [2000] NSWSC 916
In this matter James
J imposed a sentence consisting of imprisonment for 8 years including a
non-parole period of 5 years on a woman
who had killed her sleeping husband by
striking him on the head a number of times with a small axe or tomahawk. His
Honour found
that the offender had an intention to kill. He also found that
depression was a mitigating circumstance. The provocation was a
long history of
emotional and some physical abuse, culminating in cutting off of part of the
offender’s hair on the night of
the offence. It was later in the evening
that she saw the axe and decided to use it. She turned herself in at a police
station
next day.
R v Veech [2001] NSWSC 68
This offender had
been charged with murder but found guilty of manslaughter. He was sentenced to
imprisonment for an effective term
of 6 ½ years with a non-parole period
equivalent to three-quarters of that.
There had been arguments over some
days between the victim and the offender who seem to have been business
partners. On the day of
his death, the deceased, while at the offender’s
premises, loaded some tools into his vehicle. There was a confrontation and
the
deceased walked towards the vehicle. Without reasonable grounds, the offender
thought the deceased was going to acquire a weapon.
The offender then loaded a
rifle, went outside and fired two shots, one of which severed the
deceased’s spinal cord. He fell
and the offender then fired two more
rounds from close range, each shot causing major damage to the deceased’s
heart. Wood
CJ at CL found the offender had an intent to kill, the provocation
significant but not extreme, the time between the provocation
and response was
short, the Prisoner’s actions unpremeditated although at least in part
very deliberate and controlled and
the degree of violence extreme.
The
offender had no prior record of significance. His childhood had been somewhat
disrupted but he had some employment history.
He was not regarded as an ongoing
danger.
R v Teklemariam Abebe [2000] VSC 567
This case was
one where murder had been reduced to manslaughter by reason of provocation. The
sentence imposed was imprisonment for
8 years including a non-parole period of 6
years. The maximum prescribed under the Crimes Act of Victoria, was
imprisonment for 20 years.
There had been marriage difficulties between
the offender and his wife leading to separation. A relationship between the
victim and
the offender’s wife had been a major cause of these
difficulties.
Co-habitation had resumed and the offender and his wife had
established a restaurant. On the day of the offence, the offender arrived
at
the restaurant and found the victim sitting in the kitchen. In response to a
question as to why the victim was there, the offender’s
wife described him
as her boyfriend and asserted that she intended to live with him as man and
wife. The victim looked at the offender
“in an arrogant and condescending
fashion” and the offender lost control, picked up a knife and stabbed the
deceased
three times in the chest. The offender was 50 years, Ethiopian, and
likely to have been embarrassed by his community knowing of
the prior situation
of the three persons. The offence was regarded as out of character and the
prospects of rehabilitation good.
There was no prior record
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LAST UPDATED: 07/09/2001
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