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[2020] NSWSC 222
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State of New South Wales v Loto [2020] NSWSC 222 (13 March 2020)
Last Updated: 13 March 2020
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Supreme Court
New South Wales
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Case Name:
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State of New South Wales v Loto
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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Hearing Date(s):
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4 March 2020
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Date of Orders:
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13 March 2020
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Decision Date:
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13 March 2020
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Jurisdiction:
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Common Law
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Before:
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Campbell J
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Decision:
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See Paragraph 95
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Catchwords:
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CIVIL LAW – Interim supervision order – Extended supervision
order – applicability of Crimes (High Risk Offenders)
Act to parolees
– difference between parole and extended supervision order conditions
– parole conditions superseded
by interim supervision order conditions -
unacceptable risk of committing another serious violence offence - criminal
history –
involvement in offenders programs
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Legislation Cited:
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Cases Cited:
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Category:
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Procedural and other rulings
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Parties:
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State of New South Wales (Plaintiff) Francis Loto (Defendant)
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Representation:
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Counsel: K. Curry (Plaintiff) P. Coady
(Defendant) Solicitors: Crown Solicitor (Plaintiff) Legal Aid
Commission (Defendant)
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File Number(s):
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2018/241016
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JUDGMENT
Introduction
- By
amended summons filed in court on 3 March 2020, the State of New South Wales
(the State) seeks by way of final relief an order
under ss 5B and 9 of the
Crimes (High Risk Offenders) Act 2006 (NSW) (The Act) that the
defendant, Mr Loto, be subject to an Extended Supervision Order
(“ESO”) for a period of 3 years from
the date on which the order is
pronounced. Under s 11 of the Act, the State also seeks an order directing Mr
Loto to comply with
the 45 conditions set out in the schedule annexed to the
amended summons. Other ancillary relief is also sought.
- For
reasons which are best explained by reference to Mr Loto’s custodial
history, the course of the present case has been somewhat
unusual for
proceedings of this type. The original summons was filed on 1 August 2018, two
months before the expiration of the sentence
imposed by Woodburne SC DCJ for the
serious violence offence of wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm
contrary to s 33(1)(a) of the Crimes Act 1900 (NSW) (the index
offence) expiring on 11 October 2018. This was within the last nine months of
his then current custody for the purpose
of s 6 of the Act.
- The
preliminary application for an interim supervision order (“ISO”) and
the appointment of experts under s 7(4) of the Act was heard by Rothman J on 12
September 2018. His Honour pronounced orders, including an ISO for a period of
28 days, on
11 October 2018.
- However,
Mr Loto was not released at the expiration of the head sentence for the index
offence, but remained in custody on remand
relating to a charge of affray which
arose on 25 February 2017 and a further charge of wounding while reckless as to
the causing
of actual bodily harm whilst in company contrary to the provisions
of s 35(3) Crimes Act 1900 occurring on 17 May 2017. Obviously
both of these offences were said to have occurred while Mr Loto was an offender
in custody in a correctional centre.
- The
affray charge was withdrawn at the commencement of the appointed trial on 23
July 2019.
- In
the meantime Mr Loto had been examined by Dr Andrew Ellis, forensic
psychologist, on 7 July 2019, his report to the Court bears
the same date, and
by Mr Patrick Sheehan, forensic pathologist on 11 July 2019, who’s report
to the Court bears that date.
Both these examinations took place pursuant to the
orders of Rothman J.
- An
expected final hearing before Button J on 1 August 2019 was adjourned because Mr
Loto remained in custody and was to be sentenced
by Ellis DCJ for the aggravated
s 35(3) offence to which he had entered a plea of guilty at his trial on 23 May
2019. By consent Button J made amendments to the conditions
of the ISO ordered
by Rothman J on 11 October 2018, and adjourned the proceedings.
- On
11 September 2019, Ellis DCJ sentenced Mr Loto to a term of imprisonment of 3
years and 7 months commencing on 19 February 2018
and expiring on 18 September
2021 with a non-parole period of 1 year and 7 months. The earliest date for Mr
Loto’s release
therefore was 18 September 2019, about 2 weeks later.
- Probably
because of the shortness of time available after sentence was passed, Mr Loto
was not released on parole until 26 November
2019 on a parole order made by the
State Parole Authority dated 14 November 2019.
- The
ISO pronounced by Rothman J had remained suspended under s 10C(1A) of the Act
during the period of Mr Loto’s lawful custody and accordingly did not
commence legal operation until after his release,
expiring 28 days from this
date. For reasons which are not fully explained, the ISO which was extended from
time to time as permitted
by s 10C(2) of the Act is said to have expired on 17
February 2020 (affidavit Kelli Grabham, affirmed 26 February 2020, at [18]),
rather than
25 February 2020. The latter date would represent the maximum
permitted extensions under the Act for successive ISO’s each
of 28 days,
but not exceeding a period of three months. When I heard the matter on 4 March
2020, Mr Loto was being supervised under
the parole order made on 14 November
2019, but, again, in somewhat unusual circumstances which it is necessary to
explain to deal
with a preliminary legal argument made on his
behalf.
Parole and supervision
- That
Mr Loto is on parole is relied on by Mr Coady of counsel, who appears for him,
for a number of different purposes. First, more
or less by way of a preliminary
point, Mr Coady submits that the Act does not apply to an offender under
supervision on parole; secondly,
he submitted that the parole conditions to
which Mr Loto is subject are such as to reduce any risk of him committing
another serious
offence to a level below that which would be unacceptable; and
thirdly, in the alternative, the conditions of parole engage the discretion
conferred by s 9(1)(b) of the Act, not to make an ESO but to dismiss the
State’s application. In a nutshell these were the
substantive issues
ventilated with greater elaboration at the hearing.
- Ms
K Curry of counsel, who appears for the State, joined issue on each of Mr
Coady’s three, principal points. She argued that
the first point was
untenable and contrary to express statutory language to be found both in the Act
and in the Crimes (Administration of Sentences) Act 1999 (NSW)
(“CASA”). With regard to the second issue, she argued that, looking
at the evidence as a whole, including Mr Loto’s
criminal history before
and after the index offence, he clearly poses an unacceptable risk within the
meaning of the statute. As
the evidence before me demonstrated that a person on
an ESO is subject to closer, more intensive supervision than a person subject
to
a parole order, Ms Curry argued that I ought to be satisfied to the statutory
high degree of probability that Mr Loto poses an
unacceptable risk of committing
another serious offence if not supervised under an ESO. Thirdly, it followed
that I should exercise
my discretion to make an ESO subject to the same
conditions as the ISO which has since lapsed.
- The
parole order authorising the release of Mr Loto made on 14 November 2019 was
subject to the standard conditions of parole required
by s 128 CASA (see clause
214 Crimes (Administration of Sentences) Regulation 2014 (NSW) (“CAS
Reg”)); the conditions as to supervision required by s 128C CASA
and clause 214A CAS Reg; and additional conditions under s 128(2) CASA requiring
electronic monitoring, attendance upon a psychologist employed by CSNSW and
conditions as to non-association and place
restriction (see 128A CASA).
- It
is apposite at this point to make reference to s 160A CASA which provides that
an offender’s obligation under a parole order
made in respect of a
sentence are suspended while the offender is subject to, relevantly for present
purposes, an extended supervision
order or an interim supervision order. That
this provision had legal effect during the period when Mr Loto was subject to
the ISO
and supervised by the ESO team within CSNSW after his release to parole
is not in question.
- Appreciating
that the ISO would expire before the final hearing of the application, Mr
Loto’s “parole conditions were
updated” (Grabham affidavit, at
[21]) by recording on them a series of “officer directions” (see
Annexure “B”,
Grabham affidavit). These officer directions were
based upon a condition of Mr Loto’s parole which is in the following
terms:
You must comply with any other reasonable directions from a community
corrections officer.
The series of “officer
directions” recorded on his parole conditions, and acknowledged by Mr Loto
in writing on 16 February
2020, were issued with the intent of bringing the
parole conditions into line with the more stringent ISO conditions. This
arrangement
effectively maintains the status quo pending this court’s
determination of the State’s application for an ESO: Grabham
affidavit, at
[21]-[22]. Mr Loto continues to be supervised by the ESO team and to consult the
Correction Services NSW (“CSNSW”)
psychologist, Dr Richard Parker.
Should the State’s application be refused or dismissed, Mr Loto’s
supervision will revert
to the original parole conditions, Dr Parker would not
be available as he is deployed only to offenders managed under the Act, the
ESO
team would no longer supervise him and he would revert to the supervision of Mt
Druitt Community Corrections. The supervision
available to general parolees is
much less intensive than the supervision available to offenders subject to an
ESO (Grabham affidavit,
[11]- [17]).
Preliminary point
- Mr
Coady’s essential point is that the Act should be construed as not
applying to offenders released from custody to supervision
on parole. His
starting point is the second reading speech for the Crimes (Serious Sex
Offenders) Bill 2006 (NSW), which was how the Act commenced its
legislative life. The Minister said:
One particular concern that is dealt with by this scheme relates to a handful of
high-risk, hard-core offenders who have not made
any attempt to rehabilitate
whilst in prison. These offenders make up a very small percentage of the prison
population, yet their
behaviour poses a very real threat to the public. These
concerns are compounded where the offender never qualifies for parole and
is
released at the end of their sentence totally unsupervised. The bill addresses
this problem by allowing this small group of high-risk
offenders to be placed on
extended supervision, or, in only the very worst cases, kept in custody. The
Department of Corrective Services
has advised that only a small number of
offenders would fall into this very high-risk category (NSW Legislative
Assembly Hansard and Papers, Wednesday 29 March 2006).
Mr Coady identified this as the purpose of the legislation
and, notwithstanding the changes made to the reach of the Act over the
last 14
years, argued that the same purpose continues today.
- By
reference to s 135 CASA he pointed out that the provisions governing the making
of a parole order directing the release of an offender
to the community by the
State Parole Authority overlapped with the relevant provisions of the Act
governing the making of ISOs and
ESOs. In particular, counsel relied upon the
centrality of the interests of the safety of the community: s 135(1). He also
referred
to s 135(2) which sets out the mandatory considerations to which the
State Parole Authority must have regard including: assessment
of risk; whether
parole addresses the risk of re-offending; and the risk involved in releasing an
offender at the end of his or her
sentence without a period of supervised
parole. It was submitted that the matters referred to in s 135(3) were much like
those (they
are not identical) the Court was required to consider under s 9(3)
of the Act. Counsel also referred to ss 169 to 172 CASA dealing
with the
sanctions available for breach of a parole, including revocation of parole.
Taking all these considerations together, Mr
Coady submitted as a matter of
necessary implication that the Act should be construed as not applying to
offenders supervised on
parole.
- Ms
Curry submitted that the Act and CASA should be given a harmonious operation
according to their respective terms. She laid particular
emphasis upon s 160A
CASA by which it may be said an ISO or ESO trumps the operation of a parole
order. Counsel made reference to
s 135(3)(i) which renders the consideration
that there is a pending application under the Act a mandatory consideration for
the State
Parole Authority when considering whether to make a parole order; and
s 135(7) which renders the possibility that an application
may in future be made
under the Act an irrelevant consideration.
- With
respect, Mr Coady’s argument is misconceived and I prefer the arguments
advanced by Ms Curry. From a consideration of the
terms of both the Act and
CASA, it is quite clear that they may be given a harmonious operation. To the
extent to which there may
be potential for inconsistency in their operation,
this potential is removed by the provisions of s 160A affording precedence to
the Act over CASA. Moreover, and perhaps more importantly for present purposes,
the express terms of the Act under which I am asked
to exercise power,
contemplate that the Court’s powers may be exercised in respect of a
person serving the balance of a term
of imprisonment in the community on parole.
S 5B of the Act is in the following terms:
The Supreme Court may make an order for the supervision in the community of a
person (an extended supervision order) if:
(a) the person is an offender who is serving (or who has served) a sentence of
imprisonment for a serious offence either in custody
or under supervision in the
community, and
(b) the person is a supervised offender (within the meaning of section 5I),
and
(c) an application for the order is made in accordance with section 5I, and
(d) the Supreme Court is satisfied to a high degree of probability that the
offender poses an unacceptable risk of committing another
serious offence if not
kept under supervision under the order. (my emphasis.)
S 5B
establishes statutory conditions which must be satisfied before the
Court’s power to make an ESO is engaged. The first
3 conditions,
paragraphs (a) – (c), are satisfied if the offender is, in the case of
paragraph (a), under supervision in the
community, or, in the case of paragraphs
(b) and (c), is a supervised offender. Under s 5I of the Act, inter alia, an
offender is
a supervised offender if he or she is serving a sentence of
imprisonment, including under supervision, for a serious offence when
the
application for an ESO is made. By s 5I(3) an offender is “taken to be
serving a sentence of imprisonment ... whether the
offender is in custody or on
release on parole.” S 9(3)(f) renders the level of an offender’s
compliance with any obligations
to which he or she has been subject while on
release on parole, a mandatory relevant consideration informing the exercise of
the
Court’s discretion to make an ESO. There is nothing to limit this
reference to parole to a past, expired period of parole.
- These
express terms of the Act and of CASA and their legislative context are surer
guides to the Act’s meaning and operation
than a focus on the purpose of
the Act derived not from those considerations but by reference to statements
made in the second reading
speech: Harrison v Melham (2008) 72 NSWLR 380;
[2008] NSWCA 67 at [14] (Spigelman CJ); and [158]-[162] (Mason P); Certain
Lloyd’s Underwriters Subscribing to Contract No IH00AAQS v Cross
(2012) 248 CLR 378; [2012] HCA 56 at [25].
- I
am well satisfied that the Court has the power to make an ESO if the conditions
established by s 5B are satisfied, and I am persuaded
by reference to the
matters set out in s 9(2) and (3) that the order should be made, notwithstanding
that Mr Loto is serving a sentence
of imprisonment under supervision in the
community on parole.
Unacceptable risk
- I
turn then to the merits of the State’s application. There is no issue in
this case that the conditions laid down by s 5
B (a) to (c), as
informed by the provisions of s 5I of the Act, are satisfied in this case. The
outstanding question is whether I
am satisfied to a high degree of probability
that Mr Loto poses an unacceptable risk of committing another serious offence if
not
kept under supervision under an ESO.
- The
test prescribed by s 5B(d) is familiar and well understood. The standard of
proof is satisfaction to a high degree of probability,
a more stringent standard
than that required by the ordinary civil standard of proof, but obviously not as
stringent as the requirements
of the criminal standard of proof.
- The
Court is required to make an evaluation of future probabilities in terms of the
assessment of the chance of an identified risk
materialising. The identified
risk is a risk of Mr Loto committing another serious violence offence if not
kept under an ESO.
- A
serious violence offence, the relevant category of serious offence applicable in
the present case, is defined by s 5A of the Act.
The primary definition,
amplified somewhat by s 5A(2A), is found in s 5A(1)(a)
... a serious indictable offence that is constituted by a person:
(a) engaging in conduct that causes the death of another person
or grievous bodily harm to another person, with the intention of
causing, or
while being reckless as to causing, the death of another person or grievous or
actual bodily harm to another person ...
- The
risk of Mr Loto committing another serious violence offence will be unacceptable
if it is more than trivial; real or substantial
having regard to the seriousness
of the consequences of its materialisation. A risk may be unacceptable even if
the risk of its materialisation
is not more likely than not: s 5D of the Act. In
determining whether the risk is unacceptable, an offender’s general right
to be at liberty (where it exists, and it does not in this case because of his
continuing sentence) is to be put to one side: Lynn v State of New
South Wales (2016) 91 NSWLR 636; [2016] NSWCA 57 at [44] (Beazley P), [127]
(Basten JA) and [148] (Gleeson JA).
The index offending
- The
index offence occurred on 1 April 2012. Mr Loto was then aged 20 and on parole
serving the balance of a term of 2 years and 6
months imprisonment imposed by
the District Court for an offence of robbery in company committed on 1 April
2010 when he was then
subject to a probation order imposed in the Childrens
Court for earlier similar offending which occurred on 17 June 2009.
- The
facts were found by Woodburne SC DCJ for the purpose of sentencing Mr Loto after
he was found guilty after trial of two offences
arising out of the same
incident. The first offence of robbery in company with wounding is the serious
violence offence which brings
Mr Loto within the scheme of the Act. The second
offence was one of wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm. In her
judgment
of 1 December 2014, her Honour summarised the facts as follows (Exhibit
SEJ-1, p. 53):
a young woman was having a backyard party at a house .... [Mr] Loto ... and a
number of other islander males were ... there. The
party came to an end at about
1 am at which time the partygoers left the premises and went out onto the road.
[Two witnesses said]
there was a group of males walking along a short distance
behind them. The group were being rowdy. The group included [Mr] Loto and
[his
co-accused].
When the group reached the shopping centre [the victim] was in the process of
conducting a patrol of the shopping centre. It is clear
that the group saw [the
victim] for Mr Loto walked over to him and without provocation punched [the
victim] to his face. This single
blow was of such force that it caused immediate
pain to [the victim]. He held his face in his hands, his hands filled with
blood,
he felt dizzy and gradually fell down to his knees. Mr Loto was swearing
at [the victim] for no apparent reason. Mr Loto pushed [the
victim] further down
and stomped on his head. Within seconds of Mr Loto punching [the victim] to the
face, [the co-accused] and a
number of other males, ran in and joined in the
attack repeatedly hitting, kicking and stomping on [the victim]. Many of the
blows
were directed at his head. There were at least 3 – 4 males who
attacked [the victim]. [The victim] described being like a football
passed
around and constantly being hit and kicked from 4 – 5
directions.
- The
victim was a security guard on duty at the shopping centre. He was uniformed,
had a torch and was unarmed. He was taken to hospital
by ambulance with a
fractured nose; a wound to his forehead; a tear partly separating his left ear
from the side of his face; a subarachnoid
haemorrhage which fortunately resolved
over a period of 3 – 4 weeks; and his eyes were blackened and swollen to
the point where
he was unable to open them for a period of time. He also had
bruising and grazing to his neck, shoulder and arm. He was hospitalised
for a
period of 5 days. The offenders stole the victims watch, wallet and mobile
phone.
- Her
Honour assessed the seriousness of the offending in the following terms (Exhibit
SEJ-1, p. 58):
It is clear that the offence is properly to be regarded as a serious one, even
though the offence may be considered to be less serious
than other offences that
might have been committed under the section, particularly had the wounding been
worse or the property stolen
of greater value. The features that, nevertheless,
marked the offence as a serious one, however, are particularly the number of
offenders
and the sustained nature of this attack.
...
The extent of injuries sustained by the victim of a s 33 offence is of great
significance in assessing the objective gravity of the
offence. However, the
objective gravity of a s 33 offence is not determined solely by consideration of
the injuries caused, with
all the circumstances of the offence being relevant.
The absence of planning and pre-meditation is relevant to objective gravity,
although this feature may be diminished (as a fact favouring the offender) given
the requisite intention for the s 33 offence. This
is expressly so where the
attack is sustained and there are opportunities for the offender to desist from
the attack but he does
not to do so. Likewise where the offender does not
voluntarily end the attack, but it is necessary for another person to pull him
away to protect the victim.
Her Honour made the following
assessment of objective seriousness (SEJ-1, p 60):
This was an attack upon an innocent citizen who was doing no more than abiding
by the law and attending to performance of his employment
duties. He did so at
night in circumstances where he had no protection in terms of a weapon or a
companion but was, as it transpired
that night, at the mercy of those, like the
offenders before the court, who chose to inflict the kind of violence that
undermines
not just the safety and security of the individual victim but that of
the community at large.
I regard each of the offences committed as serious examples of their kind for
the reasons I have identified.
Criminal record
- It
must be borne in mind that Mr Loto’s criminal record commences on 1 August
2008 when he was a 16 year old juvenile with an
offence of aggravated stealing.
The element of aggravation was constituted by the consideration that he was in
company with other
members of a group who went by the name Full Blood Islander,
or FBI. A probation order of 12 months duration was imposed, subject
to a
non-association condition.
- In
breach of the probation order, on 17 June 2009, Mr Loto committed the offence of
assault with intent to rob in company, which offending
took place at a McDonalds
takeaway. He was sentenced to community service.
- At
about 4 am on 1 April 2010, Mr Loto and 3 companions approached a male person
unknown to them. Striking up a conversation to lure
the victim into a sense of
false security, one of their number grabbed his bag and another punched him to
the ground where he was
punched and kicked before the assailants absconded. The
victim’s wallet and phone were stolen. All of the assailants including
Mr
Loto were intoxicated. He was sentenced by the District Court to a term of
imprisonment of 2 years and 6 months, with a non-parole
period of 1 year and 6
months. Mr Loto was on parole for this offending when he committed the index
offence.
- While
on remand for the index offence at Parklea Correctional Centre on 22 October
2014, Mr Loto was one of a group of inmates who
assaulted another. One of Mr
Loto’s companions struck the first blow. Even after the intervention of a
correctional officer,
Mr Loto approached the victim from behind and struck him
on the head with a sandwich press. While the victim was then slumped over
a
table, the defendant punched him in the head. A second offender joined in and a
third offender pulled the victim to the ground
before stomping on his head. A
fourth offender kicked the victim and the third offender again stomped on his
head. The victim suffered
a fracture to the base of his skull and a closed head
injury which was managed without surgery. It is important to bear in mind that
this offending occurred after Mr Loto had been convicted of the index offence by
the jury’s verdict and while he was awaiting
sentence.
- Further
offending occurred on 19 May 2017, again notwithstanding the interventions of
corrections officers seeking to protect the
victim. The victim was a fellow
inmate at the Mid-North Coast Correctional Centre. Mr Loto accused him of being
a member of an outlaw
motor cycle gang which the victim denied. Mr Loto punched
him, which apparently was a signal for his companions to join in the assault.
The victim was kicked and punched several times. The attack continued
notwithstanding the efforts of correctional officers to extract
the victim. He
may have been stabbed with a sharp object. He suffered lacerations to his head,
back, shoulders and right forearm
and multiple facial fractures of a significant
kind.
- This
was the offending for which he was sentenced by his Honour Judge Ellis on 13
September 2019. His Honour found that Mr Loto was
“slightly more
criminally responsible” than the two co-offenders his Honour had
previously sentenced. Mr Loto was sentenced
to a term of imprisonment, after a
10% discount for a late plea, of 3 years and 7 months, commencing on 19 February
2018 and expiring
on 18 September 2021. A non-parole period of 1 year and 7
months was imposed, expiring on 19 September 2019. As I have stated above,
this
is the sentence he is currently serving in the community on
parole.
Compliance with prison discipline
- In
addition to the offending which has occurred in custody, Mr Loto has committed a
number of breaches of prison discipline over the
years for which he has been
dealt with administratively under the CAS Reg.
- As
will be apparent from the narrative I have provided above relating to his
criminal record, all of his offending has occurred in
company. Indeed all of it
is gang related violence. When at liberty, as mentioned, he was a member of the
FBI gang, with whose members
he committed the offences I have described. Once in
custody he apparently fell out with other members of FBI and was instrumental
in
forming a break-away and rival group under the name Outcasts, whose members
referred to it by the initialism OC. Mr Loto has these
initials tattooed on his
eyelids.
- He
has given some differing explanations for his participation in this group. By
way of example, when questioned about the Outcasts
by Dr Andrew Ellis, one of
the Court appointed experts who provided an opinion in the application he
apparently explained (at Exhibit
A1, p. 9):
He described long-term hypervigilance and paroxysmal anger in response to
interpersonal conflict. He displayed transactional ideas
about violence,
indicating that it was normal within in a prison setting, normal within criminal
gangs and necessary for survival.
- The
second expert, Mr Patrick Sheehan (Exhibit B1, p. 15 at [34]), under the heading
Institutional Adjustment, recorded this explanation:
A common theme in Mr Loto’s institutional violence has been his philosophy
justifying violence as a legitimate and necessary
action in order to protect
himself and others, often citing “gaol politics”. This has allowed
him to reject any suggestion
that he is a violent person, but rather a victim of
circumstances in a hostile environment. He robustly defended these views during
interview and sees any other view as being based on ignorance of the reality of
gaol life.
- Mr
Loto’s breaches of discipline extend to substance abuse, non-compliance
with various aspects of prison discipline, weapons
and violence. He was not able
to achieve minimum security classifications during his long-time in prison. As
late as 24 November
2016 he received a formal warning regarding his potential to
be classified as an “extreme threat inmate”. He was designated
a
high security inmate on 4 June 2017. He had been placed on segregation for
numerous periods between 2010 and 2018. Paradoxically
at other times he has been
assessed as being well-behaved.
Involvement in offender
programs
- In
her risk assessment report of 6 February 2018 (Exhibit SEJ-1, p. 18-33) Dr
Calinda Lee Payne, forensic psychologist, described
the therapeutic programs in
which Mr Loto had participated while in custody.
- Dr
Payne expressed the view that “a high-risk offender” requires a high
intensity therapeutic program to address his or
her criminogenic needs. The
Violent Offenders Therapeutic Program (“VOTP”) conducted by CNSWS is
such a program. As at
the date of her report, Mr Loto had yet to complete the
course. Indeed, he never has. She recorded that he declined to consent to
referral to VOTP on four occasions during 2015. Although he was eligible and had
recently submitted a referral for the program (as
at 6 February 2018) he was
reluctant to participate lest the program extends beyond his sentence (p. 23 at
[25]). He had undertaken
the EQUIPS Aggression and the EQUIPS Addiction programs
and his participation in those programs was described as “mostly
excellent”
(p. 24 at [26]). However, Dr Payne described these programs as
lower intensity courses which target, but do not fully address Mr
Loto’s
criminogenic needs (p. 24 at [26]).
- He
had not been able to undertake the VOTP prior to his release on 26 November
2019. While under supervision he has been regularly
consulting with CSNSW
psychologist, Dr Parker. According to Mr Sheehan he had declined an offer of
participating in the course made
on 24 April 2018, but accepted another offer of
22 August 2018 (Exhibit B1, p. 18 at [40]). Mr Sheehan was prepared to accept
that
Mr Loto was not eligible for entry to the VOTP while he was on remand for
violence offences (p. 18 at [40]), on which he remained
until his plea of guilty
and sentence for the May 2017 offending by Ellis DCJ, a little over two months
before his release on parole.
- Both
Dr Ellis and Mr Sheehan have accepted that Mr Loto’s institutional
adjustment had greatly improved during 2019, with staff
recording that he had
become a positive influence and was respectful to staff, complying with
directions given to him (Exhibit B3,
p. 2 at [7]).
The Court
appointed expert reports
- Dr
Ellis and Mr Sheehan expressed strikingly similar views. Both record that Mr
Loto is of Samoan background, raised by his maternal
grandparents, whom he
initially believed were his parents. There was disruption in his family life as
his grandfather died when he
was only 5, and a favourite uncle who was a good
role model died when he was 13 years old.
- He
performed well enough at primary school and in his early years of high school,
although he rated himself as a below average student.
He had attended a Catholic
high school until the family experienced financial difficulty and he was sent to
the local public high
school at the end of Year 9. He seems to have immediately
run into trouble, falling in with delinquent peers and engaging in frequent
fighting. He was expelled during Year 10.
- He
was sexually abused by an older male relative at the age of 14 or 15. This
incident may have been responsible for aspects of post-traumatic
stress disorder
that both Dr Ellis and Mr Sheehan suspected on examination. Most significantly,
in my view, for present purposes,
each of Dr Ellis and Mr Sheehan diagnosed that
Mr Loto is suffering from an anti-social personality disorder. Dr Ellis thought
there
were aspects of psychopathy in his presentation. I interpolate that Dr
Payne came to the same conclusions as Dr Ellis (Exhibit ESJ-1,
p. 22 at [18]).
Having deployed various actuarial measures used for this purpose, accepting
their limitations and after considering
the whole of the information available
to him, Dr Ellis offered the following conclusion in his first report (Exhibit
A1, p. 13):
In considering structured professional and clinical parameters in the absence of
any treatment or supervision, Mr Loto would fall
into a group of persons with a
risk for violent offending that is statistically high in frequency with
potential for serious consequence
in his specific case, and more than a
theoretical average offender. Specific treatment and supervision would likely
reduce this risk.
- In
his first report, Mr Sheehan expressed the following conclusions having likewise
referred to statistical tools and the range of
clinical factors of which he was
made aware ( Exhibit B1, p. 28, [75]):
In my view the evidence supports a risk estimate in the high risk category of
violent offending relative to other adult male offenders.
The apparent
correlates of his violent offending remain seemingly unchanged. His repertoire
of coping responses remains limited,
his level of treatment exposure has been
inadequate to meet his needs, he maintains permissive beliefs about violence in
certain
situations and his post supervision plans remain comparable to previous
episodes of release. In my view there is little evidence
to support the
assumption that in the absence of intensive supervision Mr Loto would be capable
of independently establishing a lifestyle
that could protect against the type of
risk factors associated with his violence. What is not clear is to what extent
that the violence
would approach the threshold of a “serious violent
offence” as defined in [the Act]. In these cases, the extent of injury
in
an assault can be influenced by variables beyond that of the act of violence
itself (for instance the same punch thrown twice
may have different results),
which further reduces certainty as to the prediction of whether Mr Loto’s
future violence would
meet the criteria for a serious violence offence. However,
the recklessness of Mr Loto’s previous violence (such behaviours
as
stomping and kicking people in the head, stabbing), his tendency to go on with
assaults until interrupted, and his tendency to
assault in the company of
others, would all seem to add to the likelihood of a serious violence
offence.
- Due
to the unusual history of these proceedings which I have described above, Dr
Ellis and Mr Sheehan have been asked to provide additional
reports from time to
time commenting on developments and updated material. Both were asked to
re-examine Mr Loto in February 2020
in preparation for the final hearing. Dr
Ellis saw Mr Loto on 14 February 2020. He expressed his current opinion as
follows (Exhibit
A3, p. 4):
The [case notes] are unremarkable and show general positive response to
supervision. There is no new information in them or at interview
to change my
opinions regarding diagnosis. Although he did not express any anti-social
attitudes at this review, which is positive,
it is too early to conclude any
sustained change in personality function.
Similarly, he has shown positive adjustment to community living and supervision
thus far. This indicates an ability to comply with
the proposed conditions of an
ESO. At this point the positive adjustment is of too short a time to make
changes to my previous recommendations
regarding risk and management, giving the
longstanding pattern of prior behaviour.
- Mr
Sheehan re-interviewed Mr Loto on 20 February 2020. He expressed the following
conclusions (Exhibit B4, p. 3 at [8]):
Having reviewed the ... case notes up to 19 January 2020, the overall progress
has been favourable. There are further flattering
descriptions of Mr
Loto’s institutional behaviour. Such as this entry on 16 October 2019:
“Through my interactions with
Mr Loto when working in D Pod and lAT I have
been extremely impressed by his overall behaviour. He is always polite and
cooperative
with officers. He is approachable and serves as a link between
officers and other inmates, in particular ‘OC’ inmates.
He was
become a role model to not only for the other islander inmates but all the
inmates within the pod. I feel he has matured in
the past 12 months in
particular and is conscience (sic) of setting a good example for others to
follow”.
At [21] Mr Sheehan concluded:
The overall impression is that Mr Loto’s circumstances and behaviour have
continued to progress favourably since my initial
assessment some seven months
ago. The most significant step is that he has obtained release to parole and has
a period of almost
two years of supervision available to him. He is managed
intensively by the metropolitan extended supervision team. His parole order
manages factors of substance use and associations, which are the mainstay of Mr
Loto’s risk. All indications are that he is
compliant with supervision.
Under the circumstances, I cannot see how an ESO could add any value to his
management at this time.
That is, at this point I would view an ESO as not being
necessary to manage the risk of a serious violence offence, given the provision
of intensive supervision by CSNSW.
The information does not bring me to revise the overall risk assessment,
formulation or analysis of the type of violence Mr Loto
is at risk of
committing. Were Mr Loto to be re-assessed against the risk assessment measures,
it is likely that he would remain
in the high risk range, but with an early
trend of attenuating risk as he amasses more time free from aggressive behaviour
and substance
use.
- Mr
Sheehan gave oral evidence. It is clear that he regards the current regime as
providing appropriate supervision of Mr Loto. I formed
the view that he did not
have a full appreciation that Mr Loto is subject to what I would regard as a de
facto ESO which is unlikely
to continue for the reasons I have addressed above
if I decline to make an ESO. In that event, even if the conditions remained the
same, Mr Loto would revert to the much less intensive supervision of Community
Corrections. I did not understand Mr Sheehan to be
advocating this. Rather I
formed the impression that he was continuing to support the intensive ESO
regime, although he may have
ameliorated his views as to duration somewhat.
- It
is perhaps worthwhile interpolating now that for a long time, probably going
back to 2013 while he was in custody, Mr Loto has
had an interest in “hip
hop” or “rhythm and blues” music which he has pursued since
his release from custody.
He has made recordings at his cousin’s home and
some of these recordings have been published on social media and have been
well
received. In this context, Mr Sheehan offered the following opinion (Exhibit B4,
p. 6 at [24]):
Central to Mr Loto’s longer term risk forecast will be how he progresses
between now and September 2021. His perception of
himself as a reformed and
enlightened person is a valuable asset for change. Of concern is his ongoing
desire for gang association
and antisocial associates, currently prohibited by
supervision. He seeks recognition, respect and fame through the mantle of his
fearsome gaol persona, which is romanticised through his music. Transition away
from this identity is a key goal to be achieved prior
to supervision expiry. I
am unable to predict how this process will unfold over the following 18 months
and whether further supervision
would be indicated at parole
expiry.
Other risk assessments including statistical
evaluations.
- I
have already made reference to the report of Dr Payne of 6 February 2018. Dr
Payne referred to a previous assessment using the Level
of Service
Inventory-Revised actuarial risk assessment tool in 2014. She described the
LSI-R as an actuarial risk instrument that
provides an indication of a level of
risk of general violent recidivism within 12 months post release, and of an
individual’s
needs in terms of supervision in custody or on parole. But
also identifies criminogenic needs, which can be targeted in treatment
programs.
She pointed out it has limitations, however, in 2014 Mr Loto’s risk and
needs were assessed as falling within the
“Medium-High risk
category for general and violent offending” (Exhibit SEJ-1, p. 25 at
[30]).
- Dr
Payne carried out a detailed assessment of risk utilising the Violence Risk
Scale (VRS). She described this as (Exhibit SEJ-1,
p. 25 at
[31]):
...a conceptual actuarial risk assessment specifically developed to assess the
risk of violence for forensic clients, in particular,
those who are being
considered for release from institutions to the community after a period of
treatment. The VRS assesses both
static and dynamic risk factors to provide a
probability of an individual’s risk for violence; relevant treatment
targets and
areas of strength; and measures changes in risk level following
treatment.
- On
her application of the VRS, Dr Payne estimated Mr Loto’s risk of being
convicted of further violent offences as being within
the High risk range
(p. 25 at [32]). She said that a Canadian empirical study indicated that 44.5%
of offenders who obtained a score similar
to Mr Loto were convicted of a new
violent offence within 5 years after release to the community, “while
67.8% were criminally
convicted for a new non-violent offence within 5 years
after release. The mean reconviction rate for violent offenders in the sample
population was 31.26 percent within 5 years” (p. 25 at [32]).
- Dr
Payne pointed out that there are no Australian statistics for comparison but the
VRS has been adopted and is used in other Australian
jurisdictions and in New
Zealand. However, Dr Payne also noted that there are limitations in the
technique. In particular, the re-offending
considered in the VRS study was not
necessarily required to meet the criteria of serious violence offence defined by
the Act. Generally
she pointed out that recidivism rates specific to a serious
violence offence (eg homicide or causing grievous bodily harm) are known
to be
lower than that identified for general violent recidivism. Individuals with
multiple serious violence offences, in the opinion
of Dr Payne, must be
considered of greater concern. It is unnecessary for me to break down Dr
Payne’s detailed results. Of
particular concern, in my judgment, is her
finding (p. 28 at subpar (j)) in the following terms:
Mr Loto denies, minimises and justifies his offending but also brags about his
aggressive, intimidating and violent behaviour. It
seems that he recognises that
he uses violence as a mean [sic] to an end but doesn’t recognise that he
doesn’t have the
skills to get his needs met without violence. He has
refused (as at February 2018) to engage in intensive treatment to improve his
understanding of his offending.
I understood the opinions of Dr
Ellis and Mr Sheehan to be broadly consistent with this in as much as it is
their view that despite
the progress he seems to have made in recent months, Mr
Loto attempts to justify his violence in various unsatisfactory ways and
has not
really accepted responsibility for it.
- Reviewing
all of the material available to her, including the results produced by
application of the actuarial risk assessment tools,
Dr Payne was of the view
that “Mr Loto presents a high risk of further serious violent offending if
not made subject to an
order under [the Act]”(p. 31 at
[43]).
Risk management
- A
risk management report concerning Mr Loto was prepared on 9 March 2018 by Senior
Community Correction Officer Erin Kirkwood. The
plan was endorsed by Janelle
Farraway, the then High Risk Offender Applications and Operational Governance
Officer. Ms Kirkwood’s
affidavit affirmed on 19 July 2019 was also read.
Ms Kirkwood also became Mr Loto’s initial Departmental Supervising Officer
(DSO) for the ISO upon his release.
- Although
this evidence sets out in detail the plan for managing the risk Mr Loto presents
of committing another serious violence offence
no opinion is expressed as to the
likely success of the plan on implementation. It is implicit, however, in the
risk management report
(Exhibit SEJ-1, p. 34-51) and Ms Kirkwood’s
affidavit that her expectation is that the plan can be implemented and
represents
a reasonable and practicable plan for the management of Mr Loto.
- Ms
Kirkwood’s plan is the basis of the current conditions under which Mr Loto
has been managed successfully since his release
in November 2019. Despite some
limited degree of “push-back” on Mr Loto’s part, Ms
Grabham’s oral evidence
was to the effect that he has been compliant and
co-operative and has made appropriate progress.
- As
I have said, the current regime involves supervision and conditions covering:
reporting and monitoring obligations, the latter
including electronic monitoring
and the provision of a Schedule of Movements; approved accommodation; place and
travel restrictions;
requirements relating to employment and education;
prohibiting the use of illicit drugs, restricting alcohol consumption unless
approved
and providing for participation in rehabilitation programs;
non-association with intoxicated persons; prohibiting the use of firearms
or
weapons; limiting and monitoring access to the internet and other electronic
communications; submission to search and seizure
powers on the part of the ESO
team; prohibiting attempts to change his identity or appearance; and providing
for medical intervention
and treatment including psychological treatment with Dr
Parker, the CSNSW psychologist to whom reference has already been made.
- Additionally
implementation of and compliance with the regime is periodically reviewed by the
ESO team. Meetings are held to discuss
case management of offenders, their
progress, behaviour or difficulties and future supervision strategies. The
conditions confer
a degree of discretion on the DSO to enable flexible
application and easing of the closeness of supervision as an offender
demonstrates
compliance and the capacity to live in the community
“offence-free”. There is no suggestion that Mr Loto cannot be
managed
under this regime. The Court appointed experts, Dr Ellis and Mr Sheehan
regard this regime as appropriate for the management of the
risk posed by Mr
Loto.
Treatment or rehabilitation in custody
- As
I have already indicated, Mr Loto has not always been willing to take advantage
of all programs available to him to promote his
rehabilitation while in custody.
In particular, having regard to his criminogenic needs, he has not undertaken
the intensive VOTP
despite the opportunity having been afforded to him on a
number of occasions. I infer that when he finally indicated a willingness
to
undertake the course he was not suitable for it for various reasons including
pendency of the 2017 charges, and shortness of time
before his likely release on
parole later in his incarceration. On the other hand, he has undertaken less
intensive courses and during
his final 12 months in custody his conduct seemed
to have improved. Moreover, he has been compliant with the psychological
interventions
of Dr Parker. He seems to have benefited from them and is keen to
maintain them.
Other options
- As
I have said probably too often, Mr Loto has been released into the community by
the State Parole Authority under a parole order
subject to conditions of
supervision, place restriction and non-association. As I sought to explain
above, however, these conditions
have not really been implemented as they have
been superseded by the conditions of the ISO and the close supervision and
monitoring
provided by the ESO team. Even after the expiration of the ISO, he
has, in a de facto way, been subject to this more rigorous regime.
I accept the
evidence that if no ESO is made he will revert to the usual Community
Corrections Supervision. Even if in substance
the conditions are the same, the
supervision available will be much less intensive.
Likelihood of
compliance
- Mr
Loto has in the past a poor record of compliance with community based
supervision. As the narrative of his criminal history makes
clear,
notwithstanding probation orders by the Children’s Court and parole as an
adult he has breached those orders by committing
other offences of a quite
serious nature, including the index offence. This history, viewed in isolation,
is not promising.
- On
the other hand, these breaches occurred during late adolescence and early
adulthood. I am of course concerned that he continued
to offend while in
custody, and as recently as May 2017. However, as I have said more than once,
his conduct improved during the
last phase of his incarceration and he has been
compliant and co-operative with the ISO since his release on parole. Given the
availability
of intensive supervision, I regard it as likely that he will comply
with the obligations of an ESO. Given his record, I could not
put it higher than
that.
Criminal history
- I
have set out the relevant criminal history above. A clear pattern emerges from a
consideration of all of it together. That pattern
is well document in the risk
management report of Ms Kirkwood to which I have referred. My own impression of
it is a tendency to
engage in serious personal violence, sometimes involving the
use of improvised or makeshift weapons, in company, while intoxicated.
This
tendency has materialised into offending whether he is at liberty or in custody.
In no small measure this tendency underscores
his risk of
re-offending.
Views of the sentencing court
- I
have set out above Woodburne SC DCJ’S assessment of the nature and
seriousness of the index offending. Her Honour also said
(Exhibit SEJ-1; at p.
67-8):
The Community Corrections officer opined that the need for the offender to
participate in an intensive violence aggressive intervention
along with a drug
and alcohol program was imperative. I agree with this assessment. Mr Loto also
needs to be assisted in gaining
employment as soon as possible upon his release
so that he may do something constructive with the rest of his life.
I am unable in the circumstances to make a finding that the offender is
remorseful, that he has good prospects of rehabilitation
or that he is
[un]likely to reoffend. So much will depend on the choices Mr Loto makes from
this point on.
Mr Loto may be developing some maturity, as his mother says, this is a positive
sign, as is the fact he is resolving his relationship
with her. He has taken
partial responsibility for his actions even if he has attempted to minimise them
and attempted to deflect
blame to the victim.
Whether Mr Loto will be able to return to the community without reoffending
depends of course upon him developing some determination
to seek the assistance
he needs in dealing with the circumstances of his birth and upbringing, his
grief over the loss of his uncle
and the emotional impact of the offences
committed against him. It is fundamentally important that he addresses his
dependence upon
alcohol.
Further, although Mr Loto may not wish to seem himself in this way, the fact is
he is an aggressive and violent person, he alone
is responsible for that and he
needs to confront the attitude he has displayed in thinking that it is
acceptable conduct to punch
a person to the ground and to stomp on him and kick
him when he is down. Mr Loto is a powerfully built young man and it was cowardly
and brutish conduct to attack [the victim] as he did.
With great
respect, her Honour’s summation of these matters was indeed prescient.
Despite an apparently improved attitude in
the recent past, and good compliance
with the ISO since his release, it is difficult to be confident that the
barriers to rehabilitation
identified by her Honour in this passage will, even
yet, be easily overcome.
Other information
- Two
affidavits were read in Mr Loto’s case. The first affidavit is that of
Faafetai Tai Chown sworn on 9 December 2019. Ms Chown
is Mr Loto’s
birth-mother. It will be recalled that because of her youth when she gave birth
to Mr Loto, he was in fact raised
by her parents. She has a Certificate IV in
Youth Work and works as a community support worker with New Horizon Community
Justice
Program. She is accustomed to working with offenders during their
transition from custody to the community. Her work requires her
to liaise with
community corrections officers.
- She
lives near Mr Loto’s approved residence, the home of his grandmother. She
visits on a daily basis.
- She
is of the view that Mr Loto’s past offending and his alcohol abuse
difficulties are related to the sexual abuse he suffered
in his mid-teens.
- She
regards Mr Loto as more mature now and in their conversations he has expressed
pro-social attitudes to work, earning money and
contributing to society. She
regards him as more considerate and respectful than he was as a young adult. He
is helpful to family
members.
- She
believes that Mr Loto’s music is very important to him and will help him
to rehabilitate.
- The
second affidavit was affirmed by Langomi-e-Hau Latukefu on 2 March 2020. Mr
Latukefu appears to be an accomplished “hip
hop” musician. He is a
member of a performing group named Koolism who won an Aria award in 2014. He has
also been a “hip
hop” music broadcaster for a national radio station
during the last 12 years. He is something of a talent scout, mentoring
emerging
artists. He states that the market for “hip hop” music is
“diverse, global and lucrative” (affidavit,
at [4]). The emerging
trend in Australia is that “hip hop” music is being led by artists
of Pacific Islander heritage.
- He
first heard of Mr Loto’s music in 2018 (while the latter was still
incarcerated), through the members of another successful
musical group who spoke
highly of him. His music had some following on social media and through this Mr
Latukefu came to know of
Mr Loto’s background and that he was in
gaol.
- He
said that on first hearing his music he was struck by Mr Loto’s talent. He
regards him as a skilful singer and rapper. He
said that Mr Loto writes clever
lyrics and delivers them with passion and conviction. He played one of Mr
Loto’s songs on his
radio program in February 2019 and it was very well
received by his audience.
- He
has recently met Mr Loto and is aware that he was under an ISO. He said Mr Loto
was very open in speaking about that and his criminal
history. He gave Mr Loto
advice about how to pursue his music career and expressed the opinion that Mr
Loto has a lot of potential
in the music industry. Income can be generated by
uploading music onto digital platforms, live performance and the associated sale
of merchandise.
- He
regarded it as important that Mr Loto collaborate with more established artists
of a similar type.
- Much
of Mr Latukefu’s evidence suggests that it would be difficult for Mr Loto
to progress musically while subject to an ESO.
He points out that it’s
necessary to travel to gigs and to record. He may need to spend long hours in
recording studios. I
infer that performances and recording most commonly may
take place after dark, the latter because hire rates are likely to be cheaper
then.
- He
also expressed the view that a direction given to Mr Loto about the content of
his music inhibits his full musical expression of
his life experience, which I
infer from what he says is integral to “hip hop”. This restriction
apparently followed the
discovery of violently anti-authoritarian lyrics in Mr
Loto’s cell in 2013. The lyrics spoke of violence against corrections
officers. He was given a direction to desist from this behaviour. I interpolate
that notwithstanding that Mr Loto’s prison
offending occurred in disregard
of the authority of corrections officers, none of it seems to have been directed
at them. Mr Latukefu
is of the view that permitting Mr Loto to sing about his
life experience may be a vehicle enabling him to overcome his
“adversity”.
Unacceptable risk
- I
am satisfied to the requisite high degree of probability that Mr Loto poses an
unacceptable risk of committing another serious offence
if not kept under
supervision under an ESO.
- In
coming to this conclusion I rely upon the assessment made by Dr Payne, Dr Ellis
and Mr Sheehan. I fully appreciate that to the
extent to which they have relied
upon actuarial or statistical assessment tools, that approach has the
limitations each of them in
their own way acknowledge. In particular, I am
conscious of the consideration that no such test can possibly be a predictor of
a
person’s future behaviour. Nor need they be. Each is concerned with the
present assessment of the chance of the materialisation
of a risk in the future.
In that regard, I am satisfied that the Canadian empirical study to which Dr
Payne referred is sufficiently
apposite to have relevance in New South
Wales.
- I
fully accept that these actuarial tools are not well calibrated for assessment
of the risk of the commission of a serious violence
offence, as opposed to a
merely violent offence. However, I accept the assessment of Mr Sheehan that
having regard to the pattern
of Mr Loto’s past offending, including the
degree of violence involved and his proclivity for improvising a weapon, should
the risk materialise it is just as likely to involve the infliction of grievous
bodily harm, even if Mr Loto’s intention does
not rise above the intent of
causing actual bodily harm to another person. This is sufficient for the
definition in s 5A of the Act.
- I
have also had regard to the consideration that each of the experts agree that Mr
Loto meets the DSM-5 criteria for anti-social personality
disorder. And that Dr
Payne and Dr Ellis are of the view that his condition has characteristics of
psychopathy. Accepting that Dr
Ellis does not consider him to be “a
prototypical psychopath” (Exhibit A.1, p. 10), one cannot divorce this
aspect from
the diagnosis of PTSD which had an impact upon the development of
his personality “in a complex fashion” (Exhibit A1,
p. 10) and, of
course, the history of substance use disorder involving alcohol.
- Although
since his release Mr Loto appears to have progressed well, or at least
favourably, at this early stage, that progress may
say more about the
effectiveness of the level of intensive supervision to which he is subject than,
in my judgment, the achievement
of any real sustained change in Mr Loto. Having
said that, his progress may give some early cause for optimism in relation to
his
prognosis.
- Looking
at the pattern of his past offending in company, when intoxicated, involving
significant violence, extending to the improvisation
of weapons, and occurring
whilst on probation, on parole and in custody, in my judgment, it is too early
to be confident his risk
of violent re-offending has been reduced to acceptable
levels. It seems to me, just as Woodburne SC DCJ found in substance, he is
still
a person who has not fully accepted responsibility for his past offending which
must be a necessary pre-condition to rehabilitation.
As Dr Ellis said (Exhibit
A1, p. 12) Mr Loto continues to display “impoverished insight into his
propensity for violence”.
He still has a tendency to justify violence in
certain contexts and to minimise the seriousness of it, notwithstanding its
obvious
consequences. Dr Ellis was of the view, notwithstanding progress,
“it is too early to conclude any sustained change in personality
function” (Exhibit A3, p. 4). I share this view and accept that
evidence.
- I
accept Ms Chown’s evidence, and that his engagement with music, even if in
a genre I am unable to appreciate, is essentially
pro-social. However, these
considerations do not displace the other factors to which I have referred.
- To
the extent to which Mr Coady argues on the basis of Mr Sheehan’s opinion
that the risk can be adequately managed by the conditions
of parole, I am
unpersuaded. As I have said, I fully accept the evidence that supervision under
an ESO is much more intensive and
therefore much more protective of community
safety. I do not regard them as equivalent. I am not satisfied the risk he poses
would
be acceptable if he were managed only under the supervision provided to a
parolee by Community Corrections.
Should an order be
made?
- I
appreciate that under s 9(1) of the Act, I have the discretion to dismiss the
application. Mr Coady relies upon, for this purpose
also, Mr Sheehan’s
opinion that the current supervision under parole is adequately protective. As I
have explained I am not
of that view for the reasons I have already given.
Essentially Mr Sheehan’s evidence was that his current supervision is
appropriate.
However, as I have said more than once, this is not parole per
se, but a de facto ESO. In determining whether or not to make an ESO, I am
required by law to treat the safety of the community as the
paramount
consideration. For the reasons I have already rehearsed when assessing the
acceptability of the risk posed by Mr Loto and
having regard to the s 9(3)
mandatory considerations as I evaluate them, the only proper exercise of my
discretion is to determine
the State’s application by making the Extended
Supervision Order sought.
Conditions
- In
the circumstances of this case, there is no issue about the suitability, or
appropriateness of the conditions to which Mr Loto
was subject under the expired
ISO. Indeed, it’s part of the argument against the making of an ESO that
those very same conditions
are appropriate and available under his current
parole. I have already explained why I reject this argument. I will by order
direct
that Mr Loto comply with those same conditions under the
ESO.
Duration
- There
has been some debate about the appropriate duration of the order. The State
seeks an order of 3 years duration, rather than
the statutory maximum of 5
years. In their initial reports, Dr Ellis and Mr Sheehan thought that
appropriate. In his last report
Mr Sheehan by necessary implication has changed
his position (Exhibit B4). In light of the progress made and Mr Loto’s
apparent
compliance with supervision, in Mr Sheehan’s opinion it is likely
that there may be “an early trend of attenuating risk
as [Mr Loto] amasses
more time free from aggressive behaviour and substance use” (Exhibit B4,
p. 6 at [23]). In Mr Sheehan’s
view, further decisions can be made about
the need for supervision at the expiration of the period of parole. Dr Ellis has
not altered
his previously stated views about duration.
- As
Mr Loto remains a relatively young man, who has made progress under intensive
supervision and, if Mr Latukefu’s assessment
is correct, has some
prospects of success in the creative arts, I am of the view, comfortable in the
knowledge that a further application
may be made if Mr Loto backslides, or fails
to build on the early promise shown, during the currency of the current order,
that a
period of 2 years from the making of the order is an appropriate
term.
- I
wish to observe that I am unable to discern amongst any of the many conditions
to be imposed a condition which authorises the DSO
to control Mr Loto’s
thoughts or hinder his freedom of speech. Psychological therapy or counselling
are other matters. Violent
anti-authoritarianism is not unknown in the long
history of popular music and there is no evidence before me that, of itself, it
might lead Mr Loto to perpetrate further acts of violence. As I have said, his
violence in custody was directed towards other inmates,
rather than corrections
officers. Writing lyrics with violent content did not change that. Doubtless Mr
Loto may wish to reflect
upon the advisability of writing about violence.
Positive thoughts are more likely to promote his rehabilitation. He will no
doubt
wish to present himself in a positive and pro-social manner in his
interactions with CSNSW. In the end, they will be matters for
him.
Orders
- My
orders are:
- (1) Under s 5B
and s 9(1) of the Crimes (High Risk Offenders) Act 2006 (NSW),
Francis Loto is subject to an Extended Supervision Order for a period of 2 years
commencing on 13 March 2020 and expiring on 12 March
2022;
- (2) Under s 11
of the said Act, direct that Francis Loto comply with the conditions set out in
the Schedule to these orders for the
duration of the Extended Supervision
Order;
- (3) Order that
the reports of Dr Andrew Ellis and Mr Patrick Sheehan may be provided to
Corrective Services New South Wales, any agency
involved in Mr Loto’s
supervision under these orders and Mr Loto’s treating clinicians or health
care practitioners;
- (4) Access to
the Court’s file may not be granted to a non-party without the prior leave
of a Judge of the Court with prior
notice provided to the parties to allow them
an opportunity to be heard in respect of the application for
access.
**********
SCHEDULE OF CONDITIONS OF SUPERVISION
FRANCIS LOTO
Part A: Reporting and monitoring obligations
Monitoring and Reporting
- The
defendant must submit to the supervision of Corrective Services NSW
("CSNSW")
- The
defendant must report to the Department Supervising Officer ("DSO"), an
employee of CSNSW, a delegate of the Commissioner of CSNSW or any other person
supervising him as directed by the DSO.
- The
defendant must comply with any reasonable direction given by his DSO for the
enforcement and implementation of the Order or any
conditions of the Order.
Where a direction may conveniently be given in writing (or is required to be
given in writing), it may be
given electronically including by SMS or other
messaging service.
Electronic Monitoring
- The
defendant must wear electronic monitoring equipment as directed by the DSO or
any other person supervising him.
Schedule of Movements
- lf
directed, the defendant must provide a weekly plan (called a schedule of
movements) and this is to be provided 3 days before it
is due to start.
- lf
the defendant wants to change anything in his schedule of movements once it is
approved by his DSO, he must tell his DSO about
the change 24 hours in advance,
unless the DSO approves a shorter period.
- The
defendant must not deviate from his approved schedule of movements except in an
emergency.
- The
defendant must truthfully answer questions from his DSO, or any other
person
supervising him, about where he is, where he is going and
what he is doing.
Part B: Accommodation
- The
defendant must live at an address approved by his DSO. The DSO will not withhold
approval for an address except where the DSO,
on reasonable grounds, determines
that the address would pose an increased risk of the defendant committing a
serious offence.
- The
defendant must be at his approved address between 10:00pm and 6:00am unless
other arrangements are approved by his DSO.
- The
defendant must allow his DSO or any other person supervising him to visit him at
his approved address at any time and, for that
purpose, to enter the premises at
that address.
- The
defendant must not spend the night anywhere other than his approved address or
any alternative approved address without first
obtaining the approval of his
DSO. lf, prior to spending the night at a place other than the approved address,
the defendant makes
genuine attempts to make contact with his DSO which are
unsuccessful, he must inform his DSO within 24 hours after spending the night
elsewhere.
- The
defendant must promptly notify his DSO of any visitor entering and remaining at
his approved address and must not permit any person
to stay overnight at his
approved address (other than persons who ordinarily reside at his approved
address), to the extent he is
lawfully able to exclude that person or persons
from the residence, without the prior approval of his DSO.
Part
C: Place and travel restrictions
- The
defendant must not leave New South Wales without the approval of the
Commissioner of CSNSW.
- The
defendant must surrender any passports held by the defendant to the Commissioner
of CSNSW.
- The
defendant must not go to a place if his DSO tells him he cannot go
there
Part D: Employment and education
- lf
the defendant is unemployed, the defendant must make take all reasonable steps
to make himself available for employment, education,
training or participation
in a personal development program as directed by the DSO.
- The
defendant must give his DSO at least 4 working days notice before commencing any
paid employment or volunteer work and comply
with any reasonable written
direction from his DSO not to engage in particular employment or categories of
employment or volunteer
work.
Part E: Drugs, alcohol and
rehabilitation programs
- The
defendant must not:
- (a) possess or
supply alcohol to other persons without the prior approval of his DSO;
- (b) possess,
use or supply 'prohibited drugs' (as that term is defined in the Drug Misuse
and Trafficking Act 1985); or
- (c) possess, or
use prescription medication other than as prescribed.
- The
defendant must not consume alcohol without the prior approval of his DSO.
- The
defendant must submit to testing for drugs and alcohol as directed by his
DSO
- The
defendant must not enter ‘licensed premises' (as that term is defined in
the Liquor Act 2007) including licensed hotels and bars, but excluding
cafes or restaurants, without the prior approval of his DSO.
- The
defendant must attend and participate in programs and courses for drug and
alcohol rehabilitation, and/or violence and anger management,
as reasonably
directed by his DSO, and must not discharge himself from such programs and
courses without the prior approval of his
DSO.
Part F:
Non-association
- The
defendant must not associate with people that his DSO tells him not to.
- The
defendant must not:
- (a) knowingly
associate with any people who are consuming or under the influence of alcohol
without the prior approval of his DSO
or notification to his DSO as soon as he
becomes aware that a person he is associating with is consuming alcohol; or
- (b) knowingly
associate with any people who are consuming or under the influence of
'prohibited drugs' (as the term is defined in
the Drug Misuse and Trafficking
Act 1985).
Part G: Weapons
- The
defendant must not possess or use any firearm within the meaning of s.4 of the
Firearms Act 1996 or prohibited weapon as defined in s.4 and Schedule 1
of the Weapons Prohibition Act 1998.
Part H: Access to the
internet and other electronic communication
- The
defendant must give his DSO a list of all devices, services and applications he
uses to communicate with (including that used
for interned based
communications). This includes phones, tablet devices, data storage devices or
computers ("Devices"). This includes the details of telephone numbers,
service provider account numbers, email addresses or other user names and
relevant
passwords and codes, used by the defendant and the nature and details
of the internet connection, as directed.
- The
DSO (or any other person requested by the DSO) may remotely inspect any internet
account used by the defendant for communication,
including the defendant's email
addresses, in monitoring compliance with this order.
- The
defendant must allow his telephone and/or internet service provider to share
information about his accounts with his DSO.
- The
defendant must provide a list of communication devices and data storage devices
in the defendant's possession and advise the DSO
of any change to the inventory
immediately.
- The
defendant must obey any reasonable directions by his DSO about the use of
Devices including, but not limited to:
- (a) the manner
of communications via the internet or internet based messaging
applications;
- (b) producing
his Devices if requested to do so by his DSO for inspection;
- (c) prohibiting
the defendant deleting records on Devices regarding website access, text
messages sent and received emails sent and
received; and
- (d) submitting
to the seizure of the Device
Part I: Search and
seizure
- lf
the DSO reasonably believes that a search(of the type referred to in sub
paragraphs d to g below) is necessary:
- (a) for the
safety and welfare of residents or staff or persons present at the defendant's
approved address;
- (b) to monitor
the defendant's compliance with this order; or
- (c) because the
DSO reasonably suspects the defendant of behaviour or conduct associated with an
increased risk of the defendant committing
a serious
offence.
then the DSO may direct, and the defendant must
submit to:
(d) search and inspection of any part of, or any thing in, the defendant's
approved address;
(e) search and inspection of any part of, or any thing in, any vehicle owned,
hired by or under the control of the defendant;
(f) search and inspection of any part of, or any thing in, any storage facility,
including a garage, locker or commercial facility
owned, hired by or under the
control of the defendant; and/or
(g) search and examination of his person.
- For
the purposes of the above condition:
- (a) a search of
the defendant means a garment search or a pat-down search.
- (b) to the
extent practicable a pat-down search will be conducted by a DSO of the same sex
as the defendant, or by an Officer of CSNSW
of the same sex as the defendant
under the direction of the DSO.
NOTE:
"Garment search" means a search of any article of clothing worn by the
defendant or in the defendant's possession, where the article of clothing
is
touched or removed from the person's body.
"Pat-down search" means a search of a person where the person's
clothed body is touched.
- During
a search carried out pursuant to condition 32 above, the defendant must allow
the DSO (or any other person requested by the
DSO) to seize anything found,
whether in the defendant's possession or not, which the DSO reasonably
suspects:
- (a) will
compromise the safety of residents or of staff at the defendant's approved
address;
- (b) will
compromise the welfare or safety of any member of the public or any other
person; or
- (c) will
compromise the defendant's compliance with this order; or
- (d) relates to
behaviour or conduct associated with an increased risk of the defendant
committing a serious offence.
- The
defendant must not attempt to destroy or interfere with any object that is the
subject of a search or seizure, carried out pursuant
to conditions 32 to 34
above.
Part J: Personal details and appearance
- The
defendant must not change his name from "Francis Loto" or use any other
name or change his appearance such that his visual appearance changes
significantly, without advising his DSO of
his intentions.
- The
defendant must not use any alias, log-in name, a name other than "Francis
Loto" or any other name approved by his DSO, or use any email address other
than those known to the DSO under condition 27 above, on any
internet site
(including social networking sites), any online communication applications or
any third party sites or applications
that requires the user to have a user
identification name or log-in email.
- The
defendant must let CSNSW photograph him when reasonably directed to do.
- lf
the defendant changes the details of any current form of identification or
obtains further forms of identification, he must provide
the DSO with such
details within 7 days.
Part K: Medical intervention and
treatment
- The
defendant must notify his DSO of the identity and address of any healthcare
practitioner that he consults.
- The
defendant must attend all psychological and psychiatric assessments, therapy,
support and treatment that his DSO tells him to
attend, unless he provides a
reasonable excuse to his DSO for non-attendance.
- lf
the defendant knowingly ceases to take any mental health medication that has
been prescribed, either on a temporary or permanent
basis, the defendant is to
notify his DSO within 24 hours of ceasing to take the medication.
- The
defendant must agree to any treating psychologists, psychiatrists, counsellors
or other mental health specialists and his general
practitioner sharing reports
on his progress with each other as considered appropriate by his treating
medical practitioners, counsellors
or other mental health specialists for the
defendant's rehabilitation and/or risk-mitigation in relation to a serious
offence.
- The
defendant must agree to his healthcare practitioners sharing information with
his DSO as to the fact of his attendance at appointments
and his overall
progress in therapy or counselling including the practitioner's general opinion
as to his development of insight
into offending risk factors, substance abuse
and to reduce his risk of offending.
- The
defendant must agree to any information being shared between those agencies that
are involve in his supervision including, but
not limited to, his DSO and
CSNSW.
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