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R v Li [2020] NZHC 3419 (18 December 2020)

Last Updated: 18 December 2020


IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND AUCKLAND REGISTRY
I TE KŌTI MATUA O AOTEAROA TĀMAKI MAKAURAU ROHE
CRI-2019-090-3465
[2020] NZHC 3419
THE QUEEN
v
MANCHAO LI

Date of hearing:
18 December 2020
Appearances:
N R Webby for the Crown
SNB Wimsett and A O Graham for Mr Li
Date of sentence:
18 December 2020


SENTENCING NOTES OF JAGOSE J




















Counsel/Solicitors:

R M Mansfield Barrister, Auckland SNB Wimsett Barrister, Auckland

Meredith Connell, Crown Solicitor, Auckland



R v LI [2020] NZHC 3419 [18 December 2020]

I am not bound to accept a version of facts most favourable to you.4




1 Crimes Act 1961, s 167 and 172. Maximum period of imprisonment: for life.

2 Family Violence Act 2018, s 112. Maximum period of imprisonment: 3 years.

3 Sentencing Act 2002, s 24(1)(b).

4 Section 24(1)(a); Edwardson v R [2017] NZCA 618 at [105]–[107].

5 Section 102(1).

6 Section 103(2).

7 Section 104(1).

8 Parole Act 2002, s 7.

9 Section 29(4)(b).

Background

10 ZY v ML [2013] NZFC 625.

11 ZY v ML [2014] NZFC 4221.

12 Lu v Huang [2016] NZHC 2311. The judgments were anonymised to avoid identifying Ms Yang as a vulnerable person, as subject of a protection order: Property (Relationships) Act 1976, s 35A and Family Courts Act 1980, ss 11B–11D.

Ms Yang, you were “willing to be dishonestly manipulative so as to avoid having to account to [her] for her relationship property entitlement”. He noted your apology and your observation you had then been “stupid”.13 It is unclear if, in the judge saying “[you] must be careful not to make the same mistakes again”, the judge was recording your own caution, or instead was cautioning you. Either way, you have not been cautious.

13 At [119] and n 21.

went to some lengths to improve her security at home and work as they realised the increasing seriousness of your risk to her.

(a) a worker on a nearby construction site, his and his workmates’ attention drawn by Ms Yang’s screams, saw you attacking her using your whole body with “a lot of power, a lot of force”. He thought you hit her twelve times in under a minute as she continued to scream “stop” and “help”, holding her arms out defensively in front of her. He said, once you stopped hitting her, “everything went silent, the body went limp and even the construction site [fell] silent”, and you “strutted” away, giving him the impression you had “done something ... like [you were] proud of yourself”;

(b) a man driving past the bus stop on his way to work initially thought he was seeing a bullying incident between older and younger school children. Stopping to intervene and hearing Ms Yang scream “no,

don’t” or “stop”, he realised it was you, holding the smaller Ms Yang at the back of her head with one hand, as you hit her with the other and she was trying to scramble up and away. He described your “multiple strikes” meeting no resistance: “she had no guard up[;] she was just getting wasted”. You were dismissive of his challenge to you; and

(c) a young boy on his way to school walked past Ms Yang at the bus stop, and then past you on your way down the hill to her. Almost at the top of the hill, he heard screaming and looked back to see Ms Yang lying on the grass, and you “punching her in the stomach from the top”. He said he was “so scared” he just continued to walk away.


The witnesses described Ms Yang’s screams as being of “terror”, “fearful, scared, shrill, loud, scary”. They all thought you were punching Ms Yang, because you held the knife concealed within the black plastic bag. Its blade mostly initially penetrated her dark clothing, with the result little damage or injury immediately was apparent. The driver who stopped heard Ms Yang groan when you released your hold of her. He was an experienced lifeguard. On his initial glimpse, he thought Ms Yang only was concussed with a bloodied nose.

Victim impact statement








14 R v Li [2020] NZHC 2844 at [16].

Personal circumstances

Approach to sentencing

... address features of an offence that aggravate its seriousness or point to a need for community protection. Mitigating factors can and do offset these features when setting a minimum period, but the fact remains that the statutory criteria for a minimum period do not include the full set of sentencing purposes and principles that apply when a determinate sentence is being fixed.


Thus “favourable personal circumstances” have limited mitigatory weight in sentencing for murder.26

15 R v Puru [1984] NZCA 13; [1984] 1 NZLR 248 (CA) at 249.

16 Sentencing Act 2002, ss 7 and 8. 17 Sections 7(1)(a) and 103(2)(a). 18 Sections 7(1)(e) and 103(2)(b). 19 Sections 7(1)(f) and 103(2)(c). 20 Sections 7(1)(g) and 103(2)(d).

21 Section 8(a), (b) and (f).

22 Section 8(e).

23 Section 8(h).

  1. Moses v R [2020] NZCA 296 at [4], citing Hessell v R [2010] NZSC 135, [2011] 1 NZLR 607 at [37].

25 Malik v R [2015] NZCA 597 at [28].

26 Brown v R [2011] NZCA 95 at [18], citing R v Walsh (2005) 21 CRNZ 946 (CA) at [28].

Your murder sentence

—life imprisonment?



27 Sentencing Act 2002, s 102.

28 Section 103.

29 Malik v R [2015] NZCA 597 at [29].

30 Sentencing Act 2002, s 104.

31 Sentencing Act 2002, s 102(1).

  1. Davis v R [2019] NZCA 40 at [25], restating the traditional two-stage approach to sentencing for murder in R v Williams [2004] NZCA 328; [2005] 2 NZLR 506 (CA).

33 R v Bell CA80/03, 7 August 2003, [2003] BCL 886 at [7].

34 R v Paul CA496/05, 1 August 2006, [2006] BCL 820 at [27].

35 Preston v R [2016] NZCA 568, [2017] 2 NZLR 358 at [158]–[160].

36 R v Rapira [2003] NZCA 217; [2003] 3 NZLR 794 (CA) at [121]; and R v Cunnard [2014] NZCA 138 at [33].

assessment of that justification, in light of sentencing’s purposes and principles.37 The necessary injustice must be clear; life imprisonment only is to be displaced in exceptional cases.38

—your culpability

(1) your use of actual violence; (2) your use of a weapon; (3) your attack to Ms Yang’s vital organs; (4) in the context of family violence; (5) committed while subject to a protection order; (6) against the very person it was to protect; (7) carried out with a high level of cruelty and brutality; (8) as the product of your extensive planning; (9) on a particularly vulnerable person; and (10) with the loss of her life.

37 R v Rapira, above n 36, at [121].

38 At [121].

39 R v Cunnard, above n 36, at [15].

40 R v Rapira, above n 36, at [121]; R v Wihongi [2011] NZCA 592, [2012] 1 NZLR 775, at [93];

Hamidzadeh v R [2012] NZCA 550, [2013] 1 NZLR 369 at [55].

41 R v Law (2002) 19 CRNZ 500 (HC).

42 R v Wihongi, above n 40. See also R v Rihia [2012] NZHC 2720.

43 R v Cunnard, above n 36, at [16].

44 Sentencing Act 2002, s 9.

(a) although they had the added aggravated fact of unlawful entry into a dwelling place under a protection order, your similar invasions of Ms Yang’s and her son’s privacy in your campaign against her for over a decade, and your stalking her in and around her home, also while subject to a protection order, do not materially distinguish them;

(b) your killing of Ms Yang was comparably brutal, and callous in your indifference to her suffering, as illustrated by your dismissive response to the man who challenged you and your self-confident departure from the scene, leaving behind the fatally-injured Ms Yang to die;

(c) you planned this attack, designed to avoid prior detection and take Ms Yang by surprise. Your actions were not ‘in the moment’ or impulsive, but the product of your careful, deliberate and extended



45 Beazley v R [2020] NZCA 65 (Sentencing Act 2002, s 104(1)(b), (c), (e), and (g): 17 years); Momoisea v R [2019] NZCA 528 (s 104(1)(c) and (d): 17 years); Singh v R [2019] NZCA 436 (s 104(1)(b), (c) and (e): 19 years); Kaur v R [2017] NZCA 465 (s 104(1)(b) and (e): 17 years); Christison v R [2017] NZCA 168 (s 104(1)(b), (c) and (e): 17 years); Akash v R [2017] NZCA 122 (s 104(1)(e): 17 years); Preston v R, above n 35 (s 104(1)(b), (c) and (e): 19 years); Singh v R [2016] NZCA 582 (s 104(1)(b) and (c): 16 years); Blake v R [2016] NZCA 82 (s 104(1)(e): 17 years); Dawood v R [2013] NZCA 381 (s 104(1)(b) and (e): 17 years); Hamidzadeh v R, above n 40 (s 104(1)(e): 15 years and 6 months); Thurgood v R [2012] NZCA 23 (s 104(1)(b), (c) and (e): 19 years); Wallace v R [2010] NZCA 46 (s 104(1)(d) and (e): 18 years).

planning. Those plans included your expectation of arrest, and your reliance on your mental health as exculpatory;

(d) you took Ms Yang down from behind, tackling her to the ground. It was a “blindside attack” leaving Ms Yang no chance to protect herself,46 even if her initial scream indicated she comprehended her peril. Under the protection order, she additionally was entitled to consider herself not at risk to attack from you.47 Overall, in all her relevant circumstances, she was particularly vulnerable.48

The presence of those s 104(b), (e), and (g) factors means a non-parole period of at least 17 years is required to meet the statutory purposes. Appellate guidance is to the effect that extensively planned, brutal, family violence resulting in murder supports a starting point in the range of 18–20 years.49

46 Vea v R [2020] NZCA 68 at [14]–[15].

47 Singh v R, above n 45, at [24].

48 Marong v R [2020] NZCA 179 at [35].

  1. Christison v R, above n 45, at [34]–[35], citing cases referred to in R v Gottermeyer [2014] NZCA 205 at [80]–[81] and, in particular, Dawood v R, above n 45, and Thurgood v R, above n 45.
a reasonable understanding of your illness, and a history of seeking help from mental health services when acutely unwell. He doubts your erratic compliance with your medication’s administration could have caused you to suffer from any psychosis or delusion. Instead he identifies that which has become obvious to those who know you: irrespective of any depressive interlude, you narcissistically manipulate people and circumstances in pursuit of your perceived entitlement. He observed you lacked any true remorse for Ms Yang’s death.

Breach of protection order



  1. Hamidzadeh v R, above n 40, at [86], citing R v Williams, above n 32, and R v Parrish [2003] NZCA 290; (2003) 21 CRNZ 571 (CA).

51 Davis v R, above n 32, at [30].

52 Beazley v R, above n 45, at [33].

53 Family Violence Act 2018, s 112(3).

contextual”.54 Prior convictions for such breaches are “integral to the assessment of the gravity of the index offending”.55

[T]he murder of a protected person by the person against whom a protection order has been made is particularly exacerbating. Where a defendant has deliberately and fatally flouted Court orders made specifically to protect the victim from him ..., there is a particular need for strong messages of denunciation and deterrence.


54 Pahulu v Police [2020] NZHC 153 at [29], citing Jackson v Police [2019] NZHC 281 at [41].

55 Jackson, above n 54, at [43], citing Mitchell v R [2013] NZCA 583, (2013) 29 FRNZ 498 at [12].

56 Singh v R, above n 45, at [24].

57 Sentencing Act 2002, s 110.

58 Section 8(c).

59 R v Lata [2018] NZCA 615 at [42].

or mental health. Any concerns for double-counting or totality are addressed by the sentence’s necessary concurrency with your life sentence for Ms Yang’s murder.60

Sentence

(a) on the charge of murder, I sentence you to life imprisonment, with a minimum non-parole period of 19 years;

(b) on the charge of breaching a protection order, I sentence you to three years’ imprisonment, to be served concurrently.


You may stand down.

—Jagose J


































60 Singh v R, above n 45, upholding R v Singh [2014] NZHC 1246 at [20].


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