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High Court of New Zealand Decisions |
Last Updated: 25 November 2015
This case has been anonymized
IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND CHRISTCHURCH REGISTRY
CRI 2009-442-000001
F
v
POLICE
Hearing: 14 January 2009
Counsel: R Ord for Appellant
T J Mackenzie and H McKenzie for Respondent
Judgment: 14 January 2009
JUDGMENT OF FOGARTY J
[1] This is an appeal against a refusal of bail. The appellant is facing three burglary charges and an offence of theft from a car. This arises out of what the police described as a “spree of offending”, at the end of December last. On
21 December he is charged with going to a bar and restaurant in Nelson and
using a screwdriver to open a larger chiller and remove
some soft drink, and a
week later going to a pizza restaurant, prying open a door and attempting, with
an associate, to open a safe;
on 29 December, reaching through a broken window
of a car and removing a camera; and then finally, on 30 December he is charged
with gaining entry to a chiller and taking a further two boxes of soft
drink.
[2] Mr Ord has indicated he will seek to characterise the first and
last of those burglaries as relatively minor, gaining entry
to chillers to get
two boxes of soft drink.
F V POLICE HC CHCH CRI 2009-442-000001 14 January 2009
But that cannot be said of the charge of attempting to open the safe at the
pizza restaurant. It would appear very likely that the
appellant will plead
guilty as one of the grounds for this appeal is that he is co-operating with the
police.
[3] He has unfortunately a reasonably significant criminal history. It
does appear likely to me that he will receive a sentence
of some form of
detention. It will either be prison or home detention. But on these facts it
will certainly not be simply community
work.
[4] The Justice of the Peace who refused bail relied principally on the
fact that there is a continuing risk that he will offend
while on bail. The
law has been amended to remove the standard in the Bail Act 2000 which removed
the standard of “real and significant” as a qualification to
risk, leaving the language of the statue “where there is a
risk”. That is clearly lowering the threshold and obviously reflects
an intention of Parliament for the criterion in s 8(1)(a)(iii)
to trigger at a
lower threshold of risk. Of course it does not follow that simply because that
threshold triggers that a person
will be refused bail. However, it will follow
that the Court must take that risk into account and also of course go on to
consider
all the other criterion that the Court must take into account under s
8(1)(a) and may take into account under subs (2).
[5] I am in no doubt that the Justice was right to say on these facts that there is a risk that the defendant may offend while on bail. I do not think there is any significant risk that he would fail to appear in Court or would interfere with the witnesses or evidence and I would go so far as to say there is no risk of either of these two criteria. Moving on to subs (2) he is, however, charged with three burglary offences, one of which is quite serious. The police appear to have a strong case and it is highly likely that he will plead guilty. He is likely to be sentenced to some form of detention, whether imprisonment or home detention. He has a past criminal history which is deplorable although Mr Ord says it is some years since he has been charged with dishonesty offending. This matter can come to a hearing quickly if a plea of guilty is entered, as I anticipate it will be from hearing counsel, and I envisage then that in the usual way he will receive credit for the time he has spent in prison pending the entering of convictions.
[6] Having considered these matters I am of the view that the decision
refusing bail should not be disturbed. The appeal is
dismissed.
Solicitors:
R Ord, Nelson, for Appellant
Raymond Donnelly & Co, Christchurch, for Respondent
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URL: http://www.nzlii.org/nz/cases/NZHC/2009/2.html