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High Court of New Zealand Decisions |
Last Updated: 26 August 2014
IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND TAURANGA REGISTRY
CRI-2011-070-7563
CRI-2012-070-1397 [2014] NZHC 1734
THE QUEEN
v
GARY JOHN READ
Hearing:
|
24 July 2014
|
Appearances:
|
TP Refoy-Butler for Crown
SNB Wimsett for Prisoner, on instructions from P Mabey QC
|
Re-sentence:
|
24 July 2014
|
RE-SENTENCING NOTES OF TOOGOOD
J
R v READ [2014] NZHC 1734 [24 July 2014]
[1] Mr Read: you may sit down. Although we have gone through a
ritual as though you were being re-sentenced on all charges,
that is not the way
I propose to deal with this.
[2] I am sorry you have been inconvenienced by being brought here but,
as you know, it is necessary for me to correct the error
in your original
sentence to avoid causing you an injustice. I need to explain why that
is.
[3] On 9 August 2013, I sentenced you to terms of imprisonment on 70 counts of importing pseudoephedrine and other drug dealing and related offences.1 The total effective end sentence of 11 years’ imprisonment was made up of a combination of cumulative and concurrent sentences. On the importation charges, I sentenced you to eight years’ imprisonment on each charge, to be served concurrently; I directed that you should serve a minimum period of five years and three months’
imprisonment on those charges before being eligible for parole. I also
sentenced you to three years’ imprisonment on one
count of
possessing methamphetamine for supply.
[4] However you pointed out, to your credit, that the effect
of the relevant provisions of the Parole Act is that
the statutory minimum
period of one third of your sentence on the methamphetamine charge must be added
to the minimum period I imposed
on the importation charges.2 That
means that, on the basis of the sentences imposed last year, you will have to
serve a year longer than I intended before you
become eligible for
parole.
[5] On 15 July 2014, at the joint request of your counsel, Mr Mabey QC, and counsel for the Crown, Mr Jenson, I issued a judgment acknowledging that it was necessary for me to correct the error in the original sentence by reducing the
minimum period of imprisonment on the importation
charges.3
1 R v Read [2013] NZHC 2005.
2 Parole Act 2002, ss 20(1) and 84(1).
3 R v Read [2014] NZHC 1651.
Orders
[6] Mr Read, will you please stand.
[7] Exercising the Court’s inherent jurisdiction, and its implied jurisdiction under the Sentencing Act 2002, I recall the order I made on 9 August 2013 that you should serve a minimum period of imprisonment of five years three months on the charges of importing pseudoephedrine. In place of that order, I direct that you shall serve a minimum period of imprisonment of four years and three months on each of the
70 counts of importing pseudoephedrine on which you were sentenced to eight
years’
imprisonment.
[8] The remainder of the sentences imposed shall stand, meaning
that your effective end sentence is one of eleven years
imprisonment, of which
you shall serve a minimum period of four years and three months’
imprisonment before being
eligible for parole.
[9] Please stand down.
.................................
Toogood J
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URL: http://www.nzlii.org/nz/cases/NZHC/2014/1734.html