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High Court of New Zealand Decisions |
Last Updated: 26 February 2016
IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND AUCKLAND REGISTRY
CRI-2014-055-002443 [2016] NZHC 284
THE QUEEN
v
BEN BOSCH HERKT
Hearing:
|
26 February 2016
|
Appearances:
|
Gareth Kayes and Sacha Norrie for the Crown
Peter Kaye for the Defendant
|
Judgment:
|
26 February 2016
|
SENTENCING NOTES OF MOORE
J
R v HERKT [2016] NZHC 284 [26 February 2016]
Introduction
[1] Ben Bosch Herkt, at the age of 39 you appear for sentence this
morning having been found guilty by a jury on a charge that,
on 17 November
2014, you murdered Matthew Greenslade (“Matthew”). The maximum
penalty for murder is life imprisonment
and that is the sentence I intend to
impose upon you because as both the Crown and Mr Kaye agree there is no basis to
do otherwise.
But in your case there is a complication.
[2] This is because your sentencing triggers s 86E of the Sentencing
Act 2002 (“the Sentencing Act”). That section
forms part of our
sentencing regime and is commonly referred to as the three strikes
legislation.
[3] The three strikes legislation applies in your case because on 27
July 2012 you were convicted in the Manukau District Court
on three charges of
robbery. You were sentenced to three years’ imprisonment and given a
first strike warning. Amongst other
things you were warned in the event you
were convicted of murder you would be sentenced to life imprisonment and would
serve that
sentence without the possibility of parole unless that would be
manifestly unjust.1
[4] Since then you have gone on to commit murder. The effect of s 86E is that you must now be sentenced to life imprisonment without parole unless I am satisfied it would be manifestly unjust to do so. If I find it is manifestly unjust to impose such a sentence the Sentencing Act requires me to impose a sentence with a minimum
non-parole period of at least 10 years.2
[5] I am also required to take into account s 104 of the Sentencing Act which requires the Court to make an order imposing a minimum period of imprisonment of at least 17 years if one or more of a series of aggravating factors are present. If that section applies the Court may only decline making such an order if it is satisfied it
would be manifestly unjust to do so.
1 Sentencing Act 2002, s 86B.
2 Section 103.
[6] Before I examine these various issues in the context of
your case it is necessary for me to review the
background and the
events which lead up to Matthew’s death.
Background facts
[7] Matthew was 32 when he died. In the latter part of 2014 he was
living in one of the units situated in a block of six in
Porchester Road,
Papakura. The flats were occupied by tenants, some or all of whom had a history
of various mental health issues.
Matthew occupied Unit 3. It was a modest
single bedroom unit and he had not been living there for long.
[8] The evidence at trial was that Matthew was a popular and gregarious
person. He made friends easily and he enjoyed the company
of others. That
assessment is supported by the comments of the Greenslade family in their victim
impact statements. I will return
to those statements later in this
decision.
[9] On Monday, 17 November 2014 the landlord had scheduled a
house inspection. The inspection took place and Matthew
passed. It seems
this was a matter of some relief and a cause for celebration on his
part.
[10] As a result he contacted several friends and invited them to his
place for a modest party. Some of those invited came from
the adjacent units
and some he knew through other connections. You were one of those
friends.
[11] He picked up you and Ms Tito, your then partner, and drove you both
back to his unit where you all began to drink.
[12] Later in the afternoon, when the alcohol supplies were
depleted, you, Matthew, Ms Tito and another went to a bottle
shop to replenish.
You bought a box of Cody’s and returned to Matthew’s unit and
carried on drinking.
[13] Quite what the catalyst was for the fight which then took place and ended Matthew’s life remains unclear. It may have been something which he said about Ms Tito or it may have been some action on his part which you interpreted as an
insult. Whatever it was it was very minor indeed. You reacted
disproportionately. You attacked Matthew with your fists. He responded
in a
similar fashion in defence and a fight ensued with both of you trading
blows.
[14] Despite the fact that he was smaller than you, the evidence is that
Matthew got the better of the fight leaving you with
a bloodied nose and bruises
and cuts to your face.
[15] Those who were in the unit with you broke the fight up. You, Ms
Tito and Matthew went outside. A short time later Matthew
returned to his unit
and locked the doors. You and Ms Tito were left outside.
[16] It is obvious from the evidence that you were very angry. You were
resentful towards Matthew for getting the better of you
and you made the fatal
decision to exact revenge.
[17] You went to one of the adjoining units and spoke to the occupant.
You asked him for a weapon and in particular a cricket
bat which you knew he had
there. But the cricket bat was broken and so you asked him to give you a
knife.
[18] It is both remarkable and deeply regrettable that a knife was then
passed to you. But it was. And armed with that knife
you wasted little time
returning to Matthew’s unit. You tried the front door but found it was
locked. You went around to
the back door which was also locked. So you smashed
your way in.
[19] Once inside you ran towards Matthew who was in the kitchen. You pinned him up against the fridge. You lunged at him, stabbing him in the head and neck. Unarmed, he courageously repelled the attack before you stabbed him in the area of his lower chest and upper abdomen. This proved to be the fatal blow. It penetrated Matthew’s abdomen. The knife cut his liver in two places and nicked his ribs in three places. But what lead to his death was when the knife entered the pericardial cavity; that sack in which the heart sits. It cut the lower surface of his heart which began to bleed.
[20] It did not bleed vigorously. There was no visible spurting blood.
Instead, unbeknown to Matthew or anyone else, his heart
slowly, but steadily,
bled with each pumping action filling the pericardial cavity and ultimately
compressing the heart so it could
no longer expand to pump. This caused the
heart to stop. It was for this reason, as Dr Morrow the pathologist explained,
that Matthew
did not die immediately.
[21] The evidence is that after this attack those who witnessed it ran
out of the unit closely followed by Matthew. They ran
to a van. Matthew
clambered into it. He retained consciousness and even talked about his
injuries. They drove straight to the
Papakura A&E. Even then, Matthew was
able to get out of the van before he fell to the ground unconscious. He never
regained
consciousness despite the prolonged and heroic attempts of medical
staff and paramedics to resuscitate him. He died where he fell.
[22] You also took off. But in the opposite direction. You were in the
company of Ms Tito. There is little purpose in trawling
through the evidence of
what happened after the fatal blow was struck but it is common ground
that after leaving the Porchester
Road complex you threw away the knife, dumped
clothing and other evidence and, with Ms Tito, did all you could to avoid
apprehension.
[23] You cleaned out your bank account and, obviously, you had plans to
get as far away as you could.
[24] As was inevitable, you and Ms Tito were located by the Police the
following morning. You were interviewed. It was a long
interview and for
most of it you attempted to convince the Police that you were not the attacker;
that two shadowy figures with gang
connections were responsible for the attack
on Matthew. That was a fiction.
[25] It was only when it was plain to you that the Police did not believe your account, and when they told you that Ms Tito had described what had actually happened, that you capitulated. You admitted you had been lying and, to your credit,
albeit it belated, you expressed remorse for what you had done and
on video
apologised to Matthew’s family.
[26] You said that Matthew had thrown the empty box of Cody’s at Ms
Tito and you got offended and retaliated. You knew
that you had stabbed him
several times but claimed you were unable to say how many. You put this down to
a combination of your intoxication
and your history of mental
illness.
[27] On several occasions you apologised to Matthew. You described him
as “a good spirit” and said that you “didn’t
mean to do
it to him”; “that he was a good guy, he didn’t deserve it and
had, in the past, given you a lot of help.”
[28] You accepted that you were in “angry mode” and
“drunk”. You said that you did not think. You said
you should have
shook his hand and acknowledged that he had won the fight. Instead, you allowed
rage, anger and resentment to cloud
your judgement and to take over with the
result you fatally wounded an unarmed man you counted as a good
friend.
Crown submissions
[29] Mr Kayes, for the Crown, enclosed the
Solicitor-General’s written
submissions in support of the sentence appeals for R v Turner3
and R v Harrison.4
These submissions directly addressed the decisions in those cases in some
detail and Mr Kayes adopts them in support of the Crown’s
submission as to
the appropriate interpretation of the expression “manifestly unjust”
in s 86E. While he accepts that
a finding of manifest injustice should only be
made in exceptional cases he submits that such a sentence would not be
manifestly
unjust in your case.
[30] He submits that there is nothing in the circumstances of the offence
or of you which would make life imprisonment without
parole manifestly
unjust.
3 R v Turner [2015] NZHC 189.
4 R v Harrison [2014] NZHC 2705.
Defence submissions
[31] Mr Kaye, on your behalf, submits that Wylie J’s very recent
decision in R v Kingi5 has direct relevance and should be
applied in your case. He supports his Honour’s observation in that case
that the word “manifestly”
must be given its ordinary meaning which
is “clearly obvious to the mind or eye or demonstrable”.
[32] In particular, Mr Kaye submits that if there is such a thing as a
scale of murders, the present case is towards the lower
end of the scale. He
also submits the seriousness of the first strike offences in 2012 need to be
seen in context; there was no
actual violence and no weapon used. He points
out that the sentencing Judge took into account your mental health as a relevant
feature of mitigation.
[33] Mr Kaye also touched on your previous convictions, your
age, your expressions of remorse, the prospects of rehabilitation,
your mental
health issues and the views of the Greenslade family. He thus submits that a
sentence of life imprisonment without
parole would clearly be manifestly unjust
and that a sentence of life imprisonment with the ordinary statutory minimum
non-parole
period of 10 years’ imprisonment would be
appropriate.
The interpretation of s 86E
[34] I turn now to consider s 86E and its application in your
case.
[35] Three cases have now been decided under s 86E.6 Two are currently subject to appeal by the Solicitor-General. Those appeals are yet to be heard. A consolidated hearing before the Court of Appeal is scheduled for 3 May 2016. The third case, R v Kingi, came before Wylie J in the Hamilton High Court only last week.7 Whether the Solicitor-General intends to appeal the sentence imposed in Mr Kingi’s case is presently unknown. Undoubtedly I would have been greatly assisted by a judgment of the appellate Court dealing with the interpretation of s 86E. However, given the length of time before such guidance is likely to become
available, I have decided your sentencing should proceed as scheduled.
In coming to
5 R v Kingi [2016] NZHC 139.
6 R v Harrison above n 4; R v Turner above n 3.
7 R v Kingi above n 5.
this decision, I am mindful of the interests of Matthew’s family and
you. Further delays, particularly given this sentencing
has already been
adjourned once, would be wholly undesirable.
[36] I now turn to consider s 86E. Section 86E relevantly
provides:
“(1) This section applies if -
(a) an offender is convicted of murder; and
(b) that murder is a stage-2 offence or a stage-3 offence. (2) If this section applies, the court must –
(a) sentence the offender to imprisonment for life for that
murder; and
(b) order that the offender serve the sentence of imprisonment for
life without parole unless the court is satisfied that,
given the circumstances
of the offence and the offender, it would be manifestly unjust to do so.
(3) If the court does not make an order under subsection (2)(b), the court
must give written reasons for not doing so.
(4) If the court does not make an order under subsection (2)(b), the court
must –
...
(b) if that murder is a stage-2 offence ... order that the offender
serve a minimum period of imprisonment in accordance with section
103.”
[37] What this section means is that where a defendant is convicted of
murder having previously received a second or third strike
warning, the Court is
required to sentence them to life imprisonment without parole unless it is
satisfied, having regard
to the circumstances of the offence and the offender,
that it would be manifestly unjust to do so.
[38] In your case, Mr Herkt, this section in our Sentencing Act is engaged because you have been convicted of murder and you have already received a first strike warning under s 86B of the Act.
[39] You received your first strike warning after you had been convicted
of three robberies for which you were sentenced in 2012.
Therefore, it is
clear that the requirements set out in s 86E apply in your case. That is
accepted by the Crown and your counsel.
[40] In applying this section, the interpretation of the words
“manifestly unjust” is obviously critical. These
words are not
defined in the Act and so the task of interpretation has been left to the
Courts.
[41] Mallon J was the first to consider the meaning of these words in
Harrison. Her honour pointed out that the threshold for the exercise of
the discretion has been set very high.8 Then Woolford J in
Turner undertook an even more detailed analysis. He looked at the
legislative history of the provision as well as the case law dealing with
the
same words used elsewhere in the Sentencing Act.9 He came to the
view that the test should be a rarely exercised one and that, while the
legislation was intended to be disproportionately
punitive, it was also intended
to target the worst types of murderers and violent offenders; those who are
incapable of rehabilitation.
[42] In Kingi, Wylie J described the test in simple terms. He
said:10
“In my judgment the word “manifestly” carries its ordinary
meaning. It means clearly, obvious to the mind or eye,
or demonstrably. In
context, the use of the words manifestly unjust in s 86E denotes an injustice
that is clear or obvious.”
[43] He added that a sentencing Court’s application of s 86E should
be informed
by three considerations.
(a) First, to avoid life without parole, any injustice must be patently clear. (b) Secondly any finding of manifest injustice must be reached on the
basis of both the circumstances of the offence and the offender (the
test being conjunctive).
8 R v Harrison, above n 4, at [28].
9 Sentencing Act, ss 102(1) and 104(1).
10 R v Kingi, above n 5, at [37].
(c) Thirdly the manifestly unjust assessment must be undertaken in
light of ss 7, 8 and 9 of the Sentencing Act, which set out
the purposes and
principles of sentencing.
[44] With respect to the Judge I find this expression of the test most
helpful and practical. I propose to adopt his Honour’s
methodology in
your case. As Wylie J did, my analysis will be guided by the following
factors:
(a) your age and the likely consequences of a sentence
of life imprisonment without parole for you personally;
(b) the circumstances of your offending in the present case; (c) your first strike offences and your criminal history;
(d) your personal circumstances, including your mental health; (e) your prospects of rehabilitation;
(f) the purposes and principles of the Sentencing Act; (g) the views expressed by the victims; and
(h) remorse.
[45] Because it is a lengthy list and because my discussion of it will be necessarily detailed I will let you know now that I have reached the view that a sentence of life imprisonment without parole would be manifestly unjust in your case. In coming to that decision it is important to emphasise that no single consideration on its own has lead me to this conclusion. I have reached this view by considering all of the factors listed above as a whole. Some carry more weight than others. It is the operating combination which has lead me to decide that in your case it would be manifestly unjust to sentence you to life imprisonment without parole. Nevertheless, it is important that I go through and discuss each feature one by one so that you understand why it is that I have come to that conclusion.
Application
Your age
[46] You are 39 years of age. Wylie J in Kingi undertook a
detailed analysis of Statistics New Zealand figures on life spans noting that
the average life expectancy for European
males was just under 80 years and for
Māori males 73 years. As his Honour observed it is, of course, impossible
to predict
how long any particular individual will live but assuming you enjoy
an average life expectancy it is likely that in the event you
were denied parole
you could expect to spend the next 40 to 50 years of your life in prison. Of
the offenders in the cases already
considered by this Court I note that
Turner was 29, Harrison was 44 and Kingi was 26. So you
are not the youngest and you are not the oldest.
[47] Serving a sentence of 40 to 50 years’ imprisonment would be to
impose an effective sentence well in excess of those
imposed on the most
notorious and well- known figures in New Zealand’s criminal history. As
David Garrett MP of the Act Party,
which was the major proposer of the three
strikes regime, said during the Third Reading of the Bill:
“... This Bill is not about locking people up and throwing away the key and it never has been. I re-emphasise what the Minister of Corrections said: the only people who will be locked up for life under this Bill will be persons who have committed murder as a ‘third strike’ or the worst of our murderers
– people like Graham Burton, William Bell, Liam Reid, and, sadly, a
number of others whose names are less well-known.”
11
[48] The notorious offenders specifically identified in that speech were individuals who exhibited extreme violence and psychopathic behaviour. They committed horrific, cold blooded killings which were rightly and roundly condemned by the community and which, it seems, were the catalyst for the introduction of the three strikes regime. But even those offenders received sentences of life imprisonment with minimum periods of imprisonment of between 20 and 30 years; decades less
than you would serve if denied
parole.
11 (25 May 2010) 663 NZPD 11226.
[49] As Wylie J observed in Kingi, some offenders sentenced to
life imprisonment have served very long sentences but not without the necessity
of their incarceration
being considered on an ongoing basis by the Parole Board
once they have served the minimum periods of imprisonment imposed by the
Court.
Contrary to Mr Garrett’s speech, I agree with Wylie J’s comment in
Kingi and adopt it in your case too, namely:
“To sentence you to life imprisonment without parole would, in fact,
amount to locking you up and throwing away the key.”
Circumstances of the offending in the present case
[50] Implicitly every killing of a human being by another is a tragedy.
The taking of a human life in circumstances which amount
to murder rightly
attracts condemnation and this principle is reflected in the seriousness of the
penalty which is life imprisonment.
[51] Despite this, some murders attract greater levels of condemnation
than others and I have already mentioned cases where the
offending has rightly
been regarded as at the top of the scale as reflected by the lengthy minimum
terms of imprisonment imposed.
[52] Your offending, despite the incalculable consequential harm
which has followed, is not in that league. And that
has been properly and
responsibly acknowledged by the Crown. Mr Kayes observed that, without
intending to diminish the
seriousness of the offending and the immense impact
it has had on the Greenslade family the Crown acknowledges that in comparison
to
other murders, it is at the lower end of the scale. The Crown concedes that
none of the aggravating factors contained in s 104
of the Act are present and so
that section which requires the imposition of a 17 year minimum period is not
engaged. In this way
your offending can be distinguished from that
which this Court has previously encountered in Harrison, Turner
and Kingi.
[53] I accept that your attack on Matthew arose in the context of an argument which quickly escalated into violence. I also accept that there was comparatively little pre-meditation although it cannot be ignored that after the initial fight you
decided revenge should be exacted. You went away, found a weapon, returned
and attacked Matthew with it.
[54] The attack itself was frenzied and over in a matter of seconds.
Furthermore, although your victim was not armed, he was
not vulnerable in the
sense that term is used in the Sentencing Act.
[55] And so if I was to compare the level of offending with that
in Turner, Harrison or Kingi I accept it is a good deal
less serious even if the consequences were equally dreadful and
irreversible.
First strike offence and criminal history
[56] You received your first strike warning following your conviction on three charges of robbery in 2012. The Crown has helpfully provided a copy of the summary of facts but unfortunately the Judge’s sentencing notes are not available. However, from the summary, it is evident that your offending involved three robberies committed over the course of a week. The total amount taken was nearly
$4,000. Your modus operandi involved passing a note to the teller
claiming you had a gun although there was no evidence you were ever armed. No
actual violence
was used. The sentencing Judge adopted a starting point of
four and a half years but applied a 20 per cent discount for your
mental
health issues. This necessarily reflected the Judge’s view that your
psychiatric history had played a significant
role in your offending.
[57] Compared to the other s 86E cases decided by this Court, it is
evident that your first strike offending was more serious
than that engaged in
Harrison or Kingi. On the other hand, it is considerably less
serious than that which confronted the Court in Turner which involved a
near fatal assault on a woman.
[58] You have an unenviable criminal history; some 98 previous convictions. But these convictions are mostly for relatively low level offending. Despite that, I cannot ignore there are a number of convictions for violence including assaulting a Police officer, assault with intent to rob, threatening to kill and attempted arson.
[59] However, your history is a good deal less serious than that in
Harrison where there was a background of some 20 years of gang related
offending. It is also less serious than that in Turner where there were
some 110 convictions including 22 for low level violence.
Personal circumstances and mental health
[60] Following your conviction I directed that a psychiatric report be
obtained. I specifically asked that the report, in addition
to providing
information in relation to your general psychiatric background and status,
should include information on how your psychiatric
condition influenced the
offending and how a sentence of life imprisonment without parole would affect
you.
[61] Although I received a comprehensive report earlier this month, for
reasons which are not immediately apparent, the
report failed to
address those specific issues. I directed a further, supplementary report
which has since been received and
to which I shall refer shortly.
[62] A good deal of your psychiatric background was traversed in the course of the trial. Since the mid-1990s you have had a documented history of mental health issues. You were admitted to the Mason Clinic where you were diagnosed with schizophrenia. It is recorded you responded well to treatment but you were not compliant with your medication. You were admitted to Kingseat Hospital later in
1995. Even at that relatively early stage your substance abuse was
noted.
[63] Over the next few years you were admitted to mental health
facilities on several occasions. Again, your compliance with
medication was
poor as was your insight into your mental health and the dangers of substance
abuse. You were diagnosed with
bipolar disorder and with schizophrenia.
You have received treatment using various anti-psychotic and mood stabilising
agents.
You have been subjected to a number of compulsory treatment orders.
You have a lengthy pattern of suspending medication and abusing
substances.
[64] In August 2015, in other words three months before Matthew’s
death, the
forensic prison team noted that your schizophrenia seemed reasonably well
controlled. You were diagnosed at that time as suffering from schizophrenia,
anti- social personality disorder and poly-substance
abuse. You were prescribed
a long acting intra-muscular anti-psychotic medication, Risperidone Consta as
well as medication to mitigate
the side effects.
[65] As part of your defence at trial you called the outpatient mental
health nurse who had been treating you in the past. She
described the effects
of the medication you had been prescribed and told the jury that she visited you
fortnightly to inject you
with the Risperidone. She last saw you on 13 November
2014 just days before you killed Matthew. She described you as pleasant and
welcoming on that occasion. She also said that although you had a history of
being non-compliant, her impression was that in the
months before November 2014
you were stable and, it seems, generally compliant.
[66] She described the effect of alcohol on Risperidone Consta. She said
it had the effect of neutralising the benefits of the
medication, presumably
resulting in the unmasking of the underlying psychiatric symptoms and making you
impulsive and prone to violence.
[67] This evidence was adduced to support your defence you lacked
murderous
intent. Plainly the jury’s verdict means this defence was
rejected.
[68] However, the question of your psychiatric background is a relevant
consideration for the purposes of sentencing.
[69] The psychiatric report concludes by observing that you have a longstanding diagnosis of schizophrenia and substance use disorder. It records that your mental health, in recent times, has been relatively stable so long as you are able to abstain from substances and are maintained on the present pharmacological regime. The report records that your risk of re-offending is increased by your substance abuse which leads to decreased inhibition and an increased tendency to resort to violence. It records that you have an abnormal state of mind characterised by disorders of perception which have, in the past, posed a danger to the health and safety of others.
[70] In the supplementary report, the writer states that in the absence
of easy access to substances of abuse you are more likely
to be stabilised as
you continue to receive your medication.
[71] Finally, the report writer concludes that while a life
sentence would be onerous or difficult for anyone, your
schizophrenia has been
under control and there does not appear to be a reason to believe you are less
capable of serving a long sentence
of imprisonment than anyone else.
[72] When this history is compared to the three other cases I note that
your mental health history appears to be very similar
to that of Mr Kingi. In
Turner and Harrison there were no diagnosed mental health issues
although Turner had been prescribed antipsychotic medication.
[73] In summary I am satisfied that while your mental health issues fell
short of providing you with a defence, your tendency
towards impulsivity and
violence is connected and did contribute to the tragic events which unfolded
that evening in Porchester Road.
Prospects for rehabilitation
[74] I have already touched on this topic. It is apparent from the
information provided to me that there is some room for optimism
for
rehabilitation if your substance abuse is addressed and you continue to comply
with your medication.
[75] I note the Crown’s responsible acknowledgement that to date you have not had the opportunity to address programmes related to violence, as well as their very proper concession that you are not beyond rehabilitation. In that context I note that the written material provided to me by Mr Kaye and the submissions he has made this morning which demonstrate that while you have been in custody you have enrolled in and successfully completed a number of helpful rehabilitation programmes. It would also seem that the testing for drugs during that time suggests you have been drug free.
Purposes and principles of the Sentencing Act
[76] As did Wylie J in Kingi, I have considered the purposes and
principles of the Sentencing Act. I have found nothing in s 7 which supports
the proposition
that justice requires you to be sentenced to life
imprisonment without parole. Furthermore, there is nothing in
s 8(a), (b) or
(c) which requires you be sentenced to life imprisonment without
parole.
[77] Section 8(e) requires me to take into account the desirability of
consistency with appropriate sentencing levels imposed
on other offenders
committing similar offences. A sentence of life imprisonment without parole
would be considerably harsher than
the sentences imposed on offenders who have
been convicted of more serious offending where the degree of callousness has
been extreme,
there have been multiple victims and the offending was well
planned. I acknowledge that this comparison involves considering
other
cases which were determined before the passing of s 86E but despite this I find,
as did Wylie J, that notions of proportionality
remain.
View of victims
[78] I have received six victim impact statements from those who were
close to Matthew. His parents and brother James have read
their statements to
the Court in your presence. His sister, other brother and aunt have also made
statements and I have read them
carefully.
[79] There are two themes which emerge and they are these:
(a) First, it is very apparent that Matthew was an integral member of a close and loving family. For that family his loss is as inexplicable as it is profound. Plainly he was a young man who, despite the challenges he confronted in his final four years when he became unwell, was a generous, family-focused person who has been described as being “loyal to a fault”, “naïve, caring and forgiving; never holding a grudge”. It is understandable that for these reasons he
was deeply loved by his immediate family, the wider family and his friends.
For his family his loss is inconsolable.
(b) The second theme which emerges from the family’s statements
is their generosity of spirit. Without in anyway minimising
the extraordinary
sense of loss they feel, Matthew’s family, perhaps because they knew he
would not hold a grudge against you,
have been gracious towards you. They
express the wish that Matthew’s death and your direct role in it leaves
you with such
a deep sense of remorse that it will compel you to turn your life
around and do good. While they understandably seek justice and
properly
observe consequences should flow from your actions, they speak of the need for
you to pay your dues and move on. This
does not mean that the sense of hurt or
sadness is in any way diminished. It is not. But there is a commendable
compassion and
generosity in what they have said to me about you.
[80] As you know, I asked for the family’s views on life
imprisonment without parole. I am advised that the majority family
view is they
would like you to have the chance to make positive changes in your life.
Understanding that is not a view held by all,
the majority want you to spend a
significant time in prison without parole as a consequence of taking a precious
life so easily.
They are concerned that you present a danger to others in the
community and that you need to have time to reflect on your substance
abuse and
your life. Once that time has passed the family believe you should be given
the opportunity of parole.
[81] That, of course is not a matter for me or the Greenslades. It will
be matter for the Parole Board when that time comes.
Remorse
[82] I am satisfied you are truly remorseful for what you
did.
[83] Although you defended the charge of murder you accepted
culpable
homicide. You accepted throughout that your actions caused Matthew’s death.
[84] It is correct that after you were apprehended by the Police you
initially tried to exculpate yourself by advancing the fatuous
fiction that
unnamed others were responsible. That was never going to fly and eventually it
dawned on you that you had little option
but to tell the truth. From that point
on you not only accepted your responsibility for the killing but you also
expressed sincere
remorse towards a man who you plainly regarded as a loyal,
kind and generous friend.
[85] That same theme emerges from the pre-sentence report and also the
letter which you wrote to me and the Greenslade family
and also the letter which
was handed up to me this morning. I have no doubt that Matthew’s death is
something which will haunt
you for the rest of your life. I am also satisfied
that you have some insight into the pain which the Greenslade family feel and
will continue to feel as a result of your actions that day.
Conclusion
[86] Taking all these matters into account I am satisfied it would be
manifestly unjust for a sentence of life imprisonment without
parole to be
imposed on you.
Minimum term of imprisonment
[87] Having decided that it would be manifestly unjust to sentence you to
life imprisonment without parole I am now required to
determine the appropriate
sentence.
[88] The law requires me to impose life imprisonment.12
There is no option to do otherwise.
[89] The next question then is what is the appropriate minimum period of
imprisonment in your case.13
12 Sentencing Act, s 86E(2)(a).
13 Section 86E(4)(b).
[90] Section 104 of the Sentencing Act requires the Court to impose a
minimum period of imprisonment of at least 17 years where
one of a number of
identified aggravating circumstances are present. I agree with the Crown that
none of those circumstances is
present in your case. And so s 104 is not
engaged.
[91] The next question is to determine the minimum period of imprisonment
under s 103. That provision dictates that the term
of imprisonment cannot be
less than 10 years and must be the minimum to satisfy all or any of the
following purposes:
(a) holding the offender accountable for the harm done to the victim and the
community by the offending;
(b) denouncing the conduct in which the offender was
involved;
(c) deterring the offender or other persons from committing the same or a
similar offence; and
(d) protecting the community from the offender.
[92] Our Court of Appeal has helpfully given some guidance on the
principles which should be applied. That Court said:14
“In short the proper approach is to apply the primary comparison
between the instance offence and the [statutory datum] as
the first step, and
then to use any relevant individual comparators as a check.
...
In the end whatever analysis or set of comparisons may be invoked, the
question whether the duration of a minimum period order of
the present kind is
or is not excessive can only be a matter of almost intuitive judgment.
Assessment of the degree of culpability
inherent in any particular offending is
not an exact science.”
[93] Mr Herkt, in my view the principal aggravating factor in your case is the level of violence you inflicted on Matthew. You took the deliberate step of finding a weapon in the form of a knife. You then went back in search of your victim. You
tried to get in the front door and when that failed you went around the
back. You
14 R v Howse [2003] NZCA 178; [2003] 3 NZLR 767 (CA) at [64], [69].
smashed your way in and you stabbed him. The pathology reveals that you
inflicted at least seven wounds. Although only one wound
was penetrative and
ultimately proved fatal, it is noteworthy that your attack initially targeted
the vulnerable parts of Matthew’s
body; his head and his neck. When he
attempted to shield himself from your attack you changed your strategy and
stabbed him in
the lower chest and abdomen area. The witnesses described the
attack as frenzied. The pathologist used the same word.
[94] There was a degree of pre-meditation because after the initial fight
you left the scene in search of a weapon. The cricket
bat was broken and so,
instead, you armed yourself with a knife and returned. You took off your shirt.
At that time there can be
no doubt you intended to cause Matthew serious injury
or death. That conclusion is, of course, implicit in the jury’s
verdict.
[95] However, I also accept that this was a spontaneous, almost
instinctive reaction to claim revenge. It was driven
by your loss of control
and impulsivity. You were enraged and you were determined to get him back for
what you regarded as some kind
of slight.
[96] However, stepping back and examining these events as a whole it must
be accepted that in comparison with other cases of murder
which this Court often
deals with this was not the worst of its kind. I agree with the Crown that it
falls in the lower end of the
scale, although not at the lowest.
[97] I have been referred to a number of cases to assist me in reaching an appropriate figure for a minimum term of imprisonment. Your lawyer says this should be set at 10 years. The Crown says it should be set at 12 years.
[98] I have been guided by a number of cases which in my view are broadly
comparable to the present.15 I have also considered a number of
cases which counsel have not referred me to.16
[99] In all of these cases minimum periods of imprisonment of between 11
and 12 years have been adopted.
[100] In my judgment a 12 year minimum term of imprisonment is appropriate
as a starting point to meet the statutory purposes and
to reflect your
culpability.17
[101] As I have already discussed, you have a substantial list of previous convictions which, in my view, warrant an uplift. Against that are your personal mitigating factors. I accept your remorse is genuine and that you immediately regretted your actions, particularly given that the young man you killed was regarded
by you as a friend.
15 R v Rangiwhaio [2012] NZHC 1751; R v Prole [2013] NZHC 1267; R v Derrick-Hardie
[2012] NZHC 2833.
carrying a large knife. He approached the victim who was intoxicated and may have
been “looking for a fight”. The victim threw a “sloppy haymaker” at the defendant, who responded by stabbing him deep in the chest. The victim died shortly afterwards. The defendant was on bail for serious violent offending and had previous violent convictions. His youth was taken as a mitigating factor. A 12 year minimum period of imprisonment was imposed; R v Fahey [2015] NZHC 78: the defendant spent the evening walking through the streets of central Auckland with an associate. The two men had earlier had a verbal altercation. After they entered Myers Park, some sort of violent incident occurred, and the victim was stabbed at least once. He retreated but the defendant followed him, lashing out at least once more to his left side. The victim suffered one or two wounds to his heart and lung area. He later died. A starting minimum period of imprisonment of 10 years was uplifted by two years to reflect an extensive history of prior violent offending; Fraser v R [2010] NZCA 313: the 18 year old appellant and an associate left a birthday party and began to walk home when they came upon group of partygoers, including the first victim. A heated exchange occurred and the victim punched the appellant in the face. The appellant and his associate went home and retrieved three knives. They then returned and found the victim, along with a friend of his, who they tried to engage in a fight. The victims ran away in different directions but the appellant and his associate split up and chased them. The appellant caught up with the first victim and stabbed him in the back while he was running, and then a further four times after he had stopped. The victim died from his wounds. The Court of Appeal upheld an 11 year MPI in spite of the appellant’s age and lack of previous convictions.
17 Sentencing Act, s 103(2).
accepted your culpability for the killing from an early stage. The question
for the jury was whether you had the necessary murderous
intent. They found that
you did.
[103] I also recognise that you have a longstanding history of mental
illness which, although not directly contributing to the offending,
is relevant
in an indirect sense in that the evidence supports the conclusion that the
consumption of alcohol increases your impulsivity
and tendency towards violence.
Weighing your past criminal offending against your personal circumstances,
particularly your mental
health issues I am satisfied they operate to balance
each other out as Mr Kayes suggested. Any uplift is offset by your personal
circumstances.
[104] This means that I conclude the appropriate minimum term of
imprisonment in your case is 12 years.
Passing of sentence
[105] Mr Herkt would you please stand.
[106] I sentence you to life imprisonment and order that you serve a
minimum term of imprisonment of 12 years.
Final warning under s 86E(6)
[107] At the end of the trial after the jury had returned its verdict I was
advised that you were to be given a first warning.
I delivered that
warning. It was later discovered that you had already received a first
warning following your convictions
for robbery in 2012. So I am now required
under the Act to give you a final warning and explain to you the consequences of
another
conviction for a serious violent offence. You will be given a written
notice outlining these consequences and listing the serious
violent
offences.
robbery and a second strike for murder. If you are convicted of any serious
violent offence, other than murder or manslaughter, then
you will be sentenced
to the maximum term of imprisonment for that offence and will serve that term
without parole unless it would
be manifestly unjust.
[109] If you are convicted of manslaughter after this warning you will be sentenced to imprisonment for life. The Judge will be required to order that you serve at least
20 years’ imprisonment unless he or she considers it would be
manifestly unjust to do so. In that case the Judge must order
you to serve a
minimum of 10 years’ imprisonment.
[110] If you are convicted of murder after this warning then you will be
sentenced to imprisonment for life. The Judge must order
you to serve this
sentence without parole unless it would be manifestly unjust to do so.
If the Judge finds it is
manifestly unjust to do so then he or she must
impose a minimum period of imprisonment of at least 20 years, unless that would
be
manifestly unjust, in which case the Judge must specify that a different
minimum period of imprisonment be served. If you are sentenced
to preventive
detention you must serve the minimum term of imprisonment for the most serious
offence you are convicted of unless
the Judge considers that would be manifestly
unjust.
[111] Mr Herkt, what this sentence means is that you must serve at least 12
years in prison before you may be released. The sentence
is one of life
imprisonment. The period which I have ordered is the minimum time that you must
serve. Depending on the view of
the Parole Board it could be longer. In theory
it could mean you will never be released. Whatever the position you are going to
spend a long time in jail.
[112] I hope you take on board what the Greenslade family have generously
suggested; that you use these years to improve yourself;
that after you have
paid your debt to society you move on as a better person. They seek that in the
memory of Matthew.
Moore J
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URL: http://www.nzlii.org/nz/cases/NZHC/2016/284.html