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Supreme Court of the ACT |
Last Updated: 20 July 2009
R v MURRAY COLIN STUBBS
[2009] ACTSC 63 (26 May
2009)
CRIMINAL LAW – The Commonwealth Criminal Code 1995 (Cth) – procuring a person under 16 years of age to engage in or submit to sexual activity – using a carriage service to transmit offensive communications
EVIDENCE - Evidence Act 1995 (Cth) – discretion to exclude improperly or illegally obtained evidence – application to exclude telecommunications evidence – whether actions of police officer constituted “aiding and abetting” – whether actions of police officer constituted entrapment
EVIDENCE – covert operation – internet chat between undercover police operative and accused – overseas police officer – “controlled operations” – use of an assumed identity – appropriate principles and practice for the investigation of on-line grooming – public importance of such investigation – actions of police officer not unlawful
Commonwealth Criminal Code 1995 (Cth), ss 11.2(1), 473.1, 474.5(1)(b),
474.14(2), 474.17, 474.26, 474.27
Telecommunications Act 1997 (Cth), s
7
Evidence Act 1995 (Cth), s 138
Crimes Act 1914 (Cth), Pts
1AB, 1AC, 15 HB
The Holy
Bible, Authorised
Version, Matthew 18:6
Ridgeway v The Queen (1995) 184 CLR
19
Emanuele v Dau (1996) 84 A Crim R 197;
Dau v Emanuele
(1995) 60 FCR 270
Bunning v Cross [1978] HCA 22; (1978) 141 CLR 54
R v
Gajjar [2008] VSCA 268
R v McGrath [2005] QCA 463; [2006] 2 Qd R 58
R v
Podger [2009] VCC
R v Tyrell [1894] 1 QB 710
R v Whitehouse
[1977] 1 QB 868
Sundai Sloane (1990) 49 A Crim R 270
Albert
Salem [1999] NSWCCA 86; (1997) 96 A Crim R 421
Robinson v Woolworths Ltd (t/as
Woolworths Plus Petrol Werrington) [2005] NSWCCA 426; (2005) 227 ALR 353
R v Ladocki
[2004] NSWCCA 336
Gedeon v Commissioner of the New South Wales Crime
Commission [2008] HCA 43
R v Burdon; ex parte Attorney-General (Qld)
[2005] QCA 147; (2005) 153 A Crim R 104
No. SCC 240 of 2008
Judge: Higgins CJ
Supreme Court of the ACT
Date: 26 May 2009
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE )
) No. SCC 240 of
2008
AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL TERRITORY )
THE QUEEN
v
MURRAY COLIN STUBBS
ORDER
Judge: Higgins CJ
Date: 26 May 2009
Place: Canberra
THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
1. The application to exclude evidence be refused.
1. This is an application by the accused for a pre-trial ruling seeking the
exclusion of certain evidence proposed to be led at trial.
2. By indictment
dated 24 July 2008, the accused is charged on two counts:
... THAT between 21 August 2007 and 21 January 2008 at Canberra ... [he] ... being at least 18 years of age, used a carriage service to transmit communications to a person who [sic] he believed to be under the age of 16 years with the intention of procuring that person to engage in or submit to sexual activity with himself
AND FURTHER THAT between 21 August 2007 and 18 January 2008 he used a carriage service in a way that reasonable persons would regard as being in all the circumstances offensive.
3. On 5 February 2009, the accused entered pleas of not guilty to those
charges.
4. The facts alleged are contained in the “Case
Statement” filed in this matter on behalf of the Commonwealth Director
of
Public Prosecutions (Cth DPP).
5. The allegations engage ss 474.26 and 474.17
of the Commonwealth Criminal Code 1995 (the Code), namely:
464.26 (1) A person (the sender) commits an offence if:
(a) the sender uses a carriage service to transmit a communication to another person (the recipient ); and
(b) the sender does this with the intention of procuring the recipient to engage in, or submit to, sexual activity with the sender; and
(c) the recipient is someone who is, or who the sender believes to be, under 16 years of age; and
(d) the sender is at least 18 years of age.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 15 years.
and
474.17 (1) A person is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the person uses a carriage service; and
(b) the person does so in a way (whether by the method of use or the content of a communication, or both) that reasonable persons would regard as being, in all the circumstances, menacing, harassing or offensive.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 3 years.
6. The term “carriage service” has nothing to do with
transportation. It is defined by reference to the Telecommunications Act 1997
(Cth). In s 7 thereof, “carriage service” is defined as “...
a service for carrying communications by means of guided and/or
unguided
electromagnetic energy.”
7. “Communications” are widely
defined to include transmission and receipt of “data”,
“text” or
any other form or forms of communication.
8. The
circumstances alleged to give rise to the offences in question arise out of
operations conducted between 21 August 2007 and
21 January 2008 during which,
utilising the internet, the accused communicated by way of email and online chat
via computer not only
at his work place but also from internet cafes and a
library.
9. The other party to the communications was Detective Stephen Waugh
of New Zealand Police based in Auckland who used a false identity,
namely,
“missTufsey14, Roxanne Taylor”. For the purposes of this ruling it
is assumed that the communications were in
fact as represented by the case
statement and proposed exhibit.
10. During the subsequent exchanges the
accused revealed certain personal details about himself. Detective Waugh, in
responding,
represented himself to be a 14 year old girl. The accused gradually
became more sexually suggestive.
11. During communications between 25 October
2007 and 14 December 2007, the accused was recorded as saying that he had been
thinking
about the sexual activity he would like to engage in with
“Roxanne” if they could be alone together. He requested
“Roxanne”
to send naked pictures of herself to him.
12. On 16
November 2007 he gave “Roxanne” detailed instructions on how to
masturbate. The terms of those communications
could, in my view, properly be
regarded as “offensive” to “reasonable persons”. It is,
of course, a question
of fact for a jury whether they were so.
13. As to the
first count, it is alleged that the communications relevant thereto commenced
with “Roxanne” on 27 November
2007 referring to “Sam”, a
female friend, asking “Roxanne” to go to Australia with her. The
accused responded
during that and later communications expressing a desire to
meet with “Roxanne” when she came to
Australia.
14. Communications concerning secrecy urged by the accused would
support a conclusion that the accused was aware that his communications
were, at
least, likely to be considered offensive. He referred, for example, to wanting
to shower and undress “Roxanne”.
15. On 8 January 2008 the
accused communicated further explicit sexual references including stating he
would like them to perform
oral sex on each other when she came to Canberra. He
included references to finding a hotel room near the bus terminal.
16. Up
until 18 January 2008, when “Roxanne” was to meet the accused at
Canberra, the communications were more sexually
explicit and would support a
conclusion that the accused was proposing to engage in sexual activity with
“her”.
17. During that day, the accused appears to have had a
change of heart. He advises “Roxanne” that their communications
were “wrong” and that there should not be any sexual activity nor
should he meet with her.
18. “Roxanne” responded, accepting the
“sex stuff” should not occur but stating that “she”
would
still like to meet him.
19. The accused subsequently arranged to meet
“her” at the Jolimont Centre. “She” sent an email to
the accused
stating that “she” had arrived there. The accused was
then seen apparently responding to this message.
20. He was apprehended by
police and, on being questioned, admitted to being at the Jolimont Centre to
meet “Roxanne”.
He denied any intention to engage in sexual
activity with “Roxanne”, though he conceded he had “indulged
in fantasies”
concerning such activity with “Roxanne”. He
agreed that some of his communications with “Roxanne” had
“sexual
content”.
21. Clearly, central to the prosecution case,
is the content of the communication between the accused and
“Roxanne”.
That is the evidence the accused seeks to have
excluded.
22. The grounds cited for the application to rule that the evidence
of those communications should be excluded rely on s 138 of the Evidence Act
1995 (Cth) (Evidence Act):
Discretion to exclude improperly or illegally obtained evidence
(1) Evidence that was obtained:
(a) improperly or in contravention of an Australian law; or
(b) in consequence of an impropriety or of a contravention of an Australian law;
is not to be admitted unless the desirability of admitting the evidence outweighs the undesirability of admitting evidence that has been obtained in the way in which the evidence was obtained.
(2) Without limiting subsection (1), evidence of an admission that was made during or in consequence of questioning, and evidence obtained in consequence of the admission, is taken to have been obtained improperly if the person conducting the questioning:
(a) did, or omitted to do, an act in the course of the questioning even though he or she knew or ought reasonably to have known that the act or omission was likely to impair substantially the ability of the person being questioned to respond rationally to the questioning; or
(b) made a false statement in the course of the questioning even though he or she knew or ought reasonably to have known that the statement was false and that making the false statement was likely to cause the person who was being questioned to make an admission.
(3) Without limiting the matters that the court may take into account under subsection (1), it is to take into account:
(a) the probative value of the evidence; and
(b) the importance of the evidence in the proceeding; and
(c) the nature of the relevant offence, cause of action or defence and the nature of the subject-matter of the proceeding; and
(d) the gravity of the impropriety or contravention; and
(e) whether the impropriety or contravention was deliberate or reckless; and
(f) whether the impropriety or contravention was contrary to or inconsistent with a right of a person recognised by the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights; and
(g) whether any other proceeding (whether or not in a court) has been or is likely to be taken in relation to the impropriety or contravention; and
(h) the difficulty (if any) of obtaining the evidence without impropriety or contravention of an Australian law.
23. The conduct of Detective Waugh is alleged to have constituted a breach of s
474.5 of the Code and s 474.14(2) as well as “aiding
and abetting”
the offences allegedly committed by the accused contrary to s 11.2(1) of the
Code.
24. Section 474.5(1)(b) of the Code proscribes causing a
“communication to be received by a person other than the person to
whom it
is directed”. That suggests it was an offence under the Code for
Detective Waugh to receive a communication directed
to
“Roxanne”.
25. That suggestion can be immediately dismissed. It
is clear that the accused, assuming him to be the responder to
“Roxanne”,
could be found to have intended to correspond with that
person, in truth being Detective Waugh, but mistakenly believed by the accused
to be a 14 year old girl.
26. Sections 474.14(2) and 474.26 of the Code
proscribe the use of a “carriage service” to facilitate the
commission of
a “serious offence”. Under s 473.1 “serious
offence against a law of the Commonwealth” means an offence
punishable by
imprisonment for a period of five or more years.
27. The offence in count one
is such an offence. Count two is not.
28. The gravamen of the alleged breach
of an Australian law is therefore the conduct of Detective Waugh in encouraging
or facilitating
the commission by the accused of the offences with which he is
charged. It is further submitted that the evidence was obtained
“improperly”.
That contention relies on Ridgeway v The Queen (1995)
184 CLR 19 (Ridgeway). Ridgeway was concerned with the law’s response to
“entrapment”.
29. “Entrapment” is defined as a
situation in which a public official, usually a police officer, counsels or
procures
a person to commit an offence and that person is then charged with
committing that offence. Evidence procured by that public official
or officials
would often be critical in the proof of the offence so counselled or
procured.
30. Mason CJ, Deane and Dawson JJ at 27, firmly rejected the notion
that the common law recognises entrapment as a defence to a charge.
That is so,
whether or not, the public officials in question have also committed an
offence.
31. However, that does not imply that conduct amounting to
entrapment has no adverse consequence for law enforcement agencies. It
is
clearly improper, indeed outrageous, for law enforcement agencies to procure
criminal conduct even if it is believed that those
procured had committed or
would otherwise commit serious offences. That is so whether or not the conduct
constitutes an offence
by officers of such an agency. In that context, recent
amendments to the Crimes Act 1914 (Cth) (Crimes Act) (Parts IAB and IAC)
referring to “controlled operations” and “assumed
identities”, exempt
authorised officers from criminal liability for, say,
participating in operations involving importing illicit drugs or the giving
of
false names or the assumption of false identities. Nevertheless, whilst that
conduct may not, as a result be in breach of an
Australian law it could still
amount to an impropriety engaging s 138 of the Evidence Act.
32. The
consequences of such conduct may be to exclude evidence obtained. That is the
relief sought by this application. I note
that even where the evidence has been
received, and a conviction recorded that conviction may be set aside and further
proceedings
stayed if the evidence is admitted but should have been excluded
(see, for example, Emanuele v Dau (1996) 84 A Crim R 197; Dau v Emanuele (1995)
60 FCR 270). A decision to proceed by way of exclusion of evidence, or the
grant of a stay, is a discretionary decision.
33. That discretion is defined
by s 138 (1), (2) and (3). Generally, the matters there referred to are the
same as those identified by the High Court in Bunning v Cross
[1978] HCA 22; (1978) 141 CLR 54
as relevant to the exclusion of evidence illegally or improperly
obtained.
34. Prior to the hearing of this application the prosecution
provided material detailing the correspondence between the accused and
Detective
Waugh posing as “Roxanne”.
35. New Zealand police also provided
details of their operation designed to track and identify paedophiles who used
the world-wide
web to target and groom children for sexual
exploitation.
36. Detective Waugh was appointed to a trained police unit
tasked with undertaking that operation. For that purpose he, and other
police,
would create an internet “decoy profile” of a child.
37. The unit
adopted, in the absence of specific provisions under New Zealand law, a policy
and procedure document entitled “Principles
of Practice for Investigating
On-Line Grooming of Children Under 16”.
38. I set out that
document:
Objective
To develop and operate a safe and evidentially-robust capacity for pro-actively investigating and prosecuting the computer-facilitated sexual grooming of children under 16 in Auckland City District.
Authority
Auckland City District Crime Services Business Plan 2007-08, Strategy 3, Objective 10, Page 10. Tasks:
- Maintain partnerships with key stakeholders
- Increase in identification of paedophiles and prosecutions for their activity
Resources
To operative within the established staffing and funding of Auckland City District’s Crime Services Business Group.
To seek the active co-operation of, and benefit from, the knowledge and experience of Department of Internal Affairs (DIA) Censorship Compliance Unit’s internet crimes investigators.
Boundaries
Staff Safety Restrictions/Boundaries
Evidential/Legal Considerations
(a) initiating contact with any person;
(b) soliciting contact with any person; or
(c) making or posting any sexual references of any sort on a profile page.
Administration
Responsibility for management of staff engaged in on-line child sexual grooming crime investigation remains with the Field Crime Manager at Crimes Services, Auckland City District Headquarters CIB.
39. The document does not directly address the issue of criminal conduct which might be committed overseas, though it clearly addresses the issue of entrapment. Police are, however, instructed not to engage in transmitting offensive material or to offer to engage in sexual acts. To quote the document:
Police investigators will not procure the commission of any offence, and will avoid any allegations that they have acted as “agent provocateur” by not:
(a) initiating contact with any person;
(b) soliciting contact with any person; or
(c) making or posting any sexual references of any sort on a profile page.
40. Evidence was tendered from Detective Sergeant Elias Petropolous of the
Australian Federal Police. He was informed during September
2007 of New Zealand
Police investigations involving the accused. He allocated Detective Senior
Constable Simone Campbell to liaise
with Detective Waugh on the
matter.
41. He agreed that Detective Waugh conducted the investigation as he,
Detective Waugh, saw fit though he kept Detective Sergeant Petropoulos
informed.
42. Detective Sergeant Petropoulos was advised, he said, by the
Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions that no authorisation
for a
“controlled operation” or use of a pseudonym by Detective Waugh was
regarded as necessary. He did not consider,
from the content of their
conversations, that Detective Waugh was encouraging the accused to commit an
offence. Thus he did not
believe that any illegal act had been or was being
counselled or procured nor, that there was any impropriety in Detective
Waugh’s
dealings with the accused.
43. It is clear that Detective
Waugh, in collaboration with Detective Sergeant Petropoulos, falsely represented
to the accused that
“Roxanne” was travelling to Australia and would
meet with him at the Jolimont Centre. He was aware that the accused
had
suggested breaking off contact but that “Roxanne” had continued
contact. He approved continued contact with a view
to confirming that it was
the accused who had been corresponding in a sexual manner with
“Roxanne”.
44. Detective Senior Constable Simone Louise Campbell
was also called. So also was Federal Agent Anthony John
Brennan.
45. Clearly, whether Detective Waugh counselled or procured the
allegedly offending conduct of the accused can only be judged by the
content of
their interaction.
46. It was conceded by Mr Gill, I think rightly, that, for
Detective Waugh to operate a fictitious persona to attract and deal with
persons
who may seek to procure young persons to engage in sexual activity with adult
persons was a legitimate exercise.
47. However, it was Mr Gill’s
submission that, even if the conduct of Detective Waugh did not amount to
entrapment, it was encouraging
or enticing the accused to commit the offences in
question.
48. Certainly, for the purposes at least of ss 474.26 and 474.27 of
the Code, the term “procure” includes to “encourage
or
entice” the relevant activity. Is it doing so simply to continue
correspondence with a person who clearly enough is endeavouring
to
“encourage or entice” the supposed recipient to engage in sexual
activity?
49. An indication, Mr Gill submits, is that Part IAB of the Crimes
Act expressly authorises a “controlled operation” including
an
operation by foreign police. That refers to an operation that would, otherwise
constitute or involve an offence against Commonwealth
law. Section 15 HB,
Crimes Act, expressly refers to ss 474.26 and 474.27 of the Code though not s
474.17 although the latter may
well be included in s 15 HB(1) Crimes
Act.
50. However, those provisions, exempting an authorised police officer
from criminal liability, would not, in my view, avoid the operation
of s 138 of
the Evidence Act if the conduct was either entrapment or otherwise an improper
inducement or encouragement of a person to commit the offence charged.
A
similar observation may be made concerning Part IAC Crimes Act. Certainly, a
certificate could have been applied for and was not, in respect of the
correspondence between Detective
Waugh, in his assumed identity of
“Roxanne” and the accused.
51. The distinction to be made between
merely gathering evidence and entrapment was explained by the Full Court of the
Federal Court,
applying Ridgeway, in Dau v Emanuele (1995) 60 FCR 270 at 284,
citing Ridgeway:
The effective investigation by the police of some types of criminal activity may necessarily involve subterfuge, deceit and the intentional creation of opportunities for the commission by a suspect of a criminal offence. When those tactics do not involve illegal conduct, their use will ordinarily be legitimate notwithstanding that they are conducive to the commission of a criminal offence by a person believed to be engaged in criminal activity. It is neither practicable nor desirable to seek to define with precision the borderline between what is acceptable and what is improper in relation to such conduct. The most that can be said is that the stage of impropriety will be reached in the case of conduct which is not illegal only in cases involving a degree of harassment or manipulation which is clearly inconsistent with minimum standards of acceptable police conduct in all the circumstances, including, amongst other things, the nature and extent of any known or suspected existing or threatened criminal activity, the basis and justification of any suspicion, the difficulty of effective investigation or prevention and any imminent danger to the community. A finding that law enforcement officers have engaged in such clearly improper conduct will not, of course, suffice of itself to give rise to the discretion to exclude evidence of the alleged offence or of an element of it. As with the case of illegal conduct, the discretion will only arise if the conduct has procured the commission of the offence with which the accused is charged.
52. In Ridgeway, police agents had purchased and imported heroin to set up a
situation where the appellant might be induced to take
delivery of it and,
hence, be apprehended. The importation was illegal but sanctioned by police
authorities. The appellant had
contacted one police agent seeking to arrange
the importation unaware that he was a registered police informant. Clearly, as
was
conceded, the police officers and agents involved in the “controlled
operation” had aided and abetted the illegal importation
that had been
sought by the appellant.
53. In that case, the police conduct itself was
unlawful, not merely deceitful. In the present case, the police officer,
Detective
Waugh, did nothing unlawful in pretending to be a 14 year old girl.
He did not represent “Roxanne” to be a young person
wishing to
engage in sexual activity with adult men.
54. I note that in R v Gajjar
[2008] VSCA 268, police posing as a 14 year old girl operated that persona
within a “chat room” called “Family Sex”. Gajjar
pleaded guilty to communicating with the fictional girl to procure her to have
sex with him. There was no suggestion that the inducements
implicit in the
“chat room” label and the conversation encouraging a meeting
constituted entrapment. It was not suggested
either that it was a mitigatory
factor that the offender had been misled.
55. Similar subterfuges were used
in R v McGrath [2005] QCA 463; [2006] 2 Qd R 58 and R v Podger [2009] VCC.
56. Although it is
not entirely analogous, there is authority that protective provisions such as
those in contention here do not involve
criminal liability on the part of the
underage person being procured, notwithstanding that the underage person aids,
abets or even
procures the offending behaviour on the part of the adult (see for
example, R v Tyrell [1894] 1 QB 710; R v Whitehouse [1977] 1 QB 868). It is a
moot point whether that immunity would extend to an adult pretending to be such
a child
but there seems to me to be no reason to suppose that criminal liability
was intended to extend to such a circumstance.
57. Even if such activity is
unlawful an issue then arises, as s 138 of the Evidence Act expressly addresses,
whether the evidence should, in any event, be admitted. Where the undercover
operatives, although aiding and
abetting the offence in question, did not induce
the accused persons to enter into criminal activity that they otherwise would
not
have done the evidence so obtained has been nevertheless admitted (see
Sundai Sloane (1990) 49 A Crim R 270 at 272-3, per Gleeson CJ). The fact that
the operatives so conducted themselves would not end an enquiry if it were to be
concluded
that the accused was no “unwary innocent”. The conduct of
police agents may, nevertheless, be so gravely unlawful as
to warrant the
refusal of the court to admit the evidence.
58. Despite encouragement to the
accused, the evidence obtained by the procuring police officer was admitted as a
matter of discretion
in Albert Salem [1999] NSWCCA 86; (1997) 96 A Crim R 421. That, per Gleeson
CJ, Hunt CJ at CL and Hidden J, had been a proper exercise of the trial
judge’s discretion.
59. An analogous case, it seems to me, is Robinson
v Woolworths Ltd (t/as Woolworths Plus Petrol Werrington) [2005] NSWCCA 426; (2005) 227 ALR 353.
In that case, authorities procured an underage girl to purchase cigarettes. It
was a random selection of target outlets. Basten
JA, Barr and Hall JJ
concurring, concluded that the conduct in question did not constitute
“impropriety” for the purpose
of s 138 Evidence Act (at 366
[46]):
46 In my view the conduct complained of was not capable, as a matter of law, of constituting impropriety for the purposes of s 138 of the Evidence Act. The factors which support that conclusion have been discussed above, but may be summarised as follows.
(a) The conduct of the law enforcement authority provided the opportunity for the commission of the offence, but did not involve the application of any form of pressure, persuasion or manipulation.
(b) The conduct involved a straightforward request, made in a public place, in the course of a legitimate business and therefore involved no intrusion on individual rights or freedoms and certainly no harassment.
(c) The two girls acted in the manner of ordinary members of the public seeking to purchase cigarettes.
(d) In the case of an offence which does not involve a criminal intent, the policy against tempting people to commit crimes which otherwise might not have occurred is of limited significance.
(e) Because the victim of a contravention of the law, namely the young person who successfully purchases tobacco products, is unlikely to complain about a contravention, the conduct constitutes a viable and practical means of achieving a better level of compliance than would be likely if law enforcement were dependent on receipt of complaints.
(f) A properly run compliance program, backed by the possibility of prosecution where contravention occurs, is itself a reasonable and proper means of promoting compliance with the law.
60. It might be said that there was, in this case, an element of persuasion in
“Roxanne’s” responses to the accused,
not merely passive
acceptance of the suggestions made by him.
61. However, Basten JA, at 366-7
[47] in Robinson noted:
47 In noting at (a) above that there was an absence of pressure or persuasion in the present case, it is not intended to suggest that the presence of pressure or persuasion would necessarily lead to a different result. These are matters of degree, and may need to be tested in accordance with the factor noted at (c), namely the likely behaviour of members of the public. If young people who are anxious to obtain tobacco products may be expected to apply some level of pressure or persuasion and seek to importune retailers, then the law will require retailers to resist such importuning and their willingness and ability to do so may also reasonably be tested.
62. The Crimes Act, as noted, has been amended to permit the authorisation of
“controlled operations”. Similar legislation
in New South Wales was
considered in R v Ladocki [2004] NSWCCA 336. It was held that such legislation
simply made clear that to breach the Code of conduct for the obtaining of an
authorisation would
not render the evidence obtained liable to be excluded
merely by reason of that circumstance. The shield provided by the Act
authorising
a controlled operation might not be necessary for the evidence to be
admitted. If police have contravened no law nor acted improperly
to obtain the
tendered evidence, the shield so provided would not be needed.
63. It follows
that unless Detective Waugh’s interaction with the accused was itself
unlawful there was no need for him to obtain
an authorisation for a
“controlled operation” or an assumed identity. As noted in Gedeon v
Commissioner of the New South
Wales Crime Commission [2008] HCA 43, the regime
for such an authorisation is intended to apply to the importation and possession
of illicit goods rather than to the
case of illicit communications. Such an
authorisation, if granted, limits rather than excludes the operation of s 138
Evidence Act.
64. Nevertheless, it seems to me that Parts IAB and IAC of the
Crimes Act demonstrate a legislative intention that “controlled
operations” of the kind undertaken here,
including the creation of an
false persona to attract those who would corrupt children, are not regarded as
inimical either to proper
law enforcement or the public interest.
65. If the
deceit and enticement used remains within the bounds of that which, if exceeded,
would be entrapment as explained, for
example, in Dau v Emanuele it will not
attract the need for the discretion under s 138 to be exercised.
66. In my
view, there is not demonstrated in this case any breach of Australian law or any
impropriety in Detective Waugh’s
communications with the accused which
should be regarded as enlivening the discretion provided for by s 138 Evidence
Act.
67. I would only add this. Even if Detective Waugh could have been
regarded as aiding and abetting the accused’s allegedly
offensive
communications, I would have exercised the s 138 discretion in favour of the
admission of the evidence he so obtained. It is, I recognise, for a jury to
characterise or not the
communications from the accused as being likely to cause
offence as defined by s 474.17 of the Code or, to quote McKenzie J in R
v
McGrath at 60 [6], and to decide “whether the [accused] should be regarded
as one who intended to carry through with what
was proposed or whether he was
merely engaging in the obscene conversation for
self-gratification”.
68. The probative value of the evidence from
Detective Waugh is high. It is electronically recorded. The content of it is
not likely
seriously to be doubted. It is of the essence to the prosecution
case.
69. The evil to be confronted by this kind of investigation is of high
public importance. I refer to R v Burdon; ex parte Attorney-General
(Qld)
[2005] QCA 147; (2005) 153 A Crim R 104 where the facts were similar to those here alleged. As
McMurdo P noted, at 108, the widespread use of the internet gives those disposed
to corrupting and sexually exploiting children unprecedented access to vast
numbers of potential victims. Such predators would be
difficult to detect
absent a complaint from an actual victim or an operation such as the present.
The Gospel of St Matthew records
Christ as condemning those who would corrupt
the young in the following terms:
18:6 But who so shall offend one of these little ones which believe in me, it were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and that he were drowned in the depth of the sea (see Mark 9:42; Luke 17:2)
70. That, I think reflects the community attitude toward such offences and such
offenders. It would support the use of covert operations
to detect them in a
manner that does not place an actual young person at risk.
71. If there was
an impropriety in the operation conducted by Detective Waugh it could only have
been in encouraging the alleged offender
to expose his intentions. In my view
that would not be a grave impropriety nor one likely, as might be the case if a
drug operation
fails to contain the drug being used as bait, to cause harm to
others. It does not curtail unreasonably the civil rights of the
accused. He
was free to “chat” or not and to choose the terms of his
“chat” or emails. I accept that Detective
Waugh, had he gone beyond
the rules of engagement laid down by New Zealand Police, could have been
counselled. I doubt he would
have been disciplined. Evidence of the evil
intentions of a sexual predator on the internet would be difficult to obtain
otherwise
without monitoring actual attempts at corruption of young people.
That would be an appalling alternative though it may sometimes
be necessary.
Better, as commented in R v Burden, that the victim be an adult posing as a
child than an actual young person who
receives and responds to such
communications.
72. It follows that the application to exclude this evidence
is refused.
I certify that the preceding seventy-two (72) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of his Honour, Chief Justice Higgins.
Associate:
Date: 26 May 2009
Counsel for the Crown: Ms K Weston-Scheuber
Solicitor for the
Crown: Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions
Counsel for the
Defendant: Mr S Gill
Solicitor for the defendant: Legal Aid Office
(ACT)
Date of hearing: 5 February 2009
Date of judgment: 26 May 2009
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/act/ACTSC/2009/63.html