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Supreme Court of New South Wales |
Last Updated: 11 March 2009
NEW SOUTH WALES SUPREME COURT
CITATION:
R v ABBAS [2009] NSWSC
127
JURISDICTION:
FILE NUMBER(S):
2008/5766
HEARING DATE(S):
10 - 11 November 2008
18 December
2008
JUDGMENT DATE:
6 March 2009
PARTIES:
Regina
(Crown)
Mohamed Khoder Abbas (Offender)
JUDGMENT OF:
Mathews AJ
LOWER COURT JURISDICTION:
Not Applicable
LOWER COURT FILE
NUMBER(S):
Not Applicable
LOWER COURT JUDICIAL OFFICER:
Not
Applicable
COUNSEL:
M Barr/ T Bailey (Crown)
J Dailly SC/
D Timmins (Offender)
SOLICITORS:
S Kavanagh (Solicitor for Director
of Public Prosecutions) (Crown)
Allied Lawyers
(Offender)
CATCHWORDS:
CRIMINAL LAW
sentence
plea of not
guilty to charge of murder
jury trial commenced
re-arraignment
plea of
not guilty of murder but guilty of manslaughter
plea accepted in full
discharge of indictment
stab wounds
excessive self-defence
use of
weapon an aggravating factor
episode initiated by deceased
remorse
plea
of guilty to manslaughter offered earlier but declined by Crown
special
circumstances
LEGISLATION CITED:
Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act
1999
CATEGORY:
Sentence
CASES CITED:
TEXTS CITED:
DECISION:
Sentenced to a non-parole period of three years and
nine months, commencing 11 December 2006 and expiring on 10 September 2010,
together
with an additional term of three years, commencing on 11 September 2010
and expiring on 10 September 2013.
JUDGMENT:
IN THE SUPREME COURT
OF NEW SOUTH WALES
COMMON LAW DIVISION
CRIMINAL LIST
Mathews AJ
Friday 6 March 2009
2008/5766 R v Mohamed ABBAS
REASONS FOR SENTENCE
1 HER HONOUR: On 10 November 2008 the offender, Mohamed Abbas,
pleaded not guilty on arraignment to a charge that on 10 December 2006 he
murdered
Joseph Webber. A jury was duly empanelled and the trial commenced.
Two witnesses had given evidence by the end of the first day.
The next day the
offender asked to be re-arraigned. On this occasion he pleaded not guilty of
murder but guilty of manslaughter,
a plea which was accepted by the Crown in
full discharge of the indictment. The jury was accordingly discharged and the
matter stood
over for sentence.
2 The circumstances of the killing are as follows. At about 7.30 pm on
Sunday 10 December 2006, the victim, Mr Webber, and two friends,
Trinity Heng
and Zaccariah Hough, went to a KFC restaurant at Wentworthville. They had spent
much of the day on a pre-Christmas
cruise, hosted by their employer, followed by
a few hours of partying at the home of their employer’s son. A
considerable
amount of alcohol had been consumed and Mr Webber was significantly
intoxicated.
3 The three of them sat at a table in the outside seating area of the
restaurant. One of them went inside for some food which the
three of them then
shared between them. Not long afterwards the offender and his companion, Mr
Hanna Saade, arrived and sat at a
table in the same outside area. Neither the
offender nor Mr Saade had ever previously met Mr Webber or either of his
companions.
4 I should say at this stage that almost everything that happened that
evening was captured on CCTV. Accordingly, the Court was in
the most unusual
position of being able to observe at first hand many of the actual movements of
the participants, together with
the time at which all relevant events
occurred.
5 At 7.56.17 pm Mr Webber got up and walked towards the table occupied by
the offender and Mr Saade. He asked for a dollar. His
demeanour was
threatening and angry, and his friend Mr Heng, sensing impending trouble, went
over and offered the deceased five dollars.
Mr Webber threw it to the ground,
and continued to walk towards the offender and Mr Saade demanding that they give
him a dollar.
Both Mr Heng and Mr Hough tried to restrain him and move him
away. They told the offender and Mr Saade to ignore him as he was
drunk.
6 At about this point – at 7.56.46 pm – the offender left the
area, saying he was going to get change from his car. He
went outside to his
car where he was seen to take a knife from the glove box. While he was away, Mr
Webber was trying to get to
Mr Saade, but was held back by Mr Hough. Very
shortly before the offender returned, Mr Webber broke away, lunged at Mr Saade
and
grabbed him by the neck of his shirt. He was in this position when the
offender returned. The offender was momentarily held back
by Mr Heng but broke
free. He went up to Mr Webber, who was still holding Mr Saade, and stabbed him
four times.
7 Shortly afterwards the offender and Mr Saade left. They went to the
offender’s car where the offender told Mr Saade that
he had stabbed the
deceased in the leg in order to immobilize him as “he looked like he was
strangling you”.
8 None of the onlookers had seen the knife in the offender’s hand,
and it was only when Mr Webber collapsed shortly afterwards
that his companions
realised the seriousness of the situation. A triple-0 call was made and an
ambulance arrived almost immediately.
However, Mr Webber died shortly after his
arrival in hospital.
9 All this happened very quickly indeed. The actual stabbing took place
at 7.57.41 pm, a mere one minute and 24 seconds after the
confrontation had
started with Mr Webber first approaching the offender and Mr Saade.
10 The next day, after learning through the media that Mr Webber had
died, the offender voluntarily attended the Merrylands Police
Station where he
was arrested and charged with murder. He has been in custody ever since.
11 A post-mortem examination found that Mr Webber had sustained four stab
wounds: three to the abdomen and one to the groin. One
of the abdominal wounds
had penetrated the aorta. This was the immediate cause of death. Even without
it, one of the other abdominal
wounds would have caused death without early
medical intervention, as it had penetrated the gall bladder, the pancreas and
the colon.
The doctor performing the post-mortem was unable to determine the
order in which the wounds had been inflicted.
12 Mr Webber had a blood alcohol reading of .238 per 100mls, a very high
reading indeed. He was heavily intoxicated at the time of
these events. This
is confirmed by the CCTV images and by the evidence of his companions.
13 It is agreed that the plea of guilty to manslaughter is based on
excessive self-defence (or more accurately, excessive defence
of Mr Saade).
14 I turn to say something about the offender’s background. This
largely comes from evidence given during the sentencing proceedings
by the
offender himself and two of his siblings, and also from a report of Dr Olav
Nielssen, which was tendered by the defence.
15 The offender is now 34 years old, having been born on 18 January 1975.
He has a police record consisting of a number of driving
offences and a few
other relatively minor offences. The only offences involving violence were two
convictions, in 1996 and 2003
respectively, for assaulting a police officer.
Both of these were dealt with by way of bond. The offender has never been in
gaol
before.
16 The offender, who is of Lebanese extraction, is the oldest of seven
children. His mother was 16 when she married his father, a
much older man, in
an arranged marriage. They came to Australia shortly afterwards and the
offender was born the following year.
His parents’ marriage was never
happy. The offender told Dr Nielssen that his father was a gambler who later
became addicted
to heroin. He was away from the home for long periods of time
so that it was, in many respects, a single parent household.
17 The offender’s mother was clearly a bitter and unhappy woman.
She visited a degree of violence on all her children, but
it was the offender
who was singled out to bear the brunt of her abuse. The evidence on this matter
came primarily from the offender’s
younger brother, Sam Abbas, who said
that the offender was beaten severely on an almost daily basis. His mother made
him solely
responsible for the great majority of household chores. He washed
the dishes, made the beds and cleaned the home. If he did not
perform these
tasks to his mother’s satisfaction, he was severely beaten. He was a
bed-wetter until the age of 14. His mother
always checked his bed and beat him
when she found that he had wet it. Sam Abbas said that he used to hear his
brother crying in
the middle of the night. He attempted suicide twice, when he
was in his early teens.
18 The offender told Dr Nielssen that in the course of this abuse he
sustained burns, a broken leg and was sometimes beaten unconscious.
He was
teased at school because of the bruises and other marks caused by his
mother’s abuse. From time to time his teachers
brought him to the
attention of child welfare services because of his obvious injuries, but he
declined to inform them about the
source of the injuries and no action was
taken. He left home at age 15, and moved in with other relatives.
19 Probably because of this physical abuse, the offender did not do well
at school. He left school without completing year 10 and
has worked ever since
as a bricklayer’s labourer. A very favourable report was tendered on
sentence from his previous employer
who has continued to visit him in gaol. He
expressed willingness to re-employ the offender upon his release from
custody.
20 In March 2005 the offender was married and in February the following
year his son was born. The offender’s wife gave evidence
on sentence in
which she described him as a devoted father and a good husband. She and their
son visit him regularly.
21 Dr Nielssen considered that the offender showed no features of
psychotic illness or delusional or abnormal beliefs. He estimated
his
intelligence to be within the normal range. He considered it likely that the
severe physical abuse suffered by the offender
in early life pre-disposed him to
developing a high level of arousal in response to threats of violence such as
the threat he perceived
to have been posed by Mr Webber. Dr Nielssen went on to
say:
“Despite the severe level of neglect and abuse he experienced in early life ... Mr Abbas did not go on to develop adolescent conduct disorder or a pattern of anti-social conduct as an adult. Moreover, he does not have a substance abuse disorder, which is the other factor most strongly associated with criminal recidivism. He has a history of stable employment, stable family life and strong support from his siblings. I believe Mr Abbas has good prospects for rehabilitation and a low risk of further offences of any kind.”
22 The offender does not drink
alcohol or take any other form of recreational drug.
23 The maximum penalty for manslaughter is imprisonment for 25 years. As
has been observed on many occasions, this offence covers
a broader range of
culpability than any other in the criminal calendar. It can range, at the lower
end of the spectrum, from a practical
joke gone wrong, to, at the other end, a
killing which is little short of murder. Sentencing patterns in relation to
particular
categories of manslaughter can provide something of a useful guide,
but ultimately each case will turn upon its own facts. It must
never be
forgotten that the offence involves the unlawful taking of a human life.
24 The starting point in the sentencing process is to assess the
objective seriousness of the offence. The Crown relies upon the
following
aggravating factors under s 21A of the Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act
1999: first, pursuant to paragraph (2)(c), that the offence involved the
actual use of a weapon; and second, under paragraph (2)(ea),
that the offence
was committed in the presence of a child under 18 years of age. In this respect
a number of KFC employees under
the age of 18 were in the vicinity. Only one of
them, a 16 year-old, witnessed the actual incident.
25 I would not use this second factor, namely the presence of the 16
year-old, as a relevant matter in this case. As Mr Dailly SC
pointed out on
behalf of the offender, he did not choose this venue to commit the offence. He
happened to be there with his friend
Mr Saade when Mr Webber approached them and
the altercation between them ensued, with tragic consequences.
26 The following mitigating factors are potentially relevant to the
objective seriousness of the offence. First, pursuant to paragraph
(3)(b), the
offence was not part of a planned or organised criminal activity; second,
pursuant to paragraph (3)(c), the offender
was provoked by the victim. However,
the Crown rightly submits that the deceased’s provocation has already been
taken into
account in reducing the offence from murder to manslaughter. It
should not be used again in mitigation of the manslaughter offence.
27 In addition to the matters under s 21A, the Crown submitted that the
offender’s action in going to the car and obtaining a knife was not a
reasonable response in
the circumstances. At that time neither the offender nor
Mr Saade were in any danger. Mr Webber had not touched anyone, and his
friends
were trying to move him away. Nor was Mr Saade in any serious danger when the
offender returned and, with no prior warning,
proceeded to stab Mr Webber four
times in quick succession.
28 On the other hand, as the defence points out, this episode was
initiated entirely by Mr Webber. Before it started, the offender
and Mr Saade
were apparently oblivious to the presence of Mr Webber and his friends at
another table in the area. The deceased’s
friend, Mr Heng, acknowledged
that no provocative word or gesture at all had preceded Mr Webber getting up and
going to the table
where the two of them were sitting.
29 The offender said in evidence that, before he went out to his car and
collected the knife, he tried to persuade Mr Saade to come
with him. Had he
succeeded, both of them would have left the area and nothing more would have
happened. A tragedy would have been
averted. Unfortunately Mr Saade refused to
move, so the offender went and collected the knife. His intention at the time,
he said,
was to frighten Mr Webber. When he returned he saw Mr Webber with his
hand at Mr Saade’s neck. I should interpose here that
Mr Webber was a
large man, approximately 180 cm in height and 102 kg in weight. He was
significantly larger than the offender, and
larger (although less so) than Mr
Saade. The offender first tried to push Mr Webber away with his left hand, but
could not move
him. He then stabbed him with his right hand. He said that he
thought he had stabbed him only twice, and lower in the body. He
was clearly
wrong in this respect.
30 The Crown did not accept that the offender tried to pull Mr Saade away
before going to his car. However, having viewed the video
on several occasions,
I accept that this did indeed take place. I also accept that the
offender’s purpose in getting the knife
was to frighten Mr Webber. It was
only when he saw Mr Webber holding Mr Saade in the neck area that he lunged at
him with the knife
in order to stop him. This was, on any view of the matter, a
highly excessive response, given that no injury had at that stage been
sustained
by either the offender or Mr Saade. I accept that the offender had no intention
to kill Mr Webber. However, as he himself
conceded, in stabbing him with a
knife he must have realised that really serious injury would virtually
inevitably follow. I also
accept, consistently with Dr Nielssen’s
findings, that the offender’s childhood experiences of severe and
unremitting
abuse, meant that he was particularly prone to develop high levels
of arousal when confronted with threats of physical violence.
31 The knife itself was a relatively small, opening knife, which the
offender routinely kept in his car for use during his employment.
32 It follows that the most significant factor exacerbating the objective
seriousness of this offence was the use of the knife in
circumstances which
clearly, in hindsight, did not merit a response of that nature. Further, as the
medical evidence shows, the
knife was used to inflict no less than four stab
wounds, three of them to the abdomen.
33 On the other hand I accept the various matters referred to by Mr
Dailly in mitigation of the objective seriousness of this offence.
Amongst the
more important of these is the fact that neither the offender nor his companion
did anything whatsoever to provoke this
episode. The fact that the offender
sought to avoid the confrontation by pulling Mr Saade outside quite early in the
piece is also
a significant factor. Nor is there any doubt as to the
genuineness of the offender’s belief at the time that he needed to
protect
his friend Mr Saade, albeit that the means he used was grossly disproportionate
to the threat posed by Mr Webber.
34 Objectively, the offence must be placed at the lower end of the
spectrum of manslaughter offences, given the broad range of criminality
encompassed by that offence.
35 I turn to discuss the effect upon sentence of the offender’s
subjective features. These are, without exception, favourable
to the offender.
The Crown sought to urge that, as the offence of assault police in 2003 involved
the threatened use of a knife,
greater weight should be given to personal
deterrence in the sentence for this offence. However, without going into the
detailed
facts of that earlier offence, I do not regard it as relevant in this
case. Accordingly I do not propose to treat the offender’s
criminal
record, minor as it is, as an adverse factor in the sentencing process.
36 The offender has expressed extreme remorse for this offence and I
accept that he is entirely genuine in this respect. In his evidence
he
expressed severe regret and said that he deserved to be punished for killing Mr
Webber. He acknowledged that Mr Webber did not
deserve to be stabbed. He wrote
a handwritten note which was read in court, apologising to Mr Webber’s
family and seeking
forgiveness for the pain and sorrow he had caused them,
whilst acknowledging that it would be difficult for them to forgive him.
37 Given the offender’s contrition and the various matters referred
to by Dr Nielssen, I consider it most unlikely that the
offender will re-offend
in any serious manner in the future. This is a highly significant matter on
sentence. A further highly
significant matter is the offender’s plea of
guilty. Although this was only entered during the course of the trial, a letter
was sent on the offender’s behalf to the DPP in September 2007, requesting
that the Crown accept a plea of guilty to manslaughter
based on excessive
self-defence. It was not until the second day of the trial, after Mr
Webber’s two companions gave evidence
which supported the offender’s
version of events, that the Crown agreed to accept this plea. The offender
should not be penalised
for the Crown’s delay in this regard. In all the
circumstances I propose to apply a discount of 20% for his plea of guilty.
38 Mr Webber was the father of a daughter, Rakaia, born in 1991, and a
son, Teiwa, born in 2003. Extremely moving victim impact statements
were read
in court on behalf of Mr Webber’s widow, Christine Tumanako and his
daughter Rakaia. A further statement, of Mr
Webber’s youngest sister,
Briar London, was tendered by the Crown. I would like to convey my own and the
Court’s sincere
condolences to Mr Webber’s family and friends.
Their lives have forever been changed by the events of 10 December 2006. I
hope
that they will understand that the extent of the grief and loss suffered by the
family of a homicide victim cannot be used as
a measure for the appropriate
sentence to be imposed upon the perpetrator.
39 This is a most unusual case in a number of respects, particularly
relating to the offender’s background and his strong prospects
of
rehabilitation. The Crown has agreed that special circumstances exist which
justify a departure from the statutory nexus between
the non-parole period and
the total term of imprisonment.
40 The offender has been in custody since 11 December 2006 and his
sentence is to commence on that date.
41 Mohamed Abbas, for the manslaughter of Joseph Webber you are sentenced
to a term of imprisonment with a non-parole period of three
years and nine
months, commencing on 11 December 2006 and expiring on 10 September 2010,
together with an additional term of three
years, commencing on 11 September 2010
and expiring on 10 September 2013; a total sentence of six years and nine
months. The earliest
date on which you will be eligible for release on parole
is 10 September 2010.
**********
LAST UPDATED:
11 March 2009
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