You are here:
AustLII >>
Databases >>
Supreme Court of New South Wales >>
2011 >>
[2011] NSWSC 89
[Database Search]
[Name Search]
[Recent Decisions]
[Noteup]
[Download]
[Help]
R v Thomas Ty Phu LEE [2011] NSWSC 89 (25 February 2011)
Supreme Court of New South Wales Decisions
[Index]
[Search]
[Download]
[Help]
R v Thomas Ty Phu LEE [2011] NSWSC 89 (25 February 2011)
Last Updated: 7 March 2011
|
Case Title:
|
|
|
|
|
Medium Neutral Citation:
|
|
|
|
|
Hearing Date(s):
|
9, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 19, 20, 21, 22, 29 July;
16th August; 8th October; 12, and 17 November, 2nd and 14th December 2010
|
|
|
|
Decision Date:
|
|
|
|
|
Jurisdiction:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Decision:
|
On count 1 of the indictment, the offender is
convicted and sentenced to a term of 5 years and 6 months imprisonment, to date
from
12 June 2010, expiring 11 December 2015. On count 2 of the indictment,
the offender is convicted and sentenced to a term of 7 years imprisonment, to
date from 12 June 2010,
expiring 11 June 2017. On count 3 of the indictment,
the offender is convicted and sentenced to a term of 6 years imprisonment, to
date from 12 June 2016,
expiring 11 June 2022. Non parole period of 8 years
to date from 12 June 2010. The offender is eligible for release on 12 June 2018.
|
|
|
|
Catchwords:
|
CRIMINAL LAW - sentence - relevant factors -
nature and circumstances of offence - gravity of offence - generally - parity
between
co-offenders - grounds for discrimination between co-offenders - degree
of criminality.
|
|
|
|
Legislation Cited:
|
|
|
|
|
Cases Cited:
|
|
|
|
|
Texts Cited:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Parties:
|
Regina - (Crown) Thomas Ty Phu Lee -
(Offender)
|
|
|
|
Representation
|
|
|
|
|
Counsel: L Crowley - Commonwealth Director of
Public Prosecutions - (Crown) A Radojev/P Stitz - (Offender)
|
|
|
|
- Solicitors:
|
Solicitors: Commonwealth Director of Public
Prosecutions - (Crown) Jack Rigg Solicitors - (Offender)
|
|
|
|
File number(s):
|
|
|
|
Publication Restriction:
|
|
SENTENCE
| 1 | The offender, Thomas Ty Phu
Lee, pleaded guilty on 29 July 2010 to conspiring with others to deal with
money, in excess of $1 million,
with the intention that it would become an
instrument of crime (s 400.3(1) Criminal Code Act 1995 (Cth)), conspiring
with others to import not less than the traffickable quantity of heroin (s
233B(1)(a)(iii) Customs Act 1901 (Cth)) and conspiring with others to
traffic in a marketable quantity of heroin and methamphetamine (s 302.3
Criminal Code Act ). Each of these offences carries a maximum penalty of
25 years imprisonment. |
| 2 | The pleas of guilty came on
the eleventh day of a trial after the principal witness in the Crown case, a
co-conspirator, had given
evidence and was part way through cross examination.
The offender had formally admitted, pursuant to s184 Evidence Act 1995,
that the conspiracies existed as they were particularised by the Crown. The only
live issue at trial was whether the offender was
a party to those conspiracies.
|
| 3 | The Crown prepared a statement
of facts for the purposes of sentencing, parts of which were disputed by the
offender. The offender
took issue with the Crown's interpretation of a number of
telephone intercepts. Ultimately, the resolution of this dispute fell to
the
Court according to the onus and standard of proof that applies in criminal
matters : The Queen v Olbrich [1999] HCA 54. The Crown relied upon
the whole of the Crown brief, including two volumes of telephone intercept
material. I have had regard to that
material in finding to my satisfaction
beyond reasonable doubt that the interpretations advanced by the Crown are
correct. The particular
areas of dispute are indicated within the summary of
facts that appears below. |
The Offences
| 4 | In June 2005, the Australian
Crime Commission commenced an investigation into the money laundering activities
of several money remittance
businesses in Melbourne and Sydney. The
investigation was later expanded to include the importation and trafficking of
drugs, as
evidence relating to the commission of those offences came to light.
The scope of the investigation focused principally upon members
of the syndicate
dubbed the "Ken syndicate". Members of the syndicate were based in both Sydney
and Melbourne. The head of the syndicate
was Khan Hoang Tran (Tran) also known
by the anglicised name "Ken" or "Kenny". Hong Phong Le (Phong Le) was a
principal member of
the syndicate who was based in Sydney and worked closely
with Tran during the commission of the money laundering, drug trafficking
and
drug importation offences. |
| 5 | The syndicate and their
members in Sydney sold drugs to buyers in Melbourne. The drugs were couriered
down to Melbourne by various
syndicate members. The Melbourne buyers would remit
money to Sydney for the purchase of the drugs. Purchase moneys were remitted
both before and after the delivery of drugs. This occurred between November 2005
and July 2006. |
| 6 | Tran or Phong Le acquired
drugs through various means, including through the importation of drugs from
Vietnam and through purchases
from domestic suppliers. The drugs would then be
warehoused in Sydney, until couriers were arranged to transport the drugs to
Melbourne.
Various types of drugs were acquired and sold by the syndicate,
including heroin and methamphetamine. |
| 7 | Tran or Phong Le would arrange
for various members within the syndicate to act as couriers to transport the
drugs to Melbourne, either
by personally carrying the drugs with them on
commercial airline flights or by transporting the drugs to Melbourne by car. The
actual
delivery of the drugs in Melbourne was arranged and facilitated through
the Melbourne-based members of the syndicate, including Ngoc
Thuan Nguyen (Ngoc
Nguyen) and the offender. |
| 8 | Payment for the drugs was
effected by a number of different methods. On occasions, the purchasers would
deposit the money with the
various money remittance businesses in Melbourne and
requested that it be sent to similar businesses in Sydney for collection by
Tran
or Phong Le. On other occasions, the money would be provided directly to the
couriers, who would either use the money remitting
businesses to send it back to
Sydney or simply bring the money back with them on their return. On other
occasions, Ngoc Nguyen and
the offender would receive money from the buyers in
Melbourne and deposit it with the Melbourne money remittance businesses for
transfer
to Sydney. |
| 9 | The offender (who was
previously known as Be Van Tran) lived in Melbourne. He is the uncle of Phong
Le. Throughout the period of the
syndicate's activities, the offender was
commonly referred to as "Be" or "uncle Be". |
| 10 | The offender carried out
various tasks for the syndicate as and when required. The offender would
generally carry out these tasks
as directed or instructed by either Phong Le or
Tran. |
| 11 | One of the offender's main
roles in Melbourne was to collect and remit drug purchase moneys through the
Melbourne remittance businesses
to facilitate the movement of drugs between New
South Wales and Victoria. These activities related to the offence of conspiracy
to
deal with money as the proceeds of crime. |
| 12 | The offender also liaised
with the couriers for various purposes once they arrived in Melbourne to deliver
drugs and on occasions
the offender received or warehoused the drugs that were
returned or rejected by the buyers in Melbourne and thereafter attempted
to sell
those drugs on behalf of the syndicate. These activities related to the offence
of conspiracy to traffic in controlled drugs.
|
| 13 | The offender introduced the
syndicate to his drug contact in Vietnam (Dung) and thereafter, together with
Phong Le and Tran, the offender
was involved in the arrangements for the
importation of heroin on behalf of the syndicate. On occasions when the offender
was in
Vietnam, he would deal directly with the suppliers and couriers there. At
other times he would contact the same people by telephone
from Australia and
discuss prices, amounts and courier arrangements. On other occasions, the
offender met, or made arrangements to
meet, with couriers arriving in Australia
or paid couriers for importing drugs into Australia on behalf of the syndicate.
|
| 14 | Between November 2005 and
July 2006 the syndicate was involved in the business of selling illegal drugs on
a day to day basis. Throughout
this period, a number of discrete importations
and instances of trafficking occurred. The evidence of these offences was
principally
derived from extensive lawfully intercepted telephone material,
surveillance and other corroborative material. The following summary
of 11
specific occasions of importations and trafficking is representative of the
scope of the activities of the syndicate and the
offender's role therein.
|
Importation in December 2005
| 15 | In November of 2005, the
offender and Phong Le travelled to Germany for a holiday. There, they recruited
a German citizen (Springer)
to import heroin from Vietnam to Australia. In early
December 2005, the offender, Phong Le, another member of the syndicate and
Springer
each travelled to Vietnam. Whilst in Vietnam the offender met up with
Springer. The offender purchased Springer's ticket to fly to
Australia to import
heroin for the syndicate. The offender also provided Springer with some cash for
the trip. The offender contributed
his own money to part finance this
importation. |
| 16 | The offender disputes that he
purchased Springer's ticket and that he provided Springer with cash. The
offender also disputes that
he contributed his own money towards the
importation. Having regard to a number of text messages and telephone calls on 5
and 6 April
2006 (Exhibit A on sentence), where a co-offender refers to the
offender having purchased Springer's ticket, and in which the offender
himself
refers to "losing paper", I am satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that the
offender financed the importation to the extent
set out above.
|
| 17 | On 16 December 2005, Springer
arrived at Sydney airport in possession of 71.8 g pure heroin internally
secreted. This was only one
third of the drugs that were anticipated by the
syndicate. Springer was arrested and charged. |
| 18 | For some months, the
syndicate was unaware of Springer's arrest. The offender, Tran, Phong Le and
others speculated as to whether
Springer had "ripped them off". The offender
eventually rang a number of gaols in Sydney and ascertained that Springer had
been arrested
and was in custody. The offender advised the syndicate of this
fact. |
Trafficking between 13 February and 10 March 2006
| 19 | On about 10 March 2006, two
couriers travelled to Melbourne on behalf of the syndicate in possession of two
350 g blocks of heroin
and 1 kg of crystal methamphetamine for supply to two
co-offenders. The couriers also had an ounce of heroin for supply to the
offender.
The offender took possession of that ounce, valued at $10,000. The
couriers told the other syndicate members that the remainder of
the heroin was
stolen, or accidentally discarded, whilst the couriers were in Melbourne.
|
| 20 | The offender, Tran and Phong
Le again suspected that the couriers had "ripped them off". At Tran's request,
the offender contacted
the couriers and sought explanations from them. The
offender later advised Tran and Phong Le of those explanations and was requested
by Tran to escort the couriers back to Sydney. |
| 21 | The offender later sold the
heroin and attempted to buy some of the methamphetamine that had been delivered
to a co-offender. This
aspect of the Crown case is denied by the offender.
However, a number of text messages and phone calls on 10 and 11 March 2006
provide
clear evidence to this effect. |
Trafficking between 17 March and 23 March 2006
| 22 | On 22 March 2006, a
co-offender took approximately 417 g pure of crystal methamphetamine from Sydney
to Melbourne on a domestic flight.
He was intercepted leaving the aircraft in
Melbourne and police found the drugs within a carry-on bag. He was arrested and
charged
with trafficking in a controlled drug. He pleaded guilty to this offence
and was sentenced. |
| 23 | While the co-offender was at
Sydney airport, he contacted the offender to advise him that he was at the
airport and that he would
meet with the offender when he arrived in Melbourne.
|
| 24 | When the co-offender did not
make contact with anyone in Melbourne, Tran asked the offender to make efforts
to find out what had happened.
The following day, the offender contacted Tran
and informed him that the co-offender had been arrested.
|
Importation between 4 March 2006 and 14 April 2006
| 25 | A large number of lawfully
intercepted telephone calls during March and April 2006 establish that the
offender, Tran, Phong Le and
others were speaking about various drug couriers
and heroin importations from Vietnam to Australia.
|
| 26 | On a number of occasions, the
offender spoke with the syndicate's supplier in Vietnam (Dung) regarding past,
current and future heroin
supplies and the arrangements for payment of money
from the syndicate to him for those supplies. After these various conversations
with Dung, the offender spoke to either Phong Le or Tran to advise them of the
matters discussed. |
| 27 | On 14 April 2006, Phong Le
arranged for a courier to import a quantity of heroin from Vietnam to Australia
for the syndicate. The
courier was paid at least $15,000 with the promise of
further payment. The offender gave the courier $9,500 as part payment for
bringing
the heroin into Australia. |
Trafficking between 4 and 10 May 2006
| 28 | On 9 May 2006, two couriers
transported a quantity of heroin to Melbourne by car. The couriers supplied a
co-offender with half a
350 g block and the remainder of that block went to
another co-offender. A further 350 g block was supplied to another member of
the
syndicate. |
Trafficking between 11 and 13 May 2006
| 29 | On 12 May 2006, two couriers
flew from Sydney to Melbourne each carrying a 350 g block of heroin. Each block
was delivered to another
member of the syndicate.
|
Importation between 25 April and 22 May 2006
| 30 | In the latter half of May
2006, the offender travelled to Vietnam and met with a co-offender for the
purposes of arranging an importation
of heroin for the syndicate. Phong Le and
the offender had several telephone conversations in which plans were made for
the offender
to negotiate importations with the Vietnam suppliers.
|
| 31 | While in Vietnam, the
offender contacted other members of the syndicate and discussed arrangements for
importations and prices for
heroin. The offender and Tran met with Dung at a
restaurant in Hanoi where further negotiations took place.
|
| 32 | The offender disputes that he
was responsible for these negotiations. Rather, he maintains that he was merely
present at negotiations
conducted by others over the price of the heroin. A
number of phone calls between 5 and 16 May 2006 (Exhibit A) strongly indicate
otherwise. In particular, a phone call on 14 May establishes that the offender
was responsible for "getting better rates" for the
heroin.
|
| 33 | On the morning of 22 May
2006, a courier from Vietnam arrived in Sydney with 24 pellets of heroin. The
heroin was collected by Phong
Le and other members of the syndicate, who
prepared and packaged it for delivery. This heroin formed part of a quantity of
heroin
later delivered on behalf of the syndicate to buyers in Melbourne (see
below). |
Trafficking between 20 and 24 May 2006
| 34 | On the evening of 22 May
2006, a quantity of heroin imported from Vietnam was transported by two couriers
from Sydney to Melbourne
on a domestic flight. The heroin was supplied to two
other members of the syndicate. |
| 35 | The offender arrived back in
Australia from Vietnam on 20 May 2006. He was contacted by Phong Le and asked to
collect money from a
buyer in Melbourne, then send the money to Sydney via the
usual money remittance business. |
| 36 | The buyers in Melbourne
subsequently complained about the quality of the heroin. At the direction of
Phong Le, some of the drugs were
returned to the offender who later attempted to
sell them in Melbourne on behalf of the syndicate.
|
Trafficking between 25 and 30 May 2006
| 37 | During the evening of 29 May
2006, three 350 g blocks of heroin were transported by three couriers from
Sydney to Melbourne on a domestic
flight. The heroin was supplied to three other
members of the syndicate. |
| 38 | The offender collected the
money from the buyers in Melbourne, acting on instructions from Phong Le, and
remitted an amount of money
to Phong Le in Sydney from the supply of those
drugs. |
| 39 | The quality of the drugs were
again the subject of complaints by the buyers in Melbourne. Phong Le again
arranged for the drugs to
be given to the offender while new buyers were sought.
The offender later attempted to sell the drugs.
|
| 40 | The offender disputed that he
was directly involved in the sale of drugs on these occasions. A number of phone
calls in late May,
June and early July 2006 record the offender speaking to
Phong Le and others in coded terms about "holding" a quantity of drugs for
sale,
waiting for buyers to pay outstanding amounts and "balancing the books". I am
satisfied to the requisite standard that the
offender was engaged in selling the
heroin that had been returned by disgruntled purchasers.
|
Trafficking between 18 and 29 June 2006
| 41 | On 21 June 2006, a
co-offender was intercepted by police after leaving another offender's residence
at Wolli Creek in Sydney. A search
revealed approximately 500 g of crystal
methamphetamine which was destined for supply to Melbourne. This co-offender was
arrested
and charged with supplying a commercial quantity of a prohibited drug.
|
| 42 | Phong Le and two other
persons who had dealings with the syndicate were waiting for the co-offender at
Yagoona. |
Trafficking between 30 May and 22 July 2006
| 43 | On about 21 June 2006,
approximately 250 g of heroin was imported from Vietnam into Australia. On 21
June, the heroin was unwrapped
and broken up by Phong Le and other members of
the syndicate at Yagoona, in preparation for supply to Melbourne. The heroin was
then
repackaged and hidden in the premises at Yagoona for a number of weeks.
|
| 44 | On 10 July 2006, members of
the syndicate discovered that the heroin had been taken, possibly by other
people connected with the syndicate.
|
Dealing with the Proceeds of Crime
| 45 | Four money remittance
businesses in Sydney and Melbourne were regularly used by the syndicate to
transfer money for drug purchases
and to facilitate the commission of further
offences. The syndicate used these businesses (and others) to transfer money
between
Melbourne and Sydney and between Australia and Vietnam. The terms
"papers", "tickets" or "vouchers" were used to refer to money in
the course of
telephone conversations between members of the syndicate, including the
offender. |
| 46 | These various businesses
charged a small commission for the remittance of money and often confirmed these
transfers via facsimile,
including notification of the name of the intended
recipient and the remittance amount. Phong Le and Tran largely directed the
transfer
of money between Melbourne and Sydney, and between Australia and
Vietnam. |
| 47 | Between 28 November 2005 and
23 July 2006 a minimum of 110 remittances took place on behalf of the syndicate,
totalling in excess
of $4,380,205. Approximately $515,000 of this amount was
sent from Australia to Vietnam on behalf of the syndicate. The syndicate
also
arranged for further remittances to Vietnam through another remittance agency,
although the total amount of these remittances
is not known.
|
| 48 | A number of persons,
including the offender, remitted and collected money on behalf of the syndicate
during the period 28 November
2005 to 23 July 2006.
|
| 49 | The offender personally
deposited or collected $533,000 in that period.
|
| 50 | Other members of the
syndicate deposited similar or lesser amounts, with the exception of Ngoc
Nguyen, who personally deposited in
excess of $938,600 in the same period.
|
The Nature and Circumstances of the Offences
| 51 | The Crown's submission, that
the syndicate was involved in an ongoing, open-ended criminal enterprise
involving the importation and
domestic trafficking of substantial quantities of
illicit drugs and the laundering of money to facilitate and finance these
activities,
is obviously well founded. That aspect of the Crown's submissions is
not in issue. |
| 52 | The offender disputes the
Crown's submission, that he was a "key participant" in the syndicate and that
his involvement was consistent
and significant. The Crown submissions went
further and described the offender as the Melbourne "branch manager" for the
syndicate
operations in Victoria, who played an active and important role in
most of the syndicate's activities. The offender seeks to characterise
himself
as "at best a middle ranking" participant in the syndicate "where he was
directed and/or instructed to carry out tasks by
both Tran and Phong Le".
|
| 53 | The principle support for
this submission derives from the evidence given at trial by Phong Le. He
indicated that by March 2006, the
offender was making mistakes with respect to
the orders placed with Dung in Vietnam, and that he, Phong Le, spoke directly to
Dung
on some occasions. The offender further submits that the fact that he
resided in Melbourne ought not lead to the conclusion that
he exercised any
authority in that jurisdiction. |
| 54 | Whilst Phong Le may not have
regarded the offender as completely reliable, the evidence overwhelmingly
establishes the offender's
participation within the upper ranks of the
organisation. The offender communicated directly with Tran and Phong Le, both of
whom
were acknowledged as principals of the syndicate.
|
| 55 | I accept that the offender's
criminality falls to be determined as a subordinate to Tran and Phong Le,
although the offender's role
as the principal Melbourne agent for the
syndicate's activities suggests that the extent of the departure from the
sentences imposed
upon Tran and Phong Le ought not be great, after allowing for
relevant factors such as pleas of guilty and the provision of assistance.
The
sentencing exercise should not be distorted by somewhat strained attempts at
positioning the offender precisely within a notional
hierarchy.
|
| 56 | The sentences imposed upon
the offender must recognize the offender's agreement to participate in three
extensive criminal conspiracies,
as evidenced by the nature and number of overt
acts carried out by the offender over the course of the conspiracies. These
included
arranging the transfer of money from Melbourne to Sydney for the
purchase of drugs, physically collecting money from buyers and couriers
in
Melbourne and depositing that money for transfer to Sydney, meeting with drug
couriers who brought drugs from Sydney to Melbourne,
warehousing drugs in
Melbourne when required, arranging buyers for drugs in Melbourne when required,
liaising with other syndicate
members, arranging for couriers in Vietnam to
bring drugs into Australia, arranging for money to be provided to the
syndicate's Vietnam
heroin suppliers and couriers, travelling to Vietnam
together with Tran in order to meet the syndicate's heroin suppliers,
negotiating
prices and amounts of drugs with the Vietnam heroin suppliers and
attending to the syndicate operations in Melbourne, according to
the
instructions of Tran and Phong Le. |
| 57 | The substantial amount of the
drug imported and/or trafficked in the course of the conspiracies is also a
relevant factor in assessing
the offender's criminality. Similarly, the amount
of money laundered by the syndicate (over $4 million) and the fact that those
funds
were ploughed back into the purchase and distribution of illicit drugs, to
the knowledge of the offender, are important factors in
sentencing on count 1 of
the indictment. The offender was personally responsible for at least 18 separate
transactions. |
| 58 | The offences were obviously
committed for financial gain, which must have been considerable. The offender's
legitimate source of income
in 2005 - 2006 is said to have arisen out of his
employment by his sister in a freight company. The offender's role in the
freight
company was to travel to overseas markets to source new contracts. This
activity was entirely consistent with the business of drug
trafficking. The
scale of the syndicate's activities had the potential to reap huge financial
benefits to those involved, particularly
in the upper echelons of the
organisation. |
| 59 | General deterrence is a
fundamental factor in sentencing for these offences. The importance of
signalling by the length of the sentence
imposed that the courts will severely
punish those who engage in drug trafficking and money laundering cannot be
overstated. |
Factors Personal to the Offender
| 60 | The offender was born in
South Vietnam in January 1975, the second youngest of 10 children. The family
arrived in Australia as refugees
in 1982 and settled in Melbourne. The offender
had a normal upbringing and maintains a good relationship with members of his
family.
His father died in 2001. |
| 61 | The offender has been married
since 2000 and has two young sons both of whom reside with his wife in suburban
Melbourne. The offender
is described by his wife and by close friends (see
Exhibit 2) as a devoted father and husband, who was essentially led astray by
"the wrong crowd". He is also described as a "kind, intelligent and hard-working
individual". He has no criminal history, but his
prior good character was a
factor that allowed him to travel freely for the purposes of engaging in drug
trafficking, uninhibited
by the scrutiny of the authorities.
|
| 62 | The offender was in
reasonably regular employment since leaving school after year 12 in Victoria. He
obtained certificate qualifications
in real estate practice and operated his own
business between 1999 and 2005. The business closed due to financial
difficulties. It
was at this point that the offender's sister employed him in
her business for a period of approximately 12 months. After the offender's
arrest and release on bail he was employed by his brother-in-law from February
2009 to August 2010 as an apprentice electrician.
He has completed the second
year of his apprenticeship and wishes to pursue a career in this field.
|
| 63 | The offender reported a
history of ecstasy use on weekends from the beginning of 2006. By March 2006 he
was using methamphetamine,
largely under the influence of his co-offenders. The
offender says he has not used illicit drugs since August 2006.
|
| 64 | The offender's remorse for
the commission of these offences was expressed to the Probation and Parole
officer responsible for preparing
a report on 8 October 2010 (Exhibit B), and to
a psychologist (Exhibit 1). The offender acknowledged that he had done "the
wrong
thing" and that illicit drugs cause considerable damage within the wider
community. The offender was regretful that his incarceration
had left his wife
and children without support and had caused embarrassment within his local
community in Melbourne. To the extent
that the offender accepted responsibility
for his offending, he has minimised his involvement in the offences as a "debt
collector",
"runner" and general factotum for one of the co-offenders in Sydney.
It is difficult to accept the offender's statement that "he
thought his
involvement at the time was all right because he was not the one who instigated
the drug deals", given the offender's
undoubted sound intelligence and
functioning. |
| 65 | I have already made findings
of fact that completely undermine the offender's professed role in the
syndicate's activities. The equivocal
nature of the offender's contrition and
his attempts to avoid punishment commensurate with his criminality explain the
delay in entering
pleas of guilty to the offences. That is one of the
significant distinguishing features between the offender and the majority of
his
co-offenders, including Tran and Phong Le, both of whom pleaded guilty at a
relatively early stage following their arrest and
received a substantial
discount for the promise of assistance to the authorities.
|
| 66 | However, the offender did
substantially facilitate the efficient conduct of the trial, by way of the
admissions made under s 184 of the Evidence Act 1995. The confinement of
the issue at trial to the offender's participation in the relevant conspiracies
significantly streamlined the
Crown case. In the absence of those admissions, it
may have been necessary to play a very large number of intercepted telephone
calls,
in addition to proving a number of translations. Accordingly, I have
determined that a lesser sentence than might otherwise be appropriate
ought be
imposed in order to recognize the offender's willingness to facilitate the
course of justice. Ultimately, the sentence must
not be unreasonably
disproportionate to the nature and circumstances of the offences.
|
Parity in Sentencing
| 67 | It is common ground that the
offender occupied a position in the hierarchy below that of Tran and Phong Le,
both of whom were charged
with the same three conspiracies, but for the amount
of the drugs involved in the conspiracy to traffic. Tran and Phong Le both
pleaded
guilty to conspiring to traffic in a commercial quantity, an offence
carrying a maximum penalty of life imprisonment. That factor
goes a significant
way towards explaining the complete concurrency of the sentences imposed on Tran
and Phong Le for each of the
three offences upon which they were sentenced.
|
| 68 | As noted above, each of these
co-offenders provided substantial assistance and received commensurate
discounts. In the result, Phong
Le received an aggregate sentence of 12 years 6
months imprisonment with a non parole period of 8 years and 3 months ; Le v R
[2010] NSWCCA 285. The offender Tran received an aggregate sentence of 18
years imprisonment with a non-parole period of 11 years.
|
| 69 | It is also common ground that
the offender occupied a position within the organisation which was of greater
significance than that
of John Viet Nguyen and Anthony Si Nguyen ; see R v
Nguyen [2010] NSWCCA 331. Each of these co-offenders were found guilty after
trial of one count of conspiracy to traffic in a marketable quantity of drugs
and one count of conspiracy to deal with the proceeds of crime involving more
than $100,000, in which the fault element alleged was
recklessness. Thus, the
only relevant comparison for parity purposes is the sentence imposed on these
co-offenders for the conspiracy
to traffic in a marketable quantity of drugs.
Each of the co-offenders received a term of imprisonment for five years in
relation
to that offence. These sentences were described by the Court of
Criminal Appeal as lenient, although not manifestly so. Furthermore,
each of
these co-offenders was sentenced on the basis that they were couriers for the
organisation. |
| 70 | Of further relevance to the
sentencing exercise, the co-offender Ngoc Nguyen was sentenced after a plea of
guilty to the conspiracy
to deal in money to a value in excess of $1 million,
with the intention that it be used as an instrument of crime, to a term of
imprisonment
for 5 years and 3 months. Ngoc Nguyen was a primary syndicate
member based in Melbourne and carried out many of the same activities
carried
out by the offender at a similar level for the purposes of the remittance of
moneys between Melbourne and Sydney and the
distribution of drugs. However, Ngoc
Nguyen was not involved in the importation activities of the syndicate. Ngoc
Nguyen was said
to occupy a middle position within the hierarchy, comparable to
that occupied by the offender, according to the Crown's submissions.
|
Sentence
| 71 | Taking all of these matters
into account, I propose a sentence in respect of each offence which, following
accumulation, will result
in an aggregate term of 12 years imprisonment. Some
accumulation of the sentences is warranted in order to fully reflect the
totality
of the offender's criminality, constituted by his active participation
in three substantial conspiracies. |
| 72 | That criminality warrants a
non-parole period of 8 years. Anything less would, in my view, fail to
adequately reflect the principle
of general deterrence and come perilously close
to a penalty unreasonably disproportionate to the gravity of these offences.
|
| 73 | The offender served 65 days
in custody prior to the revocation of his bail at trial on 16 August 2010.
Accordingly, the sentence will
be backdated to take account of that period.
|
| 74 | On count 1 of the indictment,
the offender is convicted and sentenced to a term of 5 years and 6 months
imprisonment, to date from
12 June 2010, expiring 11 December 2015.
|
| 75 | On count 2 of the indictment,
the offender is convicted and sentenced to a term of 7 years imprisonment, to
date from 12 June 2010,
expiring 11 June 2017. |
| 76 | On count 3 of the indictment,
the offender is convicted and sentenced to a term of 6 years imprisonment, to
date from 12 June 2016,
expiring 11 June 2022. |
| 77 | I fix a non parole period of
8 years to date from 12 June 2010. The offender is eligible for release on 12
June 2018. |
**********
AustLII:
Copyright Policy
|
Disclaimers
|
Privacy Policy
|
Feedback
URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/nsw/NSWSC/2011/89.html