Ground 5: The verdict of the jury is unreasonable having regard to the evidence
17 The Crown case, in relation to the appellant's knowledge of the cocaine secreted in his suit bag, was circumstantial. In her closing address, the Crown Prosecutor drew attention to a number of circumstances from which, it was submitted, the jury would infer, beyond reasonable doubt, knowledge of the cocaine on the part of the appellant. The circumstances included the following, as fairly summarised in the Crown submissions on appeal -
"(a) The fact that the appellant brought the cocaine into Australia in his own suitbag. The Crown drew attention to the implausibility of a scenario whereby a person or persons, without the knowledge of the appellant, would conceal over half a million dollars worth of cocaine in the appellant's suitbag in the absence of any obvious way of recovering the cocaine without the accused knowing once the appellant and his baggage had arrived in Australia. There was no arrangement for the appellant to hand the bag to someone upon his arrival in Australia. The appellant did not give anyone that he socialized with in Jamaica his address in Australia. The point was that this supposedly alternative scenario was not a rational or reasonable hypothesis.
(b) The cocaine was apparently tailor made for and sewn into the lining of the suitbag. It was not simply placed in the bag. It could not have been quickly and easily inserted in the bag (for example by an intruder in the appellant's hotel room) without the knowledge of the appellant. The opportunities to do so would not be great. It would also not have been quick and easy for someone to remove the cocaine. It was a professional concealment.
(c) The suitbag weighed over 5 kilograms (because of the presence of the cocaine) when it was apparently empty. The suggestion was that this unusual and suspicious feature of the bag would have been obvious to the appellant during his return voyage.
(d) The appellant's demeanour at the airport when first spoken to by Customs Officer Farrelly:
He [the appellant] approached her [officer Farrelly], she asked him, after he said where are the exits, she asked him words to the effect 'is this all your luggage' and he held up his luggage. Now it wasn't light you might think, it was at least 12 to 13 kilos that suit bag and he held it up to shoulder height when he was apparently delirious with fatigue, or almost delirious with fatigue, another factor, an important factor. In fact his evidence was 'I felt extremely tired, almost delirious and jet lagged would be the best term for it'. They were his precise words he used, yet he held up the bag like that.
As I put to him about that, you might think that's consistent with a rush of adrenalin, a bit of perhaps even cockiness as he comes through knowing or believing that he has got the drugs in the bag. Sort of over confident, look I've only got this, I'm innocent, I have got nothing in my bag.
(e) On the appellant's own account, the suit bag was his own, was packed by him and only he was to have custody of it. It remained in his custody or control during the entire trip home because he took it on the aircraft as cabin baggage.
(f) The appellant changed his initial story about where he bought the suitbag from. His original claim that he bought it from Strandbags in North Ryde was proved to be false.
(g) The Crown also drew attention to a number of implausible or inconsistent aspects of the appellant's evidence relating to his purchase of the suitbag in Burwood and the particular features he was looking for, the purchase of the ticket in cash by his friend, the unusual nature of the appellant's trip to Jamaica (he travelled alone, which was unusual for him; he stayed in the one place for the entire trip and socialized with taxi drivers and an interpreter; he purchased a telephone in Jamaica), his evidence that there was lax security at his hotel (yet he kept a large amount of cash and his other documents in his room). Nothing was apparently moved or disturbed in his room in Jamaica. His money was not stolen."
18 In M v The Queen (1994)181 CLR 487 at 493 Mason CJ, Deane, Dawson and Toohey JJ said:
"Where, notwithstanding that as a matter of law there is evidence to sustain a verdict, a court of criminal appeal is asked to conclude that the verdict is unsafe or unsatisfactory, the question which the court must ask itself is whether it thinks that upon the whole of the evidence it was open to the jury to be satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that the accused was guilty. But in answering that question the court must not disregard or discount either the consideration that the jury is the body entrusted with the primary responsibility of determining guilt or innocence, or the consideration that the jury has had the benefit of having seen and heard the witnesses. On the contrary, the court must pay full regard to those considerations."
19 Senior counsel for the appellant considered each of the matters referred to in para [17] (a)-(f) individually. He asserted, in essence:
(a) the appellant was an innocent dupe;
(b) the fact that there was no obvious way of recovering the cocaine was not established. There were obvious ways of recovering the cocaine if the people at the end, from where the cocaine is imported, are given information, and sufficient information to identify the person who has had the cocaine, as it were, planted on them;
(c) whilst he accepted that the sewing of the packages of cocaine into the suit bag could not have been done quickly and easily, it was something that professionals operating in the field with the high stakes involved and with the skills that they may be expected to have, would reasonably be anticipated to be able to find their way into a hotel room and to secrete this material in a bag without the person knowing;
(d) the additional weight in the bag caused by the presence of the heroin was not so significant when there were a large number of other items in the bag;
(e) a reliable inference as to knowledge could not be drawn from the reference to the appellant's demeanour being one of over confidence;
(f) the fact that the suit bag was the appellant's own and packed by him and only he had custody of it was not particularly remarkable or unusual in the context of luggage that was carried onto an aeroplane;
(g) the fact that the original claim as to where the suit bag was purchased was proved to be false was not a matter of great moment as it was quite conceivable that a person might be genuinely mistaken in this regard.
20 We do not find such an analysis convincing, particularly as it does not give adequate recognition to the fact that in a circumstantial case the probative force of the evidence derives from its accumulation and not from individual items of evidence taken alone.
21 In our opinion, it was extremely unlikely that the importation into Australia of a commercial quantity of cocaine valued at over half a million dollars would be trusted to a person who was unaware of its presence and in the absence of any obvious way of recovering it without that person's knowledge.
22 It was also, in our opinion, improbable that without the appellant's knowledge someone was able to enter his room, carry out the work of sewing the packages of cocaine into the lining of the suit bag and leave the suit bag apparently untouched.
23 When those factors, together with the other matters referred to in para [17] are considered, it is, in our opinion, clear that upon the whole of the evidence it was open to the jury to be satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that the accused was guilty. The more so when full regard is had to the fact that the jury had the benefit of seeing and hearing the witnesses, and in particular the appellant, give evidence and were determining an issue which involved a consideration of the evidence in the light of the common experience of human affairs.