Mr Bruce pointed to the following cases as representing, as a whole and after making all just allowance, a range of sentences significantly out of kilter with the sentence imposed on his client.
46 The first is Fitzpatrick [2010] NSWCCA 26, in which the offender pleaded guilty to one count of supplying (deemed) 24.2g amphetamine (maximum 15 years) and one count of ongoing supply of amphetamine (maximum 18 years), comprising 51 separate occasions, recorded by listening device. The offender was on bail for the first count when she committed the offence which was the subject of the second. She was accorded a discount of 17% for her pleas of guilty. On the first count a fixed term of imprisonment of 16 months was imposed and on the second a sentence of four years ten months with a non-parole period of three years four months, giving an overall effective sentence of five years four months with a non-parole period of three years nine months. The offender's appeal against the severity of her total sentence was dismissed. In doing so, the Court noted the finding by the sentencing judge that the second offence concerned very substantial drug dealing from the offender's home and the magnitude of the operation was also very substantial, the motivation for both offences being financial gain. The offender's antecedents included drug and violence related convictions and the breach of bail was a significant aggravating factor. On the other hand, the offender had a disadvantaged background and had been a drug addict from a very young age.
47 In Chen [2009] NSWCCA 157 the offender pleaded guilty to one count of ongoing supply of methylamphetamine, intercepted phone calls indicating that he supplied or agreed to supply during the relevant period on 24 separate occasions, a total of at least 115.3g, having in all a minimum value of $28,800, one count of deemed supply of 23.48g of methylamphetamine, and the possession of a prohibited weapon, a taser gun (maximum penalty of 14 years' imprisonment with a standard non-parole period of three years). Two additional supplies of 10g and 7g of methylamphetamine were taken into account on a Form 1. The offender had no prior criminal record and was given a 25% discount for his plea of guilty. On count one the sentence was six years and three months' imprisonment with a non-parole period of four years, whilst on counts two and three he was sentenced to fixed terms of two years concurrently with count one. The offender had obtained the methylamphetamine from a number of alternative supply chains. He mixed it with cutting agents and then supplied the finished product to an established customer base from a shop front which had been established at his residential address. Drugs were supplied on a daily basis for financial gain. On his arrest police seized $4,885 in cash, which the offender said he had borrowed from people whom he would not identify. In searching his premises police seized, amongst other things, 54.6g of cannabis leaf and four ecstasy tablets. Drug paraphernalia, such as digital weighing scales, a large number of clear resealable bags, aluminium foil and various cutting agents were also found. The amounts sold were, on occasions unknown but otherwise varied between 0.5g and 28.4g, the bulk being between 1g and 3.5g. The sentencing judge concluded that the offender was selling the drugs as well as amphetamines "on a scale which is in the scheme of things, fairly large'". He also found that the offender "was running a regular business for the supply of drugs over a period which he said in evidence was up to six months and, although the quantity of drugs is perhaps not as great as has come before the courts on other occasions, it is still significant". In dismissing the offender's appeal, Buddin J (with whom the other members of the Court agreed), stated that the objective gravity of the ongoing supply offence was high since the offender was not a mere street dealer but, rather, part of an organised commercial operation, matters which were evident from the length of his involvement in the enterprise, the number of individual transactions in which he participated and the overall quantity of drugs supplied.
48 In Singh [2009] NSWCCA 129 the offender pleaded guilty to the offence of ongoing supply involving 100 MDMA (ecstasy) tablets (31.81g) for $2,000, 1,000 tablets (319.8g) for $17,500 and 700 tablets (205.4g) for $12,250 and supplying 2.25kg of cannabis for $16,500. Taken into account on a Form 1 when sentencing on the first count were also the supply of 1,000 MDMA tablets (241.92g) for $17,500, goods in custody comprising $5,400 in cash, and possession of 86g of cannabis. The offender had previous convictions for driving and minor drug related offences. His early plea attracted a discount of 25%. An overall sentence of seven years six months with a non-parole period of five years was imposed on each count, to be served concurrently. The period of supply was 22 September 2005 to 16 November 2005. The offender had been introduced to cannabis when a seven year old and admitted having been involved in the supply of drugs since he was 15 and had made "a large amount of money" from his recent drug dealings. In dismissing the appeal, Howie J noted that one of the matters "of very great significance in the ongoing supply offence" was that two of the supplies were for commercial quantities of the drug. The maximum penalty for supplying such a quantity of methylamphetamine is 20 years' imprisonment and, his Honour noted, "would have warranted cumulative sentences", observing (rightly, with respect) that the offender "was very fortunate to have been charged under s 25A and then to have another supply of a commercial quantity taken into account on a Form 1". His Honour went on to say that a starting sentence of ten years for the s 25A offence and the Form 1 matter, which included a supply of six times the commercial quantity, was not excessive. In rejecting a contention which relied on an even more lenient sentence passed on his co-offender, Howie J said that the offender "should accept that he is doing the least sentence that he could possibly have hoped for to reflect his criminality as a serious drug trafficker".
49 In Hanza [2008] NSWCCA 288, the offender pleaded guilty to two counts of ongoing supply; in relation to the second a further count of ongoing supply being taken into account on a Form 1. The first count involved the supply on each occasion of approximately 7g of heroin, in all 27.94g for a total sum of $10,080. In respect of the second count, three supplies were involved, being 28.13g for $9,500, 55.13g for $18,500 and 84.2g for $31,500, in all 167.46g of heroin for $59,500. Telephone intercepts revealed that, in a period of approximately nine weeks, over 150 phone calls were made in relation to the supply of drugs, revealing the further supply of 40g of heroin for $17,000. On the first count a fixed term of imprisonment of two years was imposed and, on the second, an overall sentence of five years with a non-parole period of three years, resulting in an overall sentence of six years with a non-parole period of four years. Each count covered a period of a little over four weeks approximately six weeks apart. The offender's appeal was dismissed since, aside from some technical fault, the Court considered that no less severe sentence was warranted in law and should have been passed.
50 In Tran [2007] NSWCCA 140, the offender pleaded guilty to one count of ongoing supply and one count of supply (deemed). The first count involved four transactions of approximately 5g each of heroin and, on the fifth occasion 56g of heroin. The second count involved possession for the deemed purpose of supply of 75g of heroin. In all the amount of heroin involved was 151g. After a 25% discount for early pleas, sentences were imposed on the first count of three years nine months with a non-parole period of two years three months and, in respect of the second count, two years six months with a non-parole period of 12 months. The overall sentence was one of four years six months with a non-parole period of three years. The offender was found to have been involved in a commercial business operating "above the street level of sales", indeed some street sellers were involved in the ongoing supply matters. McClellan CJ at CL, after noting that there was no appeal (and could be no appeal) against the individual sentences, concluded that the total sentence was appropriate.
51 Smith [2007] NSWCCA 138 is perhaps a more useful judgment since the sentence under appeal was varied and the Court made (if I may say so with respect) some useful observations on the relevant principles. The offender had pleaded guilty to one count of ongoing supply over a two week period at the end of 2005 involving about a dozen supplies of amphetamine, in all 35g, and an offence of supplying a prohibited drug between the same dates, being cannabis, involving about half a dozen supplies, totalling between 10g and 15g. The sentence for the first offence took into account four offences of supplying cannabis, supplying amphetamine, goods in custody and possessing a prohibited drug (cannabis). For the first offence an overall sentence of four years with a non-parole period of two years was imposed partly accumulated on the sentence for supply comprising an overall sentence of two years with a non-parole period of one year. The effective sentence was a term of four years with a non-parole period of two and a half years. The sentencing judge regarded the offences as serious, they were planned and organised and committed for financial gain. The ultimate sentences reflected discounts for early pleas but also assistance to the authorities described as "genuine and valuable". Subjectively, it was accepted that the offender was contrite and had reasonable prospects of rehabilitation. The starting point identified by the sentencing judge for the first count was eight years and, for the second, four years. A number of grounds of appeal were advanced, but the only presently relevant one was that the sentences were manifestly excessive having regard to the starting points. Referring to a number of decisions of this Court concerning the principles to be applied in sentencing for an offence under s 25A of the Act, James J (with whom the other members of the Court agreed) cited with approval the following passage from the judgment of Dunford J in Hoon and Pouoa [2000] NSWCCA 137 -
[39] The section is directed to the concepts of repetition, system and organisation, and the objective criminality of any offence under the section should be determined by reference to those features, and not merely to the number and quantities of individual instances of supply.
52 His Honour also referred to Khaled [2001] NSWCCA 169 where Wood CJ at CL said (at [19]) that higher sentences are appropriate for bigger and more organised dealers and lesser sentences for those at the bottom of the distribution chain. James J went on to characterise the offender's activities in the instant appeal as follows -
[53] Repetition, system and organisation were present in the applicant's activities but at a level much below that of certain other offenders, who have, for example, had employees working in shifts in the business of supplying drugs. The applicant was at or near the bottom of the distribution chain. Although, as the authorities indicate the quantity of the drug supplied by the offender is not the only relevant fact in sentencing, it remains a factor of some relevance. In the present case, the total quantity of the drug supplied by the applicant during the 30 day period was only about 35g.