Consideration
22Mr Hijazi's failure to comply with the safe storage requirements for a so-called category G licence renders him undeserving of the reinstatement of that category of licence at this time. He sought to minimise the seriousness of the shortcomings by relying on the fact that police officers had been satisfied with the arrangements when they carried out an inspection in May 2012. That fact cannot assist him. While it is unfortunate that local officers (most likely not expert in the requirements of the firearms legislation) had given Mr Hijazi the green light when they should not have, Mr Hijazi cannot rely on inadequate enforcement on their part as if it equates to full compliance on his.
23Mr Hijazi had a personal responsibility to ensure that he was compliant. He had declared to the Commissioner, in writing, that he "fully under[stood] and [could] comply with the firearms safekeeping requirements of the Firearms Act 1996 and associated Regulation". And yet his own evidence is that he became fully aware of the safe storage requirements for a category G licence, and the requirement to have the collector's pieces rendered inoperable, only after his licences were revoked: 3 July 2014 affidavit at [13], confirmed in cross-examination.
24As far as the magazines are concerned, his evidence was that they were in the pistols when he bought them from a licensed dealer. He had never taken them out to inspect them. He assumed the dealer who sold them to him would have known the law and would not have sold him prohibited magazines. That approach is not good enough. It confirms Mr Hijazi's inadequate understanding of his own obligations.
25The shortcomings with respect to category G compliance bespeak a failure on Mr Hijazi's part to inform himself fully on what his responsibilities were. It was, for him, a new category of licence which required more focus and more effort on his part. The Commissioner was right to revoke that category of licence; the decision to that extent is affirmed.
26However, the category G non-compliance stands in stark contrast to Mr Hijazi's years of satisfactory, and safe, compliance in respect of the other licence categories. Constable Luikens himself accepted that the safe storage shortcomings related only to category G. Except in relation to that category, there have been no adverse events; there is nothing to suggest that public safety has been at risk. At least as far as the remaining licence categories are concerned, Mr Hijazi understood the requirements and he complied with them. Failure to comply with one discrete set of requirements can and should be quarantined from Mr Hijazi's other compliant behaviour.
27But that is not the end of the matter. There is still the question of the alleged links with OMCGs.
28In this respect the Commissioner's position is somewhat thin.
29I accept that Mick Hijazi is, or has been, a high-ranking member of the Comancheros but there is no evidence that Mr Hijazi's relationship with his brother has tainted Mr Hijazi's character or his behaviour. Indeed, the Commissioner alleges nothing specific against Mr Hijazi except that his brother is a member of the Comancheros. For example, it is not asserted that Mr Hijazi has engaged in any criminal or even questionable conduct. Mr Hijazi currently has little contact with his brother and he expresses no particular desire for that position to change. He is content to allow his brother to get on with his life, just as he wishes to get on with his.
30Mr Hijazi's relationship with Mr Laupepa is similarly benign. Mr Hijazi said, and I accept, that Mr Laupepa attended Mr Hijazi's home for the purpose of dropping off his nephew's car to have its windows tinted. (Mr Hijazi operates a window-tinting business and sometimes undertakes the work at home.) Mr Hijazi did not previously know Mr Laupepa; the job seems to have originated from a word-of-mouth referral. Mr Laupepa did not enter Mr Hijazi's house. He came back later to pick up the car. That is the extent of their interactions.
31Mr Assam (also known as Hassan Jaafar) is a former employee of Mr Hijazi. Mr Hijazi used to see him during working hours and some years after the employment relationship ended, they both used to attend the same shooting range together. That appears to be the extent of their association.
32As for Mr Hijazi's connection with Mr Barbaro, Mr Hijazi explained (7 April 2014 affidavit):
[40]... To the best of my knowledge in 2002 I was working at a carwash in Campbelltown for my brother in law Mr Sam Clark. Around that time I had made an application to the NSW Police Force. Whilst working at the carwash Mr Pasquale Barbaro was a customer of the carwash and I only ever spoke to him on one isolated occasion at a car dealership where I was dropping off a customer vehicle after it had been washed. I have not had any other contact with a (sic) Mr Pasquale Barbaro.
33I accept Mr Hijazi's explanation of his brief association with Mr Barbaro.
34Mr Hijazi provided several references to the Tribunal, none of which were challenged by the Commissioner, although the Commissioner did submit that, to the extent that they attest to Mr Hijazi's character, they are of little relevance. On the contrary, when they refer to Mr Hijazi's being a "good leader, trainer and role model", his "honesty", "integrity", "maturity", "professionalism" and his devotion to his wife and three children, they paint a picture of a person well capable of, and committed to, protection of his family's safety and that of the public. He is circumspect about his ownership of firearms. Any fear that he may come under pressure from, or under the influence of, OMCGs or other criminal elements is in my view unwarranted.
35There are two further issues to deal with. The first is Mr Hijazi's allowing his probationary pistol permit to expire in 2008. The second is his driving record.
36As for the expiry of the permit, Mr Hijazi said, and I accept, that his life was very busy at the time - he had just got married and was purchasing a home to live in - and things simply got the better of him. There have been no similar slip-ups since and there is no reason to suppose that there will be any in the future.
37In relation to Mr Hijazi's driving record, the Commissioner relies on the decision in Tannous v Commissioner of Police [2011] NSWADT 116 to submit that Mr Hijazi has shown "a repeated disregard for a regulatory scheme aimed at ensuring public safety, and ... a lack of compliance with the law generally".
38In some circumstances it is appropriate to give a poor driving record significant weight when considering a person's general attitude to compliance with the law but it must surely be regarded as of less significance when an applicant has a fully compliant history in the particular regulated activity under consideration. This is such a case. With the exception of the non-compliance in relation to the category G licence, Mr Hijazi has been fully compliant with the requirements of the legislation. Mr Hijazi has done nothing to suggest that he has a generally lax attitude to compliance; indeed, his history suggests otherwise.
39Accepting, as I do, that public safety is a paramount consideration, and acknowledging that holding a firearms licence is a privilege, not a right, I am nevertheless satisfied that Mr Hijazi should have his category A, B and H licences restored. The best indicator of future behaviour is past behaviour and in that regard I am satisfied that Mr Hijazi's continued holding of a firearms licence in those categories does not place public safety at risk.