The Relevant Facts
36 The written submissions lodged by the Crown in connection with the present appeal contain the following succinct and helpful overview of the factual background:
"5. The Appellant was, during the period of the offences, a director of Australia New College Pty Ltd CAN 002 536 932 which trades as Pre-Uni New College. The main business premises were located at 5 The Crescent, Strathfield NSW where the Appellant worked.
6. On each of the dates specified in the 12 counts, the Appellant attended either the Bendigo Bank, Strathfield or the Westpac Bank, Strathfield (or both) and made numerous cash deposits into various accounts, in amounts just under $10,000. To enable her to do this, in January 2004 the Appellant, with a number of friends, attended each of those banks, opened accounts in their names and made herself a signatory on each account. Those accounts were opened for the Appellant's use."
37 The written submissions of the Crown summarise, count by count, the factual details of the various deposits, the making of which was the foundation for, respectively, each of the 12 counts in the indictment. It is not necessary to repeat the entirety of that material. It is, however, useful to reproduce paragraphs 15, 16 and 17 of the written submissions of the Crown. They are as follows:
"15. Between 23 January 2004 and 13 May 2004 the Appellant deposited just over $510,000 in cash into various accounts each deposit being less than $10,000.
16. Prior to January 2004, the Appellant was making similar cash deposits namely amounts under $10,000. These deposits were into accounts in her own name.
17. Prior to January 2004 the Appellant was informed of the obligation on the bank to report "significant cash transactions". The evidence in relation to this included:
(a) On 11 June 2002, the Appellant deposited $20,000 in cash at a Bendigo bank. She was informed by the customer service officer that the deposit was a significant cash transaction and accordingly a form was required to be completed for any amounts of $10,000 or more. This was done. The form has in bold print in the top corner the words "significant cash transaction".
(b) Some time in 2002 when the Appellant was to deposit over $10,000 in cash she was told by a customer service officer that the transaction would have to be reported as it was over $10,000. As a result the Appellant took money out of the bundle to reduce the deposit to under $10,000.
(c) In late 2003, the Appellant was advised by Mr. Choi (Lending and Service manage at the Bendigo Bank), after he had observed her making a transaction just under $10,000, that her deposits of just under $10,000 were suspicious. The was informed that the transactions would be reported to AUSTRAC.
The Crown alleged that as a result of the conversation with Mr. Choi, the Appellant stopped depositing amounts of just under $10,000 cash at the Bendigo Bank. The Appellant recommenced this practice after her friends had opened accounts in their names with her as a signatory. It was the Crown case that this was specifically done to enable her to continue to deposit cash of less than $10,000 and that she was doing so to avoid the transactions being reported as significant cash transactions."
38 The facts as thus far summarised constituted, essentially, the Crown case at trial.
39 The appellant's case at trial was, essentially, two-fold. Her case was, first, that she believed that the relevant deposits would be reported whether or not the individual amounts of the deposit exceeded $10,000. Her evidence at trial was that this belief was based upon something that had been told to her by a bank teller. She was unable, however, to say when, where or by whom in particular she had been given this information. She was unable even to name the bank at which, according to her, she had been given this information.
40 Her case was, secondly, that there was a number of exculpatory explanations for the making of the deposits. Those explanations, as nominated by the appellant at trial, included:
· She had security concerns about carrying around large amounts of money in cash.
· She thought that it was safer for her to make deposits not exceeding in any individual case $10,000.
· She had found that other customers who were waiting for teller service tended to complain about delay whenever she was involved in processing transactions of large amounts of money.
· She tried to avoid delay when depositing money by dividing the money which she wished to deposit into several smaller deposits because it took less time to count several smaller deposits than it did to count one large deposit.
· She was merely following a habit which had no sinister connotations.
· She made the relevant deposits without having thought through any legal implications of what she was doing.
41 The appellant gave evidence at trial. She did so with the assistance of an interpreter. She gave, in particular, the following evidence:
"Q. Mrs. Lee, you know don't you, or you did in January 2004 that if you deposited $10,000 or more in cash the bank would refer to it as a significant cash transaction?
A. Yes.
Q. And a certain form or particular type of report needed to be made if it was $10,000 or more?
A. Yes.
Q. So the magical figure so to speak was $10,000?
A. Above $1,000?
Q. Sorry?
A. Above $10,000?
Q. Above yes. When you banked just below $10,000 like $9,950, that was so the form didn't have to be filled out because it was a significant cash transaction of $10,000?
A. No I was told that that, even transaction would be reported. (sic)
Q. Mrs. Lee that wasn't my question. The reason you banked for example $9,950 was so that it wouldn't be $10,000. That's correct $10,000. That's correct isn't it?
A. Yes.
Q. Because if it was above $10,000, it was regarded as a significant cash transaction and a particular report had to be made?
A. Yeah in front of me.
Q. So there was something significant about the $10,000, that's correct?
A. What I knew at the time was that if the cash deposit is above $10,000 then the report will be made in front of me.
Q. You knew that that was because the bank told you it's called a significant cash transaction?
A. I do not know about the significant, that word, but with the reports, all I knew over $10,000 there will be a report that should be made." [T 323, 324]
42 In that latter connection, learned Senior Counsel for the appellant put, towards the conclusion of his oral submissions, the following:
"It was never an issue of fact that she wasn't a party to the transactions. She was a party to the transactions and she said so. That was never an issue, ……………." [T 34, 9/2/2007]