Thursday 20 August 2009
DARYL MERVYN MAINWARING v REGINA
Judgment
1 ALLSOP P: On 21 June 2007, the appellant was found guilty of two counts of perjury by Sorby DCJ in a judge alone trial for which the appellant elected under the Criminal Procedure Act 1986 (NSW), s 132. The trial judge found the appellant not guilty of two counts of perjury with intent to procure an acquittal of one Gerard Gallagher on a charge of murder, but guilty of two alternative counts of perjury under the Crimes Act 1900 (NSW), s 327.
2 On 21 September 2007, his Honour sentenced the appellant on the first perjury count to a fixed term of three years, to commence on 24 November 2005 and to conclude on 23 November 2008. On the second perjury count, his Honour sentenced the appellant to a head sentence of four years four months with a non-parole period of three years to commence on 24 November 2006. It follows that the overall sentence was a head sentence of five years four months with a non-parole period of four years.
3 The appellant appeals against the conviction and if unsuccessful in that appeal seeks leave to appeal against his sentences.
4 The background to the charges against the appellant was the stabbing murder of one Mateo Mamaril on 30 May 1999 at a home unit in Bondi. The location was a brothel run by Mr Marmaril's sister. There were no witnesses to the attack. Police located a single Fila running shoe (UK/Australian size 9, left foot) next to the bed in the lounge room where Mr Mamaril had been sleeping. A partial shoe print from a right shoe with a matching sole to the Fila left shoe was found on the tiled window sill of the kitchen window through which Mr Mamaril's attacker was believed to have entered the premises.
5 A finger print impression on the inside of the front door to Unit 3 was identified as matching the right ring finger of Gerard Gallagher, an Irish national living in Australia on a working holiday. Mr Gallagher was an occasional client of the brothel who, a few weeks prior to the attack on Mr Mamaril, had been refused entry following a dispute with Mr Mamaril's sister.
6 The Fila running shoe located at the crime scene was subjected to DNA testing. A bloodstain on the shoe was found to match the DNA profile of Mr Mamaril and DNA from an area inside the shoe was found to match the DNA profile of Mr Gallagher.
7 In an electronically recorded interview with police on 17 June 1999 Mr Gallagher agreed that the Fila running shoe located at the crime scene "looks like mine" and "could be it". Mr Gallagher stated that such a pair of shoes in size "9 or 10" had gone missing from outside the front door of his home about a month before.
8 Mr Gallagher was charged with the murder of Mr Mamaril.
9 On 11 May 2000 police executed a search warrant on Mr Gallagher's cell at the Metropolitan Remand and Reception Centre (MRRC) at Silverwater in order to locate other shoes belonging to Mr Gallagher for the purpose of comparison with the Fila running shoe. Mr Gallagher was asked to produce all shoes worn and owned by him and in response provided, amongst other shoes, a pair of US size 11½ blue, grey and black Asics running shoes (UK/Australian size 11) from a black plastic bag beneath a bed to the extreme left of the cell. The execution of the search warrant was videotaped, but it was later discovered that there was no concurrent audio recording.
10 A comparison between the wear patterns on the internal structure of the blue, grey and black Asics running shoes seized in the police search of Mr Gallagher's cell and the Fila running shoe located at the crime scene was conducted by Jillian Fogarty, a forensic podiatrist.
11 Mr Gallagher pleaded not guilty to the murder of Mr Mamaril and his trial proceeded on three separate occasions in the Supreme Court of New South Wales. Murder Trial 1 (14 August 2000 - 5 September 2000) resulted in a hung jury; Murder Trial 2 (29 January 2001 - 5 February 2001) was aborted part way through and Murder Trial 3 (7 April 2001 - 1 June 2001) resulted in an acquittal.
12 The appellant gave evidence on oath for the defence at Murder Trial 1 on 28 August 2000 and at Murder Trial 3 on 21 May 2001. The testimony given on both occasions was substantially the same. The appellant's evidence was that during April 2000 he was awaiting trial at the MRRC at Silverwater. The appellant shared a cell with Mr Gallagher and two others. The appellant said (as was the case) that he had been taken to the Junee Detention Centre to attend court in Albury, where he remained until late May 2000 before returning to Silverwater. When the appellant went to Junee he said that he left behind clothing, a brief of evidence, personal papers, shoes and an electric fan: "Just bulky things I did not want to take to Junee. I took an overnight type thing to Junee". The appellant said that he did this because he thought that he would only be away for two or three days and, being a plumber at the MRRC, "an essential worker there … they would try to get me back as quick as they could to Silverwater".
13 The appellant gave evidence that he left his property in the care of Mr Gallagher because "[t]hey don't hold private property at Silverwater … [If you take it to the property office] [t]hey pack all your property up and send [it to] Junee. Because of the bulk of property, I knew I was only going for a few days, so I took a carry bag with all the clothes I needed … It is a common practice if you don't want to take it to Junee or wherever you are going. You leave [it] in the care of somebody … You have got this large amount of property which could be lost or whatever in transit. Doesn't come with you, you wait two or three months for it to come back". He said that his possessions were left in a large garbage bag "under [Mr Gallagher's] bed so they would be looked after". Mr Gallagher agreed to look after the property until the appellant returned.
14 The appellant gave evidence that the shoes he had left with Mr Gallagher were Asics running shoes which were blue, grey and black with a little bit of yellow on them. They had grey splatters of paint that had been spilled by the appellant when he was doing some painting in the MRRC.
15 The appellant was shown the blue, grey and black Asics running shoes seized by police on 11 May 2000 and identified them as being his own shoes. He also indicated that these were the shoes referred to in a Department of Corrective Services' invoice dated 30 October 1999, thereon recorded as being size 10½ and as item 33 on the "Alpha Listing of Inmate Property" purporting to list property of the appellant within the prison system as at 9 August 2000. The appellant stated that he received size 11 ½ shoes and cannot explain the discrepancy with what is printed on the invoice. The appellant stated that whist at the MRRC he purchased two pairs of Asics running shoes. He said he took size 10 ½ and on both occasions ordered size 10 ½. Both pairs of Asics running shoes received fit him, although the first pair were size 9½ and were "a little bit firm on me, tight" a "very tight fit, but I still wore them anyway, because if I handed them back it would take another two months to go through the procedure again to get another pair". The second pair, being size 11½, the appellant "could wear them, comfortable … in gaol you really don't have a choice". "They were a little bit large, but I could wear them and I kept them also. I used them for work. They were more of a work shoe".
16 The appellant gave evidence that he did not give Mr Gallagher permission to wear the Asics running shoes he left in Mr Gallagher's cell and to his knowledge Mr Gallagher never wore them. The appellant did not buy a pair of Asics running shoes for Mr Gallagher, nor did he give or lend him a pair.
17 Mr Gallagher also gave evidence at the first and third murder trials. Mr Gallagher denied ownership of the Asics running shoes and stated that he had told police, upon production of the shoes, that "they are not mine". Mr Gallagher confirmed the appellant's version of events regarding the leaving of the shoes in Mr Gallagher's care.
18 Agreed facts were tendered at the appellant's trial stating that the appellant shared cell 224B with Mr Gallagher at the MRRC from 2 April 2000 until 16 April 2000; that Department of Corrective Services' records showed that on 16 April 2000 the appellant was transferred to Junee Correctional Centre, returning to the MRRC on 17 May 2000; that the appellant was absent from the MRRC on 11 May 2000 when Mr Gallagher's cell, 224B, was searched; and that the appellant again shared cell 224B with Mr Gallagher on 2 June 2000.
19 After giving evidence in Mr Gallagher's third trial, the appellant returned home to Queensland. On 6 June 2001, pursuant to an unrelated investigation, the appellant was (legally) recorded speaking to a covert police operative, "Phillip Lucas", in a car park on the Queensland Gold Coast. The appellant volunteered the following in conversation: "I've been through a bit of shit, I've been through a murder trial and shit the last … I got a bloke in … (unintelligible), went and testified for a bloke in there last week, he got off and he's gone back to Ireland … it was all over some runners and that found at a murder scene and shit … well, we put a lot into it you know, I fucken' put my head on the line to get him, going fucken' on about it … this Gerry Gallagher the name is … So it was all about runners and who owned 'em and all this sort of shit, you know … And I put me hand up to fucken' owning a pair of runners, there was one found at the scene, murder scene and then when they raided the gaol to get his runners to try and do a DNA test and that, well I was actually in remand for nearly two years a couple of years ago … And I was living with him when they took these runners and I put me hand up and said, 'Oh they're fucken' my runners'. I don't know whose runners they were, whoever's runners they were, who gives a fuck. But anyway, fucked 'em up in court … I did a you know, stat dec and I got 'em to -inside [gaol] you fucken' when you buy something they put it on ya dot - ya know, on your property sheet and everything. It was all fucken' signed up in my name and everything, all the runners and that and fuck it. It fucked the DNA up. This could fuck Australia's fucken' new DNA laws … Yeah keep laughin'. The jury come back and said 'Not guilty' … They couldn't have touched me 'cause when it happened I was in custody see? …So there's no way it'd come back onto me. It's just a matter of me fucken' sticking my hand up in the air a little bit fucken' further than I wanted to".
20 "Phillip Lucas" gave evidence that he had met with the appellant on at least 12 and perhaps as many as 20 occasions. In cross-examination, "Mr Lucas" rejected the suggestion that the appellant was simply "big noting himself". "Phillip Lucas" said: "I don't believe so. With other conversations I've had with [the appellant] whatever he said he would do or provide he has done so, so I had no reason to doubt him".
21 In November 2005, the appellant was extradited to New South Wales on the perjury charges. While in custody in Queensland awaiting extradition Queensland police executed a search warrant on the appellant's cell and property. Footwear was taken - some Asics runners, Puma runners, one pair of black slides and one pair of Rockport black dress shoes.
22 These shoes were later sent to Ms Fogarty, the forensic podiatrist, for examination and comparison with the shoes earlier examined in relation to the Gallagher trial. Another forensic podiatrist, Mr Bennett, also examined the shoes.
23 In 2006, the appellant consented to testing of his feet.
24 There was expert evidence tendered in the appellant's trial. First, the transcript of evidence of Ms Fogarty, that had been given at an earlier trial of the appellant was tendered. Mr Bennett also gave evidence. It is sufficient for present purposes to note that both Ms Fogarty and Mr Bennett gave evidence that the Asics shoes taken from Gallagher in his cell appeared to have different foot patterns from the runners and shoes taken from the appellant but that neither could be in any way certain of that.
25 The appellant gave evidence in his own trial. He swore that the Asics running shoes taken from Gallagher were his, having left them in Gallagher's care when he had been temporarily transferred to Junee. He said that at and prior to the time of the conversation with the covert police operative he was taking antidepressants and had consumed 10-12 bourbon and cokes. He said:
"'I was just big noting myself in conversation I think. Just pulling things out of the air."