Thursday 13 November 2003
REGINA v JAIME DE JESUS BETANCUR-GALVIS
Judgment
1 STUDDERT J: The appellant, Jaime de Jesus Betancur-Galvis, stood trial in the District Court following the presentation of an indictment charging him with being knowingly concerned in the importation of a commercial quantity of cocaine. The trial began on 6 August 2001 and on 10 August 2001 the jury found him guilty. The appellant was subsequently sentenced to a term of imprisonment of sixteen years six months with a non parole period of ten years six months.
2 The appellant appeals against his conviction and also seeks leave to appeal against the sentence imposed.
3 The case against the appellant was essentially based upon circumstantial evidence and evidence of his association with a man named Obiel Zuluaga Gomez (I shall refer to him here as "Gomez").
4 On 20 July 1999 an Australian Air Express consignment arrived in Sydney from Panama. On the following day this consignment was examined by members of the Australian Customs Service. The consignment comprised an industrial floor cleaner and a wooden crate that contained four batteries. When one of the batteries was examined it was found that it contained a package wrapped in grey plastic and masking tape, inside which there was a quantity of white powder. A field test indicated this powder was cocaine. Similar packages were found in the other three batteries. Altogether the substance weighed 15.7 kilograms and contained over 9 kilograms of pure cocaine. The cocaine packages were replaced by substitute inert packages and the consignment was reconstructed with a view to there being a controlled delivery.
5 Gomez had arrived in Brisbane a week before the industrial cleaning machine. On 14 July 1999 he flew to Sydney and whilst Gomez was waiting for his luggage at the carousel, he there met the appellant. The appellant took Gomez to the city and then to a unit leased by the appellant in Edgecliff and the appellant arranged for a telephone to be connected there. On 21 July 1999 Gomez attended the office of Australian Air Express inquiring about the consignment and was informed it was not ready. Gomez then attended the office of Panalpina World Transport, a freight company in Alexandria, to discuss clearance of the consignment. On the following day arrangements were made for the collection of the consignment on 23 July 1999.
6 On 23 July 1999 the appellant made two calls from a Taxis Combined office telephone to a number in Colombia. A call to that same number had been made from a public telephone box in Brisbane on 18 July 1999, the day of the arrival of Gomez in that city. There was evidence of other calls having been made to the same number in Colombia on 23 July 1999. Surveillance on Gomez on that date established that he made two calls to Colombia shortly before midday, and that one of those calls was to the same number the appellant called twice that day on the office telephone. In addition, four further calls to that same Colombian number, two shortly before midday and two shortly before midnight, were made from a mobile phone traced to a SIM card found in a mobile phone in the possession of the appellant at the time of his arrest. There was no evidence as to the subscriber of that phone in Colombia or as to who it was that either the appellant or Gomez called on that number.
7 On the morning of 23 July 1999 Gomez attended a motel across the road from the appellant's unit at Edgecliff and booked a room for the night. That morning he collected the proceeds of two Western Union money transfers from the Pitt Street branch of Travelex Australia. One of the transfers came from Colombia, and the other from Spain. Gomez attended the Australian Air Express office at Sydney airport, where he paid the freight charge on the consignment and inquired about customs clearance. Then Gomez went to the office of Panalpina, requesting there that arrangements be made for Customs clearance and the delivery of the consignment. He was granted permission to make a call from a phone at the office of Panalpina to obtain the relevant commercial invoice for the consignment, which came from Panama (see Exhibit F).
8 It was after he left the office of Panalpina that he was seen to make the two Colombian calls mentioned earlier (see para 6).
9 At about midday, two men attended the office of Millers Self Storage at Tempe and were attended by Ms Lisa Egtberts. They made inquiries about storage for cleaning equipment and Ms Egtberts used a Millers Self Storage business card to write details of prices etc. on the back of it and she wrote her name, Lisa, on that card. The men inspected storage units at the premises at Tempe. When later the appellant and Gomez were arrested in circumstances to which I shall shortly refer, both men had a Millers Self Storage business card in their possession, and the card found in the appellant's possession had the name Lisa written on the front and details on the back consistent with Ms Egtberts' description of what she had written on the card.
10 At about 2.20 pm that same day Gomez returned to the office of Panalpina to inform staff he wanted to pay the Customs duty and clearance fees for the consignment, and he was seen to leave those premises in the appellant's car, with the appellant driving. Gomez returned to Panalpina an hour later and paid what was due on the consignment. Subsequently Gomez was advised the consignment was ready for collection and two calls were made from his motel room in Edgecliff to the appellant's mobile phone. Gomez later attended on Panalpina to arrange for the consignment to be delivered to his Edgecliff motel that evening.
11 The consignment in its crate was delivered to the motel at about 7.30 pm on 23 July 1999 and deposited in the parking area. Two calls were then made from Gomez's motel room to the appellant's mobile phone, at 8.54 pm and at 9.33 pm. At 9.50 pm the appellant was observed to enter his Edgecliff unit block and four minutes later he phoned Gomez. The call was intercepted the recorded. Gomez told the appellant that he was already in bed, but six minutes later he was seen to leave the motel and enter the unit block. Then both the appellant and Gomez left the unit block and crossed to the driveway of the motel, where they carried the crate into the lift. Shortly afterwards the appellant left the motel and travelled to his unit at Kensington. Before midnight the third and the fourth of the calls to the Colombian number he had called earlier were made on the appellant's mobile phone.
12 The next morning, shortly after 6.00 am, the appellant telephoned Gomez and this conversation was recorded (see Exhibit AA). Suffice it to state that a meeting was arranged, and within twenty minutes Gomez left his motel carrying a blue trolley bag. He walked across to the appellant's Edgecliff unit. A few minutes later the appellant entered that same unit block, and ten minutes after that both the appellant and Gomez were seen leaving that block. Gomez was carrying the same trolley bag. The two men went to a bus shelter and there the appellant hailed a taxi. As they were attempting to enter it, both were arrested.
13 The trolley bag in the possession of Gomez was padlocked but this was later found, when opened, to contain the four substituted inert packages which had been removed from the batteries. A search of the room Gomez had occupied at the motel revealed the wooden crate, and that contained the four batteries from which the controlled delivery packages had been taken. The cleaning machine was also found.
14 Among the items located in the appellant's possession were the business card from Millers Self Storage at Tempe previously mentioned, and a set of keys for the trolley bag in the possession of Gomez at the time of his arrest. At the time of arrest Gomez had the second card for Millers Self Storage in his possession, together with a key to the motel room and keys to the appellant's unit at Edgecliff.
15 At the time of his arrest the appellant indicated he did not wish to be interviewed without an interpreter and before speaking to a solicitor, but, having been taken to the police headquarters, he was asked to confirm that a property seizure record which had been prepared was correct insofar as it related to the objects taken from his possession. The appellant claimed that the keys taken were not his, although he did not deny they were in his possession.
16 Subsequently, on 4 August 1999, the appellant did participate in a recorded interview. During that interview with police he said that he had resided at Kensington for some fifteen years and was the director of a cleaning company. He had rented the unit at Edgecliff from 1998 as a city residence for his employees who from time to time needed to reach city locations early in the mornings. He said that he met Gomez by chance at the airport on 14 July 1999, although he had known him before that for a number of years. He said that Gomez told him of a cleaning machine he was importing from South America which could help the appellant with his business. Since Gomez had no pre-arranged accommodation, the appellant offered him accommodation at the unit at Edgecliff. He said he had the telephone connected at the unit at the request of Gomez.
17 The appellant said he was born in Colombia and he came to Australia in 1977. The appellant said that during the two months prior to his arrest he had made numerous calls to people in Colombia, including his family and a friend. He also said that Gomez at times changed SIM cards between his and the appellant's mobile phones.
18 At no relevant time did the appellant admit to the police an awareness of there being cocaine in the crate he had helped to move. In the police interview, and particularly between questions 173 and 197, the appellant endeavoured to explain to the police his association with Gomez, linking it to their common interest in the cleaning industry. The appellant acknowledged that he took Gomez everywhere and asserted that Gomez was "working with me all the week" (see question 173 and answer). The appellant acknowledged that he accompanied Gomez to the airport and to Panalpina and he said he was with Gomez when he picked up the money transfers at Travelex. He said he went with Gomez to the storage place (Millers).
19 The appellant said that on 23 July 1999 Gomez rang him and asked for his help to pick up the batteries to take them upstairs at the motel. He agreed that later that evening he had met Gomez at the unit and that he had accompanied him across the road to the motel and had then assisted in carrying the crate with the batteries in it to the motel room where Gomez was staying.
20 The appellant said that on the morning of his arrest, Gomez visited him "throwing himself on top of" the appellant when the appellant requested the return of the keys to the Edgecliff unit. Gomez put the keys to his bag in the appellant's pocket and the appellant said he thought these were the keys to the Edgecliff unit. Gomez told the appellant he was in a hurry because he had to go to Brisbane and the appellant went with him to a bus stand. The appellant then hailed a taxi for himself but Gomez pushed in front of him to get in the taxi before him. The arrest followed. Exhibit D, a folder of photos, contains a photo of the keys to the bag in which the packages were discovered. Those keys might be described as small keys typical of those used to lock a bag. The jury does not appear to have had before it photos of the keys to the unit.
21 Throughout the police interview the appellant asserted the belief that the crate contained only batteries for the industrial cleaner. Gomez "never mentioned anything about cocaine to me. That's the truth" (Q 282).
22 The appellant did not give evidence at the trial.