CROWN CASE AT THE TRIAL
6 The Crown case was that, on 15 September 1992, at around 9pm, Mr. and Mrs. Mulholland were victims of a home invasion committed by four men, during which time Mrs. Mulholland was also sexually assaulted.
7 At the trial, Mr. Mulholland gave evidence that four men entered his property via the kitchen, wearing balaclavas and holding firearms. They hurried into the lounge room. One of the men was holding a .357 Magnum revolver. Another man, on the Crown case, the appellant, looked familiar to Mr. Mulholland, who saw his skin through open stitching in the balaclava. His hair was receding and pulled back in a ponytail, and his teeth were broken with gaps. He was holding a .32 calibre pistol in his right hand, and .303 calibre rifle in his right hand. He was slouching and he walked in a loping style.
8 The men demanded money and drugs, and Mr. Mulholland was taken into the bedroom while it was searched, and he was later taken outside where he was forced to dig up a number of barrels. He was subsequently tied up in the lounge room, and asked about the whereabouts of his rifles.
9 Mr. Mulholland's evidence was that he heard sounds from the bedroom suggestive of a sexual assault. Two men were keeping watch over Mr. Mulholland, demanding money and holding shotguns to his head. At one point, one of the men came out from the bedroom and slapped him in the face, saying "That's for fucking a brother". The man's face was close up to him and Mr. Mulholland noticed six to eight weeks' of growth on the man's face, and that he had missing teeth. Mr. Mulholland's evidence was that he recognised this man as the appellant. The fourth man then came out of the bedroom, and Mr. Mulholland was threatened. Threats were also made in respect of his children. Subsequently, the four men left the house. Throughout the incident, Mr. Mulholland had been physically assaulted and threatened, and several thousand dollars were taken as well as quantities of cannabis and four rifles: a single barrelled Boito shotgun, and single shot .22 calibre rifle, a ten shot .22 calibre rifle, and a ten shot pump action rifle.
10 Mr. Mulholland gave evidence that he had met the appellant once before, in early 1991. The appellant came to his property with another man, and they stayed for over an hour. The appellant had spoken to Mrs. Mulholland, who had been in the kitchen, and said something like "G'day darlin', how you goin' darlin'". The appellant then had shoulder-length hair, which was receding, bad teeth, a slight pot belly and he walked with a slouch.
11 In cross-examination, Mr. Mulholland agreed he had made three statements to police: on 27 January 1993, and subsequently in February and April 1993. The first statement was deficient in detail and contained errors, mainly because he felt pressure: he said he had dropped off his children to school that morning and needed to pick them up that afternoon. He agreed that over time the level of detail in the statement increased. He also agreed that in taxation proceedings taken against him, he would have lied about money earned by him from his drug crops.
12 Mrs. Mulholland gave evidence that she had been in bed when she heard a scream, and she saw men in dark clothing and rifles inside the house. One of them came into the bedroom and told her "Shut up, darlin', I'm not going to hurt you darlin', everything's going to be alright". She heard the other men talking about drugs and money, and asking her husband where he kept the rifles. Her bedroom was searched, and one of the men went through her drawers and said "Why don't you put these pretty things on". This man had a ponytail. Mrs. Mulholland's feet were tied with packaging tape, and her nightie was ripped off, and she was told to open her legs. At some point, one of the men forced her legs apart and put his gloved fingers in her vagina. Later, Mrs. Mulholland overheard the men make threats about her children, and she heard the man who sexually assaulted her hit her husband and say "That's for fucking a brother".
13 Mrs. Mulholland's evidence was that, when the man in her bedroom had spoken to her, she recognised the voice, but at the time could not put a name to the voice. However, after the men had left, her husband said "It was the Heustons", and Mrs. Mulholland immediately knew the man had been the appellant. She had previously met the appellant in the circumstances described by Mr. Mulholland in his evidence. She remembered his voice because the manner in which he spoke to her when she first met him was offensive to her.
14 Although both the Mulhollands received injuries, and although Mrs. Mulholland had to have a broken tooth attended to professionally, they did not report the matter to the police immediately, because of the threats that had been made to them. A week or so after the event, they did attend the rooms of a consulting psychologist, Mr. McCombie, and told him they had been robbed and that Mrs. Mulholland had been sexually assaulted, and they mentioned the Heustons. Later on, Mr. Mulholland realised that the police suspected him of cultivating and supplying drugs, and on 27 January 1993 he went to the police station, reported the attack and set about negotiating an indemnity from prosecution from drug offences in return for giving evidence against the appellant and the other two Heustons, whom he named as three of the attackers. He identified the appellant as one of the men who sexually assaulted Mrs. Mulholland.
15 A number of police officers gave evidence for the Crown, namely Detective Sergeant Stuart Ware, Detective Senior Constable David Minehan, Detective Senior Constable Michael Fabris, and Senior Sergeant Gordon Smith.
16 Sergeant Ware's evidence was that he was present during a search of the property of the appellant's brother (Eric Heuston) on 9 March 1993, where two barrels were removed from underneath thick grass. They contained a .357 Magnum replica revolver and six replica bullets in the chamber, and a box of 50 .32 calibre pistol cartridges and four balaclavas. The Magnum replica revolver was a silver revolver, which accorded with the description that had been given by Mr. Mulholland in his first statement on 27 January 1993. It contained some markings, which accorded with a more detailed description given by Mr. Mulholland in one of his later statements.
17 Senior Constable Minehan and Senior Constable Fabris gave evidence of conversations with the appellant on 9 March 1993, of which Minehan had taken notes in his notebook. Both of them attended the appellant's house to execute a search warrant and Fabris cautioned him and asked if he would accompany them to his brother's house, which he did. When they arrived, Fabris asked the appellant if he knew anything about the two kegs found in the yard, one of which had a silver Magnum pistol. The appellant said he did not know anything about them. The appellant was led to the area where the barrels were located. Fabris said that the kegs were found among the reeds and "You're here most days, you would have seen the kegs", to which the appellant replied "Yeah". The appellant was asked what else had been in the barrel, and he replied "The silver replica pistol, the .32 pistol and the rifle which was shortened and came apart". The .32 pistol and the rifle were not in the barrel, the appellant was asked if he knew where they were, to which the appellant said "I don't know. Eric must have moved them".
18 Fabris then brought up, for the first time, the home invasion and cautioned the appellant. The appellant was escorted to Kempsey Police Station where he refused to be electronically interviewed. Fabris told the appellant that Minehan would, in that case, continue to record their conversation in his police notebook. Fabris put the circumstance of the home invasion to the appellant who said "I just wasn't there". When asked if he knew Stephen Mulholland, the appellant said "No I've never met him"; and the same went for Deborah Mulholland. When asked where he had been on 15 September 1992, the appellant said "I really don't know". Minehan read the notebook entries to the appellant, who then signed it.
19 Fabris left the interview room to bring in an independent officer (Senior Sergeant Gordon Smith) who spoke to the appellant and verified the veracity of the interview. Afterwards Fabris asked the appellant a further question "Who owned the two barrels which were found at Eric's property which had the guns in them", and the appellant replied "We all do".