R v Imo SAGOA
[2014] NSWDC 44
At a glance
Source factsCourt
District Court of NSW
Decision date
2014-04-14
Catchwords
- Power to stay proceedings
- appeal against conviction
- conceal serious offence
- Hinder investigation
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Catchwords
Judgment (13 paragraphs)
Introduction 1On 23 May 2010 a party at Dee Why ended abruptly when a young man, Edan Brown was stabbed. Mr Brown died of his injuries soon after being taken to hospital. That morning investigating police arrested and tried to interview a number of partygoers. They refused to answer questions, on legal advice. Other partygoers were identified. Police suspicions as to the identity of the stabber soon centred on Anthony Jones or 'AJ' but their inquiry was a broad one. Imo Sagoa, also known as 'junior,' was identified as a person of interest: exhibit 6. 2On 26 May 2010, Mr Sagoa, the appellant, made a formal statement to police: exhibit 5. In it he said he was at the party but had left, very drunk, before the fight and gone to stay with his Uncle Terry. The statement on its face appears far from convincing. It was soon contradicted by other information received by police. 3On 10 June 2010 the appellant participated in a recorded witness interview: exhibit 8. He was told he was not under arrest but was cautioned that anything he did say would be recorded and could be used in evidence. During the interview he maintained his initial story. He said he did not know Jones or AJ, despite being confronted with telephone call records showing communications between his phone and Jones' on 23 May 2010. Detective Ferns put to him that he was with Jones at a McDonalds after the stabbing. He denied any memory of this: Q & A333 -340. For reasons, obvious from a reading of the interview, Detective Ferns was not impressed with Mr Sagoa's account, prompting these comments: "But I don't want you misleading us and getting us to go on different lines of inquiry, when we should be focussing our inquiry on who did this: Q & A 341 & 342." 4This apparently referred back to some earlier questions: Q 322 See, I'd rather you, if you're, if you're intentionally lying to me that's unforgivable. If you know something and you don't want to tell me I'd rather you just say Jason, I don't want to tell you because then that way that doesn't put me on other lines of inquiry and it doesn't create more time to have to spend chasing up your lies, I'd rather you just say, Jason, I don't want to tell you. So is Uncle Terry a lie or is he true? A I don't know, I really don't know. Q 332 " ... I don't want to start searching all the pubs at Manly and the northern beaches... trying to find a bloke called Uncle Terry if it's false." To which Mr Sagoa replied: A "Maybe it is false, I don't know. I was that drunk that day, can't remember anything": Q 355 I think you can remember what happened because people have put you at the party there at the time of the fight. Simple as that. A Why would they? I was at the party ... Q 356 That's why you're in a police station talking to two detectives on a murder investigation, that's why you're here, mate, because your story or your little statement that you made to Alf Lombardo isn't consistent with what other people told us. That's why you're sitting in the seat right there. People wouldn't say that you were there, they wouldn't, there would be no reason for them to lie would there? But unless you were involved in the murder or in the stabbing or the fight that you would have a reason to lie, yeah? That's only sensible isn't it? A Why? Q357 I don't know, mate. A I wasn't even there. 5On 27 July 2010 Mr Sagoa was arrested for 'affray' and 'conceal serious offence'. He participated in a formal interview: exhibit 7 at Q 7. He was aware of his right to silence and exercised it. I do not however, because of his responses to the independent adopting officer, believe he was aware of his right not to participate in the interview at all. As he told the Sergeant "I had no choice did I?" exhibit 7 Q &A 241-242. 6During the interview Detective Sergeant Pooley and Detective Matenga explained what an affray was: Q & A 63- 69. They explained their view that Mr Sagoa appeared unconcerned someone had been murdered: Q & A 157. It was put to Mr Sagoa that he fled the scene with AJ: Q & A 162. It was also put that later AJ told him and others he had stabbed Brown: Q & A 187-194. 7Sergeant Pooley then said. "We've also been told that you take, took some form in the assault on the victim" (sic): Q 195. The Sergeant then told him, wrongly, that the punishment for conceal a serious offence was the same as that for the crime concealed, here murder: Q & A 199-203. Throughout the interview Mr Sagoa maintained his right to silence in the main responding to questions with a "no comment." 8After the interview Mr Sagoa was not charged with affray. He was charged with three offences: (1)Concealing a serious offence, being the stabbing murder of Mr Brown by Jones: s 316 Crimes Act 1900. (2)Hindering the police investigation of Jones: s 315 Crimes Act 1900, and (3)Knowingly making two false and misleading statements to police on the 26 May 2010 and 10 July 2010: s 307B Crimes Act 1900. 9The charges did not proceed to hearing until after Mr Jones' conviction for Mr Brown's murder. Jones' initial trial before Justice Hall resulted in a hung jury. Jones entered a guilty plea on 23 November 2012 during a trial before Justice Barr and jury. He received a substantial sentence of imprisonment: exhibit 2. 10Mr Sagoa gave evidence at the trial before Justice Hall and a jury: exhibit 4. He maintained his story that he was at the party. He said that he was very drunk and had left before the fight. He did however say he was friends with Jones and had seen him at the party. The Crown Prosecutor was given leave to cross-examine him and put to him that he was there during the fight that he was aware of the stabbing that he had left with Jones and that later Jones had admitted to him in the presence of others that he, Jones, had stabbed Mr Brown. Mr Sagoa stuck to his original version of events. 11Mr Sagoa came for trial before Magistrate Stevenson at the Downing Centre on 27 February 2013. The hearing continued on the 28 February, 1 March, 8 March, 13 March, 10 April, 15 April, 16 April, 7 May, 23 July, 6 November and 5 December 2013. On 5 December 2013 Mr Sagoa was convicted of the s 315 and s 316 Crimes Act offences. The s 307B Crimes Act matter, being a backup charge to the hinder matter, was withdrawn and dismissed. Mr Sagoa was sentenced to 2 years imprisonment on each count. Each sentence was made concurrent with the other. 12Mr Sagoa, as is his right, appealed his convictions and the severity of the sentences imposed: s 11 Crimes (Appeal and Review) Act 2001.