11 Some attention was given, in the course of the submissions, to whether, as a matter of principle, any plea offered in the Local Court should be regarded as one offered at the earliest possible moment, and as one attracting the maximum discount which was referred to in the guideline judgment, irrespective of any antecedent delays in that court.
12 In my view, it is proper for the utilitarian value of a plea to be assessed in the continuum of the justice system, from the time of charging to disposition, and in the light of the fact that the amount of the discount is a discretionary matter, there being no entitlement, or presumption, that an offender should receive any particular amount by way of a discount in any particular factual situation: R v Scott [2003] NSWCCA 286 per Howie J at para 28.
13 Any other approach would involve an unduly rigid approach to the discretion which is involved, and would fail to pay regard to the fact that considerable savings in time, expense and inconvenience to investigators, the DPP, witnesses and the Court, will occur if pleas are offered, for example, at the first mention. Where that does not occur, considerable time, expense and inconvenience can be occasioned at the Local Court stage, in the assembly of evidence, in mentions, in conducting a committal, in applications for stays, appeals and the like, before the matter reaches the District Court or Supreme Court. It would be unrealistic to ignore those circumstances when assessing the utilitarian value of a plea, and it would be artificial to assume, without more, that a plea entered in the Local Court should inevitably attract the maximum discount.
14 That is not to say that a plea entered in the Local Court would not normally attract greater weight than one offered after arraignment in the District Court, but even that may depend upon the particular circumstances of the case, and of the individual offender, as there may well be good reasons for some delay. As appears from Regina v Dib [2003] NSWCCA 117 what is of relevance is the practical extent of the advantage, which the plea provides, for the administration of justice.
15 This has some relevance for the present case in that the applicant failed to appear in the Balmain Local Court when the charges were first listed on 2 October 2002, leading to the issue of a warrant for his arrest. Having regard to the nature of the answers given in the ERISP, which would have provided some assistance to the Crown, but would not have supported a contested case, DNA testing was carried out, and became the subject of three separate reports, which were dated 14 January 2003, and provided to the defence.
16 On 29 April 2003, it appears, the prosecution was advised informally that the applicant intended to plead guilty, and then on 27 May 2003 the pleas were entered in the Local Court, after which the applicant was committed for sentence.
17 Had the matter proceeded to trial, it would not have occupied any great time, or caused much inconvenience either to police or forensic witnesses, or to the victims. Nor was there any saving in investigative effort or costs since the prosecution brief was complete by the end of March 2003, by which time the statements of the victims had been obtained.
18 These were matters properly to be taken into account by his Honour when assessing, in a practical way, the extent of the utilitarian value of the pleas in the context of the administration of the justice system. They were such as might properly be regarded as lessening their value.
19 It was submitted however that the Crown had accepted, in the course of the sentencing proceedings, that the plea had been entered at the "earliest possible moment", and that it should be held to such concession. It is obvious from a reading of the transcript, which transposed the names of those representing the defence and the Crown, that it was in fact the applicant's legal representative who attributed that concession to the Crown, by an aside during a somewhat lengthy address.