Having regard to the cases cited, it is quite clear that the head sentence of eight years here was not excessive. A factor which weighed strongly against the applicant was his earlier repeated re-offending on bail. But he was entitled to credit for his co-operation and his apparent rehabilitation. (By co-operation I mean to some extent the fact that he allowed the police to search his house on one occasion, but more importantly the timely plea of guilty and the full hand up committal.) The recommendation for parole after a third of the sentence appropriately recognised that aspect of co-operation, but not sufficiently, in my view, the other aspect of rehabilitation. The case had the unusual feature that before November 2002 the applicant had led an exemplary life, and after February 2004, and for the period of two and a half years up until sentence, he seems to have resumed it. Unlike the situation in Raciti, this was a turnaround too substantial and significant to be entirely outweighed by the feature that the later offences had occurred while he was on bail. It should, in my opinion, have been reflected in an earlier recommendation for parole, at two years, applied also to the sentences on the counts of possession with a circumstance of aggravation.