This Court has a discretion to receive evidence of this kind. In R v Maniadis [1997] 1 Qd R 593; [1996] QCA 242, Davies JA and Helman J, with Fitzgerald P agreeing, noted that there was power to admit evidence in an appeal against sentence where this was in the interests of justice. The power was at least as wide as when admitting evidence in an appeal against conviction. The discretion will not be commonly exercised, but an appeal court may admit new evidence even where it is not fresh in the sense discussed in Ratten v The Queen (1974) 131 CLR 510 if the admission of the evidence causes the court to form the "opinion that some other sentence, whether more or less severe, is warranted in law and should have been passed": see s 668E(3) Criminal Code 1899 (Qld). I consider that the evidence now sought to be adduced by the applicant, some of which was not available at sentence, is helpful to this Court in determining whether the sentence imposed at first instance should have been passed. Mr M J Copley for the respondent has in his usual and even-handed way conceded that in the unique circumstances pertaining here it is appropriate to grant the application to adduce further evidence. I would therefore grant that application.