[2] Mr Oliver had prior convictions in May 1989 and May 1990, in Victoria, for offences of possession of a drug of dependence, for which he was respectively fined $100 on the first occasion, and $200 on the second. The circumstances of his possession of cocaine in 2002, described by the prosecutor to the sentencing judge, were that in 2002 relevant authorities were investigating some substantial offences involving drugs, in which Mr Oliver was not a particular target of the investigations, but in which investigation interception of various telephone calls established that he had arranged and agreed to receive two kilograms of a quantity of cocaine that had been found on the Queensland Coast near Cooktown. In August and September 2002 a man named Mr Porter had been active in endeavouring to obtain exclusive possession of seven kilos of that cocaine, and had succeeded in that goal. Analysis of the seven kilos when it was later seized showed it to be 66% pure, and if further diluted to an ordinary level of street purity, would have a value on the "street" in excess of $1million. Mr Oliver was to get two kilos of that cocaine, but was not arrested until 2 March 2005, because of the length of time taken to analyse all of the intercepted telephone calls and other material. There was accordingly a substantial delay between the date of his offence in September 2002, and the date of his plea in February 2007, and his sentence in June 2007. He never actually physically possessed the cocaine, but it was accepted he was constructively in possession of it, for a commercial purpose. He faced a maximum sentence of 25 years, the same maximum sentence as for trafficking in cocaine, as Mr M Copley submitted for the respondent.