[14] In this Court, Mr Farr SC, on behalf of the applicant, submitted that the learned sentencing judge erred in a number of respects. First, it was said that there was inadequate recognition of the mitigating features of the case. Secondly, it was said that his Honour erred in placing excessive emphasis on general deterrence for an offence for which no comparative sentence could be produced. Thirdly, it was said that his Honour erred in relying upon the decision of Newton DCJ in R v Clark,[1] which, it is said, was a far more serious case, to impose an almost identical sentence. Fourthly, the sentence was imposed at the very top of the range proposed by the Crown Prosecutor. Fifthly, it is said that his Honour failed to appreciate that the order for full reparation constituted a substantial financial penalty, because the reparation was not of an ill-gotten gain but a payment for which the applicant had not received any corresponding financial benefit. On the applicant's behalf, it is said that no conviction should have been recorded against the applicant.