Counsel at sentence and again on appeal, made particular reference to two cases. The first was R v Law; Ex Parte Attorney-General [1995] QCA 444; [1996] 2 Qd R 63, the second, Bell v R (1981) 5 A Crim. R 347. Law identified delay where it causes some unfairness to the offender as a mitigating factor. Examples of attendant unfairness were where the offender was left in a state of uncertainty and with his reputation under a cloud, or where his rehabilitation between offence and sentence was evident in Bell, a case involving a solicitor's having stolen some $30,000 from his trust account, the Court identified an error in the sentencing Judge's exercise of discretion: he had regarded the fact that no precedent could be found for a non-custodial sentence in such circumstances as mandating a sentence of imprisonment. That was an undue fettering of his sentencing discretion. The Court, in re-sentencing, noted a number of mitigating features, including the applicant's psychiatric state, his full restitution, his co-operation and his rehabilitation over the delay of some years in dealing with the offence, in concluding that it was an exceptional case in which a non-custodial sentence could properly be substituted.