The Facts
17 Somewhere between 8pm and 9pm on 19 May 2001, the prisoner and a female companion, Ms Sekulovska, met at the Bankstown RSL Club (the Club). This meeting was as a result of a telephone call from Ms Sekulovska in which she said she was concerned for her safety and had gone to the Club for protection. In the course of this conversation she said she was scared that if she left the Club people, whom she said had chased her, might try to grab her. Although it was suggested by the prisoner that Ms Sekulovska said that she had been the subject of an attempted rape, the evidence on this is far from clear and I am not able to make a firm finding in relation to that.
18 When the prisoner and Ms Sekulovska met at the Club he did not, according to the observation of Ms Sekulovska, appear to have a knife on him but at some stage later in the evening she became aware that he had a knife concealed on his person. The precise time when she became aware that the prisoner had a knife in his possession is not clear, however the prisoner undoubtedly had the knife in his possession immediately before and at the time of the murder.
19 The prisoner and Ms Sekulovska left the Club in Ms Sekulovska's car shortly after 9pm. Each of them took a quantity of drugs, namely valium and rohypnol. These were taken in the car just after leaving the Club and whilst Ms Sekulovska was driving the car. The prisoner took about five valium tablets and two rohypnol tablets. They then drove to Kings Cross.
20 When they arrived at Kings Cross, they parked in one of the back streets and the prisoner gave Ms Sekulovska approximately $60 towards the cost of a quantity of heroin that she then purchased.
21 At about 10.30pm, both the prisoner and Ms Sekulovska injected themselves with half of the heroin that had been purchased. The couple then left Kings Cross in the car and the prisoner fell asleep. What happened between that time and 2am on 20 May 2001 is not clear. However, at some time after 10.30pm and before 2am the prisoner took over the driving of the vehicle and drove to Stanmore where, at about 2am, he was pulled over by police for driving the wrong way down a one-way street.
22 The prisoner gave a name to the police which was later discovered to be false. Unfortunately for the prisoner the person whose name he gave to the police proved to be a person who was not licensed to drive a motor vehicle in New South Wales. As a result, the prisoner was arrested, searched and placed in the back of the police patrol wagon. The search that was made of the prisoner was detailed and extended from the top of his body down to and including the areas of his legs and feet. Neither a wallet nor a knife was found on his person. I am satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that at the time of the search there were, as Constable Venables the searching officer said: "(n)o items on his person." Furthermore, I am also satisfied that at that time when stopped and searched by police at Stanmore, the prisoner was not obviously affected by drugs, although their effects on him are likely to have been present to some degree.
23 The vehicle in which the prisoner and Ms Sekulovska were travelling was driven to Strathfield, arriving at approximately 5am. It is unclear from the evidence what happened between the time the prisoner was released from police custody following his arrest at Stanmore and his arrival in the vicinity of Strathfield station, near which the murder occurred. However by the time the two arrived at Strathfield Ms Sekulovska was driving the car.
24 The car was parked in a street in which there was a Seven Eleven all-night convenience store. However, it was not parked directly outside the store, rather it was parked a little way up the street. At different times Ms Sekulovska and the prisoner went into the store. When Ms Sekulovska went into the Seven Eleven convenience store she saw the deceased, struck up a conversation with him and shortly thereafter informed the prisoner of her observation. By that time it was, on the evidence of both the prisoner and Ms Sekulovska, between three and four hours since either of them had taken any drugs.
25 When the prisoner and Ms Sekulovska arrived at Strathfield they had little money left, but were anxious to obtain more drugs. This required money, and in order to gain such money, the prisoner was, as his counsel submitted more than once, "literally prepared to do almost, or indeed, anything to satisfy his drug dependency." In order to do so I am satisfied to the requisite standard that an arrangement was made between the prisoner and Ms Sekulovska that she would lure the deceased away from the Seven Eleven convenience store to a place which was not as well lit and where the deceased could be relieved of his money by the prisoner.
26 In order to do this, it was necessary that there should be some inducement held out to the deceased by Ms Sekulovska, who presented as a physically attractive young woman.
27 I am satisfied that she drew the deceased into a nearby side street, but I am also satisfied that, whatever may have been the inducement by Ms Sekulovska to the deceased, no significant sexual contact had taken place or was in course between Ms Sekulovska and the deceased by or at the time the prisoner came upon them. I accept the evidence given in this regard by Ms Sekulovska when she emphatically, and I believe truthfully, denied that she had actually engaged in oral sex with the deceased.
28 When the prisoner came upon the scene he already had a knife in his hand. This knife had not been on his person at 2am, and I am unable to make an affirmative finding as to where it came from. However I am satisfied that the prisoner used the knife with a view to causing the deceased to give over his money. That was the object of the arrangement that had been made between the prisoner and Ms Sekulovska.
29 The deceased was not prepared to give the prisoner his money. The prisoner became angry and struck the deceased several times with the knife. Four wounds were inflicted into the deceased's chest - one of which punctured his right lung, another of which entered the right side of his heart, and exited through the back of the heart. The deceased attempted to defend himself and may have kicked out at the prisoner in the course of doing so. Defensive wounds were found on the right hand of the deceased, including a wound to the palm suggesting that the deceased had attempted to grasp the blade of the knife. The wounds to the deceased's chest were "major wounds," and according to Doctor Cala, the forensic pathologist called in the Crown case:
"The amount of force used … would probably be moderate or could be moderate or could be also severe, but I think that at the very least it is a moderate amount of force."
30 The chest wounds sustained by the deceased, and in particular the wounds to his lung and heart were described by Dr Cala as "extremely significant". The wound to the heart caused very rapid blood loss into the chest cavity and death resulted from loss of blood. The four wounds to the deceased's chest were such that it is unlikely that he would have been able to remain standing "for much longer than about 30 to 45 seconds" after they had been inflicted.
31 The prisoner and Ms Sekulovska decamped, leaving the deceased on the footpath, where he was found at approximately 5.45am. An ambulance was called, treatment was given and he was conveyed to hospital, however he was formally pronounced dead at approximately 8.15am.
32 The post mortem examination revealed that the blood alcohol level of the deceased at about 5.00-5.30am would have been about 0.15 mls of alcohol per 100 millilitres of blood. Such an amount would have been sufficient to have adversely affected his judgment.
33 Significantly, the stab wounds to the chest of the deceased were all in or about some 138 cm above the left heel, were from the left to the right and "approximately at the horizontal". Such wounds are inconsistent with a mere waving of the knife in front of the deceased in the way in which the prisoner claimed in his evidence to have done. They unequivocally demonstrate blows by the prisoner into the chest of the deceased with some degree of force. They are to be contrasted with the slash wound to the deceased's face and the wounds to his hand. The position and angle of entry of the chest wounds are also inconsistent with the evidence of the prisoner that when he merely "swung the knife" he was "on the ground" and later, when he swung the knife yet again, that he was on his knees.
34 Although the prisoner denied any recall of having stabbed the deceased, his denial is inconsistent with the account given by him to Ms Sekulovska at the Westside Rehabilitation Mission on 22 June 2001. His account regarding the circumstances of the murder was recorded by a listening device that the police had obtained under the Listening Devices Act 1984. The recording contains the following:
"Prisoner: … I'm the one that killed the poor cunt.
Sekulovska: Did you mean to?
Prisoner: Nah, yeah, I did, nah, I didn't probably.
…
Prisoner: When I think about it, I spin out. I think to myself, fuck I'm a murderer, a killer, I'm a murderer. That's fucked.
Sekulovska: Just things went wrong, that's all.
Prisoner: Well, it was his fuckin fault … it was his fuckin …
Sekulovska: Fuckin arsehole tried to kick you.
Prisoner: I've still got the scars on my legs.
Sekulovska: Are you serious?
Prisoner: From kicking.
Sekulovska: Was it that bad?
Prisoner: Umm umm all there.
Sekulovska: … shin, babe.
Prisoner: All there, look all there. They're all from that son of a bitch, and he laughed at me. He goes the knife, the knife isn't even sharp and he laughed at me.
Sekulovska: Are you serious?
Prisoner: And I went 'yeah' and I go whack whack, and I stabbed him like about six times.
Sekulovska: It says that he was stabbed in the face and chest.
Prisoner: No, I slashed his face from there open.
…
Prisoner: And when I think about it man, I shouldn't have shanked him. I shouldn't have stabbed the poor cunt."
..."
35 I do not accept the evidence of the prisoner in relation to the circumstances preceding and at the time of the murder. Like the jury, I reject that the acts of the prisoner in killing the deceased were done in self defence or were within the ambit of provocation. The murder occurred in the course of a planned robbery in which a knife was used. The prisoner had the knife in his hand at the material times. It was intended as a weapon with which to threaten the deceased so that he would more readily give over his money to the prisoner. When the threats did not achieve this objective it was used more forcefully and that resulted in the death of the deceased.