Facts
2 The Prisoner, who shared a similar ethnic background to that of the deceased, had formerly been a friend of his. However as a result of him forming a relationship with Lena Hammoud, in respect of whom the deceased appears to have had something of an obsession, that friendship came to an end during the latter part of the year 2001.
3 Evidence was tendered from several witnesses, which was not directly contradicted, although it was certainly questioned, concerning the apparently tumultuous behaviour of the deceased in relation to Ms Hammoud during the year 2001, and in relation to various incidents or threats which the deceased was reported to have made that year concerning the Prisoner. The evidence of these witnesses gave rise to the issues of self-defence and provocation, it being accepted that it was the act of the Prisoner in deliberately shooting the deceased with the specific intention required for murder that brought about his death. Absent direct contradiction of these witnesses and in circumstances where I can only find facts which are adverse to the Prisoner where they are established beyond reasonable doubt, I must accept the broad thrust of what they said, notwithstanding the reservations which I do have as to the absolute reliability and credibility of at least some of them.
4 Apparently Ms Hammoud, with whom the Prisoner has been living in a de facto relationship and who has born a child to him, met the deceased through a sister, Betty. That sister was understood to be his girlfriend, a circumstance which makes it somewhat surprising that the deceased should have become as possessive, in relation to Ms Hammoud, as the evidence generally suggests. Ms Hammoud said in this respect that she had never been in a sexual relationship with him and had never accepted any gifts or money from him.
5 The first disturbing incident of which she gave evidence seems to have occurred in early 2001. It involved the deceased calling at her place of residence, apparently for the purpose of discussing his annoyance at the fact that Betty had once been in a relationship with one Ahmed Karmas. She said that, in the course of the exchange this day, he held a gun to her head, made threats in relation to Karmas, instructed her to break off contact with that man, and with a man Fadel Moussa, whom she was seeing. He also said that he wanted her to go out with him and to obey his instructions.
6 The next incident occurred during the evening of 24 July 2001. In the course of that night, a large number of shots were fired at Ms Hammoud's unit. Ms Hammoud and another person who was present, Ragda Jamal, said that shortly after the shooting the deceased telephoned the premises and inquired whether he had killed her. Hussein Hammoud who had been at the premises, but who had left shortly before the shooting began, after receiving a telephone warning, gave evidence of observing the deceased outside the building, discharging a weapon in its direction. He also said that when he later asked the deceased why he had shot up the premises, he was informed that it was a "bit complicated", but that he did not want anyone near Ms Hammoud and that he had gone there in order to kill her.
7 There was evidence corroborative of the fact of this shooting from neighbours, and from the discovery of fired cartridge cases of .38 and 9 mm calibre outside the premises.
8 Ms Hammoud recounted a further incident, on the occasion of her birthday on 24 September 2001, when, she said, the deceased arrived at her premises with a teddy bear, red roses and a handgun which he held to her head. He informed her that the Prisoner "was not for her" and would "get what was coming to him". Additionally she said, he threatened to take matters into his own hands if he found out more about her and the Prisoner. Soon after this, she said, the Prisoner commenced to live with her, which prompted further abusive phone calls and threats to the effect that her days were numbered.
9 The next incident in point of time was one of which the Prisoner gave evidence, as having occurred in October 2001. It was his account that while he was jogging in a park at Turella, he was approached by the deceased who said "if I see you in this area again or see you with Lena again I'm going to kill you". According to him the deceased then fired several shots over his head, some of which struck a sign. Police confirmed that the sign had evidence of gunshot damage, although it could not be aged.
10 Ms Hammoud next gave evidence that the deceased called at her apartment on the night of 11 November 2001. She said that he held a gun to her head, tied her up, burned her face, head and arms with a hot iron, kicked and struck her, forced her to take drugs, cut her hair, forced her to sit in a hot bath while he removed her top, dunked her head in a toilet, fired a shot between her legs into her waterbed, played with her, forced her to masturbate him, and reminded her of his instruction not to see the Prisoner. In the course of these events, which on her account were spread over about 12 hours, there was an intercepted phone call, in the course of which the deceased spoke to one Basim Hamzi. The conversation was in terms that included an acknowledgment by the deceased that he had Ms Hammoud tied up in the premises. The possibility of her being killed was discussed. Hamzi spoke to her and indicated that she "owed" the deceased and had to comply with his instructions. This seems to have followed upon some problem which had developed involving Saleh Jamal, which had led to the deceased being given the label of a "dog".
11 Ms Hammoud said that the deceased again instructed her, this night, that he did not want her near the Prisoner, who he was going to kill, adding that he wanted her to stay with him.
12 Subsequent police inquiries revealed that there was a hole in the waterbed, sheets and blanket, which was consistent with it having been punctured by a bullet leading to its contents leaking onto the carpet. A .22 projectile was recovered from within the bladder to the bed.
13 Ragda Jamal gave evidence of observing the unit in a disturbed condition on the next day, of Ms Hammoud being distressed with signs of having been tied up and burned. She said that she accompanied her to a medical centre, a Social Security office, and to Leah's Wax Works for the purposes of receiving treatment for her burns, and of having a record of the incident made. Ms Hammoud similarly gave evidence of going to the medical centre, social security office and Leah's Wax Works. Police were not brought in, she said, because of fears of reprisals.
14 The medical centre records do not support the evidence of any attendance on 12 November. They do record a later visit in which Ms Hammoud sought treatment for a burn or burns. The treating doctor was not called, and whether the records were correctly or incorrectly dated was not explored. Whether Ms Hammoud's account was correct in every detail may perhaps be questionable. However, I am satisfied from the contemporaneous video tape that she was subjected to some degree of violence at the hands of the deceased, and was the recipient of threats from his associate Hamzi, which she was entitled to take seriously.
15 Ms Hammoud gave evidence of receiving a large number of subsequent calls from the deceased including 20 or so calls on 24 December 2001 warning her to stop seeing the Prisoner, and threatening her and her expected baby.
16 The Prisoner gave evidence, in a general way, of being aware of this history, and of his own experience at Turella.
17 Moving forward to the night of 26 December, there was evidence from two persons, Ahmad Doudar and Ali Bazzi, who were friends of the deceased and of the Prisoner, concerning the fact that the deceased, who they had met in a park that evening at Arncliffe, was in an agitated state and was snorting large quantities of cocaine. They each said that they saw that he had two handguns with him, a .25 Beretta which he was accustomed to carrying on his person, and a larger weapon. Although they did not give precisely the same account of the threats that he had made in their presence, they were generally to the effect that the Prisoner had "done the wrong thing", and that the deceased was going "to get him", or "to do him and her (Lena)." Their attempts to calm the deceased were unsuccessful, and he was last seen by Bazzi at about 2 AM.
18 That the deceased had been using cocaine extensively that night was confirmed by the post mortem examination and analysis of a blood sample, which led Dr William Allender to calculate that he had consumed around 500 mgs of the drug, a level that was double the upper end for its therapeutic (that is, pleasant and non dangerous) use. He gave evidence that a dosage of this level would be likely to cause agitation, aggressive behaviour, and feelings of invincibility and overconfidence.
19 Finally by way of a background to the deceased's reputation for aggressive and erratic behaviour, there was evidence from Hussein Hammoud, Doudar and Bazzi that they had seen him with firearms, that he had on several occasions discharged them at other people including a pedestrian who had annoyed him, that seemingly he found it amusing to terrorise people, and that he had expressed, in more recent times, a hatred of the Prisoner.
20 It is evident that the deceased arrived outside the apartment where the Prisoner and Lena Hammoud were living at 35/37 Brandon Ave Hurstville at about 4:30 AM on the morning of 27 December 2001. Lena Hammoud, the Prisoner and several neighbours gave evidence of hearing him shouting out the Prisoner's name in the street, and buzzing on the intercom to the apartment. His presence outside the premises was confirmed by a security camera which had been installed on the balcony of a second floor apartment, which was focussed on a van in the street, and which incorporated a timing function.
21 After being woken by the shouting and buzzing of the intercom, the Prisoner phoned a friend, Bilal Kalache, at 4:35:02 and 4:45:02. As a result he drove over to the apartment with Abdul Zahed. Their arrival at the scene at 4:54:32 is confirmed by the video.
22 At 5:00:34 the Prisoner can be seen on the video, standing on the pavement, shaking hands with the deceased. It was his evidence that he had waited for the arrival of Kalache who he had hoped could calm down the deceased, and persuade him to go home.
23 Ms Hammoud said that they had decided that the Prisoner should go down to the street to talk to the deceased, because otherwise they feared that he might start shooting at the unit, and also because they were embarrassed about the effect of his conduct on their neighbours. She asserted that the Prisoner did not take a weapon with him, and said, additionally, that she had never seen him with a handgun either on his person, or in the unit.
24 The Prisoner said that when he spoke to the deceased via the intercom, he was informed by him that if he did not come down, then he would have the home of his parents shot up by certain people who he had waiting at those premises. This was a concern which the Prisoner said that he had in his mind when he confronted the deceased.
25 The events which occurred after the initial meeting between the deceased and the Prisoner in the street are partially captured by the security video. In substance the Prisoner, who went off screen for a few minutes between 5:00:34 and 5:03:06 to speak to Kalache, is seen to re-emerge at 5:03:09. At that time the prisoner is seen to lift and point what appears to be a gun in his right hand. At this stage the head of the deceased is visible, as is his left arm extended sideways. Abdul Zahed, who to that point had been standing motionless in the street with his arms folded and leaning against a pillar, can be seen to react at 5:03:11 by turning and then running from the pavement towards the street.
26 The deceased is seen to appear on the right hand of the screen at 5:03:12 with his hands clasping his stomach, and to then move away towards the basement car park where his body was eventually found.
27 Post mortem examination showed that he sustained a non fatal gunshot wound to the abdomen and a further gun shot wound to the chest, which clearly was the cause of his death, since the bullet which struck his chest passed through the supera vena cava, the pulmonary artery, the right main bronchus and the thoracic spine at T7 level, before transecting his spinal cord at that level.
28 The information available on the video and through the post mortem examination, was supplemented by the evidence of Tam King Fong who, from an apartment across the road, heard a bang after which she looked out of her window. She saw two males, one (the Prisoner) with his back to her holding what she thought was a gun in an elevated position and the other man, facing her, bending forwards and doing a waving motion with his palm outwards at almost the level of his chest. This second man, she said, moved backward into the car park followed by the Prisoner. She heard some more noises and then saw the Prisoner run away.
29 There were some other neighbours who heard what appeared to be raised voices before the shouting, including Fernando Rojas and Richard Hoagland, who each said that they heard two groups of shots.
30 Bilal Kalache, who had parked his vehicle across the street, claimed not to recall whether he had seen any firearms, let alone anything of the shooting. He was even uncertain as to whether he had heard the shots, although he did acknowledge driving away from the area with Zahed before being stopped by police. At the time of giving evidence he was serving a sentence of imprisonment, and it is clear, beyond any doubt, that he was unprepared to give a truthful version of the night's events.
31 It was the Prisoner's account that after speaking to the deceased, and then Kalache, he had walked back to the driveway, at which point the deceased pulled out a gun and indicated that he was going to kill him and Ms Hammoud. He said that the deceased made an additional observation to the effect "I'm going to fuck your mum", which was particularly offensive to a person of the Prisoner's ethnic and religious background.
32 He said that he struggled with the deceased and managed to disarm him of the weapon which he had pulled, a .45 Norinco semi automatic hand gun, and pushed him backwards. He said that after telling the deceased that he was on drugs and to go home, the deceased pulled out a smaller weapon and pointed it at him, after making a motion with his other hand consistent with that required to cock the weapon. The deceased, he said, repeated that he was going to kill him, as a consequence of which he fired several shots at him. The deceased then fell to the ground, dropping his gun where he lay.
33 It was the Prisoner's account that all of the shots were fired in the basement area, although there were clear inconsistencies in his evidence as to the locations where the struggle took place, and where the shots were fired, and as to the times at which these events occurred.
34 Abdul Zahed provided some corroboration for the account of the Prisoner in so far as he said that he heard the deceased saying to the Prisoner, during the argument between them before the shooting, "I'm gonna pop that bitch Lena - bring her down, show her what I'm going to do to her, the fucking slut"; and "if you get in my way I'm going to pop you". He said that he saw the Prisoner disarm the deceased of a large black firearm, after which the latter produced a small firearm from his waistband.
35 He agreed that the deceased did not discharge the weapon, but said that he pointed it at the Prisoner in the entrance to the car park at a time when the Prisoner and the deceased were facing one another. According to him, the Prisoner had a gun in his right hand, and the deceased, who was shown to be right handed, held his gun in the left hand. He said that he ran for his life when he heard the first shot, but he also claimed to have seen the deceased a second later at 5:03:12 clutching his stomach and moving towards the bottom of the screen. He added that he heard some more shots while he and Kalache drove away from the scene, before being stopped by a police car several hundred metres up the road.
36 After the shooting, the Prisoner ran across the road and from the rear garden of 40 Brandon Avenue he threw the .45 Norinco onto the roof of some townhouses under construction in 43 Cambridge Street. He discarded the top which he had been wearing in the rear garden of 42A Brandon Ave. He was arrested in the car park of the adjoining premises of 39/41 Brandon Ave. When initially spoken to by police he untruthfully denied any involvement in the shooting, and later exercised his right not to be interviewed or to take part in an identification parade. His initial lie was relied upon as a matter going to the credibility of his evidence, but not otherwise.
37 The subsequent forensic and ballistics investigations established that five shots had been fired, two of which had struck the deceased. Another shot struck the bonnet of a Mitsubishi Magna, beside which the deceased's body was found, and then ricocheted to a rear wall. A fourth shot hit a pillar between two or three of the vehicles that had been parked in the front section of the carpark.
38 Three .45 calibre fired cartridge cases were found in the entrance area to the carpark or under the Toyota vehicle, which was parked closest to the entrance. The remaining .45 calibre cartridge cases were found in the street. It is probable that they were accidentally moved to there after the shooting. All of these cartridge cases and the bullet recovered from the abdomen of the deceased were shown positively to have been fired by the Norinco handgun that was recovered from the townhouse roof. The bullet which entered the deceased's chest was too damaged for comparison purposes, but there is no question other than that it was fired by the Prisoner.
39 The evidence points convincingly to the fact that the shots which struck the deceased in the chest, which hit the pillar, and which hit the Magna and the rear wall, were all fired from the front of the car park and in the direction where the deceased was attempting to take cover between the cars, up against the back wall, after having first been shot in the stomach. That shot, I am satisfied, was fired from outside the car park, as is established by the observations of Mrs Fong and the video.
40 It was the Crown case that having disabled the deceased by shooting him in the abdomen, the Prisoner then pursued him to the car park and fired the further 3 shots, one of which caused his death, at a time when he was signalling, with his right hand extended in front of him, for mercy.
41 It relies, for this submission, upon the post mortem evidence which shows that a bullet struck the palmar aspect of the right hand of the deceased, passed through the thumb, and exited the back of his hand, fracturing the thumb bone on the way, by the fact that the entry wound to the chest was a keyhole wound, indicating that the bullet had struck something on its way causing its normal spin to be disrupted, and by Dr Lawrence's assessment that the transection of the deceased's spinal cord would have prevented him moving very far, if at all, after receiving that injury.
42 There remains one aspect of the case that was not capable of final determination upon the available evidence. It concerns the finding of a .25 Beretta pistol of the kind which the deceased was accustomed to carrying, and which was consistent with that which had been seen by other witnesses to have been in his possession that night.
43 This gun was found hidden under a tree in the front garden of 45 Brandon Avenue. It was pointed out to police, on the morning of 27 December, by Rabab Hammoud, who had been seen at the premises of 35/37 Brandon Ave with the deceased at the time of the shooting by several witnesses, including the Prisoner and her sister, Lena Hammoud. She can also be seen leaving the premises after the shooting, at 5:05:10 and 5:05:19 and it was established that she used the deceased's mobile to place a 000 call, and to inform his relations of the shooting.
44 She attended at the police station on the morning of 27 December, following a conversation with police. Although both the Crown and the Defence wished her presence at the trial, it was established that she had made herself scarce before the Committal, and all subsequent efforts to secure her attendance had failed. As a consequence there was no admissible evidence available to the jury, or to me, from her as to the circumstances of the shooting, or as to how, when, or why, the .25 Beretta found its way to 45 Brandon Ave.