12.917 The severest of penalties will be reserved for offenders who have taken 'a leading or executive part in the crime', … the 'masterminds or controlling agents' … who often finance the entire venture. Large quantities are often involved, … and the schemes are usually carefully planned as commercial operations for personal financial gain …" (Emphasis added)
38 Senior counsel for the respondent contended that his Honour's characterisation of the respondent as a "front" was well based, particularly having regard to the fact that the respondent used his own name and identity documents. It was submitted that this reflected how low the respondent's position was in the hierarchy and contra-indicated the likelihood the respondent was in a position of trust. It was submitted that had he been trusted, it was more likely that he would not have used his personal identification documents.
39 Senior counsel for the respondent also relied upon the fact that the respondent had not received any money or benefit from the importation, other than perhaps being "relieved" of the responsibility to make good the losses of those whom he had introduced to the Canadian mortgage scheme. Senior counsel for the respondent also argued that the respondent's role was not critical to the success of the ongoing drug importation in the same sense as the role of a principal manager and financier.
40 In my opinion, there was no error in the description or characterisation that the sentencing judge gave to the respondent's role in the drug importation. The evidence permitted of a finding that the respondent was a "storeman" or a "front". Indeed, the evidence did not support a finding of any different, or, more particularly, any higher role. However, participating in a drug importation in that role does not render the criminality minor. As his Honour remarked, the crimes were serious.
41 More relevantly, as both the Crown and senior counsel for the respondent acknowledged, labels such as "courier", "storeman" and "front" are not critical in a case such as this. Rather, it is the objective features of the activities undertaken by the accused person, including the position of authority that person held in the organisational hierarchy, that is relevant to the sentencing process: see R v Wong & Leung [1999] NSWCCA 420; 48 NSWLR 340; 108 A Crim R 531.
42 Having reached that common position, the Crown and the respondent thereafter parted company.
43 The Crown submitted that the respondent was in a 'position of trust' and that it is apparent from the sentence imposed that his Honour failed to give sufficient weight, both to the autonomy with which he acted and the critical nature of his role. That the respondent was in a position of trust was apparent, on the Crown's submission, from the fact he was unsupervised in his handling of up to ten shipments of cocaine and, in particular, in having access at any time to the place where the drugs were stored. Further, he was not accountable to anyone locally, his only contact being with the person known as "Geoff", who provided him with money to pay the rent on the unit in Cronulla, the hire of the car and the Kennards storage units.
44 The Crown also placed some emphasis upon the fact that when the respondent tried to leave Australia, he did so without informing Geoff either that he was leaving, or that he had obtained alternate storage space. In this regard, the respondent's evidence was that he had intended to tell those with whom he had been dealing in Canada of the alternate storage space when he arrived back in Canada. He also said he intended to give those persons the key for the Moore Park storage unit. The respondent explained that he had obtained the alternate storage facility because Geoff had told him not to go back to the unit at Tempe. He said that when he was given that information, he thought that "the other storage was gone, like, closed down".
45 There are certain aspects of this part of the respondent's evidence which are curious. The respondent said that Geoff telephoned him before each delivery and that this had happened on the occasion of the delivery on 15 June. He said it was Geoff who told him not to use the Tempe storage facility any longer. The inference to be drawn from his evidence was that he was not given any instructions in respect of alternate storage. Nonetheless, the respondent took it upon himself to open a new storage facility and not to inform Geoff that he had done so.
46 I have not been able to reach any conclusion as to what this evidence demonstrates, as it leaves too many questions unanswered. That is sufficient to reject the Crown's submissions that the evidence demonstrated the respondent was in a position of trust. I should add, however, that I consider there was merit in the respondent's submission that his actions and explanations as to why he acted as he did in relation to the storage unit at Moore Park are explained by his fear. It is at least equally possible that his actions, in particular his loyalty to those to whom he was answerable in Canada, arose out of his fear of those persons, rather than his loyalty being indicative of any position of trust.
47 The Crown relied upon the same factual matters as demonstrating that the respondent was acting autonomously, so that he should have been sentenced on the basis that his role was higher in the organisational hierarchy than his Honour considered was the case. I do not see any error in the trial judge's approach in this regard. The evidence did not support a finding that the respondent's role in the organisation was other than performing the task of taking delivery of the goods, storing them and facilitating access to the storage unit.
48 That does not mean, however, that the role played by the respondent was not an essential part of the drug importation. The goods had to be received and stored for the purposes of distribution, presumably, in this case, to "middlemen" who would then on-sell the drugs for their ultimate dissemination into the community. The distribution of drugs is the step that brings in the profits to those organising the importation. It is also the step that wreaks the harm to the community and to the individual drug takers. It is that step which makes the importation and possession of significant quantities of drugs such serious offences. The Legislature has seen fit to reflect its abhorrence of the crimes of which the respondent was convicted with maximum penalies of life imprisonment.
49 In Markarian v R [2005] HCA 25; (2005) 215 ALR 213 the High Court, in the judgment of Gleeson CJ, Gummow, Hayne and Callinan JJ, said, at [30], that maximum penalties are not enacted by legislatures as "mere formalities" and that "[j]udges need sentencing yardsticks". The Court then explained, at [31]:
"… careful attention to maximum penalties will almost always be required, first because the legislature has legislated for them; secondly, because they invite comparison between the worst possible case and the case before the court at the time; and thirdly, because in that regard they do provide, taken and balanced with all of the other relevant factors, a yardstick."
50 The respondent is only to be sentenced for his actual criminality. The question for the trial judge was what was the appropriate sentence to impose, having regard to the criminal conduct in which the respondent engaged. The question for this Court is whether his Honour erred in the sentencing process: see House v R [1936] HCA 40; (1936) 55 CLR 499, and in particular, whether the sentences imposed in totality were manifestly inadequate.
51 Although there was no error in his Honour's characterisation of the respondent as a "storeman", it is necessary to have regard to the essential aspects of that role. The question whether his Honour had sufficient regard to the importance of that role cannot be determined in isolation. Relevantly, for the purposes of the present case, the Crown relied upon two further matters within the combination of factors relevant to determining an appropriate sentence, which it contended were not appropriately reflected in the sentences imposed.
52 The Crown contended that there was another consideration to which his Honour failed to have regard in sentencing, namely, the need for general deterrence. It was submitted that that failure was also reflected in the manifest inadequacy of the sentences. The Crown further contended that his Honour placed too much emphasis on the appellant's personal circumstances, and in particular on the duress under which he was acting. It was submitted that this also led him into error in imposing a total sentence that did not adequately reflect the totality of the respondent's offending. These two issues became linked in that the respondent submitted that this case was not an appropriate one to give full force to general deterrence in circumstances where the respondent was acting under duress.
53 It is convenient to consider these matters, which are encompassed in grounds 3 and 4, before considering whether his Honour erred, both in the sentences he imposed and in making those sentences concurrent.