FACTS
18 As at 17 November 2001 the prisoner had been in a de facto relationship with Donna Pearce for approximately 6 months. They were living in a housing commission flat at Kingswood. The evidence reveals that their relationship was not tranquil, indeed on a number of occasions it had involved some degree of violence. The prisoner was a person who, even when unaffected by drugs, was short tempered. Donna Pearce had a history of drug abuse but apparently had been endeavouring to overcome this. The prisoner also had a history of drug abuse. The drugs he used had ranged from cannabis through to narcotics, but in the months before he killed Donna Pearce the prisoner had confined his illicit drug taking to amphetamines and cannabis. His drug intake of both these drugs was substantial and occurred over a protracted period. The effects of amphetamines include hostility and aggression and, where they are used regularly or in high quantities, may include violence.
19 On 17 November 2001 the prisoner and Donna Pearce had an argument. One of the neighbours, Mr Raymond Beard, who lived in the same block of units as the prisoner and Donna Pearce heard screaming and went out onto his balcony to see what was happening. He saw the prisoner and Donna Pearce down in the car park directly underneath his balcony. They were near the prisoner's car. He went back inside his unit but the noise continued. He thought things were getting violent so he went out to have another look. He saw Donna Pearce fall to the ground after she had been hit by the prisoner with what Mr Beard believed to have been a metal pole or something of that description. That metal pole was undoubtedly exhibit O. It consists of a heavy steel bar that was over five feet, six inches (1.68 metres) in length, onto each end of which weights that are used in body building can be attached. It is an implement that is capable of inflicting serious injury on a person struck by it.
20 Mr Beard's evidence was that after she had been hit Donna Pearce remained on the ground. As a result Mr Beard went inside his unit and phoned the police. He subsequently returned to his balcony by which time the victim was lying on the front seat of the car screaming. When Mr Beard saw Donna Pearce on the front seat of the prisoner's car she was shaking in a way that he likened to a person who was having an epileptic attack. After that the car was driven off. Donna Pearce was still shaking as the vehicle was driven out of the driveway.
21 Mr Joseph Glover was also an occupant of the units in question. He gave evidence that on a day a few weeks before Christmas he had heard a female screaming in reasonably close proximity. He also heard a sound like metal hitting the ground. As a result he went out onto his balcony. He saw the prisoner and Donna Pearce in the prisoner's car. She was crying. The prisoner apparently got out of the car, picked up the metal object, put it into the car which then drove off rapidly. He did not see Donna Pearce after the incident just described.
22 Another neighbour, Mr Glen Clarke also heard the sounds of an argument, which he fixed as occurring at about 1.00pm approximately one month prior to the date of making his statement on 19 December 2001. On the afternoon in question he was watching television in his unit, when he heard yelling and screaming coming from the driveway area of the units. He also heard the sound of steel hitting concrete. He recognised the voices as those of the prisoner and Donna Pearce. He heard the prisoner say "Get in the fucking car" and Ms Pearce's voice swearing back at him. Having woken his flatmate, Ms Boileau, he went out onto his balcony in time to see the prisoner's car at the end of the driveway, exiting the premises. However, he was unable to see anybody in the car.
23 After the prisoner's car had left the premises, Mr Clarke went down to the driveway and garage area. There he saw a 10 kilogram weight, green in colour, lying to the left of where the car had been parked. The description was that of an exercise weight that could be fixed to a bar of the kind described by Mr Beard.
24 In the course of his evidence Mr Clarke said that the front driver's side window has been smashed a couple of weeks before the incident just referred to. He was informed by the prisoner that Donna Pearce had smashed it.
25 The prisoner gave evidence at the trial. He denied that there had been an "incident … argument or anything like that". He said that on the afternoon in question he and Donna Pearce had had "only a disagreement" and that this occurred prior to 2.00pm on 17 November 2001. He said that after the disagreement he left the unit to take his son to his mother's place. Having done so he returned to the unit, arriving back some time after 2.15pm. He claimed that Donna Pearce had left the unit at about 2.30pm and that while she was gone he packed his belongings and those of his son and carried them downstairs to put them in his car. He was leaving. His belongings included two 10 kilogram weight plates, a weight bar and two dumb bells. He took these downstairs and whilst he was packing the car Donna Pearce returned. Some obscenities passed between them and the prisoner's evidence was that one of the dumb bells over balanced and fell onto the ground. He said that this was picked up by Donna Pearce who then, according to him, said "You're not going anywhere cunt. I will smash every window in the car." To which the prisoner replied "You smash my windows and I will smash you with this", meaning the weight bar (exhibit O).
26 The prisoner then claimed that he put the weight bar through the back seat onto the front seat and got into the car. When he did so he said he felt a blow to the back of his right shoulder like a very hard punch. He spun around, whereupon he said that Donna Pearce struck him in the head with one of the dumb bells. He claimed that he grappled with her grabbing hold of her hand and trying to prize her fingers off the dumb bell. He said there was a short struggle in the course of which he hit her on the nose with the dumb bell and the other side of the dumb bell hit her in the temple but the blow "wasn't very hard". He claimed never to have actually had hold of the dumb bell but when trying to ward off further blows struck by her he struck her with the dumb bell in the left temple area. He thus claimed that there were only two blows sustained by Donna Pearce, namely one to the nose and left temple, another to the left temple. I did not find this account credible and do not accept it as a correct or truthful account of what occurred.
27 Having done this he claims that he said to her "it's all right I will take you to the hospital". The Nepean Hospital was located in the immediate vicinity of the block of units in which Donna Pearce lived. The prisoner said that he found that the victim "was unresponsive". "I checked her pulse on that occasion and I couldn't locate a pulse". He also said that he drove to a spot opposite the hospital entrance checked her pulse again, was unable to find any and observed that she was not breathing. So instead to taking her to the hospital he covered her with a dressing gown and drove to Lapstone on the Blue Mountains, where he dumped her body in the bush.
28 After the prisoner had killed Donna Pearce and hidden her body in the bush he returned to Kingswood where he pretended that Donna Pearce was not dead, but was merely absent from her unit. He took her jewellery, which he later pawned.
29 Subsequently, in company with a female companion he drove to Queensland. In the course of that journey he confided to his female companion, Geraldine Boyle, that he and Donna Pearce had had a fight, she had threatened to smash his car window and he hit her with a dumb bell, splitting her skull. However, after the first hit he said she was still alive so he covered her with the dressing gown to hide her, played some music and watched her take her last breaths. Subsequently, he put her into the boot of his car.
30 Ms Boyle was cross examined at length and in relation to major parts of her evidence. The essential suggestion was that the evidence as summarised in paragraph 29 above should not be accepted. I am of opinion that her evidence as to what the appellant told her should in essence be accepted. She would not have known the details of the events involved in the death of Donna Pearce but for what she was told by the prisoner. Secondly, her evidence is consistent with that given by Mr Beard, who was a credible witness. Thirdly, her evidence is consistent with admissions made by the prisoner to a number of people after the killing, including certain of his friends.
31 After the prisoner had initially disposed of Donna Pearce's body he drove to Hervey Bay, Queensland where he stayed with a friend of many years standing, Mr Mark Chinnery. The prisoner and Mr Chinnery were "good mates". Whilst he was at Hervey Bay the prisoner confided in his friend. He told Mr Chinnery that Donna was dead and that he had killed her. He said that they had had some sort of an argument, and that he had hit her in the head with the dumb bells and as she was too badly injured to take to hospital and that he had to get rid of her. He went on to say that Donna Pearce had hit him with a shoe and that "he just snapped and hit her with the dumbbell". The prisoner also told Mr Chinnery that he had hit her with the weight bar, that she then screamed so he "hit her again to make her stop screaming and she regressed into a child like state and did as she was told". He also told Mr Chinnery that he had "wrapped … jumper leads around her head" and had used them to strangle her, because she was still alive. In cross-examination counsel for the prisoner suggested that the prisoner has said that "he had hit her 42 times with a dumbbell." However Mr Chinnery was unable to remember any particular number. It was from the premises at Hervey Bay that the prisoner returned to Sydney to remove the body of Donna Pearce from Lapstone in order to hide it deeper in the bush at Wentworth Falls.
32 Mr Chinnery was cross-examined to suggest that the prisoner had said that Donna Pearce had hit him with a dumb bell. He denied this, adhering to his evidence that the implement that he had been told she had used was a shoe. He was also cross-examined about conversations that the prisoner had had with him concerning the events of 17 November 2001 from which it emerged that the prisoner had from time to time, in dribs and drabs, expanded upon, perhaps embellished, his account of the killing of Donna Pearce. The way in which these conversations took place and the exaggerations which I am satisfied were involved in some of them, clearly show that the prisoner was unrepentant and indeed tended to show off about what he had done. I am satisfied that Mr Chinnery accurately conveyed the essence of the admissions made by the prisoner concerning the way in which he hit Donna Pearce in the head with the dumb bell.
33 Another of the people to whom the prisoner spoke about the events of 17 November 2001 was Ms Windeatt. He told her that he had killed Donna Pearce. She asked him "Have you beaten her unconscious?"; to which he replied, "No, I've killed her." He was then asked why. His reply was "She wouldn't do as she was told and she wouldn't get off the methadone".
34 The detailed description of the killing given by the prisoner to Ms Windeatt was that in the course of packing his possessions into his car he had a weight bar in his hands and Donna Pearce threatened to break a window of the car, removing her shoe for this purpose. The prisoner then told Ms Windeatt that he said to Donna Pearce: "You break this fucking window and I will cave your head in, cunt, with this bar" and he proceeded so to do when Ms Pearce (according to the prisoner) broke the window. The prisoner told Ms Windeatt that the killing was affected by striking her "three to four times with the weight bar in the head."
35 According to Ms Windeatt's evidence the prisoner told her that Ms Pearce was bleeding profusely and asked to be taken to hospital. He covered her with a dressing gown and said he was going to take her to the hospital but, according to what the prisoner told Ms Windeatt, once he had covered her head with the dressing gown he hit her several more times with the weight bar. He also told Ms Windeatt that he had placed a rope or wire around her neck and had driven around until he was satisfied that she was dead. He then took her to Lapstone, where he dumped her body in the bush.
36 Ms Windeatt was cross examined at some length. It was suggested to her that the prisoner had told her that the deceased had struck him with a weight whilst the two of them were in the car. She rejected this suggestion. It was also suggested to her that the conversation about the prisoner hitting Ms Pearce with the weight bar did not occur. Again, this suggestion was firmly rejected. It was further suggested that the conversations that she had with the prisoner did not include any discussion of his strangling Ms Pearce. This too was firmly rejected by Ms Windeatt. I thought Ms Windeatt was a credible witness. She had been a friend of the prisoner for almost 8 years and had been in a relationship with him at one time. Although she was estranged from him at the time of the conversations to which I have referred, she gave her evidence in a forthright, credible manner. I am of opinion that her evidence was credible and I accept the essence of it.
37 There was no forensic evidence that clearly established that Donna Pearce had been strangled. The state of her body when its whereabouts was revealed by the prisoner, did not permit of any such evidence being obtained. Whilst there were jumper leads and other items in the boot of his car that could have been used to strangle Donna Pearce in the way the prisoner told Ms Windeatt he had done, the forensic testing of this material did not produce a result sufficiently positive for the experts to state that such items had been used in the way stated by the prisoner. Notwithstanding this I have no doubt that the prisoner told Ms Windeatt that he had strangled Donna Pearce, but as the evidence stands and having regard to the standard of proof necessary to support a positive finding I am unable to make an affirmative finding that he did so. In my opinion the statements made by the prisoner in this regard may well have been braggadocio on his part to demonstrate his dominance and perhaps to instil some fear into Ms Windeatt so as to deter her from going to the authorities. The fact that he made a like statement to his friend Mr Chinnery adds to the strength of the conclusion that he claimed to have strangled Ms Pearce, but in the absence of positive scientific evidence I do not think it is appropriate to make a positive finding adverse to him in this regard.
38 Yet another person to whom the prisoner spoke after he had killed Donna Pearce was Christine Davis. She had known the prisoner for three years. At one stage she too had been in a relationship with him, as a result of which a female child had been born. The prisoner and she met at the Lake Haven Shopping Centre so that the prisoner could see his daughter. They then drove to Sydney and in the course of returning to the Central Coast, the prisoner stopped the car at Normanhurst and had a discussion with her about the killing of Donna Pearce. The version of the killing that he then conveyed to Ms Davis was that there had been an argument between the two of them and that he had told Ms Pearce to get into the car or "he'd put the weight rod through her head". She continued yelling at him, but got into the car. Ms Davis said that the prisoner told her that "he screamed at her to shut up and Donna didn't shut up and he then grabbed the dumb bell from in between his legs and struck her to the right side of the face". He also told her that he had "struck her again and again and … that he couldn't stop". He also told her that he had wrapped thin wire around her throat twice and jammed it in the car door. He gave chapter and verse of Donna Pearce's death, of his putting her into the boot of his car and playing music. He told her how he had taken her body to the Blue Mountains, left her posed with her legs splayed apart "so that the maggots and ferals would decompose her quicker", how he had taken her jewellery, pawned it and drove to Queensland. He said that "the murder weapon, the dumb bell, was put underneath the Mark Chinnery's house at Hervey Bay". That is where it was found by police when those premises were searched at about the time of the arrest of the prisoner on 24 December 2001.
39 For the post mortem examination of Ms Pearce there were just bones. The forensic pathologist, Dr Ellis, said that there was insufficient evidence to definitely pinpoint the precise cause of death. There were, however, a number of fractures to the skull indicating trauma to the head. These fractures were extensive, one of them depressed, such as could have been caused by being struck by a dumb bell. Dr Ellis was able to point to the fractures to the skull as being a likely cause of death. They were to three main areas; just under the right cheek close to the right side of the nose; a number of fractures in the region of the left temple and the bones around that region; two small fractures at the back of the head. The blows necessary to cause fractures of the kind observed would have been sufficient to cause her death by one of several possible mechanisms. I am satisfied in accordance with the jury's verdict, that the actions of the prisoner caused the death of Donna Pearce. He first hit her in the head with the weight bar. He later hit her repeatedly in the head with a dumb bell. These blows caused the fractures to her head.
40 The attack on Donna Pearce occurred at a time when the prisoner was acting under the effects of provocation. This is consistent with the jury's verdict. He was a person who was short tempered. This characteristic was exacerbated by his protracted and heavy use of amphetamines and cannabis over a period that relevantly extended some months before the killing. On 17 November 2001 he, as he told Mr Chinnery, "just snapped" and began hitting Donna Pearce with a dumb bell that he had in his car. Donna Pearce probably did not die immediately but the interval between the time that he hit her with the weight bar and beat her with the dumb bell and her death was not long. She was almost certainly dead before he decided to hide her body at Lapstone. She was certainly dead by the time he actually hid her body at Lapstone.
41 The details of the way in which the body of Donna Pearce was treated by him both in hiding it in the bush at Lapstone and later removing it from Lapstone and hiding it deep in the bush at Wentworth Falls are well after the fact of her death. They are too unpleasant to recount in these Remarks on Sentence. Furthermore to do so would be very distressing for Donna Pearce's family. They are relevant to the question of sentence only to the extent that they demonstrate, in my opinion, a callousness on the part of the prisoner that is inconsistent with any genuine remorse at that time. I am satisfied that there was not then, and there is not now, any genuine remorse on the part of the prisoner for having killed Donna Pearce.
42 The circumstances in which Donna Pearce was killed and the fact that the provocation asserted by the prisoner was not great, bodes ill for the future of the prisoner on release. He is revealed as a hard man, readily aroused, lacking in self-control and quick to inflict injury on another. In my opinion the manslaughter of Donna Pearce by the prisoner is at the high, indeed very high, end of the spectrum of culpability. As a consequence the determination of his sentence should be approached on the basis that the objective culpability of the crime for which he is to be sentenced is very high.