The Circumstances of the OffendING
4 The parties put before me a Statement of Agreed Facts. The following is a summary.
5 From about 7.30 pm on Saturday, 24 December 2017, the offender and his friends, including Mr Winton Stevens, were at the Norfolk Island Leagues Club. The complainant was also at the Leagues Club and had been there since 6 pm that evening. The complainant had taken his dog with him and was sitting outside with his friends prior to the incident. The complainant had consumed about 10 vodka and orange drinks and one shot of tequila.
6 The complainant noticed Mr Stevens arriving at the Club at about 7.30 pm that evening. The complainant and Mr Stevens had known each other for a long time and did not have a good relationship. The complainant intended to avoid contact with Mr Stevens. However, that did not occur.
7 At about 10 pm, the complainant and his dog walked towards the main bar, passing the offender and Mr Stevens in the process. Mr Stevens made a comment to the complainant to the effect that his dog should be outside. An argument broke out between Mr Stevens and the complainant. They challenged each other to an arm wrestle with the loser to leave the Club.
8 The complainant and Mr Stevens moved to a small table located in the middle of the Club and next to the pool table. Approximately 12 patrons gathered around the table to watch what was happening and that group included the offender, Mr Blake O'Hara and Mr Daniel Griffiths.
9 The arm wrestle began and was recorded by Mr O'Hara on his mobile telephone. Mr Stevens won the arm wrestle and at this point, the complainant leant over the table and punched Mr Stevens, striking him under the right eye. The complainant stood up and punched Mr Stevens again. Mr Stevens stood up and punched the complainant and the complainant fell to the ground.
10 At this point, the complainant stood up and started moving towards Mr Stevens. The offender moved out of the crowd of people and started moving towards the complainant. The offender was holding a schooner glass in his right hand. As the offender was behind the complainant, he swung the schooner glass at the complainant, striking him in the rear right side of his head. The glass smashed on impact causing a number of deep lacerations to the complainant's head.
11 After striking the complainant, the offender dropped the remaining part of the schooner glass onto the ground and moved back into the crowd of people. He left the Club a short time later.
12 The complainant's head was bleeding heavily. Nevertheless, he continued to fight Mr Stevens until Mr Griffiths separated him by taking hold of his arm.
13 Mr Desmond Burger was also at the Club at the time, but he was seated at a table outside. He heard the sound of glass breaking and he rushed into the main area of the Club. He saw the complainant bleeding from the head. He obtained the first aid kit from behind the bar and took the complainant into the male toilets. However, Mr Burger was not successful in treating the complainant's injuries.
14 Mr Ryan Christian is a friend of the complainant. He witnessed the incident from the bar area. He said to the offender, "What have you done?" The offender said in response, "What have I done?" Mr Christian entered the male toilets and saw the severity of the complainant's injuries and took him to the Norfolk Island Hospital and Residential Aged Care Service (NIHRACS) which is a short distance from the Club.
15 The police attended the Club later in the evening and took photographs of the scene and adjacent areas and secured CCTV footage and Mr O'Hara's mobile telephone footage of the incident.
16 On 25 December 2017, the offender contacted police and arrangements were made for him to be interviewed. The offender could not remember hitting the complainant, but admitted that he was the man shown doing so.
17 Dr Glenn Zerby attended the complainant at NIHRACS and evaluated his wounds. The main site of the complainant's bleeding was a moderately large cutaneous artery which had been cut. There were five lacerations on the complainant's head totalling 14.3 cm in length. The wounds were closed with 16 interrupted sutures and four running sutures. The complainant had suffered a class II haemorrhage and that means he lost greater than 15% of his total blood volume. Dr Zerby expresses the opinion that had it taken him a further 10 minutes to clamp the severed artery, the complainant would have had hypotension, altered mental status and potential permanent organ damage. Minutes after that, he would have died. In the immediate aftermath of the incident, the complainant was in pain and had trouble sleeping.
18 The complainant has prepared a victim impact statement which has been tendered under s 142 of the Sentencing Act 2007 (NI) and I have considered it as required by s 142(4). The injuries have had a significant effect on the complainant and he claims that he lost his employment as a result of days off work and the occurrence of migraines. In addition to those migraines, which he describes as cluster migraines, he suffers head and neck cramps and watering eyes. Furthermore, he suffers from depression, loss of sleep and nightmares. I have also seen photographs of the complainant's injuries and they show that the offender's attack on him was extremely dangerous.
19 I was told by the Director, and have no reason to doubt, that the complainant takes medication for his depression and that he continues to seek treatment for his recurring headaches, first from Dr Zerby until April 2018, and thereafter from the NIHRACS where he presented on seven occasions between May 2018 and May 2019. The offender's counsel referred me to a medical note suggesting that there was no relationship between the incident and the headaches.
20 The Director seeks a compensation order of $1,000 under s 121 of the Sentencing Act and I will make such an order unless Mr Rowe, the offender's counsel, wishes to say anything further.
21 As far as the offender's own response to his offending is concerned, there are a number of items of evidence which are relevant. First, at least two witnesses describe the offender as appearing to be in shock immediately after the incident and, as I have said, Mr Ryan Christian said "What have you done?" and the offender replied "What have I done?" Secondly, the offender apologised in a Facebook message to the complainant on the day after the incident. Thirdly, the offender contacted the police the day after the incident and presented himself to them to admit what he had done. Fourthly, the offender has been affected by the incident such that he lost considerable weight and became depressed as a result of what he had done. That was his evidence and the evidence of Ms Sue Buffett. Fifthly, the offender undertook a self-imposed drinking ban by obtaining an order under s 76 of the Liquor Act 2005 (NI). Sixthly, the offender has indicated (as the Director concedes) from the earliest possible opportunity that he admits the offence of recklessly inflicting grievous bodily harm. Finally, the offender apologised to the complainant in the course of evidence before me and, as far as I could tell, that apology was genuine.