The federal parole process for the applicant
21 The evidence discloses that the delegate had before her the following documents at the time of making the parole refusal decision, with portions extracted that are relevant to the particular issues raised in these proceedings:
(1) A submission addressed to the delegate prepared by a senior advisor in the Commonwealth Parole Office, concluding with a recommendation that the delegate refuse to grant parole to the applicant "at this time", with related recommendations to sign the refusal of parole notice, sign the accompanying letter and sign a letter to Queensland Corrective Services seeking advice on whether an individual treatment program would be made available to the applicant. Included in this document were a number of passages relied upon by the parties or otherwise pertinent to the issues discussed below. In particular, that submission included information on the following topics (amongst others):
(a) the remarks of the sentencing judge on the objective circumstances of the applicant's offending and the substantial mitigation arising from his subjective circumstances, past, present and future, including the additional hardship he would face in prison and the valuable work he was capable of doing using his scientific skills. While a plea in mitigation on his behalf seeking that no term of imprisonment be imposed was not successful, the sentence was reduced to the lowest that his Honour considered appropriate;
(b) the applicant's personal circumstances in the context of reports provided to, and by, the Queensland Parole Board detailing his severe psychological and medical mental health conditions, including a life-long struggle with Asperger's syndrome and a number of other conditions;
(c) a summary of aspects of the Queensland Parole Board report, including medical reports which were consistent with the material before the sentencing judge, but containing considerably greater detail than the remarks on sentence as to the applicant's long history of psychological and mental health problems, his home life with an autistic family, his experience of being bullied and sexually abused at school, and the way in which moving from home in Central Queensland to Brisbane for university exposed him to pornography on the Internet;
(d) information submitted on behalf of the applicant by his lawyers, including summaries of the communications in February and March 2017 to the Commonwealth Parole Office considered further below. In particular, this included information as to the difficulties faced by the applicant in participating in group therapy treatment, his need for individual treatment and the problems with obtaining approved post-release accommodation, as well as the response given on the applicant's behalf to concerns raised about the suitability of him living with his parents upon release;
(e) recognition that this was a complex case, including the fact that failure to complete a treatment program would normally be sufficient grounds to refuse parole based on community safety grounds, but that in this case the applicant's medical condition was preventing him from successfully participating in and completing a group treatment program. Furthermore, information related to the view that the applicant needed individual treatment, and the fact that Queensland Corrective Services had not confirmed that there was such a program available inside prison;
(f) reference to the absence of approved post-release accommodation in Brisbane, the view formed by the parole service that the applicant's parents' home was not suitable, and the competing views advanced particularly by the applicant's father on that topic;
(g) consideration of the applicant's prospects of rehabilitation and reintegration into the community.
(2) A copy of the sentencing remarks referred to above.
(3) A copy of the agreed facts tendered at the sentence hearing.
(4) A report prepared by the Queensland Parole Board (a body within Queensland Corrective Services, referred to in these reasons as the parole board), dated 15 December 2016, together with the covering email by which that report was sent to the Commonwealth Parole Office and a letter dated 1 November 2016 from the respondent's Department by which the report was requested. The key portions of that report are as follows:
Reintegration considerations [emphasis in original]
Accommodation
During the interview with prisoner Westlake on 31 January 2017, he reported he lived with his parents in central Queensland until he started university. Prisoner Westlake reported that he moved to Brisbane to pursue his university studies and for a small period of time lived in a residential college in shared accommodation, where he observed others in the facility participating in recreational drug usage. In his RNA, he described this accommodation situation as "not ideal" but that it enabled him to be able to complete his study. Prisoner Westlake reported that his supports decreased when he moved to Brisbane as he was living away from his family. Social isolation appears to be a risk factor precipitating his offending behaviour, and his access to family relationships appear to be a protective factor.
Prisoner Westlake identified his parents [sic] address in Rockhampton as where he would be residing if considered for parole. He has received regular (twice monthly) contact visits with his parents during his current incarceration period. He reported accommodation plans in the community may change depending on employment opportunities that may lead him to reside in Brisbane.
…
RECOMMENDATION
During the current interview with Offender Development staff, the following factors were noted.
Factors that may increase prisoner Westlake's risk of recidivism include:
• Outstanding treatment needs in the area of sexual offending;
• Responsivity issues relating to group participation and mental health;
• Multiple co-occurring mental health diagnoses;
• Social isolation and association social/communication difficulties.
Factors that may reduce prisoner Westlake's risk of recidivism include:
• Personal support;
• Motivation towards gaining further employment and education;
• High level of education and professional skills;
• Stable accommodation;
• Potential for employment post-release;
• Motivation to address and manage mental health and offending behaviour, and commitment to doing so.
The report concluded with a handwritten comment, apparently by the author's manager or supervisor, that "While acceptable behaviour is noted, the prisoner has o/s [outstanding] treatment needs + is an unacceptable risk to the community for further sexual offending".
(5) Attachments to the abovementioned parole board report that are referred to in the body of that report, including:
(a) a home assessment report which stated that the applicant's parents' residence was deemed not suitable for release due to the applicant's parents having a two-year-old granddaughter stay overnight on a regular basis, the parents' "lack of awareness to be able to identify any potential risk behaviours which may lead to further offending", and, further, that the parents did not appear supportive of the applicant having to comply with parole order conditions;
(b) a report from the applicant's treating clinical psychologist, Professor Attwood, dated 7 March 2016;
(c) a further report of Professor Attwood dated 27 September 2016;
(d) a further report of Professor Attwood dated 9 December 2016, of which the following passages were relied on by the applicant in oral submissions:
I have grave concerns with regard to his mental state and any consequences in relation to being a suicide risk.
…
I understand that he will be required to engage in the treatment programs designed for those in prison who have been found guilty of particular offences. It is essential that whoever is running those groups is aware of the nature of Asperger's syndrome and how it will affect group participation. Daniel will have a general difficulty with regard to self-disclosure and especially, converting his thoughts, emotions and experiences into speech. This was clearly a characteristic in the therapy sessions with Daniel that I have had in the past. This is not Daniel being non-compliant and resistant to therapy but a genuine difficulty with group dynamics, participation and disclosure.
(e) a report from a child and adolescent consultant psychiatrist, Dr Brian Ross, dated 21 March 2016;
(f) a report from a clinical psychologist, Penny Lewis, dated 4 March 2016; and
(g) lengthy notes, apparently handwritten by the applicant, which are undated.
(6) A letter from the applicant's solicitors to the Queensland Parole Board dated 14 February 2017 (also addressed to the respondent and to the Minister for Justice and sent to the Federal Offenders Office email address), enclosing some of the reports referred to above, as well as additional reports and a letter of support from the applicant's father (upon which reliance was placed at the hearing). Key amongst that material was the following:
(a) A letter of support sent by a professor in the applicant's field of expertise from a leading university, dated 14 February 2017, to the Queensland Parole Board states:
I am confident that Daniel is highly employable and there are several research labs in Brisbane that would be an excellent fit for his skills and expertise. Indeed, there are current research projects in my own lab that would benefit from his experience. I would definitely hire him to undertake this work in my lab.
For Daniel to perform this work efficiently he would require unlimited access to the internet to download data and research papers and to access software for data analyses.
(b) A letter of support sent by the applicant's father, to the Queensland Parole Board on 14 February 2017 (and relied upon by both parties), including the following passage:
It is my intention to have him reside with my wife and myself in Bouldercombe after his release, to allow him to regain some sort of normality in his life. He will be able to receive treatment from Minds and Hearts via the internet, and I will travel with him to Brisbane for any treatments which require his actual presence. We will also investigate any help that can be found in Rockhampton. I would like to think that he will be able to actively look for appropriate positions to enable him to pursue his career before the end of 2017.
(7) A letter from the Commonwealth Parole Office to the applicant's solicitors, dated 16 February 2016 [sic - apparently, and in context, in fact 2017], inviting a response to issues relating to consideration of parole. That letter:
(a) listed non-exhaustive matters of relevance to the delegate's consideration in deciding whether to release a prisoner on parole;
(b) referred to the applicant's treatment needs and, in particular, that he had not completed the Getting Started: Preparatory Program for Sexual Offending (GSPP) due to his reported difficulties with the content of the program and exit from the program on 1 February 2017;
(c) advised the following with regard to the delegate's power and discretion:
The delegate of the Attorney-General could refuse to grant parole release to Mr Westlake at this time and require him to successfully complete a recommended sex offender treatment program.
and;
(d) referred to the issue of post-release accommodation, stating the following:
The Report states that Mr Westlake currently does not have suitable post-release accommodation. Mr Westlake has proposed his parents' address in Rockhampton as his post-release accommodation if granted parole release. However, the parole service states that Mr Westlake's parents have their two year old granddaughter staying there overnight on a regular basis. It would be unacceptable accommodation for a child sexual offender with parole conditions restricting access with minors. On community safety grounds it is important that Mr Westlake secures suitable post-release accommodation before he is released from custody.
(8) A letter from the applicant's solicitors, dated 8 March 2017, to the Commonwealth Parole Office, responding both to the abovementioned 16 February 2017 letter from the Commonwealth Parole Office and to the parole report from Queensland Corrective Services. The letter from the applicant's solicitors particularly requested that the Parole Office take into account the following:
We are instructed by client [sic] that he did not elect to withdraw from participating in the program due to personal stresses or experiencing difficulties coping with the content. To the contrary, he was willing to participate however the program coordinator initially suggested that he postpone his participation in the program for 1 month, but thereafter advised they intended to exit him from the program and recommended one on one therapy would be more beneficial. The reason for same [sic] is associated with our client's mental health issues i.e. Aspergers syndrome, anxiety and PTSD which caused difficulty with him working within a group session. We note that professor [sic] Attwood had previously indicated that Daniel would have difficulty with respect to group session [sic] and we refer you to Professor Attwood's letter dated 9 December 2016 previously provided to you.
The letter also enclosed further medical reports, a letter from the applicant's father dated 6 March 2017 and a document that the applicant had provided to the sentencing judge in the form of a proposal for combatting peer-to-peer network distribution of child pornography. Of note amongst these additional enclosures is the letter of the applicant's father of 6 March 2017, which addressed the suitability of post-release accommodation relevantly as follows:
In response to concerns raised by Corrective Services regarding my son, Dr. Daniel Westlake's parole application I would like to make the record perfectly clear. My granddaughter is not in the habit of regular sleepovers at our house. My wife rightly raised the issue with Corrective Services as a possibility but this has only happened on one occasion while my Daughter was house sitting for us while we were away. My wife and I further undertake to not entertain our granddaughter, Michaela, while Daniel is present here.
(9) A further report from Professor Attwood dated 16 March 2017, including the following relevant passages:
Daniel described that he is barely coping with his situation in prison and is being as brave as he can. Clearly, his anxiety is considerable and he frequently has suicidal thoughts.
He described his difficulties in being a participant in the group program and this would be related to his social difficulties as well as past social experiences and social anxiety.
…
I was also able to discuss with Daniel, the options available for when he is finally released from prison. Should he be within the care of his parents in Rockhampton, it would be possible to conduct regular therapy sessions with Daniel, using Skype with both myself and my colleague, Wes Turner. Daniel also explained that his previous supervisor may be able to provide him with work that he could complete remotely while staying with his parents in Rockhampton. Thus, there are support mechanisms available for Daniel, not only in terms of supervision but also in terms of treatment and psychological support as well as occupation.
22 Submissions for the applicant at the hearing of his application suggested that the circling and signing of the recommendations at the end of the Commonwealth Parole Office submission and recommendation document was insufficient to support any inference that the delegate had considered its contents and taken them into account. That submission is rejected. The only reasonable inference to draw by such an adoption is that the contents have been read and considered, in the absence of any evidence which would defeat the drawing of the inference or accepting of an assertion that the material has been considered, such as evidence indicating that active intellectual consideration of the material was not possible in the time available: cf Carrascalao v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2017] FCAFC 107 at [30(a)], [61], [127]-[128].
23 Drawn from parts of the above material, written submissions by counsel for the applicant relied upon the fact that the applicant had taken part in psychological treatment over the past 15 years and, in particular, in more recent years with Professor Attwood. A number of the opinions of Professor Attwood were reproduced which, in substance, went to the difficulties the applicant was experiencing in prison, in turn going to the merits of him being released on parole. The paragraph of the refusal of parole notice reproduced at [4] above implicitly accepts that the applicant cannot be effectively treated in any group therapy arrangement by reason of his particular needs, and requires individual treatment.
24 It was also asserted on behalf of the applicant that the sentencing judge's comments as to the difficulties the applicant would face in prison were ignored by the delegate. However, that assertion did not form any part of the grounds of review and could not be sustained in light of the submission before the delegate, which addressed this topic insofar as it was mentioned by the sentencing judge.