IN THE COURT OF APPEAL [1993] QCA 020
SUPREME COURT OF QUEENSLAND
C.A. No. 334 of 1992
T H E Q U E E N
v.
ROBERT WING FONG CHAN
Respondent
ATTORNEY-GENERAL OF QUEENSLAND
Appellant
Mr Justice Pincus
Mr Justice McPherson
Mr Justice Byrne
Judgment of the Court delivered the 23rd day of February, 1993
Appeal allowed. Set aside the sentences imposed in respect of the charges of unlawfully trafficking in dangerous drugs and of supply of dangerous drugs. In lieu of those sentences, the respondent is sentenced to seven years imprisonment in respect of the trafficking charge and five years imprisonment on each of the charges of unlawfully supplying a dangerous drug.
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL
SUPREME COURT OF QUEENSLAND
C.A. No. 334 of 1992
Before the Court of Appeal
Mr Justice Pincus
Mr Justice McPherson
Mr Justice Byrne
T H E Q U E E N
v.
ROBERT WING FONG CHAN
Respondent
ATTORNEY-GENERAL OF QUEENSLAND
Appellant
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT
Delivered the 23rd day of February, 1993
MINUTE OF ORDER:
Appeal allowed. Set aside the sentences imposed in respect of the charges of unlawfully trafficking in dangerous drugs and of supply of dangerous drugs. In lieu of those sentences, the respondent is sentenced to seven years imprisonment in respect of the trafficking charge and five years imprisonment on each of the charges of unlawfully supplying a dangerous drug.
Sentence - Trafficking in Schedule 1 and 2 drugs - Supply to undercover officer - Business of drug dealing wholesale level - Guilty plea - Seven years imprisonment.
| Counsel: | P. Rutledge for the appellant |
| S. Herbert Q.C. for the respondent |
| Solicitors: | Crown Solicitor for the appellant |
| Crowley and Greenhalgh for the respondent |
Hearing date: 3 February 1993
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL
SUPREME COURT OF QUEENSLAND
C.A. No. 334 of 1992
T H E Q U E E N
v.
ROBERT WING FONG CHAN
Respondent
ATTORNEY-GENERAL OF QUEENSLAND
Appellant
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT
Delivered the 23rd day of February, 1993
The Attorney-General appeals against sentences imposed after the respondent's pleas of guilty to serious drug offences.
The charges and sentences imposed were:
| Charges | Sentence |
| Between 1 January and 10 December | 4 years six months |
| 1991, trafficking in lysergide | imprisonment. |
| ("LSD"), a first schedule drug, and in the second schedule drugs amphetamine, methylamphetamine and 4-Bromo-2,5 - dimethoxyamphetamine ("bdma"). |
| Charges | Sentence |
| Between 11 December and 10 December | 3 years imprisonment. |
| 1991, on 15 occasions supplying dangerous drugs. Fourteen of these |
| transactions | involved | the |
respondent's delivering LSD, bdma, amphetamine or methylamphetamine. The 15th concerned an offer to supply cocaine.
| Two counts of possession of | 2 years imprisonment. |
| property (money and a mobile phone) used in connection with the commission of a crime defined in Part II of the Drugs Misuse Act 1986. |
An undercover agent met the respondent in late August 1991.
Within the next few months, the respondent sold the agent LSD,
bdma, amphetamine and methylamphetamine. The transactions took
place on 13 days. LSD was delivered on four occasions. 500
tabs of the drug, containing in all .04725 gms, were supplied.
This exceeded 11 times the schedule 3 quantity. Bdma was
involved once. 500 tabs containing a total of 1 gm of bdma
(twice the schedule 3 quantity) were delivered. $14,030 changed
hands for these drugs. Another $33,300 was paid to purchase
433.837 gms of powder containing 51.786 gms of methylamphetamine
(over 25 times the Schedule 3 amount) in nine transactions, and
25.889 gms of powder containing 2.537 gms of amphetamine (more
than the Schedule 3 amount) on one occasion. The respondent
also supplied the agent with an "ounce" of "cocaine" for $5,500.
The substance was actually procaine which is not a dangerous
| Those facts were admitted; but before the sentencing Judge there was a contest as to whether the respondent conducted a business of drug dealing before he met the undercover agent. The Crown contended that the evidence disclosed that before August 1991 the respondent was significant in the drug scene, regularly trafficking in a range of dangerous drugs at wholesale level. The respondent testified that he had not dealt in drugs before meeting the agent. The Judge found that the respondent had carried on a business of unlawfully trafficking in dangerous drugs from an indeterminate time before late August 1991. This conclusion, which is not challenged before us, was supported by electronic recordings of the respondent's conversations with the agent and also with street dealers. In them, and during other discussions, the respondent spoke of his prior drug deals. These disclosures, which the Judge regarded as reliable admissions, included the respondent's telling the agent not long after their first meeting that the respondent: could "get speed for $1,800, $2,000 an ounce"; was already owed $16,000 for amphetamines supplied over three weeks; had previously been selling as much as 10 ounces a week of "speed" (amphetamine). (He acknowledged a cost price of $1,800 and a profit of $600 per ounce); currently dealt in between 2-4 ounces of "speed" weekly; had ready access to supplies of drugs from contacts in Brisbane, Sydney and the Gold Coast; and, in relation to LSD, used to "order 50 tabs each time". It was not possible to identify the number of individuals with whom the respondent had dealt nor the range of drugs in which he trafficked; and the Judge could not determine how much money had been earned from the illicit business. His Honour was however satisfied that the respondent was a significant link in the chain of drug distribution before he met the agent. It was also shown that the respondent trafficked with others, although not to the same extent, while supplying the agent. Having remarked that the circumstances called for a "substantial deterrent punishment", the Judge approached the sentence in respect of the trafficking charge in steps. First, he decided that an appropriate head sentence was imprisonment for seven years. Next he took into account the eleven months spent in custody awaiting sentence (allowing, in the conventional way, one year and ten months). Credit was then given for the guilty plea. The result was a sentence four years and six months imprisonment. The sentence is said to be manifestly inadequate, particularly having regard to the seriousness of the offence and that the trafficking in dangerous drugs began before the introduction to the agent. Before turning to sentences imposed in other cases, some other facts should be mentioned. The respondent was a 47 year old businessman. He is not a drug user. His entrepreneurial skills were exploited to traffic in a range of drugs in a substantial way solely for personal gain. The drugs in which he dealt included a Schedule 1 drug, and the drugs were sold to a number of people who intended to re-sell them. There was no contrition. The only significance of the plea of guilty was a considerable saving in public resources. Several cases involving serious drug offences were mentioned in argument. It is sufficient to refer to three of them to appreciate that the sentence imposed in this case requires intervention. Walton (C.A. No. 259 of 1989, 20 November 1991) was an Attorney-General's appeal decided when the maximum penalty for carrying on a business of unlawfully trafficking in amphetamine was life imprisonment. The offender, who was not a drug user, established a business of the manufacture and wholesale disposal of large quantities of amphetamine. In four months he derived a profit of about $200,000 (at a rate of $14,500 per pound). Walton entered an early plea of guilty and had spent five months in pre-sentence custody. In 1973 he had been sent to prison for almost two years for possession of cannabis for sale. The Court of Criminal Appeal increased the sentence from five to ten years imprisonment. Craske (C.A. No. 174 of 1991, 25 September 1991) involved supplying cocaine, LSD and two Schedule 2 drugs. Over about six months, the applicant supplied an undercover agent with 1.688 gms of cocaine (three sales), 0.1205 gms of LSD (nine transactions) and small quantities of the other drugs, the agent paying about $8,500. Craske was a drug user who made little pecuniary gain. He pleaded guilty. The Court of Criminal Appeal declined to disturb a head sentence of six years imprisonment but added a recommendation for early parole because of previously good character, the agent had sought out the applicant to arrange the supplies, and the offender ceased supply before learning of the agent's identity. Abdo (C.A. No. 186 of 1991, 5 December 1991) concerned heroin trafficking by a 36 year old man who, like the respondent, dealt at wholesale level. He too had access to bulk supplies. After his conviction at a trial, Abdo was sentenced to 15 years imprisonment. The evidence against him included transactions with an agent in which 50 gms of pure heroin changed hands for $72,000 over less than four months. Abdo, unlike the respondent, was not shown to have been selling a range of drugs to a number of dealers. The seven years which the Judge used as his starting point is significantly less than the sentence for Walton: someone who was not dealing in a Schedule 1 drug and whose ten year sentence reflected a reduction for both five months pre-sentence custody and a timely guilty plea. The present sentence also presents as unduly lenient in comparison with the 15 years sentence in Abdo; and this respondent's conduct deserves more severe punishment than Craske's. But for the 11 months spent in pre-sentence custody and the guilty plea, a sentence of 11 years imprisonment would have been appropriate. Taking those two matters into account, a sentence of seven years imprisonment should be imposed. The sentence in respect of the supply charges was also unduly lenient. A five year sentence should be substituted. The two year sentence for the possession offences may stand. | and amphetamine and $3,000 for the LSD and bdma. months and three years imprisonment are set aside and instead the respondent is sentenced to imprisonment for seven years in respect of the trafficking charge and five years on each of the supply counts. |
drug. Substantial profits were expected from these
transactions: about $10,000 for the sales of methylamphetamine