R v Conway

Case

[2023] NSWSC 55

03 February 2023

No judgment structure available for this case.

Supreme Court


New South Wales

Medium Neutral Citation: R v Conway [2023] NSWSC 55
Hearing dates: 3 February 2023
Decision date: 03 February 2023
Jurisdiction:Common Law
Before: Wilson J
Decision:

1. The offender is sentenced to a term of imprisonment of 16 years, to date from 16 March 2021, expiring on 15 March 2037, with a non-parole period of 12 years fixed, expiring on 15 March 2033.

Catchwords:

CRIME – sentence – murder – sentence after trial – deceased stabbed with a knife – single penetrating wound – intention to inflict grievous bodily harm – intention held fleetingly – spontaneous offence - offender and deceased friends – no history of hostility or dispute – evidence of remorse – offender with a background of deprivation – longstanding history of drug use – role of drug use in the commission of the offence

Legislation Cited:

Crimes Act1900 (NSW), s 18(1)(a)

Cases Cited:

Bugmy v R (2013) 249 CLR 571; [2013] HCA 37

FL v R [2020] NSWCCA 114

R v Isaacs (1997) 41 NSWLR 374; (1997) 90 A Crim R 587

Muldrock v The Queen (2011) 244 CLR 120; [2011] HCA 39

Category:Sentence
Parties: Rex (Crown)
Ian Matthew Conway (Offender)
Representation:

Counsel:
L Shaw (Crown)
D Stewart (Offender)

Solicitors:
Solicitor for Public Prosecutions (NSW) (Crown)
Ross Hill & Associate Solicitors (Offender)
File Number(s): 2021/00074864
Publication restriction: Nil

JUDGMENT

  1. HER HONOUR: If an example was needed to illustrate the pointless and destructive dangerousness of illicit drug use, the case before the Court today is it. On or about 8 March 2021 Christopher Ward died needlessly and violently for no better reason than that both he and his murderer, the offender Ian Conway, had been using and were badly affected by drugs. Mr Conway stood trial for the murder of Mr Ward from 31 October 2022 to 11 November 2022 before this Court sitting at Newcastle. A verdict of guilty was returned against him by the jury on the last day of proceedings. He appears today to be sentenced for his crime.

  2. Murder is an offence contrary to s 18(1)(a) of the Crimes Act1900 (NSW). It carries a maximum sentence of life imprisonment and, in the circumstances of this case, a standard non parole period of 20 years' imprisonment applies; these are the statutory guideposts to which the Court must have regard in determining sentence.

The Facts of the Offence

  1. The principles governing fact finding by a trial judge for the purpose of sentencing were enunciated in R v Isaacs (1997) 41 NSWLR 374; (1997) 90 A Crim R 587, among them that facts found for the purpose of sentencing must be consistent with the jury's verdict, that findings of fact adverse to an offender must be established beyond reasonable doubt whilst favourable matters need only be established to the lower standard of proof on the balance of probabilities.

  2. The offender gave evidence at trial deposing, by way of broad summary, that he acted in self-defence. His account of the stabbing was clearly rejected by the jury. I view it as a likely attempt by the offender, in a later state of sobriety, to understand and come to terms with his conduct - probably only dimly recalled due to his intoxication - rather than as a reliable account of events. The evidence of Ms Renee Lee is to be preferred and I accept her account of the elements of the crime of murder to the criminal standard of beyond reasonable doubt.

  3. The facts that apply to the offender's crime are quite straightforward. In summary, the offender stabbed Mr Ward, his friend and a guest in his home, with a single thrust of a knife to the abdomen after a brief difference of opinion about a wrestling or fighting game. It cannot be doubted that, had the offender not been affected, and probably well affected by methylamphetamine, the ruinous drug with the deceptively anodyne street name “ice”, this crime would never have been committed, Mr Ward's life would not have been cut short in such a tragic and meaningless way, and Mr Conway would not face the sentence that will today be imposed upon him.

  4. Mr Ward and the offender had known each other for some years, mainly in the context of their mutual use of illicit drugs. Their relations were friendly and there was no negative history between them that contributed to the events of 7 and 8 March 2021. The men and Mr Conway's wife, Ms Coghlan, appear to have met during the day on 7 March 2021 for a meal at a fast food restaurant in Newcastle, and were again together that afternoon and evening at the offender's Broadmeadow home. Another, rather reluctant, visitor was Ms Lee. Ms Lee was the only person amongst those present who was not affected by drugs.

  5. The offender had obtained methylamphetamine during the day and he had shared it with Mr Ward. Both men were adversely affected by their use of the substance, with Mr Ward behaving in an erratic and, to the offender, irritating manner. After injecting himself with methylamphetamine when in the kitchen of the Conway home Mr Ward began to take apart a kettle, after which he was observed to crawl about on his hands and knees and to bark as a dog might. He made some unpleasant remarks to Ms Lee and Ms Coghlan and was reprimanded for his comments by the offender. Mr Ward did, however, settle down and at the time of the stabbing he was sitting quietly on a lounge next to Ms Lee, talking to her.

  6. The offender, perhaps still irritated to a degree with Mr Ward for his earlier behaviour, produced two knives and challenged him to “muck around”, apparently an invitation to wrestle or play fight. Mr Ward refused to take part, saying he was not in the mood. He remained sitting on the lounge. The offender was standing in front of him, across the short width of a coffee table. In his drug affected state Mr Ward's refusal to engage angered the offender and, taking up a large hunting knife, he lunged at Mr Ward and thrust the knife forward into Mr Ward's abdomen. In that fleeting moment of anger, the offender intended by his act to do Mr Ward some very serious injury. I am satisfied, however, that he did not intend to kill him.

  7. Tragically, the injury to Mr Ward proved to be most serious and ultimately fatal. After the knife wound was inflicted Mr Ward put his hand to his stomach and lifted his shirt. Ms Lee, who had been sitting beside Mr Ward on the lounge and who had seen the stabbing, observed what she described as "a really deep, long gash". The offender appeared to be shocked by the severity of the injury and said, "oh shit". He began to panic.

  8. The offender suggested a number of plans that might distance Mr Ward and what had happened to him from the offender and his home, such as slitting Mr Ward's throat and dumping him elsewhere, but his wild suggestions, as with similar comments made to Ms Lee the following day, seem to have been borne of panic and fuelled by intoxication rather than from any serious intent. Instead, having taken at least some steps to assist Ms Lee in obtaining a towel with which to apply pressure to the wound, the offender fled the premises. He remained hidden in a nearby park to watch what happened.

  9. Ms Lee telephoned the emergency operator and an ambulance arrived to take Mr Ward to hospital. Despite the efforts of paramedics and hospital staff Mr Ward sadly died on 8 March 2021. A later post-mortem examination found an 8 centimetre stab wound to the area of about the mid abdomen. The wound tracked from front to back on an almost horizontal plane, perforating the liver. Significant blood loss followed.

The Impact of the Crime

  1. The Court was grateful to receive a victim impact statement from Carl Ward, Christopher's brother. Carl Ward described the devastation experienced by his family following the violent death of Christopher. Carl described the heartbreak and distress experienced by him, his father, his sister and extended family. He believes that the despair felt by his sister over her brother's death contributed to her later suicide and to a deep depression into which his father fell. The whole family has been left terribly affected by Christopher's death. The entire community is adversely affected by the violent death of a citizen, and the ongoing pain and loss to the Ward family evidences the harm done to the community more broadly by this crime. The Court extends its sympathies to the Ward family.

The Gravity of the Crime

  1. It is necessary to identify those facts, matters and circumstances that determine the gravity of the crime. [1] It is not necessary to categorise the seriousness of the crime by reference to a range and I do not propose to do so. [2] As I have already observed, I am satisfied that, in stabbing Mr Ward, Mr Conway intended to do him really serious injury at least for a fleeting moment. I accept that he did not intend to kill him and he was, in all likelihood, deeply shocked by the level of severity of the injury that he inflicted.

    1. Muldrock v The Queen (2011) 244 CLR 120; [2011] HCA 39 at [29].

    2. FL v R [2020] NSWCCA 114 at [59]-[60].

  2. This was not a crime borne of any longstanding malice or ill will or of some dispute. The act leading to death was that of plunging a hunting knife into Mr Ward's abdomen using what is an offensive and potentially lethal weapon. The act was carried out entirely spontaneously with little thought and no planning. As I said at the outset, it was a crime that would not have happened but for the offender's state of intoxication.

  3. Whilst the use of a weapon elevates the gravity of the offence to a degree, other features lessen it. The offence was spontaneous, of very brief duration, it consisted of a single forward movement, and it was accompanied by a briefly held intention borne of passing irritation and anger. The sentence to be imposed must reflect those circumstances.

The Offender’s Criminal History

  1. The offender has a long history of entries in his criminal record reflecting encounters with the criminal justice system. His criminal history is before the Court as exhibit (“Ex”) SA2 and the details of a number of the entries it contains may largely be found in Ex SA4. The Court regards the offender's criminal history as disentitling him to the full measure of leniency that might otherwise have been extended to him, but it is not an aggravating feature.

  2. The offender was first before a court as a child of about 17 years of age for dishonesty and drug offences committed as a 16-year-old. His criminal history continued thereafter with relatively regular entries for breaking, entering and stealing and other property crime, suggestive of an individual stealing to support a drug habit and lifestyle.

  3. Mr Conway has some entries for offences of violence, such as an entry for assaulting police in 2002 and another of assault occasioning actual bodily harm from 2015, but his record is principally indicative of dishonesty. He has some weapons convictions, which are troubling, but they seem to be relatively isolated offences. When paroled in the past after serving gaol sentences from time to time it is clear the offender struggled and he was not infrequently reincarcerated for breaching parole. His record, by and large, is that typical of a drug addict and the Court has considered it in the way that I have indicated.

Parity

  1. Some material was placed before the Court relating to the potential issue of parity. It refers to the proceedings against the offender's wife, Ms Coghlan, who was charged with and sentenced for her part in hindering the discovery of evidence of the offender's crime. I have had regard to that material, but I do not regard the principle of parity as of particular relevance in this instance. Ms Coghlan's crime followed that of her husband and is very different in nature and degree to that of the offender. They are not co-offenders.

The Subjective Case

  1. The Court has heard oral evidence from Mr Conway and been provided with a report from a forensic psychiatrist, Dr Olav Nielssen, and a letter from the offender's mother, Ms Clothier. Ms Clothier has attended court today in support of her son.

  2. The offender was born in February 1975, and he is now only a matter of some days short of his 48th birthday. In his evidence to the Court this morning Mr Conway told the Court that he was deeply sorry for what he did on 7 March 2021. He said he thinks about Mr Ward, who was his friend, every day and every night when he lays down to sleep. He would, if he could, take back his actions. Sadly, that course is not open to him and, as Mr Conway said, he can but apologise for his conduct and, recognising the link between his drug use and the commission of the crime, resolve to do better in the future.

  3. The offender confirmed in his evidence the truth of the history he gave to Dr Nielssen when he spoke with the doctor on 14 December 2022. His history is, largely, a very sad one. His parents separated when he was six or seven years old and the offender had very little contact with his father thereafter. His mother remarried and, although there is no suggestion of abuse or deprivation in the family home, the offender struggled with the loss of his natural father and the changes in his family life.

  4. By his mid-teens, the offender's behaviour at home was such that he left home. For some years after leaving home at the age of 15, the offender lived on the streets. An entry in his criminal history for offences of March 1993 broadly confirms the offender's account of a life spent on the streets. At page 30 of Ex SA4, there is a record of the offender telling arresting police officers that he had been squatting on Lee Wharf with other street kids who spent most of their time drinking and taking drugs. The offender's drug use commenced in those years.

  5. The offender married about 20 years ago and he enjoyed a generally supportive relationship with his wife until her untimely death during the course of his trial last year from cancer. Mr Conway and his wife have two children; a son who is presently in custody, it seems serving a sentence, and a much younger boy who was removed from the couple's care at some stage prior to Mr Ward's murder, evidently because of the offender's and Mrs Coghlan's drug abuse.

  6. That short history summarises much personal grief.

  7. The offender believes that he has suffered from anxiety for much of his life, perhaps attributable in part to the serious abuse he says he suffered as a child in what he described as "boys' homes", now generally known as juvenile detention centres. That abuse, the offender's anxiety, his life on the streets, all led to an entrenched and very long-term drug addiction, commencing with cannabis and heroin use at age 15. Although the offender says he has had some periods of abstinence from drugs, he has always relapsed and returned to drug use.

  8. He said in evidence this morning that “the drug blacked it out” - “it” being his sad history - but also that it got him into trouble. Almost 30 years of participation in the methadone programme has not, it seems, altered that pattern. Dr Nielssen regards the offender's drug use as a highly significant feature in the offender's life. He has diagnosed the offender as having a substance use disorder in partial remission, probably with some past related drug psychosis, also now in remission in custody. Dr Nielssen said:

“The diagnosis of a substance use disorder was made from the history of abuse of heroin, cannabis, methamphetamine and benzodiazepine medication, all of which are known to have harmful psychological effects. The complications of substance abuse include the effect on the offender's physical health, including repeated infections with hepatitis C and tooth decay from long term treatment with methadone. The psychological complications include possible hypoxic brain injuries from as many as five opioid overdoses requiring resuscitation and episodes of psychosis related to the use of methamphetamine. The social complications of long-term drug addiction include the many years in prison for drug related offences and his poor social performance when compared to his potential. The offender's substance use disorder would appear to be in relative remission because of the absence of any recent substance related charges and his treatment with opioid replacement medication at a higher dose than prior to his arrest” (Ex S1).

  1. The offender's mother, Ms Clothier, sees her son’s drug use as having been very destructive of the offender's great potential, taking him from a boy that she described as intelligent, artistic, and sporty to a damaged drug user.

  2. Drug use is not a feature that mitigates crime in most circumstances. It does not do so in this instance, but it does inform and explain how Mr Conway came to be where he is today. It is argued by counsel for the offender that “Bugmy features”, being a reference to the High Court decision of Bugmy v R (2013) 249 CLR 571; [2013] HCA 37 operate in this case. Certainly, the circumstances of the offender's mid to late teenage years are highly relevant to explain the offender's overall lifestyle.

  3. The Court accepts that these circumstances and particularly, childhood sexual abuse and a life lived on the streets, do mitigate somewhat the offender's moral responsibility for this crime. He began using drugs as a child without parental support or guidance. He accelerated his drug use to escape the psychological trauma of abuse and so became entrenched in destructive drug use. Crime is an almost inevitable corollary of illicit drug use. Mr Conway has not had the opportunities of an individual from a stable well supported background and his unstable background has contributed to the offender's criminal lifestyle.

  4. The Court accepts that the offender is remorseful. He gave evidence of his deep and sincere regret for Mr Ward's murder and the loss of his friend for what he described to his mother as "a stupid terrible thing gone wrong". He clearly has a degree of insight into the role of his drug use in the commission of that murder. Having such insight, the Court accepts also that the offender is well motivated to rehabilitate himself from drug use. He remains on an opioid replacement programme in custody at, Dr Nielssen noted, a higher and apparently more appropriate dose than was administered to him in the community.

  5. The offender deposed that he has not used illicit drugs since entering custody. His healthier appearance - vastly to be contrasted with his appearance in Ex J, a recording made on 9 March 2021 - points to the truthfulness of that evidence, which is not, in any event, challenged by the Crown. No doubt the consequences of drug use on 7 March 2021 have informed Mr Conway's determination to remain drug free. Not only has the offender seen his friend Mr Ward die at his hand and found himself incarcerated for Mr Ward's murder, he has lost the chance of being with his wife at her deathbed, or of regaining custody of his young son.

  6. Both are personal tragedies of great magnitude and whilst neither can amount to extra-curial punishment or anything like it, these are losses beyond that suffered by many offenders and the Court has had regard to them in fixing the sentence to be imposed today. It may be that the offender can turn his insight into the connection between his drug use and a lifestyle of crime and its resulting misery into future rehabilitation. However, as the Crown pointed out, the offender has been motivated to abstain from drug use in the past without being able to translate that motivation into permanent abstinence.

  7. Whilst the Court accepts the genuine nature of the offender's intentions to better himself, his future prospects can only be considered, in my assessment, as guarded. They are entirely in Mr Conway's hands.

Special Circumstances?

  1. In determining the sentence to be imposed, the Court has given consideration to whether a finding of special circumstances should be made in the offender's favour. Such a finding is not a mechanism by which to impose a lower sentence on an offender. It is a means of imposing a longer period of supervision on parole. Whilst there is no doubt Mr Conway will require and would benefit from considerable support and assistance on his release from custody, the parole period that will flow from the ordinary application of statute will be sufficient for that purpose in my judgment. The offender will either make the most of the support of services made available to him on his release to parole and move permanently away from addiction and crime, or not. An even lengthier period of parole will not, in my conclusion, make any real difference to that outcome.

  1. Those features that could have supported a finding of special circumstances have been given full weight in fixing the sentence imposed.

Sentence

  1. The offender, having been convicted of the murder of Christopher Ward, is sentenced to a term of 16 years imprisonment to date from 16 March 2021. The head sentence will expire on 15 March 2037. The Court fixes a non-parole period of 12 years which will expire on 15 March 2033. The earliest date upon which Mr Conway will be eligible for release to parole is 15 March 2033.

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Endnotes

Decision last updated: 08 February 2023

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Most Recent Citation
R v Knight [2023] NSWSC 321

Cases Citing This Decision

1

R v Knight [2023] NSWSC 321
Cases Cited

5

Statutory Material Cited

1

Bugmy v The Queen [2013] HCA 37
Bugmy v The Queen [2013] HCA 37
FL v R [2020] NSWCCA 114