R v Starr

Case

[2010] QDC 350

31/08/2010

No judgment structure available for this case.

DISTRICT COURT OF QUEENSLAND

CITATION:  R v Starr [2010] QDC 350
PARTIES:  R
(respondent)
V
DAVID JOHN STARR
(applicant/defendant)
FILE NO/S:  Indictment No.
DIVISION:  Criminal
PROCEEDING:  590AA application
ORIGINATING 
COURT: 
District Court at Brisbane
DELIVERED ON:  31 August 2010 (ex tempore)
DELIVERED AT:  Brisbane
HEARING DATE:  31 August 2010
JUDGE:  Irwin DCJ
ORDER:  The evidence obtained against the applicant by virtue of
the execution of a search warrant at 6 Turner Street,
Windsor, on 1 September 2009 is to be excluded.

CATCHWORDS: 

CRIMINAL LAW - EVIDENCE - SEARCH WARRANT - ADMISSIBILITIY - where failure to specify relevant place in search warrant which authorised that a police officer may enter the place and exercise search warrant powers at the

place - discretionary power of the court to exclude evidence
obtained through the execution of the warrant.

Police Powers and Responsibilities Act 2000 (Qld), s 150(1), s 151, s 156, s 157

Bunning v Cross [1978] 141 CLR 54, applied
R v Adamic [2000] QSC 402, distinguished
R v Day & Anor [2008] QSC 358, considered
R v Edwards [1998] QCA 246, distinguished
R v Ireland [1970] 126 CLR 321, cited
COUNSEL:  V. Loury for the Crown respondent

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C. Toweel for the applicant/defendant

SOLICITORS:  Director of Public Prosecutions for the respondent Crown
A.W. Bale & Co for the applicant/defendant

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THE COURT RESUMED AT 2.14 P.M. IN THE ABSENCE OF THE JURY

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HIS HONOUR: This is an application made after the

presentation of an indictment against David John Starr at the commencement of a trial charging him with assault occasioning bodily harm, sexual assault, and robbery with personal

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violence. The purpose of the application is to exclude
evidence obtained by the execution of a search warrant at the
premises at which the accused was then living.
It is argued on behalf of the accused that the warrant was 20

unlawful and a nullity because it did not specify the details of the place where it was to be executed. This is conceded by the Crown Prosecutor. The issue is whether I should exercise

my discretion to exclude the evidence which has thereby been
unlawfully obtained, and in particular, the evidence of the 30
location of a gold-coloured chain to which a cross is
attached. Mr Toweel, who appears for the accused, argues that
I should exercise my discretion to exclude that evidence.
Ms Lowry, the Crown Prosecutor, argues that I should not
exclude the evidence in the circumstances of this case. 40
In order to address this application, it is relevant to
summarise the background circumstances. For this purpose, I
consider it is sufficient if I do so by setting out the
information which was relied upon by plain clothes Senior 50
Constable Walsh in the application for the issue of the search
warrant.
While it may be that at trial, the evidence may emerge
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somewhat differently from this, it is nonetheless sufficient for the purposes of my current ruling. I note that this is a ruling which it is necessary for me to make during the course
of a trial. As a consequence, the extent of my researches are

limited to the authorities which have been referred to by both 10
Counsel.
As set out in the application, the facts of this matter are as
follows: At approximately 8.43 p.m. on the 31st day of August
2009, the police communications centre received a triple-O 20
call from the victim, LT, who stated she was being attacked by
an unknown male in the vicinity of Kent Street, New Farm. LT
is a sex worker in the Fortitude Valley
area.
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Upon arrival by police, the complainant advised that she had
been working as a prostitute outside number 92, Kent and
Brunswick Streets when a white Toyota Camry approached and
pulled up next to her, and the male driver said, "are you
working?" She replied, "yes." He then told her to jump in. She 40
then entered the vehicle outside 92 Kent Street, and sat in
the front passenger seat.
She described the driver of the vehicle as a male Caucasian,
late 40s, balding with combover, Donald Trump-style hair, and 50
heavy set build. She then directed the male and drove with him
to Teneriffe Drive at Teneriffe. They then pulled up in his
vehicle across from number 37 Teneriffe Drive behind a blue
Honda SUV parked in front.
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The male unzipped his pants and the complainant placed a
condom on his penis. She then said to him, "shall we sort the
money side of things out first?" He responded by lunging at

her in a violent and hostile manner. He grabbed her by the 10

neck and pushed her head against the side of the passenger door. He groped at her breasts and tried to undo her jeans belt.

He had a hold of her neck and was squeezing, and continued to 20
bang her head against the interior door frame. He forcefully
rammed her head numerous times against the side door of the
vehicle. He pinned her on her back, on the passenger seat, so
that her head was against the door of the vehicle and her legs
onto the driver's seat, and he was pinning her between her 30
legs.
She began to hit the vehicle horn with her feet to call for
assistance. The passenger door to the vehicle then opened
during the scuffle and the male reached over her to attempt to 40
close the door to prevent her from exiting the vehicle. She
retaliated by jamming her elbow into the door frame and
started kicking and attempting to gouge out the eyes of the
male, causing him to bleed from the face.
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He then attempted to squeeze her throat and ripped off a chain and pendant of a cross that she was wearing around her neck, and threw it on the ground of the vehicle on the driver's side floor. He dragged her out of the vehicle by the hair and

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continued punching her to the head and upper body. She
commenced running up the hill on Tenerife Drive, yelling,

"rape, rape," to call for assistance.

The suspect male followed her and shouted, "how can it be rape 10
when your pants are up?" She then defended herself with her
high-heel shoe and hit him more that once in the head with the
heel of her sandal when he came at her again.
Residents in neighbouring houses were alerted to the commotion 20
and started coming out of their houses, to give assistance to
the complainant. The suspect male then returned to his
vehicle and drove off down the hill. The complainant
contacted triple O and started walking back towards Kent
Street. As she approached Kent and Brunswick, the male 30
returned in the white Toyota Camry and approached her and
drove slowly past her.
She again contacted triple O and alerted other sex workers in
the vicinity, who were able to provide a partial registration 40
number of the vehicle, as a white Toyota Camry, Queensland
Registration, 789J. The complainant had visible scratch marks
to her neck, with redness and swelling and blood spatter
staining on the forearm of her white Puma hoodie. Once all
information had been obtained, she was placed in a blue 50
protective suit, to preserve the evidence on her and her
clothing.
She then conducted a drive with detectives from Fortitude
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Valley CIB and identified the location where the incident had
occurred. A crime scene was then established at that
location, the road cordoned and the scene processed by Scenes
of Crime officers. Extensive intelligence inquiries were

conducted and a vehicle registration was identified. A white 10
Toyota Camry, 2005, Queensland Registration 789 JFS, was
identified as being registered to a Shirley May Starr, of 6
Turner Street, Windsor.
Other persons listed at that address include a male, David 20
John Starr. Further inquiries identify that he is the son of

Shirley Starr and is also listed as living at 6 Turner Street, Windsor. A photoboard was compiled and an electronic recorded interview was then conducted with the complainant. During the interview, she was shown the photoboard and she identified a

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photograph of David John Starr as the male who had been the
driver of the white Toyota Camry and had attempted to rape
her. It was established that the vehicle was at 6 Turner
Road, Windsor at 9.40 a.m. on 1 September 2009.
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The application continued that a search warrant was sought
under the Police Powers and Responsibilities Act, for the
address at 6 Turner Road, Windsor, in order to recover the
pair of shorts worn by the suspect, Starr, at the time of the
offence and any other blood stained clothing which was worn at 50
the time of the offence.

Detectives reasonably believed that the clothing would be located at 6 Turner Road, Windsor, the address of the suspect,

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David John Starr. Detectives also sought to search the
vehicle, white Toyota Camry, Queensland Registration, 789 JFS,
said to be currently located at the address, to locate the
gold coloured necklace, with the gold coloured cross, which

was ripped from the complainant's neck and thrown on the front 10
driver's side of the vehicle floor, by the suspect Starr.
Detectives reasonably believed that a search of 6 Turner Road
and the vehicle nominated would recover evidence of the
commission of the crime of attempted rape by the suspect,
David John Starr. 20

In that application, the place to be searched was identified as 6 Turner Street, Windsor.

Plainclothes Senior Constable Walsh became involved in this 30
investigation at about 9.10 p.m. on 31 August 2009. According
to her evidence before me, she continued to work on this
investigation until 4.00 a.m. on 1 September 2009. After
about three hours' sleep, she returned to work to continue the
investigation at about 9.30 a.m. on 1 September 2009. 40

She prepared the application for search warrant, to which I have just referred, together with the search warrant during the course of that morning. In her evidence at the committal

proceedings, she said that she had been a plainclothes senior 50
constable for the past three and a half years and during that
time, she had prepared numerous search warrants.
Her evidence was that using pro forma documents in a package
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available to the Queensland Police Service, she prepared the
application and then cut and pasted information from the
application into the search warrant. Each of these documents
were printed out and she read the documents over before

attending on a Justice of the Peace at the Magistrates Court, 10
to make the application to issue the warrant.
A comparison of the application and the search warrant, which
are in evidence before me, demonstrate that she did transfer
some information from the application into the search warrant. 20
In particular, she transferred information as to the nature of
the offence for which the warrant was to be issued. She also
transferred the details of the evidence that may be seized
under the warrant, which in each document were described as
"One gold coloured chain, with a gold coloured cross and blood 30
stained shorts and any other blood stained clothing located at
the dwelling, worn at the time of the offence".
However, she did not transfer the information as to the place
to be searched, so that the details of the place as appear in 40

the search warrant that was issued, are "Insert location of relevant place"; 6 Turner Street, Windsor, as a place to be searched, is mentioned at no place in the warrant.

According to Plainclothes Senior Constable Walsh' evidence, 50
the failure to transfer this information as to the identity of
the place from the application to the warrant, was an
oversight which she considered was due to fatigue or as she
also described it, sleep deprivation.
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Justice also failed to identify the omission from the search 10
warrant and the omission was not identified at any stage by
Plainclothes Senior Constable Walsh, before she arrived with other police at the residence of 6 Turner Street, at Windsor and executed the search warrant at approximately 1.30 p.m. on
that date. 20
I note that her evidence was that she attended that address in the presence of other officers, including a number of officers who were not sleep deprived. However as she was both the
person who prepared and applied for the warrant, and also 30
executed it, it does not appear that any other police officer
reviewed the warrant before its execution.
During the execution of the warrant the accused identified
clothing that he had been wearing on the previous night and 40
that was handed to the police. Of more significance for the
purposes of the current application is the fact that he
directed Plain Clothes Senior Constable Walsh to the rear deck of the dwelling and showed her a gold coloured necklace with a gold coloured cross which was positioned on the windowsill 50

floor of the Toyota Camry by the front passenger door of the
vehicle.

This oversight was not picked up by her prior to lodging the
application and the search warrant with the Justice, who
issued the warrant at 12.16 p.m. on 1 September 2009. The

ledge. He told her that he had found the necklace on the residence at 6 Turner Street, Windsor, the white Toyota Camry, which was referred to in the search warrant, was outside the premises. As a consequence a separate crime scene warrant was issued in relation to the search and processing of that vehicle.

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The necklace and gold cross was taken into possession by Plain Clothes Senior Constable Walsh and would be sought to be tendered by the prosecution as evidence in these proceedings, which would be relevant to the issue of the identification of the complainant's assailant.

The fundamental nature of the deficit in the search warrant
that was issued and executed is demonstrated by reference to
the provisions of the Police Powers and Responsibilities Act
2000. Section 150(1) empowers a police officer to apply for a
warrant to enter and search a place. Section 151 empowers the
issue of a search warrant only if the issuer is satisfied
there are reasonable grounds for suspecting evidence of the
commission of an offence, or confiscation related evidence is
at the place or is likely to be taken to the place within the

next 72 hours.

Section 156 requires a search warrant to state, amongst other things, that a police officer may exercise search warrant powers under the warrant. Section 157 provides that those search warrant powers include the power to enter the place stated in the warrant, which is referred to as the relevant place, and to stay on it for the time reasonably necessary to exercise powers authorised under the warrant and under section 157. Those powers are set out in the search warrant that was issued.

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As I have observed, the Crown Prosecutor concedes that the
warrant was not lawful and is a nullity. It follows that the
search itself was unlawful. However as is identified in R v.
Day & Anor [2008] QSC 358, a decision by A Lyons J, on
20 August 2008, the question that then arises is whether the
evidence obtained in the unlawful search should be excluded in
an exercise of the Court's discretion. On the basis of what
her Honour said at paragraphs [32] and [33] of the judgment,
there is a discretion to exclude evidence which stems from

both the common law and statute law.

Section 130 of the Evidence Act 1977 (Qld) states:

"Nothing in this Act derogates from the power of the Court in
a criminal proceeding to exclude evidence if the Court is
satisfied that it would be unfair to the person charged to

admit that evidence."

The question in this particular application is whether the 141 CLR 54 where it was held that even if the evidence was obtained unlawfully it is not for that reason alone inadmissible, and that in the exercise of the discretion, competing public interest must be weighed against each other. One such interest was the protection of the individual from the unlawful and unfair treatment. The competing public interests are often summarised in the following terms:

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evidence obtained as a result of the search should be excluded
because there was no valid search warrant. The principles
involved in a consideration of the discretion were outlined in
"The desirable goal of bringing to conviction the wrong doer
and the undesirable effect of curial approval or even
encouragement being given to the unlawful conduct of those
whose task it is to enforce the law." (Bunning v Cross (1978)
141 CLR 54, 74).

Before I address the factors involved in a consideration of the discretion, to exclude the evidence as they are outlined in Bunning -v-Cross, I observe that the observations made by her Honour, Holmes, J, in R -v- Adamic [2000] QSC 402, that even if the warrant in that case had been defective as a result of a technical insufficiency of the description of the premises in the warrant, it was not a case having regard to what was said in R -v- Edwards [1998], QCA 246, in which exclusion of the evidence would be warranted.

In both Adamic and Edwards, the deficiency in the warrant was
a technical insufficiency in the description of the land or premises to which the warrant applied. The observations in Edwards, at page 8, should be viewed in that light, where the

Court says:

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"The premises need be identified only with reasonable 1
particularity and in a criminal trial, the evidence obtained
by means of a search warrant that is defective simply because
the address is incorrect, will not be excluded if the error is
of a technical nature only and without any police misconduct".

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In the present case, the error is not of a technical nature only, but relates to the entire basis on which the warrant has been issued. In the absence of a location at which the warrant was to be executed and the search to occur, the entire

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basis for the warrant was wrong.

With reference to the factors in Bunning -v- Cross, the first is whether the unlawfulness or illegality was the result of a mistake or is a deliberate or reckless disregard of the law.

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On one view of the evidence, as Plainclothes Senior Constable oversight by her in circumstances where she was fatigued. However, a degree of a reckless disregard of the law, cannot be excluded in this case.

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The fact is, as identified by Mr Toweel in his submissions, she, being aware of the requirements of a warrant, had a number of opportunities to ensure that the warrant complied with law. The first was at the time she drafted it; the

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second was at the time that she took it to the Justice for
consideration as to whether it would be issued and when she
received it back from the Justice and finally, when she

executed the warrant.

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While it can also be said that the issue of the warrant by the 1

Justice in the circumstances was also attended by a degree of recklessness, the fact is that the police officer had the opportunity between the time that the warrant was issued at 12.16 and the time that it was executed at 1.30 p.m. on the

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same date, to ensure that the warrant was checked, so that it

complied with the law.

The second factor is the cogency of the contested evidence.

In this case, as Ms Loury submits for the Crown, the evidence

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of the necklace and cross, is cogent and reliable evidence. generally be allowed to play no part in the exercise of discretion where the illegality involved in procuring it, is intentionally reckless. In any event, even where the

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illegality arises only from mistake and is neither deliberate
nor reckless, if there is other equally cogent evidence
untainted by illegality available to the Prosecution at the
trial, the case for the admission of evidence illegally

obtained, will be the weaker.

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In this case, on my understanding of the evidence available to the Crown on the issue of the identification of the accused as the assailant of the complainant, in the absence of evidence

of the location of the necklace and cross in his possession,

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there is other evidence confirmatory of his identification.

In particular, the evidence of Ms Wilson from the John Tonge

Centre, that a specimen which gave a presumptive positive

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reading for blood taken from the long sleeved top which the 1
complainant was said to be wearing at the time of the alleged
attack, gave a full DNA profile which matched the reference
sample of the DNA profile of the accused. It is estimated
that the probability of this DNA profile occurring, had this

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DNA come from someone other than and unrelated to him, is
approximately one in 7,400 billion, based on Queensland

Caucasian data.

A third consideration which arises from Bunning v Cross is the

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ease with which the law might have been complied with in this case.

procuring the evidence in question. It is conceded by Ms

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A fourth and important factor is the nature of the offence. There is no doubt that the three offences with which the accused is charged, while not the most serious of criminal offences, are nonetheless serious offences.

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Finally, it is a relevant consideration that an examination of
the legislation suggests that there was a quite deliberate
intent on the part of the legislature to narrowly restrict the
police in their power. This is a factor favouring rejection

of the evidence. I consider the Police Powers and

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Responsibilities Act, particularly with reference to the
circumstances in which search warrants may be obtained, is

such legislation.

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Balancing these factors in circumstances where the defect in 1

the warrant is not merely a technical one, but is fundamental to the basis on which it has been issued and executed so that basis was wrong, and having regard to the fact that the

purported use of the power entailed the invasion of the

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privacy of citizens I consider the error is of such
proportions as to tilt the balance of public interest against

the receipt of the evidence so obtained.

Having weighed up the factors that I am required to consider,

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I am satisfied that in the present case the important public interest in the protection of the individual from unfair treatment should prevail because to do otherwise would give encouragement to officers whose task it is to uphold the law to approach the question of the issue of search warrants in

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the manner which has occurred in this case.

Having come to this conclusion, I am nonetheless sympathetic
to the position of police officers such as Plain Clothes

Senior Constable Walsh who have a difficult job to do. I

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recognise that she was tired at the time that she made this able to provide a detailed application in support of the warrant. The details of that application have been read into
application with the associated error, but nonetheless, as Mr

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the record as part of this decision and in my view she was
sufficiently in possession of her faculties to do so and to be
able to transfer other information in that application into

the search warrant. In the circumstances I exclude the

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evidence which has been obtained by virtue of the execution of 1
that search warrant.

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Cases Citing This Decision

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Cases Cited

4

Statutory Material Cited

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R v Day [2008] QSC 358
Bunning v Cross [1978] HCA 22
Bunning v Cross [1978] HCA 22