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HIGH
COURT OF SOLOMON ISLANDS
Criminal Case No. 355 of
2004
BETWEEN:
REGINA
AND:
FEFELE
AND KWAIMANI
Date of Hearing: 25 February 2008 to 12 March 2008
Date
of Judgment: 2 April 2008
Ms Kleinig and Mr Coates for the Crown
Mrs
K. Anderson for A. Fefele
Ms M. Lidimani for L. Kwaimani
JUDGMENT AFTER TRIAL
Cameron
PJ
1 The two accused, Alick Fefele and Lemuel Kwaimani, are
charged with attempted murder, and in the alternative doing grievous
harm.
2 The charges arise out of an attack on a DBSI bank manager in
Chinatown. I find that on 10 May 2000 there was a vicious and sustained
attack
on Moses Garu at his place of work at the DBSI Bank. During that attack he
suffered severe cuts to his scalp, face and neck,
a chipped skull, a broken jaw
and forearm, as well as severed tendons in that forearm. He was rushed to the
National Referral Hospital,
where he was treated by Dr. Pikacha. He lost a
considerable quantity of blood, and one of the cuts below his ear was found to
have
been close to his carotid artery. The injuries were consistent with
sharp-edged object wounds such as would be inflicted by a knife
or an axe and
were potentially fatal.
3 The Crown case was that 5 men in all were
responsible for the attack. They were all charged and tried. However, at the
close of
the Crown case there was found to be insufficient evidence against 3 of
the men, and only Mr. Fefele and Mr. Kwaimani were found
to have a case to
answer.
4 The Crown case against Mr. Kwaimani is that on the morning of
10 May 2000, he drove 3 men in his white taxi from the Malaita Eagle
Force (MEF)
Central Lions Camp in the Kaibia area of Honiara to the Chinatown Branch of the
DBSI Bank. The Crown says that he then
waited in his vehicle while the 3 men,
armed with bush knives and a small axe, went into the Bank and made their attack
on Moses
Garu. The Crown says that the 3 men attempted to murder the victim and
that after the attack they hurried to Mr. Kwaimani’s
taxi, which was
positioned for a fast getaway, and were spirited away from the scene. The Crown
contends that by his actions in assisting
the attackers in this way, he was a
party to attempted murder or in the alternative to doing grievous
harm.
5 The Crown case against Mr. Fefele is that he was one of the 3 men
who were taken from the MEF Camp to the Bank by Mr. Kwaimani,
and that he was
one of the actual attackers of Moses Garu.
6 I should add the Crown
contended that the motive for this attack was that members of MEF wished to kill
a Guadalcanal man by way
of reprisal for the killing of a MEF boy, and that
Moses Garu was selected as the innocent victim. In the result, though, there was
no evidence from which that motive could be
inferred.
7 Lemuel
Kwaimani
Part of the Crown case against Mr. Kwaimani were two
statements he made to Police dated 17 November 2003 and 8 January 2004.
8 In his first statement, he said that in mid 2000 he had been the owner
of a white taxi, a toyota corolla station wagon registration
number A6358. He
stated that on the morning of 10 May 2000, he had picked up 3 men from the side
of the road in the Kaibia area of
Honiara, and driven them to the DBSI Bank in
Chinatown. He claimed he did not recognise the men, and saw no weapons. He was
told
to wait while the men got out and walked into the DBSI Bank, pulling their
hoods down to their eyebrows as they did so.
9 He stated that it was only
when they emerged from the Bank that he saw that they were armed with small bush
knives, and that he
noticed blood on them. The men returned to his taxi, one of
them ordering him to drive them quickly or "we’re going to get
you". He
did so, dropped them off at the same place beside the road that he had picked
them up from, and only later that evening
learned from the broadcast news that a
branch manager had been attacked by some men. He said he was too scared to
report his involvement.
10 Then on 8 January 2004, at the instigation of
the Police, Mr. Kwaimani made a supplementary statement. He said that rather
than
picking the 3 men up from the side of the road, he had that morning gone to
the MEF Lions Camp in Kaibia and taken them to the Bank
from there. He infers in
his statement that he went to the camp looking for a wantok, and while at the
camp was told by one of the
3 men to drive them to the DBSI Bank in Chinatown.
He had been told by some of the "MEF boys" that Jimmy Rasta was the commander
of
the camp, and had observed him there that morning, standing around a barbeque
with others.
11 He says that he knew the name of one of the men he
transported, the nickname of another, but did not know the name of the third
man. He said that when the men got back into the taxi after being in the Bank,
he saw two of them had bush knives and one a small
axe. He said that he drove
back to the MEF Camp, and during the journey the men were saying that they had
just killed a man. He said
he remained at the Lions Camp for about 20 minutes
after his return, during which time he heard the men repeat to Jimmy Rasta and
others that they had just killed a man. His reason for not disclosing this
information in his first statement was that he was scared
of Jimmy Rasta and the
"MEF boys".
12 I am satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that the 3 men who
attacked Moses Garu were the 3 men who Mr. Kwaimani says he took to the
DBSI
Bank that morning. Mr. Kwaimani’s own statements refer to his observing
the 3 men pull hoods down to their eyebrows, seeing
them enter the Bank, seeing
them when they emerged with bloodied weapons, and then hearing what sounded like
a lady screaming. I
accept this is what Mr. Kwaimani saw and heard. All the
other relevant evidence points to an attack by 3 men with the type of weapons
Mr. Kwaimani says he saw the men carrying.
13 In its case against Mr.
Kwaimani, the Crown relies on a number of witnesses whose evidence was that they
saw the white taxi in
the vicinity of the DBSI Bank in Chinatown on the morning
of 10 May 2000.
14 I refer to the evidence of Christina Raike, an
employee of the DBSI Bank. She stated that as she was returning on foot to the
Bank
from a nearby shop, she noticed a white taxi parked in front of that
office. She said it was "about two metres from the door". She
could see there
was someone sitting in the driver’s seat and another was in the front
passenger seat, but because of the tinted
windows of the taxi was unable to say
whether anybody else was in the taxi. She gave evidence of entering the premises
at her place
of work, walking straight to the kitchen, coming back out of the
kitchen and immediately encountering 3 men. She said one of them
asked which
room was her boss’s, and then the 3 men rushed into that room. She heard
her boss cry out, and she then left the
building, went to a nearby hair salon
where she told two police officers what had happened, and then walked back
towards the DBSI
Bank with them.
15 While walking back she said she
observed "The taxi that I saw before in front was no longer there but it was
parked some distance
away near the main road". Christina Raike drew a sketch of
the taxi’s position on that occasion, (exhibit 9). She stated that
she
then saw 3 men running towards the taxi.
16 According to Christina Raike,
on that second occasion the taxi was positioned adjacent to a building then
under construction and
in a short driveway that led to a main road. That road
runs past the Quan Chee refuelling station as well as the Honiara Hotel. I
add
that the evidence as a whole indicated that the only exit way for vehicles from
the area in which the Bank was situated was via
this driveway, and I approach
the matter on that basis.
17 A number of witnesses said they saw a white
taxi parked in that driveway. Evidence was given that the registration number of
the
vehicle was A6358, the same registration number that Mr. Kwaimani had
provided for his taxi. The evidence was that the taxi was facing
in the
direction of the main road I have referred to, away from the Bank.
18
Christina Raike’s evidence was not challenged by the defence. I accept it
as a truthful and accurate account of what she
observed. I draw the inference
from her evidence that only a very short period of time elapsed from when she
first saw the white
taxi to when the 3 men entered the Bank. I also note Mr.
Kwaimani said in his first statement that he was told to "drive down the
road
that passes the Development Bank" and then told to "just stop here at the Bank".
I accept this is what he was told and the inference
I draw is that he first
stopped outside the Bank to let his passengers out.
19 I am satisfied
that the taxi Christina Raike first saw outside the Bank was that of Mr.
Kwaimani, that it was he who Christina
Raike saw in the driver’s seat,
that the 3 passengers were still in the vehicle at that point, and that it was
they who entered
the Bank a very short time later and made the attack. Further,
I accept that the taxi she later saw in the driveway was that same
taxi, and
from other witnesses I am satisfied it was pointing away from the Bank and in
the direction of the main road.
20 The central issue relating to Mr.
Kwaimani is the extent of his knowledge and involvement in what
occurred.
21 The year 2000 was during what is termed "the tensions" in
Solomon Islands. In that period, there was armed conflict between members of
the Malaita Eagle Force (MEF) and a Guadalcanal faction,
stemming from an
attempt to evict Malaitans from the island of Guadalcanal and retaliation
thereafter. The fact of this conflict
is recorded in the Townsville Peace
Agreement and the Amnesty Acts. During the conflict, killings were commonplace.
22 Mr. Kwaimani’s visit to the MEF Lions Camp on 10 May 2000 was
during this conflict. He further admits that Jimmy Rasta, who
he had heard was
the commander of the camp, was at the camp that day.
23 He stated to
Police that he was told to drive the men to the DBSI Bank. I accept this. He
infers that he was not part of any discussion
prior to this as to what was to
occur at the Bank – I proceed on this basis, as there is insufficient
evidence to suggest otherwise.
24 He further says that the first time he
became aware that the men had weapons was when they came out of the Bank, at
which stage,
according to his second statement, he saw two of them with
bushknives and one with a small axe.
25 I do not accept that this was
the first time Mr. Kwaimani realised that the men were armed. Descriptions of
the weapons were given
by a number of witnesses, who described the axe variously
as between 30 cm and 50 cm long, and the bush knives in the vicinity of
50 cm
long. On the evidence, the men must have been armed when they first entered Mr.
Kwaimani’s taxi at the camp – there
was simply no other opportunity
to arm themselves. To suggest that they all intentionally and successfully
secreted those weapons
about their persons such that Mr. Kwaimani had no
knowledge of their existence until after the attack is just not realistic
–
the weapons were of a length which would make hiding them in their
clothing while sitting in the vehicle extremely difficult. Further,
it is
apparent from Mr. Kwaimani’s statements his involvement was more than as
an innocent driver. He had voluntarily gone
to the MEF Camp that day, had been
told to take the men to the Bank, did so, waited for them there, been privy to
their conversation
in the vehicle afterwards about they having killed a man,
returned to the MEF Camp following the incident and despite knowledge of
the
attack had remained there for some 20 minutes, and heard further discussion as
to what had occurred.
26 Also relevant is the position of Mr.
Kwaimani’s taxi, initially in front of the Bank, and then much closer to
the main road
and pointing away from the Bank and in a position to make a quick
exit from the area. Combined with this is a body of evidence that
the 3 men were
seen hurrying to the taxi and that when they got in the taxi then immediately
sped off.
27 The conclusion I draw is that while the 3 men were in the
Bank, Mr. Kwaimani re-positioned the taxi so as to be in the best possible
position for a fast getaway, and that when the men returned he sped off with
them.
28 I reject the assertion in Mr. Kwaimani’s first statement
that when the men returned to the taxi from the Bank one of them
said to him to
drive fast or ‘we’re going to get you’. If threatened in this
way, why did he choose to remain at
the MEF Camp for some 20 minutes after he
had returned there with the men?
29 I infer from Mr. Kwaimani’s
involvement as outlined that the men he took to the Bank would not have been
concerned to conceal
their weapons from him at any stage. The fact that after
the attack there was no attempt to conceal from Mr. Kwaimani either the
weapons
or the violence that had occurred inside the Bank is consistent with
this.
30 I have not overlooked Moses Garu’s evidence that his
attacker pulled out a long object (presumably a weapon) from the side
of his
thigh in his long trousers. I also note that Christina Raike in her evidence did
not say she saw the men carrying weapons
when they entered the Bank. This
indicates a concealment of weapons in the initial period the men were in the
Bank. Despite this,
I am satisfied that Mr. Kwaimani knew the men were armed
from the outset.
31 I reiterate that there is insufficient evidence that
Mr. Kwaimani was part of any planning back at the camp relating to this
incident.
Nor is there evidence that anyone told him, either before or during
the journey to the Bank, what was intended once the men got
there.
32 However, it must have been abundantly clear to him that the
reason for the trip was to commit violence. The fact that he knew the
men were
armed, had come from a MEF Camp, and had a specific intention of entering
business premises during
business hours could have left Mr. Kwaimani in no
doubt that violence was intended.
33 Mr. Kwaimani, as the provider of
transport for these men both to and from the Bank, and in deliberately
positioning his vehicle
for a fast getaway, was a knowing and active
participant.
34 I refer to section 22 of the Penal Code, dealing with
joint offenders. This provides:
"When two or more persons form a common intention to prosecute an unlawful purpose in conjunction with one another, and in the prosecution of such purpose an offence is committed of such a nature that its commission was a probable consequence of the prosecution of such purpose, each of them is deemed to have committed the offence".
35 The first limb of section 22
requires a common intention to prosecute an unlawful purpose. As a knowing and
active participant,
the Crown has proved beyond reasonable doubt that Mr.
Kwaimani had a common intention, along with the other 3 men, to carry out the
unlawful purpose of going to the Bank so that violence could be committed. It is
irrelevant to this that Mr. Kwaimani’s role
was to be the getaway driver
rather than an actual attacker. Each had a part to play in the
enterprise.
36 I now consider the second limb of section 22, which
attaches liability for an offence committed in the carrying out of the unlawful
purpose if that was a probable consequence of that activity.
37 In
considering this, I accept the evidence of Dr. Pikacha that Moses Garu suffered
life threatening injuries consistent with being
struck by weapons of the same
type as I find were carried by the 3 men namely, bush knives and an axe.
38 The issue is whether, on an objective basis, an attempt on the life
of a person or persons in the Bank was a probable consequence
of their entry in
order to commit violence. If not, was the infliction of serious injury a
probable consequence?
39 To assess this, one must look at the
surrounding circumstances. The men came from a MEF Camp; they moved as a group;
they were
armed with weapons capable of causing serious injury or death; it was
during the time of the tensions; it was an intended entry into
business premises
during business hours; and it was with the intention of carrying out
violence.
40 Added to that is the fact that Mr. Kwaimani knew the
reputation of MEF for doing harm to others. In his second statement to Police
he
says of the "MEF boys" that "I know their reputation and the things they could
do to people they don’t like". I accept this
was Mr. Kwaimani’s
view.
41 I am not prepared to go so far as to find that an attempt on the
life of a person was, on an objective basis, a probable consequence
of the
venture.
42 However, I consider that the Crown has established beyond
reasonable doubt that the infliction of serious injury on one or more
persons
was a probable consequence of the venture. The types of weapons which they
carried were such that their use was likely to
inflict serious
injury.
43 The intentional infliction of serious injury on a person is to
do that person grievous harm. I conclude that the Crown has satisfied
me beyond
reasonable doubt that Mr. Kwaimani was a party to doing Moses Garu grievous harm
within the meaning of section 22 of the
Penal Code.
44 He has therefore
committed the offence of doing grievous harm under section 226 of the Penal
Code.
45 Alick
Fefele
The Crown case is that the accused Mr. Fefele was one of
the 3 men who attacked Moses Garu.
46 Mr. Fefele made no statement to the
Police. Only one witness gave evidence identifying Mr. Fefele as one of 3 men,
two of whom
carried weapons, seen running to a white car. That was Sergeant
Michael Manetevua, who at the time was on patrol in this area as
a constable in
the Royal Solomon Islands Police Force.
47 Sergeant Manetevua’s
evidence was that he saw the men "for
not more than 10 seconds". He
also stated "their face is facing up
because they’re running towards the car
so I don’t actually see their
face". He goes on to say that he could tell one of the men was Alick
Fefele because of "his build, his shape, and
how he walk". He expands by saying
"Because of his muscle shoulder. He has
muscular hands and hips and I get use to his shape ever
since I’m a teenager". He says
that Mr. Fefele is "a little bit bow
leg".
48 Sergeant Manetevua
then told the Court that he could see the side of the face of one of the men and
recognised that person as Alick
Fefele. He stated that his head was covered down
to the level of his ear but from the ear down it was not.
49 He also
stated that while looking at the 3 men he wanted to be able to identify them.
50 I accept that Sergeant Manetevua saw the 3 men as he described. I am
in no doubt that those 3 men were the attackers of Moses Garu.
The issue is
whether the purported recognition of Mr. Fefele as one of those 3 men is
sufficiently reliable for the Court to be satisfied
it was him.
51 I note
that Sergeant Manetevua based his recognition on the fact that he had known Mr.
Fefele since he was a teenager. He was asked
in evidence in chief if he knew
what school Mr. Fefele had gone to and he replied "no". He then agreed that on 1
October 2003 he
had given a statement to Police which contained the
following:
"I have known Patrick and Alick since Primary School. They are brothers. They have the same mother and the same father. Patrick is the same age as me and Alick is older. I went to Gilo school and they went to Kulu school in Tasimboko ward. The schools are close together and they used to come to our school and we went to their school. We played sport together friendly games and all these. That was during the 1980s. Patrick used to cause nuisance at school even then."
It is apparent that the statement contradicts Sergeant
Manetevua’s evidence in Court that he did not know what school Mr. Fefele
went to. His explanation for the contradiction was that he was only talking
about Patrick in the statement. This explanation is unconvincing
because of the
clear wording in the statement that "they went to Kulu school" and "we went to
their school".
52 While on the face of it his conflicting accounts of his
knowledge of Mr. Fefele’s schooling seems minor, it assumes more
significance when his claim for recognition of Mr. Fefele was based on knowing
him since a teenager.
53 Sergeant Manetevua was asked why in his police
diary entries of 10 May 2000, which referred to an attack on Moses Garu, he did
not record the fact that one of the men he recognised was Mr. Fefele. His
explanation was that he was too scared to record that recognition
for fear of
what might then happen. It was pointed out to him that in a witness statement of
15 May 2000 he did so name Mr. Fefele.
Sergeant Manetevua’s explanation
was that he considered the witness statement as a document forming the basis of
an investigation,
unlike his police diary entries. The rationale for the two
different approaches is not entirely convincing.
54 Sergeant
Manetevua’s evidence was that of the 3 men he saw, the only person he
recognised was Mr. Fefele. It was drawn to
his attention that on 1 October 2003
he had given a statement to Police in which he stated:
"As soon as I saw them both I knew they were Alick Fefele and Patrick Iro".
He reaffirms twice more in that statement that he
recognised Patrick Iro.
55 His explanation to the Court for these
contradictory versions was to the effect that he had in his statement been too
quick to
assume that Patrick Iro, who is apparently Mr. Fefele’s brother,
was one of the men with Mr. Fefele. In other words, Sergeant
Manetevua was
acknowledging to the Court that he may have been mistaken in his identification
of Patrick Iro as one of the men involved.
56 It is quite remarkable that
Sergeant Manetevua gave a statement to Police on 15 May 2000 in which he names
only Mr. Fefele, then
in a statement of 1 October 2003 he names both Mr. Fefele
and Patrick Iro. Then, when giving evidence, Sergeant Manetevua recants
what he
said about Patrick Iro, in effect saying he may have been mistaken as to
that.
57 Mrs. Anderson submitted that the reason for the recantation was
because it would have been obvious to Sergeant Manetevua that Patrick
Iro was
not one of the accused in the trial, and that he was tailoring his evidence so
as not to appear to have been mistaken at
the time he identified Patrick Iro as
one of the 3 men involved.
58 I do not accept that Sergeant Manetevua was
deliberately tailoring his evidence in this way. I accept that on reflection
Sergeant
Manetevua was of the view that perhaps he had been too hasty in
identifying Patrick Iro as one of the 3 men involved.
59 However, the
fact that Sergeant Manetevua now acknowledges that he may have been mistaken as
to Patrick Iro, despite his previous
positive and unqualified identification of
him in a witness statement, raises a question as to how sure he was in
his identification of Mr. Fefele. In other words, if Sergeant Manetevua
was prepared at one point to positively identify Patrick Iro
when he now says he
cannot be sure it was him, there is a possibility he may have done the same with
respect to Mr. Fefele. While
I do not doubt the genuiness of Sergeant
Manetevua’s evidence, a question is raised as to whether his
identification of Mr.
Fefele is reliable.
60 Its reliability is further
called into question by Sergeant Manetevua’s own evidence that he was only
able to see the side
of the person’s face, and then only the lower half of
that face. His evidence as to a muscular build, including the reference
to a
slight bow leg, does not particularly assist, as such general description could
fit any number of Solomon Island men.
61 Evidence was given by Sergeant
Manetevua of a conversation with Mr. Fefele during the trial and said to have
occurred in the Court
grounds. The evidence was that Mr. Fefele had said to him,
prior to Sergeant Manetevua giving evidence,
"Don’t tell the
Court that you saw me". While I accept
this was said by Mr. Fefele, the words are equivocal and I am not prepared to
draw any adverse inferences against
Mr. Fefele based on them.
62 I am
conscious of the need for special caution in considering identification
evidence. For the reason given, I consider there is
a reasonable doubt as to the
identity of the person said by Sergeant Manetevua to have been Mr.
Fefele.
63 It follows that the Crown has not established beyond
reasonable doubt that Mr. Fefele was one of the
attackers.
Decision
64
Alick Fefele, I find you Not Guilty of
the charges of attempted murder and doing grievous harm, and you are acquitted
and discharged on those charges.
65 Lemuel Kwaimani, I find you
Not Guilty of the charge of attempted
murder. On the charge of doing grievous harm, I find you
Guilty, and you are accordingly
convicted of that offence.
BY
THE COURT
Hon. Justice IDR
Cameron
Puisne Judge
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