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IN
THE SUPREME
COURT
OF THE
REPUBLIC OF
VANUATU
(Criminal
Jurisdiction)
Criminal Case No. 05 of 2004
PUBLIC PROSECUTOR
–v-
KORA WILLIAM
Coram: Justice
Treston
Ms. Wodak for Public
Prosecutor
Mr. Bartels for
Defendant
SENTENCE
You appear for sentence
today on 1 count of intentional assault causing permanent damage to the victim,
your wife. The maximum penalty
provided for by the Penal Code for that offence
is 5 years imprisonment.
You are
69 years old the victim, your wife, it seems is 68 and you have been married for
nearly 50 years. The pair of you have had
11 children, 9 of whom remain living.
This happened on 3 January of this year when you ambushed the victim and
attacked her with
a bush knife. Her friends tried to protect her but you sliced
her leg rendering her immobile and while she was in this state you
continued to
attack her with the bush knife, cutting at her left leg, left arm and her head.
She suffered deep lacerations to her
scalp and a 14-cm long laceration to her
left leg involving muscle damage. Her proximal radius on the left-hand side was
also fractured.
She was lucky not to
die.
The prosecution submits that
there are serious aggravating factors, which I must take into account. They
include your previous conviction
against the same victim when you used a piece
of wood and a stone. For that, you were sentenced in August 1999 to 2 months
imprisonment
which was suspended for 2 years. The prosecution also points to
previous violent behaviour in your relationship including that previous
conviction and it is submitted that that behaviour amounts to a repeated
pattern. The prosecution point to the serious nature of
this attack as well as
the use of a lethal weapon namely a bush knife and finally it is submitted that
your intention to cause serious
harm to the victim is clear from the use of the
weapon and the nature of the injuries. Authorities are provided to me which are
of
assistance and it is submitted by the Public Prosecutor that the sentencing
range should be somewhere between 3 and 4
years.
On your behalf, I am
reminded of your age of 69 years and your health difficulties as referred to in
a letter from Central Hospital
concerning your eyesight. While it is acknowledge
by your counsel that this is a serious offence, I am asked to take into account
your long marriage to the victim, and the fact that any sentence of imprisonment
will be significant because of the fact that you
are effectively banished from
your home island as a result of this offending because your family has disowned
you and your wife has
indicated that she doesn't want to resume living with you.
I am asked to be merciful and consider your rehabilitation as much as
the
retribution which the public and law require. I am asked to remember that you
are willing and have been willing to undergo counselling
which could not take
place before now because of conflict issues with those who a willing to do it. I
am asked to take into account
your plea of guilty and the time you have spent in
custody.
When I approach the
question of sentencing I must look at the maximum sentence of five years
imprisonment. I must hold you accountable
for the harm done to the victim not
only physically but also psychologically. Effectively it is not only the victim
you have wronged
but also the community and your particular community on Epi at
large. I must hold you responsible for your actions and I must consider
the
victim's interests. I could take into account, were it appropriate, any custom
settlement under section 119 of the Criminal Procedure Code [CAP 136], but there
is no suggestion that anything has been done in that regard. I must not only
denounce your conduct but also
deter you and other like-minded offenders from
similar activities. I must protect the victim and the community at large from
this
sort of violent behaviour and I recall and reinforce the comments made by
the then Chief Justice in
Public
Prosecutor v
Willie
Tataki C.C. 1994 where the Chief Justice
said that the violence towards women would not be accepted in this community and
wives would be
protected from excesses from their husbands. I am of the view
that your offending and the nature of the injuries and the weapon used
place
your case towards the top end of the gravity of offending for this offence
accepting that the least restrictive outcome must
be the one which is followed.
There have been significant physical effects on the
victim.
Aggravating features must
be balanced against the mitigating ones and the aggravating ones include the
following, first there was
actual violence used, second, there was the use of a
lethal weapon which could and did inflict serious injuries, third, there was
the
harm caused to the victim, fourth, there was the stated excess of authority
which you used over her, when you consider that you
had some right over her
because you had purchased her, in your words, fifth, there was the premeditation
of this offending when you
actually ambushed her behind from the banana tree and
finally there was your previous conviction and your previous pattern of abusive
behaviour.
By way of mitigation
there is of course your age of 69 years, your plea of guilty, your cooperation
with the authorities and your
expression of contrition and regret but the
aggravating features far outweigh the mitigating ones in your
case.
The Court must respond
firmly to offences of this kind. The Court must protect women and deter others
from behaving in a like way.
This was a cowardly and unprovoked assault without
justification and the personal consequences which you will now face and which
have been outlined to me are really of your own making. As I have said, I am of
the view that this offending must be marked in a
way which is nearer to the
maximum than the minimum. Imprisonment is inevitable and you must use the time
that you are in custody
to reflect upon the harm and destruction you have heaped
upon your own family. At 69 years of age or not, the repetitive use of weapons
on someone who deserves your respect, love and affection is intolerable. I agree
with the prosecutor that there are more aggravating
features in this case than
in the ones presented to the Court. You must of course be given appropriate
credit for your plea of guilty
which has avoided the necessity of a defended
trial but it is my view that the result of such a trial would have led to this
same
result inevitably.
Giving
you such credit as I can, I consider the appropriate sentence is 3 years 6 and
1/2 months imprisonment. I give you credit for
the four months, you have already
spent in custody. The result of sentencing today is a sentence of 3 years 2 and
1/2 months imprisonment.
I understand your health difficulties and the necessity
of an operation and it is my view that the appropriate authorities ought
to
release you for that operation and for any consequence rehabilitation, but once
those matters are complete it is imperative that
you are returned to the prison
to serve the balance of your sentence. You have 14 days to appeal that sentence
should you be dissatisfied
with
it.
Dated AT
PORT VILA, this
19th
day of May 2004
BY THE COURT
P.
I.
TRESTON
Judge
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URL: http://www.paclii.org/vu/cases/VUSC/2004/87.html