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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Irish Court of Criminal Appeal >> D.P.P. -v- Cuan de Paor and Wojciech Zdanowski [2008] IECCA 137 (19 December 2008)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IECCA/2008/C137.html
Cite as: [2008] IECCA 137

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Judgment Title: D.P.P. -v- Cuan de Paor and Wojciech Zdanowski

Neutral Citation: [2008] IECCA 137


Court of Criminal Appeal Record Number: 91 & 92CJA/08

Date of Delivery: 19 December 2008

Court: Court of Criminal Appeal


Composition of Court: Hardiman J., Budd J., McCarthy J.

Judgment by: Hardiman J.

Status of Judgment: Approved

Judgments by
Result
Hardiman J.
Review Application by DPP Refused


Outcome: Review Application by DPP Refused




THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEAL
91 & 92 CJA/08

Hardiman J.
Budd J.
McCarthy J.



IN THE MATTER OF SECTION 2 CRIMINAL JUSTICE ACT 1993

THE PEOPLE AT THE SUIT OF THE DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
v.
CUAN de PAOR and WOJCIECH ZDANOWSKI
Respondents




JUDGMENT of the Court delivered on the 19th day of December, 2008 by Mr. Justice Hardiman.
By notice of application for review dated the 20th March, 2008, the Director of Public Prosecutions seeks a review of the sentences imposed on the above named respondents on the 22nd February, 2008, on Bill No. 85/2007 Cork Circuit Criminal Court. This review is sought on the grounds that the sentences were unduly lenient. It is convenient to deal first-named respondent, Cuan de Paor.

A sentence of five years imprisonment suspended for five years was imposed on this respondent in respect of his conviction for robbery contrary to s.1491) of the Criminal Justice (Theft and Fraud Offences) Act, 2001. The applicant had pleaded guilty to this offence. He had also pleaded to a further count of robbery according to the same statute and to counts of false imprisonment contrary to s.15 (1) of the Non-Fatal Offences against the Person Act 1997. All of these pleas were entered on the 27th June, 2007 and sentence in relation to them was adjourned until the 22nd February, 2008.

The Crime.
The offences to which the respondent pleaded guilty arose out of the fact that on the 17th December, 2006 at approximately 7.30am on a Sunday morning a dwelling house in a suburb of Cork was broken into. Three people including the accused broke into the house, the others were his co-accused and a third person is wanted on warrant. According to the evidence of Detective Sergeant Gerry Crowley at the sentencing hearing, the other two participants planned the event and the person who is missing will have the highest level of culpability. The house was entered through a back window which was left unlocked. The applicants were a married couple and their fifteen year old son. The intruders were wearing Halloween masks and gloves. The man of the house heard a noise and got out of bed. He was confronted by a masked man with a gun who tied him up with flex. His wife was held by another intruder. The occupants were forced to give the combination of a safe but there was little or no money in it. The fifteen year old son of the house was awoken by a man in his bedroom, who was the respondent. He was told to be quiet and to stay lying down. He was tied up and gagged, though very lightly, according to himself. According to the boy, the man with him acted at all times on the instructions of a third person outside the bedroom. At one point he was instructed to kick the boy in the head but he did not do so. The boy was eventually put into a hot press. There was some talk of taking him as a hostage but that did not occur. The intruders then got the pin numbers of three bank cards and laptop, a mobile phone and some Christmas presents. At one point a threat to kill the father was made by one of the other intruders. A total of €2,400.00 was removed from a bank with the stolen cards.
Special features.
The above description indicates the commission of a very serious crime. There are however special features of the offence as far as the accused is concerned. The accused was not convicted of either aggravated burglary contrary to s.13 of the Criminal Justice Act 2001 or of the making of a threat to kill contrary to s.5 of the Non-Fatal Offences against the Person Act, 1997. This is because his plea of not guilty in relation to those offences was accepted by the State. This in turn is rather remarkable since on the face of it they would have been entitled to rely on the doctrine of common design to make each accused guilty of all that was done in pursuance of their common purpose at the victims’ house. But the State, represented in this Court by Mr. Donal McCarthy, expressly said that they were not relying on that doctrine and accepted that the accused was not responsible for the possession of a gun or for the making of a threat to kill. This, clearly, is of major advantage to the accused.

The second special feature of the case is that the principal garda witness, Sergeant Crowley, endorsed the terms of a probation report, to be discussed below as follows:

“Q. As to the factual content of that [probation report] where Cuan de Paor is concerned, have you any observation to make as to factual content?

A. As to factual content I feel that they are a fair comment.

Q. Any recommendation and the like is a matter for the judge, but factually are you happy with the contents of that report?

A. I am with them, yes.”


Furthermore the same witness in evidence, speaking of this respondent said:
      “I would be satisfied that he was truthful, that his offence or his participation in the offence was certainly lesser than the other two people involved and he was basically I suppose doing their bidding.”

He also said that he believed that the respondent was “genuinely remorseful for what he did”.

The third special feature is the probation report compiled by Ms. Noreen Mulligan on the 5th February, 2008. This establishes that this respondent, now twenty-one- years of age, was nineteen at the time of the offence. He is the second eldest of five children of a very respectable family. The family reside in Galway. He was educated at two well known schools in the Galway area. He had a very promising upbringing until his early teenage years when his behaviour deteriorated to the point to where he was twice asked to leave home and on the second occasion was in fact homeless for a short period. He received psychological attention. Eventually however his abuse of alcohol and drugs came to the point where his parents could no longer cope with his abusive behaviour.

The respondent came to Cork at the age of seventeen, in 2004, to stay with an uncle who gave him employment. He left this for other employment after a period but took to gambling most of his earnings and lost his job.

In relation to the offence, the respondent was at the time of its commission sharing a house with his two co-defendants and a former employer. He had been out drinking earlier on the night of the robbery and had gone home to go to bed. He heard the co-defendants downstairs and went to join them, hoping for more drink. They then told him about their plans and he was invited to go with them which he did. It would appear that the other two defendants, or one of them, had heard about the victims from someone he knew socially and decided that they were appropriate targets for a robbery.

The respondent states that he did not realise the full extent of the plans and was unaware that they had a gun. It is at this point, in particular, that the Detective Sergeant’s endorsement of the accuracy of the probation report is most important. He was later afraid to pull out and specifically afraid that he would be attacked by the co-defendants. He was instructed to “look after the boy” and the evidence was, as recited in the prosecution’s submissions on the hearing of this application, that he treated the boy with some consideration.

Another feature of the case is that, when questioned by the gardaí “Mr. de Paor co-operated with the gardaí and admitted his part in the offence… his co-operation was certainly able to lead us in certain lines and was a great help to us.” Indeed, it seems unlikely that a case could have been made against the respondent without his own co-operation since the victims of the crime, who were badly frightened, were unable to identify anybody and it does not appear to have been other evidence.

In all the circumstances then, this is a very serious offence committed by a young man for whom there is a good deal to be said on grounds of youth and lack of previous convictions, for he has none. He also appears to have taken a number of constructive steps after he was charged with the offence. Firstly he returned to Galway. He has completed a full time information technology course with Fás, which is the first educational achievement he has had since the Junior Cert. He has now applied for and is attending an advanced course in computerised accounts and payroll management. His commitment to and application for these two Fás course is assessed as very good, especially when contrasted with his past educational and employment history.

The respondent’s very troubled and very troublesome youth is in the main due to his abuse of alcohol and drugs, and his habit of gambling. He has contemplated self harm. On his return to Galway he commenced counselling with a Health Service Executive addiction counsellor. He and his parents focussed on bringing him some structure and stability in his life. The addiction counsellor reports that the respondent continues to make significant progress in counselling. His G.P. confirmed that he has attended for two drugs screenings, both of which were clear. The counsellor is of the opinion that he has made significant progress and also considered that he should attend the Bushy Park Addiction Treatment Centre for assessment. He is willing to do so. He is assessed by the probation officer as somewhat immature but having made significant effort in changing his lifestyle and addressed the issues which led to his involvement in crime.

In sentencing the applicant, the learned trial judge had this to say:
          “As always arriving at the correct sentence is extremely difficult. This man played a part in a most dangerous and lethal venture, went in by force to a house and literally terrorised the three inmates. It looks that he was the least culpable of the three, shown by the fact that he joined in at the last minute. Apparently, according to the gardaí, he did not play a role in the planning of it and did not profit as much by the proceeds as the others. Having said all of that it was a most lethal and grievous venture for him to be involved in.

          In mitigation, he has pleaded guilty and has co-operated fully with the gardaí. The Sergeant very fairly said that without the co-operation of the two defendants, but especially this man, the offences might never have been proved in court. He has no previous convictions. He is remorseful and this is shown by his offer of €10,000.00.

          He is relatively young. He is still only 20 years of age. His parents are obviously and have been all along greatly concerned by his behaviour and his father spoke quite honestly and clearly about this today.

          Taking into account in full all the mitigating factors of which there are many and, in particular, the report of the probation officer who says basically that further work in a structured environment needs to be done, my decision is to sentence him on count 2 robbery contrary to s.14(1) of the Criminal Justice Act, 2001 to five years imprisonment, take the others, 3,4,5,6 and 11 into consideration, and suspend the five years imprisonment on the basis that he pays over to Sergeant Crowley for onward transmission immediately the sum of €10,000.00 and that for a period of two years from today’s date he is under the supervision of the probation service and in particular is to abide by the preconditions which they have laid down, that he continue to do the addiction recovery treatment, including attendance at Bushy Park Addiction Treatment Centre, that he attends for urine analysis as directed by the probation service and that he ensures the structure of the work and training remain part of his lifestyle and of course he is of good behaviour for the period of five years.”



Principals applying on this application;
In DPP. v. Byrne [1995] 1 ILRM 279, said to be the first application brought under s.2 (1) of the Criminal Justice Act, 1993, this Court, per O’Flaherty J. set out the relevant principles as follow
          “In the first place, since the Director of Public Prosecutions brings the appeal the onus of proof clearly rests on him to show that the sentence called in question was ‘unduly lenient’.

          Secondly, the court should always afford great weight to the trial judge’s reasons for imposing the sentence that is called in question. He is the one who receives the evidence at first hand… He may detect nuances in the evidence that may not be as readily discernible to an appellate court. In particular, if the trial judge has kept a balance between the particular sentences of the commission of the offence and the relevant personal circumstances of the person sentenced what Flood J. has termed the ‘constitutional principle of proportionality’ (see People (DPP) v. WC [1994] 1 ILRM 321) his decision should not be disturbed.

          Thirdly, it is in the view of the court, unlikely to be of help to ask if there had been imposed a more severe sentence, would it be upheld on appeal by an appellant as being right in principle?...

          Finally, it is clear from the wording of the section that, since the finding must be one of undue leniency, nothing but a substantial departure from what would be regarded as the appropriate sentence would justify the intervention of this court.”

In the later case of Clerkin Mr. Justice McCracken had the following to say:
          “What the Director of Public Prosecutions in this case has to show is that the sentence was unduly lenient. It may well be said that it was a lenient sentence, and it may well be that if any of the members of this Court had been the trial judge a custodial sentence would have been imposed. However, that is not the test. A trial judge is entitled to be lenient if he considers that it is just to do so in all the circumstances of any particular case, and in the present case the learned trial judge spelt out the reasons for his leniency and we can see no error in principle in applying those reasons to the present case and in suspending the sentence on the respondent.”

Applying these principles, it seems clear that there was ample basis on which the learned trial judge might have decided to do what he did, that is to take an unusually lenient course. The scope to do so was, indeed, opened by the prosecution who at the trial, as in argument submitted during this appeal, specifically exempted the accused for responsibility for the more serious aspects of the offence including the responsibility for the firearm and for the threat to life and recognised his much lesser role in the violence and the tying up of a person. The investigating guard specifically agreed with the factual content of the probation report, which is another matter of great importance. Then, the respondent is both a very young man (and still younger at the time of the offence) and a person without previous convictions. It is clear from all the authorities that this latter aspect is a matter of great importance, described as “absolutely crucial” by Fennelly J. in DPP v. Barrett (CCA unreported 19th May, 2003), in suspending a two year sentence imposed on conviction for the supply of a controlled substance contrary to s.15 of the Mis-use of Drugs Act, 1977 as amended.

The Court would observe that, contrary to the written submissions of the Director, it appears quite clear from the remarks quoted above that the learned trial judge took into account the aggravating features of the case but also those features, and they were significant, which tended to mitigation. He took the view that both the accused and society at large would be best served by continuing the structured programme which was having good effect for the accused and gave the best hope of his rehabilitation. In those circumstances, this Court would repeat what was said in DPP v. Keegan (CCA unreported 28th April, 2003):
          “Now a judge having taken that view, plainly a view for which there was some objective support but fundamentally a subjective decision, we have to address the question of whether we are in effect going to give a ruling which says that he cannot do that, that in doing that he was wrong in principle.

          In the circumstances of this case we do not believe that the prosecution has sufficiently discharged the burden which lies on it… The judge seemed to be influenced by the youth of the defendant, by the drug problem of which there was some evidence and which he was prepared to accept the respondent was addressing and by his prospects of reformation. We cannot say that the judge erred in principle in considering these matters. It may very well be that this is a case where this Court and indeed any of the members of it would have imposed a significant custodial sentence. But we cannot see that the learned trial judge has been demonstrated to have erred in principle in these regards.”
In summary, this was an exercise of judgement by a learned judge in the Circuit Court with considerable experience in this area. His decision was a rational one, for which there was evidential support, and even though it certainly is an example of unusual leniency for such an offence, it is not one which this Court can stigmatise as wrong in principle in the circumstances of this offender and his peculiar role in this offence and in the interests of the community in the prospect of his rehabilitation with the support of his family to making an improved and lasting role in future as a good citizen in society.

For these reasons the Court refuses the application on behalf of the Director of Public Prosecutions under s.2 of the Criminal Justice Act 1993.


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IECCA/2008/C137.html