Section 3A: Purposes of Sentencing
Principles of Sentencing
Proportionality: need relationship between gravity of offence and penalty imposed.
Parity: fairness (dealing with things in the like manner of the things)(e.g. co-accused).
Section 4: Evidence and Sentencing
What is a plea of Guilty?
R v O’Neill:
“… a plea of guilty in itself arrives with it an admission of the essential legal ingredients of the offence and no more”
When is the Court obliged to accept a plea of guilty?
Meissen v The Queen:
‘A court will accept a plea of guilty by a person of full age, sound mind and understanding, provided that the plea is an exercise of free choice in that person’s interests, even if that person is not in truth guilty of the offence’.
Withdrawing a Plea of Guilty
Court has the power to allow a PG to be withdrawn at any time before sentence (s207 CP).
R v Boag:
- court found that the DEF had been given more favourable advice by his second counsel - insufficient to w/d plea.
- Need to show PG was NOT attributable to a genuine consciousness of guilty.
- Need to show miscarriage of justice
- If plea entered in circumstances affecting its integrity as an admission of guilt, court should readily grant leave.
- Court look at the high public interest in finality of legal proceedings,
Aggravating & Mitigating Circumstances: Balance of Proof
Aggravation: Prosecution to prove Beyond Reasonable Doubt
Mitigation: Defence to prove on balance of probability
R v Storey
Di Simoni Principle
The court is not to have regard to any such aggravating or mitigating factor in sentencing if it would be contrary to any act or rule to do so.
Section 10: Dismissal of Charges and Conditional Discharge of Offender
Section 10(1)(a): non conviction and dismissal Section 10(1)(b): non conviction and CRO (not exceeding 2 yrs) Section 10(1)(c): non conviction and intervention program
CRO
Section 9
- Can either be recorded as a non-conviction OR conviction recorded.
CRO CONDITIONS
CCO
Section 8:
CCO CONDITIONS
ICO
Section 7: a court that has sentenced an offender to imprisonment in respect of 1 or more offences may make an intensive correction order directing that the sentence or sentences be served by way of intensive correction in the community
ICO CONDITIONS
What are the mandatory conditions for CRO/CCO/ICO?
CRO: must appear b4 court/not commit any offence
CCO: must appear b4 court/not commit any offence
ICO: Not commit any offence
What are the condition difference between CRO/CCO/ICO?
CRO: supervision/place restriction/alcohol or drug abstention/program treatment/non-association
CCO: PLUS Community Service Work/Supervision
ICO: PLUS Home Detention/Electronic Monitoring
Section 5: Imprisonment
Section 43: Correcting Errors
Community Service Hours