The State v Joel Otariv

JurisdictionPapua New Guinea
JudgeCannings J
Judgment Date15 December 2011
Citation(2011) N4466
CourtNational Court
Year2011
Judgement NumberN4466

Full : CR NO 371 OF 2008; The State v Joel Otariv (2011) N4466

National Court: Cannings J

Judgment Delivered: 15 December 2011

4466

PAPUA NEW GUINEA

[IN THE NATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE]

CR NO 371 OF 2008

THE STATE

V

JOEL OTARIV

Madang: Cannings J

2011: 10 November, 7, 8, 15 December

CRIMINAL LAW – sentencing – rape – guilty plea – two counts – circumstances of aggravation on each count – whether sentences should be served concurrently or cumulatively – totality principle.

A man pleaded guilty to two counts of rape, committed against his mother, within a short space of time. He claims to have been under the influence of drugs. Each offence involved a violent assault.

Held:

(1) Notional sentences of 20 years imprisonment and 25 years imprisonment were imposed in respect of each offence, the total potential sentence being 45 years imprisonment.

(2) The sentences should be served cumulatively as there were two separate incidents, albeit separated by a short space of time.

(3) Under the totality principle, the court continued to accord some benefit to the offender for having pleaded guilty, thus the total sentence was reduced to 30 years imprisonment.

Cases cited

The following cases are cited in the judgment:

Mase v The State [1991] PNGLR 88

Public Prosecutor v Kerua [1985] PNGLR 85

Saperus Yalibakut v The State (2006) SC890

The State v Douglas Jogioba (2007) N4085

The State v George Tomeme CR No 920/2002, 24.08.07

The State v James Urig CR No 375/2009, 24.05.10

The State v James Yali (2006) N2989

The State v Jeffery Wangi (2006) N3016

The State v Joe Sime CR No 1078/2004, 25.08.06

The State v Joel Otariv (2011) N4409

The State v Philip Kila CR No 722 of 2006, 15.07.09

The State v Philip Nangoe CR No 392/2006, 24.10.07

The State v Robert Yochie (2010) N4113

The State v Steven Tari Nangimon Garasai (2010) N4155

SENTENCE

This was a judgment on sentence for two counts of rape.

Counsel

A Kupmain & S Collins, for the State

M Mwawesi, for the offender

15 December, 2011

1. CANNINGS J: The offender, Joel Otariv, is before the court to be sentenced after he pleaded guilty to two counts of rape. The offences were committed within a short space of time on the morning of 17 March 2008 at the offender’s village, Sirin, in the Bogia District of Madang Province. The victim in each case was his 60-year-old biological mother. At 9.00 am he followed her to the garden. He asked her to give him the bushknife that she was carrying. She did so, then he struck her with it, overpowered her, pulled her into the bush, forcefully removed her clothes and penetrated her vagina with his penis, without her consent. She ran away, he followed her, assaulted her, forced her to the ground and again penetrated her vagina with his penis, without her consent. The circumstances of aggravation charged in the indictment are that:

· at the time of each offence he used a weapon (a circumstance of aggravation under Criminal Code, Section 349A(b));

· he tortured and caused grievous bodily harm to the victim (Section 349A(c));

· he abused a position of trust, authority and dependency (Section 349A(e)); and

· he is a member of the same family as the victim (Section 349A(f)).

ANTECEDENTS

2. At the time of these offences the offender had no prior convictions. He has been recently sentenced to life imprisonment for wilful murder, an offence which was committed on 22 January 2010 (The State v Joel Otariv (2011) N4409).

ALLOCUTUS

3. The offender was given the opportunity to address the court. He said:

I say sorry to my mother for what I did. I also say sorry to my brothers and sisters and my uncles and aunties and other family members for what I did.

OTHER MATTERS OF FACT

4. As the offender has pleaded guilty he will be given the benefit of the doubt on mitigating matters raised in the depositions, the allocutus or in submissions that are not contested by the prosecution (Saperus Yalibakut v The State (2006) SC890). It is significant that he has cooperated fully with the police. When he was interviewed by police in Madang, on 31 March 2008, two weeks after committing the offences, he made full admissions, acknowledged his guilt and said that he had been smoking drugs and that caused him to have sexual desires against his mother.

PRE-SENTENCE REPORT

5. Joel Otariv is 23 years old and single. His parents are alive but elderly. He was raised in the village. He has a grade 6 education. His father has two wives and the offender is among ten children of these marriages. The offender says that he had a good family upbringing. He has no formal employment record and expresses no interest in working for wages. He is a villager and is content to stay that way. He admits that he uses drugs and says that this was what caused him to commit the offences. His father and his second mother and an aunt and an uncle were interviewed by the author of the report. They are deeply ashamed by his actions, which they regard as immoral and animalistic. The whole village feels ashamed. There is no realistic chance of reconciliation between the offender and his mother as she has left Sirin because of the shame and embarrassment she has endured and she is in hiding, it is not known where. The report concludes that the offender is not suitable for probation.

SUBMISSIONS BY DEFENCE COUNSEL

6. Mr Mwawesi acknowledged the gravity of the offences but urged the court to take into account that at the time of the offences the offender had no prior convictions and, most significantly, the guilty plea. A term of years, rather than life imprisonment, should be imposed.

SUBMISSIONS BY THE STATE

7. Mr Collins submitted that the only mitigating factor was the guilty plea but it was so heavily outweighed by the numerous circumstances of aggravation, only a sentence of life imprisonment would be appropriate. It is difficult to imagine a more serious case of rape. He represents a significant danger to the community, which needs to be protected. No rehabilitation is possible, it was submitted.

DECISION MAKING PROCESS

8. To determine the appropriate penalty I will adopt the following decision making process:

· step 1: what is the maximum penalty for each offence?

· step 2: what is the starting point for each offence?

· step 3: what sentences have been imposed for equivalent offences?

· step 4: what is the head sentence for each offence?

· step 5: should the sentences be served concurrently or cumulatively?

· step 6: what is the effect of the totality principle?

· step 7: should the pre-sentence period in custody be deducted?

· step 8: should all or part of the sentence be suspended?

STEP 1: WHAT IS THE MAXIMUM PENALTY FOR EACH OFFENCE?

9. Section 347 (rape) of the Criminal Code states:

(1) A person who sexually penetrates a person without [her or] his consent is guilty of a crime of rape.

Penalty: Subject to Subsection (2), imprisonment for 15 years.

(2) Where an offence under Subsection (1) is committed in circumstances of aggravation, the accused is liable, subject to Section 19, to imprisonment for life.

10. Circumstances of aggravation were charged and proven in relation to each count. Therefore the maximum penalty for each offence is life imprisonment. The court has a discretion whether to impose the maximum by virtue of Section 19 of the Criminal Code.

STEP 2: WHAT IS THE STARTING POINT FOR EACH OFFENCE?

11. I have expressed the view in a number of cases (eg The State v Philip Kila CR No 722 of 2006, 15.07.09) that the starting points when sentencing for rape should be:

· if circumstances of aggravation are not charged and proven (Section 347(1)): 10 years; and

· if circumstances of aggravation are charged and proven (Section 347(2)): 15 years.

I follow that approach in this case and use 15 years imprisonment as a starting point for each offence.

STEP 3: WHAT SENTENCES HAVE BEEN IMPOSED FOR EQUIVALENT OFFENCES?

12. Before I fix a sentence I will consider other sentences I have imposed for rape in cases that in various respects have similarities with the present case.

TABLE 1: OTHER RAPE SENTENCES, 2006-2010

No

Case

Details

Sentence

1

The State v James Yali (2006) N2989, Madang

Trial – offender raped 17-year-old sister of his de facto wife – conviction under Section 347(1).

12 years

2

The State v Jeffery Wangi (2006) N3016, Bialla

Guilty plea – victim an 8-year-old girl – no circumstances of aggravation charged in indictment – conviction under Section 347(1).

14 years

3

The State v Joe Sime CR No 1078/2004, 25.08.06, Buka

Guilty plea – offender raped his niece, aged 16 – threatened her with a small axe – genuine remorse – strong mitigating factor was the conditions of detention at Buka police lock-up – conviction under Section 347(2).

10 years

4

The State v George Tomeme CR No 920/2002, 24.08.07, Kimbe

Trial – shortly before meeting the offender, the victim, a young woman, had been raped by six other men – offender led her away on pretext that he was saving her, then raped her himself – conviction under Section 347(1).

12 years

5

The State v Philip Nangoe CR No...

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