Crimes Amendment (Gross violence offences) Bill 2012 – Second Reading Speech delivered in Parliament 7 February 2013
Mr Pallas (Tarneit) — I rise to indicate that Labor will not be opposing this bill. In doing so, I acknowledge that the government put to the people a proposition about how it would deal with offences of the nature addressed by the bill — that is, effectively through a mandatory sentencing system. The bill introduces two new gross violence offences. Those offences include intentionally causing serious injury in circumstances of gross violence and recklessly causing serious injury in circumstances of gross violence, both of which carry with them a four-year minimum sentence, as is described in the bill. The bill also replaces the definition of serious injury in the Crimes Act, which affects both the new and numerous other offences.
In saying that opposition members do not oppose the bill, I also say that we acknowledge that during the 2010 election campaign coalition members made a number of announcements about how sentencing issues would be dealt with. Firstly, there was an indication of baseline sentencing arrangements for various offences. Parliament is yet to see that legislation. We appreciate that therefore the government is finding the implementation of that commitment very difficult. Secondly, only a few days before the election, the now government made a promise to introduce minimum sentences for intentionally or recklessly causing serious injury with gross violence. It is the contention of the government that this legislation effectively implements that commitment. However, the election policy was that the minimum sentence would be four years for adults and two years for 16-to-18-year-olds.
As it was described in the policy, judges would be able to depart from those mandatory sentencing arrangements only in what was described in the policy as exceptional circumstances — circumstances defined as a case so unusual that the Parliament would never have intended it to be covered. Effectively a provision of the policy that was taken to the election was to avoid unintended consequences in the law.
As members can see from the legislation that we are debating today, this bill is a very substantial departure from the commitment espoused by the government. The bill changes the definition of serious injury to contemplate injury that endangers life or is substantial and protracted or destroys a foetus. The bill creates two new offences: causing serious injury intentionally in circumstances of gross violence, and causing injury recklessly in circumstances of gross violence.
Gross violence is defined as a concept which incorporates the characteristics of prior planning where an offender causes serious injury in concert with at least two others — that the person planned in advance to use a firearm or imitation firearm to cause serious injury and that the offender caused or continued to cause a serious injury after the victim had already been incapacitated.
For both offences the bill brings into effect the minimum four-year term unless the court finds that a special reason exists. The bill also makes it clear that the minimum non-parole period does not apply to offenders under 18 years of age, so those commitments made in a pre-electoral sense have not been honoured by the government.
The special reasons allow the court to apply the four-year minimum sentence.
It is quite important that we appreciate that this is not a mandatory sentencing scheme, it is not what the government said it was going to put before the people of Victoria and certainly the legislation is a far cry from the so-called commitments. In many cases it is a case of the large print giveth — that being the policy; and the small print taketh away — that being the fine print of this legislation. The special reasons that are being put forward to apply the four-year minimum include the offender being between 18 and 21 years of age. Let us recall that the proposal the government put when in opposition was that it would be mandatory sentencing, albeit for a lesser term, for 16 to 18-year-olds. Now we have a situation where a psychosocially immature 18 to 21-year-old is, to some extent, excluded from the full operation of the legislation.
The other reason is that at the time of the offence the offender had impaired mental functioning linked to the commission of the offence.
This impairment of judgement, in effect, constitutes a consideration that a court may therefore vary from the mandatory minimum; and of course if the offender assists the law enforcement authorities. The important thing is that this provision enables not so much the sentencing related to the offence to vary from the minimum requirement but the behaviour of the offender post the offence, and that really puts paid to the lie that this is a minimum mandatory sentencing system. Finally, the court could propose to make a court treatment order for the offender as an alternative and therefore avoid the minimum obligations.
In addition there is a coverall provision in terms of the operation of the court’s capacity to vary from the minimum mandatory arrangements, described as ‘substantial and compelling circumstances’.
In effect we have so many heads of exemption, together with a coverall capacity for the court to exempt that what we are really seeing here is a demonstration that the whole concept of minimum mandatory sentencing cannot work, and it cannot work for exactly the reasons that the legislation itself lays out. There are far too many circumstances that need to be appreciated, apprehended and recognised and the courts themselves would have found it extremely difficult to have complied with what effectively was, and was originally stated as, the Parliament’s intention, and in the absence of complying with that intention, a gross injustice would have occurred.
The government has recognised the folly of the position it took to the election and, quite frankly, it is not for me to be critical of that. It is a substantial improvement on what was a reckless and, indeed, dangerous policy that could have led to gross injustice in circumstances where the exemptions contained within the provisions which give effect to some of the injustices that could occur, and then the coverall exemption, all demonstrate that much more could have been done, and has been done, in terms of providing a recognition of judicial independence.
But at its heart we are not opposing the bill because, as confirmed by the government, a judge can avoid delivering a manifestly unjust sentence. We can hardly argue with that. Inflexible mandatory sentencing leads to unjust sentences unrelated to the circumstances of the offence, and the behaviour and the mental state, for that matter, of the offender.
The original proposal to have a four-year minimum sentence and then to effectively state that judges must be mind-readers in the basic formula that the law applies — except where we do not want it to — would have been grossly unjust and quite irresponsible in the context of trying to get the courts to interpret the legislative intention of the Parliament.
We acknowledge that the government put this policy, albeit a substantially altered one, to the electorate on the Wednesday before election day, and we are at least comforted in the knowledge that it has taken a very substantial step backwards from where it was going. The government seems to have recognised that there are real problems with most mandatory sentencing schemes and, while it may be appropriate in some cases such as traffic offences, most mandatory sentencing schemes face two problems such as ineffectiveness and unjust sentencing.
We believe a better approach would be to recognise that juries should have a role, should be consulted and should advise judges as to the appropriate sentencing. That avoids the inflexibility and the injustice inherent in mandatory sentencing schemes.