IN THE DISTRICT COURT AT TOKOROA CRI [2017] NZDC NEW ZEALAND POLICE Prosecutor. BANABA KAITAI Defendant

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EDITORIAL NOTE: NO SUPPRESSION APPLIED. IN THE DISTRICT COURT AT TOKOROA CRI-2016-063-004445 [2017] NZDC 6093 NEW ZEALAND POLICE Prosecutor v BANABA KAITAI Defendant Hearing: 22 March 2017 Appearances: Sergeant T Garnett for the Prosecutor M Crapp for the Defendant Judgment: 22 March 2017 NOTES OF JUDGE A J S SNELL ON SENTENCING [1] Mr Kaitai, you are for sentence today on three charges. There is the possession for the sale or supply of a psychoactive substance. That has a maximum penalty of two years imprisonment. There is the representative charge of possession of cannabis for supply. That is a charge that has a maximum penalty of eight years imprisonment. There is the unlawful possession of a firearm which has a maximum penalty under the Arms Act 1983 of four years imprisonment. [2] In terms of the factual circumstances, the Tokoroa police have in the last 12 months been making investigation into the sale of synthetic cannabis from a variety of addresses operated by the Kaitai family in Tokoroa and Putaruru. Following a car accident that did not involve you but involved another member of the family, matters were brought to a head. NEW ZEALAND POLICE v BANABA KAITAI [2017] NZDC 6093 [22 March 2017]

[3] The matters that involve you occurred at about 9.30 am on 10 December when the police went to your address and located in your bedroom under the mattress was a replica eight millimetre Glock pistol modified to fire altered eight millimetre ammunition rounds. There were five eight millimetre rounds in the Glock with one of the rounds chambered and ready to be fired. On a bedside dresser in the room was six grams of cannabis plant material. Immediately outside the master bedroom window was a bag containing 530 one gram snap lock plastic bags of synthetic cannabis. Also located at the address was a further 155 grams of loose synthetic cannabis. The estimated street value of the synthetic cannabis located is believed to be around $13,700 and the estimated value of the synthetic cannabis found in the whole operation relating to the different addresses and different defendants all linked together was around $42,700. Quite plainly it was large scale organised drug offending. [4] You have a previous list of convictions amounting to 20 previous convictions. They are mainly for violence and disorderly behaviour. There are, however, three relevant convictions relating to cultivating cannabis which was said to have occurred on 1 October 2011, then the selling or supply of cannabis relating to offending occurring on 15 January 2012 and the unlawful possession of a firearm on 15 March. All of those matters were dealt with on 24 January 2013 and resulted in a quite lengthy prison term that you received at that time. [5] I have a pre-sentence report. That is dated 7 March. That identifies the key factors relating to your offending as your attitude, your sense of entitlement and a lack of decision-making and problem solving skills. In relation to the cannabis charge, you said that you were simply trying to make money. You did write a letter expressing your remorse, but that can only be given a limited amount of weight because in some respects the report says that you blame the government for bringing in synthetic cannabis and creating the problem despite the fact that it is now illegal. The report makes a recommendation of imprisonment. It says that you acknowledge that that is the only realistic option, given your previous firearms and drug dealing convictions which were recently imposed and for which you received a sentence of two years, four months imprisonment.

[6] You have expressed a desire to undertake a number of programmes once you are released from prison and that will be addressed by the Parole Board. [7] I have received a letter from you attached to the submissions from Ms Crapp. The letter is a comprehensive one and it outlines your background and a number of personal matters, which I am not going to go into in Court, but I can assure you I have read your letter and I give you as much credit as I can for that letter. I have also received a very detailed set of submissions from your counsel. They are written submissions backed up by cases and I express the Court s appreciation for those submissions. They have been of assistance. [8] When it comes to sentencing you, I need to hold you accountable for your offending, to promote in you a sense of responsibility. I also need to denounce the offending and sentence you in a way that acts as a deterrent for others. I remind myself that I must sentence you consistently with appropriate sentencing levels for similar offending and I must impose the least restrictive outcome that is appropriate in all of the circumstances in accordance with the hierarchy of sentences. [9] The first step in the sentencing process is to establish a starting point and I intend doing that in two ways. I am going to establish the starting point for the drug offending for which you have two separate offences and then a starting point for the firearms offence. [10] In relation to the drug offending (cannabis), the drug offending is accepted to cover a period from 1 June through to 15 July 2016. Your counsel accepts, as does the police sergeant, that you were a bottom end commercial dealer and you accept, as does your counsel s submissions, that you were doing that to obtain money. In relation to that, your counsel accepts that you fall into the lower end of band 2 of the tariff case of R v Terewi 1. That has starting points of between two and four years imprisonment and I accept that you are at the bottom end of band 2 and so the starting point for that offending will be one of two years imprisonment which is the possession of cannabis for supply. That is the lowest end that I can reach on the facts. 1 R v Terewi [1999] 3 NZLR 62

[11] In relation to the second charge, which is the charge that you jointly with others had possession of a psychoactive substance that was a non-approved substance, relying on the High Court authority of Moore v R 2, again you would fall into band 2 of Moore v R. Moore v R indicates that a starting point of between six and 12 months imprisonment is likely. Justice Brewer indicated that this was for supply on a moderate scale with the object of deriving profit. Yours is towards the top end of that and if I had been dealing with that matter on its own, I probably would have had a starting point of somewhere near the top end of that towards the 12 month mark. However, I need to deal with it in totality with the cannabis offending and so I uplift the starting point of the cannabis offending by six months only to reflect your offending in relation to the psychoactive substances. So that leaves a starting point of two years six months on those two offences. [12] Separately and distinctly, I then turn to the unlawful possession of the firearm. The possession of a replica Glock pistol capable of firing eight millimetre rounds with five rounds loaded in it and one in the chamber is an exceptionally serious offence in my view. There is no lawful reason that a member of the public would ever have possession of a pistol like that in circumstances like this other than for criminal activity. Based on the authorities that I have read, a starting point of anywhere between two years and two and a half years is appropriate. My finding in relation to this pistol is that it was possessed by you in order to protect your drugs and your drug dealing activity. It was there either to protect you when you were dealing or to stave off what you perceived as attack from others who might be trying to rob you. The reality is that the lowest starting point in terms of the least restrictive outcome that I can impose upon you in all the circumstances is two years imprisonment and that is where I start. That takes into account the fact that there was a bullet in the chamber ready to fire and it was left in that manner. [13] I then turn to any personal factors that aggravate those two starting points; the two years six months for the drug offending and the two years for the firearms offending. In my view, your previous convictions for cultivating cannabis, selling or supplying cannabis and unlawful possession of firearms which occurred in 2012 and 2 Moore v R [2015] NZHC 2565

you were sentenced in 2013 require an uplift. In relation to each, there will be an uplift of two months. [14] I turn then to personal mitigating matters that reduce that. Given the comments in the pre-sentence report and your letter, I am prepared to reduce each of those starting points which are now two years, eight months and two years, two months by one month for the matters raised in your letter. So they will be reduced from there. [15] You are then entitled to a separate and discrete discount of 25 percent from each of those starting points for your early pleas of guilty. In relation to the drug offending, 25 percent is seven months and three weeks. In relation to the firearms offending, it is six months and one week. That will be deducted off each of those respective sets of offending. [16] Your final sentence in relation to these matters, in relation to the cannabis offending will be 23 months and one week imprisonment. That is to be served concurrently with six months for the psychoactive substance charge. So they are served together. In relation to the firearm, that matter reduces to a sentence of 18 months and three weeks. That is cumulative on top of the other matters for the firearms. That takes matters outside of my jurisdiction in terms of release conditions. The Parole Board will be dealing with that for you. [17] I make an order forfeiting the various drugs and paraphernalia associated with them and the firearm and ammunition, and order that they be destroyed. That is the end sentence. A J S Snell District Court Judge