By Paul Gregoire and Ugur Nedim Just after midnight on 2 September 1991, Paul Darcey Armstrong met Filipe Flores at the Exchange Hotel on Oxford Street in Sydney’s Darlinghurst. The pair left the nightclub, and Armstrong drove Flores to Lincoln Crescent in Waterloo. Mr Armstrong then performed oral sex on the 27-year-old Ecuadorian man at… Read more »
Posts Categorized: Criminal Law
Breaching a Suspended Sentence Doesn’t Necessarily Mean Prison Time
By Paul Gregoire and Ugur Nedim NSW police executed a search warrant at the Woolloomooloo residence of Rachel Jaia Lambert on 29 December 2011. In the apartment, officers found 456 MDMA (‘ecstacy’) tablets, a quantity of cannabis and several items indicating drug supply, including scales and small resealable plastic bags. The total value of the… Read more »
Impact of Mental Illness on Sentencing After a Plea of Guilty
By Paul Gregoire and Ugur Nedim On the afternoon of 3 January 2011, John Elturk stole a chef’s knife worth $25 from a Big W store at Carnes Hill. The 37-year-old then made his way to the family home in Lansvale, where he’d been living with his father until shortly before Christmas. The two had… Read more »
Woman Walks Free Despite Helping Conceal Evidence of Murder
By Paul Gregoire and Ugur Nedim On 2 March 2012, NSW police senior constable David Rixon pulled Michael Allan Jacobs over on Lorraine Street, West Tamworth for a routine breath test. But when the officer told the driver he was about to test him, Jacobs shot the highway patrolman in the chest with a .38… Read more »
Drugs Being Found in a Common Area is Not Enough to Prove Possession
By Paul Gregoire and Ugur Nedim On 22 March 1978, NSW police detective Watson introduced himself to Edward Paul Filippetti and his mother at Port Kembla Courthouse. The detective explained that he had received information about Mr Filippetti having a large number of “buddha sticks” concealed at his Lake Heights house. Buddha sticks are often made… Read more »
Driver Acquitted Despite Drugs Being Found in Car
By Paul Gregoire and Ugur Nedim At around 9.30 one morning, NSW police officers were at a flat on Murray Street in Port Macquarie investigating an incident, when the phone rang. An officer answered and told the caller the occupant wasn’t home. The caller rang again two minutes later. This time, the officer recognised the… Read more »
Court Rules Overdrawing $2 Million is Dishonest, But It’s Not Fraud
By Paul Gregoire and Ugur Nedim When Luke Brett Moore opened his Complete Freedom savings account at the Goulburn branch of St George bank, he was unaware just how much freedom the financial institution would afford him. But Mr Moore soon found that he was at liberty to make quite a range of large withdrawals…. Read more »
Affray Conviction Quashed Due to Insufficient Evidence
On the evening of 15 June 2013, Sogeat “Jet” Ouch and Caine Little met in a park in Canley Vale to have a fight. Mr Little owed Mr Ouch a long outstanding debt, and the confrontation was arranged to settle the matter. Little travelled to the park with his two friends, Bill Nguyen and Jimmy Chovnlamontry…. Read more »
Sex Offender Appeals Admission of Tendency Evidence
By Paul Gregoire and Ugur Nedim Pierre Mol was a Sydney-based artist, who’d made quite a name for himself. Mol painted the largest mural in the southern hemisphere on the request of the Sultan of Brunei. He also painted the well-known mural in the Rocks of a 1901 photograph of Brown Bear Lane. Today, Mr Mol… Read more »
Senior Prosecutor Appointed to NSW District Court
Attorney General Mark Speakman has announced the appointment Deputy Senior Crown Prosecutor Gina O’Rourke as a judge of the District Court of New South Wales. The Senior Counsel is due to be sworn in on 30th January 2018. “Ms O’Rourke is an outstanding barrister who has prosecuted more than 200 jury trials in the Supreme… Read more »