Sentencing Remarks DPP V Lanciana
Sentencing Remarks DPP V Lanciana
Sentencing Remarks DPP V Lanciana
PASQUALE LANCIANA
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JUDGE: O'Connell
WHERE HELD: Melbourne
DATE OF HEARING: 26–30 April, 3–31 May 2021, 9 August 2021
DATE OF SENTENCE: 3 September 2021
CASE MAY BE CITED AS: DPP v LANCIANA
MEDIUM NEUTRAL CITATION: [2021] VCC 1252
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Introduction
laundering.
been loaded with two sealed crates containing $2.32 million in cash, left the
Reserve Bank in Collins St Melbourne destined for the Armaguard depot in Carrum
Downs. Michael West was driving the van and next to him sat the crew leader,
Robert Brewer. The ‘escort’, John Johnston, sat in the rear of the van.
4 At about the same time the armoured van departed the Reserve Bank, a group of
five men dressed as road workers were setting about placing witches hats and
road signs at what was to become a fake road works site on Harcourt Parade,
Richmond, just at the entrance to the South Eastern Freeway. The ‘road workers’
were wearing white hard hats, orange/yellow vests, goggles and khaki overalls.
5 As the Armaguard van turned into Harcourt Parade and approached the entrance
“I was seated in the front passenger seat and the three of us were chatting to each
other and I had the run book on my lap. Ahead of us the traffic had slowed as it often
does as we are about to merge with the freeway. I think that we actually stopped for
a moment and then again moved off with the traffic at a slow speed. It was about
now that I recall seeing a yellow "slow" sign that I think was being held by a "road
worker". This sign was like a "lolly pop" sign that often has another direction such
as "stop" on the reverse side. This road worker was standing to [the] left of us in
front and I recall seeing another worker opposite him further on who was bending
down looking at the road holding onto a piece of machinery. As we drew closer I
don't recall seeing the man on the left again but my attention was on the man using
the machinery. It appeared to me to be some sort of angle grinder and I noticed a
cloud of dust coming up off the road [as] he used it. I expected to see a hose and a
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lot of water around him as there normally is where concrete or tar is being cut but
there was none. At this point he was about 10 feet away from the front of the truck
to our right and as I watched him our truck came to a stop. I don't know why as I
wasn't watching in front of us at this time.
Within a second of us stopping I heard a noise at the rear of the van and I looked
around and there was a man already in the van standing close to where John sits
behind Mike.
This man was holding a silver coloured revolver in, I think his left hand. I noticed that
he had a bushy moustache, possibly ginger in colour. He yelled, "All of you into the
back and face the floor facing the front. Do as we tell you and you won't be hurt, we
don't want to hurt you." I think that another man had also got into the truck by this
time but my vision of the back of the truck was blocked…." 1
6 The use of the stop/slow sign to stop the van appeared routine, just as it was
intended. The noise of the concrete saw nearby was clearly designed to distract
the guards’ attention; it also achieved its purpose. Behind the van, another
offender manoeuvred his Bedford truck so as to block the view of cars stopped
7 Under cover of that Bedford truck, two offenders, one brandishing a firearm, then
gained entry to the back door of the van using a custom-made brass key. Once
the offenders were inside, the guards were restrained with handcuffs whilst plastic
bags with holes that enabled breathing were placed over their heads. One of the
offenders then drove the van to nearby Walnut Street, where the $2.32 million in
cash was removed and placed in a white van. The ‘road workers’ then
disappeared, leaving the three guards restrained in the back of the van.
8 To this day, much as to how this armed robbery was carried out remains unknown.
The money has never been recovered. Although the brass key that enabled instant
access to the rear of the van was accidentally dropped and left inside the van, how
that key was made, or obtained, has never been satisfactorily explained.
9 A good deal of the evidence at trial canvassed various suspects and ‘persons of
interest’ who may have had a hand in organising or carrying out the robbery, but
1
Statement of Robert Brewer (now deceased) 22 June 1994. By agreement between the parties, this statement,
and those of Michael West and John Johnston, were read to the jury and became part of the evidence at trial.
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ultimately that evidence provided little in the way of definitive answers, save that
the jury were satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that you were involved.
10 Crucial to that finding was the evidence of Witness O. She gave evidence that
when her son was an infant in August 1994, she went with you to some city bank
branches, where you asked her to exchange some cash for different
11 Witness O said that some months afterwards, you had a conversation with her in
had recently been published in the media. During that conversation you told her
that the money she had exchanged on your behalf in the city had been stolen in
“the Richmond robbery” and that you had been involved in that robbery with others.
12 The jury also heard that nearly 20 years later, on 30 July 2014, Witness O, who by
that stage had commenced co-operating with police, had a conversation with you
which she secretly recorded. In that recording you were heard to say “…I didn’t do
13 Consistent with the admissions you made to Witness O, the prosecution case was
put on the basis that you were involved in the planning and organisation of the
robbery and/or participated in the robbery. According to the jury’s verdict, you must
have at least planned and organised this armed robbery. That is the basis upon
14 About six weeks after the armed robbery, on 9 August 1994, a solicitor acting on
your behalf, John Anile, purchased a vacant block of land located off Kororoit
Creek Road, Williamstown (‘the KCR transaction’). The contract of sale recorded
2
Transcript of recorded conversation between Witness O and Pasquale Lanciana, 30 July 2014.
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the purchase price as $555,000 with a deposit of $5,000 paid with the balance of
15 The vendors, Loukis and Michael Georgiou, had purchased that property five years
before at the price of $740,000. They gave evidence that the actual sale price,
negotiated on your behalf by Mr Anile, was $955,000, and that $400,000 of that
16 It was alleged by the prosecution at trial that Mr Anile offered the vendors the
$400,000 cash component in the negotiated sale price, and did not include that
amount in the sale price documented in the contract, in order to assist you to
launder cash that was derived from your involvement in the armed robbery.
18 The prosecution also alleged that you arranged for the payment of the $400,000
cash, at least $250,000 of which you delivered personally to the vendors, and that
that money, or some of it, came from your share of the proceeds of the armed
robbery.
19 A document of 7 April 2015 which you had authored to assist John Anile was
“4. John's view was that the land was worth at or about the Value Generals assessment
for land tax which I recall was about $590,000.00 and he was going to see what
could be negotiated. In the end the property was purchased for $555,000.00.
5. John was more concerned with the terms over and above the purchase price and I
was able to raise $200,000 from family friends and my own resources.
6. I believed that the Vendors were very keen to sell as the property had been on the
market for a long time and the soil test showed that it was going to be almost
impossible to build on it as it was an old "tip".
7. The deal that was done contained a 12 month settlement and we could do what we
wanted with the land once the deposit of $5000 was paid, and we would be able to
use the subdivided land increase in price to pay the balance prior to settlement of
the Purchase Price to the Vendor or the buyers of our subdivided lots would pay out
the Vendors 12 months later which is fact occurred.
8. I recall giving the $200,000.00 to John a week or so after he had negotiated the
Purchase in a bag and he went to the Vendors house and completed the deal by
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signing the Contract and handing over the money. The money was made up of all
sorts of denominations. I did not go to the Vendors house.
20 By its verdict the jury must have rejected that version of events.
21 Although there were some unsatisfactory aspects of the evidence given by Loukis
and Michael Georgiou, I am satisfied that the jury’s verdict reflects the following:
• that the $400,000 cash, or some of it, came from your share of the proceeds
23 On 11 February 2020, Mr Anile pleaded guilty to the same charge for his
imprisonment and a non-parole period of 21 months was fixed. 4 I must take that
of Charge 3.
Bank branch at 271 Collins Street, Melbourne. You instructed her to exchange
$4,000 worth of $20 notes for $50 and $100 notes. The transaction was caught on
CCTV. You can also be seen through glass doors on that footage, waiting outside
3
Statement of Pasquale Lanciana, 7 April 2015 (Exhibit J at Trial).
4
DPP v Anile [2020] VCC 82 (“Anile”).
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25 The serial numbers of some of the notes exchanged by Witness O coincided with
sub-packs of new notes issued to the Reserve Bank at Melbourne about two weeks
before the armed robbery. The prosecution case was that those notes were likely
to have been on the Armaguard van at the time of the armed robbery.
26 Witness O said in her evidence that she believed she also attended at “two or
three” other bank branches that day. The evidence revealed that very similar
transactions, involving similar serial numbered $20 notes exchanged for higher
Bank branch in William Street (Charge 7), an ANZ bank branch in Bourke Street
(Charge 8) and the National Australia Bank branch in Bourke Street (Charge 9). In
28 The prosecution case was that you conducted all six of these transactions, either
on your own account or through Witness O, and that the $18,000, or some of it,
came from the money stolen in the armed robbery. By exchanging those notes you
29 The jury’s verdicts of guilty in respect of each of Charges 4–9 reflect their
Procedural history
30 For the next 20 years you appear to have avoided suspicion as to your
involvement. However, in 2014 you became aware of police interest in you, and in
discussions with Witness O you speculated about the progress of the police
investigation. That was the context in which you made the admission to having
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31 You were not charged until 18 November 2016. You were remanded in custody at
that time.
32 Between 16–26 October 2017, a contested committal hearing was held at the
33 On 27 May 2019, your first trial in this Court commenced after lengthy pre-trial
argument. The jury retired to consider its verdict on 26 June 2019 but after five
days of deliberation the jury was discharged because it was unable to reach a
verdict.
35 The second trial was listed to commence on 20 April 2020 but was adjourned due
to the pandemic.
36 On 27 April 2021, your second trial commenced. The jury retired to commence its
deliberations on 21 May 2021 and returned its verdicts on 31 May 2021. You were
Victim impact
37 The planning and sophistication of this armed robbery might lend itself to
comparisons to Hollywood movies, but, as the victim impact statements
demonstrate, the reality is quite different. Michael West, Robert Brewer, John
Johnston, and each of their families suffered immeasurably for their involvement
38 It is to be recalled that the three men in the van that day were threatened at
gunpoint, placed in handcuffs and made to lie down in the back of the van with
plastic bags over their heads while the money was stolen. In his statement to police
“Suddenly one of the back rear doors of the Armaguard truck flew open. I turned in
the direction of the rear of the truck and I saw a bloke inside the truck who quickly
came upon me and he thrust a .38 calibre revolver into my face. He said to me “don’t
fucken move, this is a robbery” or words similar. He further said, “just do as you’re
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told and no one will be hurt”. He then grabbed me by my left shoulder and forced
me to lay face down on the floor of the truck. He then grabbed my arms forcing them
behind my back and he placed handcuffs on my wrists. This bloke told the other
Armaguard blokes, Bob and ‘Gasper’, to come over the back and they had to step
over me and he made them lay down on the floor. He also handcuffed them however
I did not see this as I was told not to look in their direction but to look away. I could
hear them being handcuffed.
This male then said he had plastic bags with holes in them and one was placed over
my head. It was a green coloured garbage type bag.… The truck was driven for a
few minutes which felt like about five minutes and was then stopped at a location I
was not aware of. I was then grabbed hold of and told to get on my feet but I could
not do this and I was dragged up. As this happened I heard and felt my .357 Ruger
revolver fall out of my holster onto the trucks floor.
I was then taken over to one of the trucks rear corners and sat down and handcuffed
to Bob and ‘Gasper’ all with our backs to one another. I still had the plastic bag on
my head and could not see anything. I then heard the rear door of the truck open
and heard the crates containing the money off loaded from the rear of the truck. The
rear door of the truck was then closed and I heard a vehicle driving away from the
rear of the truck.
… When he thrust the .38 calibre revolver into my face I feared for my life and I did
as I was told. No person had permission to treat me in this manner.” 5
“I was extremely scared and feared for my life throughout this ordeal. I followed the
orders for fear of my mates as well… After the incident was over I felt angry,
disappointed in myself and helpless”. 6
40 Whilst Robert Brewer did not specifically comment on how he felt during the
will proceed on the basis that this was a humiliating and distressing experience for
each of them.
41 Those three men have since passed away, but they were not the only victims.
42 The Sentencing Act 1991 (‘the Act’) defines a victim as including a person who
has “suffered injury, loss or damage (including grief, distress, trauma or other
43 Such persons include those close to the primary victims, such as family members.
Sections 8L and 8K of the Act enable victims to make statements describing the
5
Statement of John Johnston, 22 June 1994.
6
Statement of Michael West, 22 June 1994.
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impact suffered as a direct result of the offending “for the purpose of assisting the
44 In this case seven victim impacts statements were tendered from members of the
45 Of those seven victims, Craig West requested that his statement be read aloud by
the prosecutor during the plea hearing. Mr West, who was eight years of age at
the time of the offence, described how he witnessed the personal deterioration of
his father in the years that followed. His father became hypervigilant, paranoid and
example, waking in the night screaming and hiding behind furniture, crying, “don’t
shoot, don’t shoot…”. That sort of behaviour and the marked changes to his
condition was made worse by the physical and verbal abuse he endured at his
workplace because of the lingering suspicion that he or the other guards were
46 The families of Robert Brewer and John Johnston tell strikingly similar stories.
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straining what had been close, loving relationships. As one victim put it simply, “It
47 I am conscious that not all of the matters canvassed in the victim impact
statements could be said to have been incurred as a direct result of the offence. It
is, I think, important to take a practical approach to the content of such statements,
48 Ultimately, it is sufficient to say that this offence had a marked effect on these men
Personal circumstances
49 You were born on 6 June 1957 and you are now 64 years of age. At the time of
50 Your parents migrated to Australia in the late 1940s from Calabria, Italy. Your
father was the first to come to Australia. He worked in a number of jobs in order to
save the funds to enable your mother and two older siblings to migrate. For most
of his working life your father worked at an abattoir where he eventually became
51 Your mother worked in the home, caring for you and your seven siblings. She is
of 2 August 2021 confirms that your mother suffers from a number of chronic health
conditions, that her hearing and sight is impaired and that she does not speak
English. 7 Since your release in July of 2019 up until the verdict in this case, you
52 In a helpful personal reference, your eldest brother described the pivotal role you
played as the third-oldest child in supporting and caring for the other members of
your family, particularly your mother. Your family was never well-off but remained
7
Letter of Dr Angelika Borozdina, 2 August 2021 (Exhibit 2 on the Plea).
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very close. One of your sisters passed away after a battle with cancer and another
sister was placed in care at a young age because of her severe disabilities. You
are said to be very close to your older brother and your four younger brothers and
are very much engaged with their children and other extended family.
High School but did not fare well. You describe yourself as generally misbehaving
and failing to apply yourself to your studies such that you could not complete year
12.
54 I was told that after leaving school you “fell in with the wrong crowd” for a period
of time and got into trouble in Adelaide. Your criminal history shows that in 1976,
when you were 19 years of age, you were convicted of robbery with violence and
condition that you enter into a bond in the sum $100. On the plea, I was not told
what the circumstances relating to that incident involved, but your counsel
described it as a wake-up call, after which you returned to school and completed
year 12.
55 Soon afterwards, you enrolled in a nursing course but did not qualify. You then
opened a pizza business in Prahran known as Mr Natural Pizza which for a period
of time was reasonably successful. You married your first wife in about 1982 and
there is one child of that relationship, a son who now lives in New York. In 1984,
your wife was murdered during a burglary. You told your assessing psychologist
that you returned home to find your wife deceased and that you were traumatised
by the experience – all the more so because you were initially suspected of having
56 You returned to live with your parents who assisted you in the care of your then
young son.
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57 In 1991, you married your second wife and there are three children of that
relationship, a son and two daughters, all now in their 20s. Counsel emphasised
the strength of the relationship you have with each of your adult children,
particularly your eldest daughter who has suffered from a number of mental health
problems.
58 When you were last imprisoned she reacted quite badly, and I accept that your
fears as to how she will fare whilst you are in custody will weigh on you heavily.
59 During the 1990s, you did some work in security and property development. You
were said to have lost all of your assets in prolonged and stressful civil litigation
60 You have limited previous convictions. Aside from the matter in South Australia,
you were involved in an assault matter and the making of a false report to police,
which were dealt with when you were 19 and 24 respectively. They attracted small
fines and I do not see those matters as influential in this sentencing exercise.
61 There are some subsequent offences which may have some relevance to your
prospects for rehabilitation. For reasons that are not apparent, you were convicted
of six separate charges of shop theft between 2002 and 2012. Of more substance,
about 14 months after you committed this offending you were convicted of
cannabis, for which you were sentenced to a total effective term of imprisonment
62 You have had a lifelong interest in boxing and training. You started learning to box
at a young age along with your brothers and eventually turned professional in
years, you have trained and taught many people at the FightFit Boxing Centre in
South Melbourne.
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63 Quite a number of the personal references tendered on your behalf speak to the
way in which you have been able to positively impact on the young people you
have taken under your wing to train and mentor. In one reference, a former
correctional officer described the role you took on in the Young Offenders Unit at
Port Phillip Prison during your last time on remand. You trained and mentored
many of the youths housed in that unit, gaining the respect of both staff and
inmates.
64 That material is to your credit. I accept that you have made a real difference to the
lives of quite a number of young people in helping them develop the direction and
self-discipline they had otherwise been lacking. Although you now fall to be
sentenced for having committed what are very serious offences, I appreciate that
character is not one-dimensional, and the positive contribution you have made to
dedicated, disciplined and generous person who has earned widespread respect.
Those testimonials were not challenged by the Crown and I accept their tenor.
66 You were assessed by a forensic psychologist for the purposes of your plea
2021. 8 On the basis of the history you provided and the psychometric testing she
67 Ms Ferrari stated:
“…in the custodial setting, his symptoms are likely to worsen and his ability to
regulate his emotions, when combined with the volatile prison environment and his
8
Report of psychologist Carla Ferrari, 3 August 2021 (Exhibit 1 on the Plea).
9
Ibid [73].
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comorbid PTSD diagnosis, is likely to be compromised. This also increases his risk
of impulsive, disproportionate responses if his PTSD is triggered.” 10
68 Ms Ferrari thought that your symptoms had worsened over the last several years
in the context of being remanded in custody between 2016 and 2019 and have
been further exacerbated by your return to custody in May 2021 following the
verdict. It was suggested that imprisonment would likely weigh more heavily on
Defence submissions
69 Your counsel, Ms Karapanagiotidis, who appeared both at trial and on the plea
with Ms Blair, submitted that because the prosecution had put its case to the jury
on the basis that you had either directly participated in the offending or that you
were involved in its planning and/or organisation, it cannot be known on what basis
the jury determined how you were involved. It was argued there was no rational
basis upon which a sentencing judge could determine if you actually carried out
the offence or organised it, or did both. It followed that there was an insufficient
basis on which to conclude that you played a central or significant role in the
offending. It was conceivable that your role could have been quite minor.
70 As to the charge of false imprisonment, it was submitted that the sentence imposed
in respect of that matter should be served concurrently with the sentence imposed
for the armed robbery because there was such a substantial overlap between the
two offences.
10
Ibid [76].
11
Ibid [79].
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71 As to Charge 3, involving the money laundering through the KCR transaction, it
• how much of the money was derived from the proceeds of the armed robbery.
72 That was so because the prosecution had put its case on the basis that only some
of the money need be derived from the proceeds of the armed robbery to make
out the offence. It was submitted that the jury could have been satisfied as to only
$50,000 being derived from the armed robbery, because that amount was admitted
73 With respect to the bank transactions (Charges 4–9), again it was submitted that
what was derived from the armed robbery may have only been a small part of what
74 It was further submitted that the application of the principle of totality in sentencing
required that the money laundering sentences be substantially concurrent with the
delay between the time at which an offender is interviewed and trial should mitigate
significantly. In your case, you were first interviewed in 2016 (although you were
aware the police were investigating you from 2014) and ultimately convicted in
76 You have been and will continue to be subject to the restrictive prison regime in
place to deal with the pandemic. That means you cannot have contact visits with
your family and must spend long hours in lockdown which, it was argued, you
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77 It was not contended that separation from your elderly mother was so exceptional
that that separation has produced in you is a matter that can properly be taken into
78 As to your psychological condition, it was submitted that two principles taken from
the decision in Verdins 12 were engaged. The first was that your sentence will weigh
more heavily upon you than a person who is not afflicted with the disorders
diagnosed by Ms Ferrari.
79 The second was that there was a serious risk that your imprisonment would
significantly and adversely impact on your mental health. Both of those principles
80 Finally, it was submitted that you have “very good prospects of rehabilitation”,
principally because over the last 27 or so years you have shown yourself to be a
stable and productive member of the community, your subsequent criminal history
is limited, you have no drug or alcohol issues, you have extensive family support,
Prosecution submissions
81 Mr Shaw, for the prosecution, contended that this armed robbery should be
combination of factors such as the degree of sophistication and planning, the fact
that it occurred in company, the fact that a very large amount of money
($2,320,000) was stolen, none of which was recovered, the brazen nature of the
82 Your role in respect of Charges 1 and 2, it was submitted, must have been
significant.
12
R v Verdins (2007) 16 VR 269; 276 at [32].
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83 The same features were said to aggravate the second charge of false
imprisonment, although Mr Shaw accepted in discussion on the plea that care was
punishment.
84 He submitted that the money laundering charges associated with the KCR property
sophistication, the large amount of money involved, and its purpose, which was to
conceal your involvement in the armed robbery and launder the proceeds.
branches in central Melbourne were submitted to fall at “the lower end of gravity”,
although that offending was nevertheless aggravated by its purpose and the fact
that you were alleged to have forced Witness O to conduct her transactions.
86 It was submitted that the sentencing purposes of just punishment and denunciation
sentencing purpose.
87 The maximum penalty for armed robbery is now 25 years imprisonment. It was 20
years imprisonment at the time this offence was committed.
88 Section 5(2)(b) of the Act requires that I take into account, as one of many factors,
“current sentencing practice”. The different maximum penalty that now applies
89 The concept of equal justice requires that I should also have regard to sentencing
practices at the time of the offence if it can be demonstrated that those practices
required a materially lesser sentence at that time. 13 Your counsel did not contend
13
Stalio v The Queen (2012) 46 VR 426, 432 [9], [11]; Carter v The Queen (2018) 272 A Crim R 170, 182 [57].
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90 I have reviewed a number of decisions involving armed robberies at the higher end
91 In the cases to which I have had regard, I did not detect a materially lesser
sentencing range around the time of the commission of the offence as compared
different maximum penalties and what was then s 10 of the Act relating to the
abolition of remissions.
Findings
93 This was a criminal enterprise that required meticulous planning, preparation and
military style precision. According to the verdict of the jury, you organised and/or
14
R v Zakaria (1984) 12 A Crim R 386; R v Barci & Asling (1994) 76 A Crim R 103; R v Bouchard (1996) 84 A
Crim R 499; The Queen v Hynson (Victorian Court of Appeal, Winneke P, Vincent AJA and McDonald AJA, 4
December 1995, Unrep.); The Queen v Parker (County Court of Victoria, Byrne J, 21 March 1995, Unrep.); The
Queen v Crupi (County Court of Victoria, Byrne J, 29 November 1994, Unrep.); R v Crupi (1995) 86 A Crim R
229 (conviction appeal); The Queen v Rich (County Court of Victoria, Byrne J, 31 October 1995, Unrep.); R v
King & Los (1993) 66 A Crim R 74; Johnson v The Queen [2011] VSCA 348; Murrell v The Queen; DPP v Murrell
[2014] VSCA 337; Konamala v The Queen [2016] VSCA 48; Binse v The Queen [2016] VSCA 145; R v Rich
[2009] VSC 515; DPP v Walker & Dargan [2019] VSCA 137.
15
DPP v Dalgleish (2017) 262 CLR 428, 434 [9]; DPP v Walker & Dargan [2019] VSCA 137, [81]–[82].
16
In Lord v The Queen [2018] VSCA 52, the adequacy of sentencing practice for armed robbery was called into
question: [11] per Maxwell P and Beach JA.
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• the fact that these offences were carried out by a number of people acting as
an organised unit;
• the fact that they involved an elaborate ruse to gain access to the van;
• the fact that a handgun was pointed at the guards to disarm and restrain
them;
• the fact that the large sum of money stolen was never recovered;
• the fact that the offending left a lasting impact on the victims; and
96 Because of the manner in which the Crown put its case to the jury, there remains
some uncertainty as to the precise role you played in the commission of this
offence. Nevertheless, I am satisfied that your role must have been significant.
97 First, the evidence led at trial showed that five people combined to carry out this
that there were other participants unseen by the witnesses, assisting in other ways,
but I regard the implicit suggestion that you might have been one of those unseen
participants playing some lesser role as unrealistic, if not fanciful. This was an
enterprise where all participants combined to play their part to bring about its
success. I am satisfied that the witness accounts demonstrate that each part
98 Second, the words you used when speaking with Witness O in the recorded
conversation of 30 July 2014 – “…I didn’t do the robbery… I just organised it, I
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didn’t do it” 17 – plainly contradict the argument that you may have only contributed
to the planning of the enterprise in some small way. I regard the suggestion that
you could have simply provided a pair of gloves or made some similarly minor
contribution as also being fanciful. If it be true that you “just organised it”, then the
conclusion that you played a significant role in planning the enterprise would seem
unassailable.
99 Third, the timing of the KCR transaction, occurring as it did just weeks after the
armed robbery, and the large amount of cash involved is completely inconsistent
with the assertion that your role in the armed robbery may not have been
significant. I appreciate that the prosecution put its case on the basis that all, or
some, of the cash was derived from the proceeds of the armed robbery. However,
in the document of 7 April 2015 18 which you authored, you admitted to contributing
$200,000 in cash to the purchase. Moreover, at trial no issue was taken with the
part payment for the KCR property. On any view, you were dealing in large
amounts of cash very shortly after the commission of the armed robbery. All of this
100 It follows that you will be sentenced on the basis that you played a significant,
101 The overlap in the aggravating features between the charges of armed robbery
concurrent sentence on Charge 2 to ensure that you are not doubly punished. The
related but distinct criminality. The extent of cumulation will be moderated by the
17
Transcript of recorded conversation between Witness O and Pasquale Lanciana, 30 July 2014 (Exhibit U on
the Trial).
18
Statement of Pasquale Lanciana, 7 April 2015 (Exhibit J on the Trial).
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DPP v LANCIANA
102 As I have indicated, I must take into account the sentence imposed on Mr Anile in
distinguishing feature, although he, unlike you, ultimately pleaded guilty to that
money laundering – much less so the exchanges of cash at the bank branches.
103 For completeness, I should indicate that I am by no means satisfied that Witness
O was ‘forced’ to conduct the transactions the subject of Charges 4, 5 and 6. She
may have felt under some pressure to do so, but I am not prepared to find that
such pressure as may have been operating on her mind aggravates the offending.
104 I do accept that there are matters personal to you which mitigate your position.
Your work in training and mentoring young people who have been at risk is
commendable. Likewise, your engagement with your now adult children and your
elderly mother shows a side of your character which is far from anti-social. I also
accept that the enforced separation from those loved ones will weigh heavily on
you.
105 I assess your prospects for rehabilitation as fairly reasonable given your advancing
age, the fact you have no alcohol or drug problems, the positive direction your life
has taken in work and in training young people, the fact that your subsequent
offending has been negligible over the last 20 years or more, and that you remain
106 That said, I need to make clear that because of the seriousness of this offending,
19
At the time of sentencing Mr Anile, a declaration was made pursuant to s 6AAA of the Sentencing Act 1991
(Vic) that he would have been sentenced to 5 years imprisonment with a non-parole period of 3 years, but for
his plea of guilty: Anile [119].
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DPP v LANCIANA
107 I appreciate that delay can have a debilitating effect on an accused person and is
108 The first relates to the uncertainty hanging over a person’s head for a lengthy
period of time and the anxiety that generates. That is a particularly apposite
consideration in your case because of the delay from charge to trial (nearly two
and half years) as well as the delay caused by the first trial ending in no verdict
and the pandemic (about two years). I do not think that the delay between you first
learning of police interest in you in 2014 and charge in 2016 mitigates in your
particular circumstances. Nevertheless, the overall delay of four and half years or
109 The second means by which delay may mitigate is where an offender has shown
favour, given your lack of offending in recent years, your engagement with your
family, the work you did in the Young Offenders Unit at Port Phillip Prison whilst
on remand and the work and training you performed once released.
110 Your sentence will be reduced because it has been attended by significant delay
on the basis that both limbs of the applicable sentencing principle have been
engaged.
111 The prosecutor did not challenge Ms Ferrari’s opinion that your mental health is
fragile by reason of what was said to be your post-traumatic stress disorder and
major depressive disorder. Accordingly, you will be sentenced on the basis that
imprisonment for you is likely to be more burdensome because you suffer from
those conditions. Moreover, I find that in the setting of having to serve a further
lengthy sentence there is a high risk of further deterioration of your mental health.
This is all the more so because you will be subject to the very restrictive prison
regime implemented to deal with the pandemic. Those matters will reduce the
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DPP v LANCIANA
112 Returning now to the sentence that must be imposed, the prosecutor’s submission
This was an audacious armed robbery, the scale and sophistication of which was
of the highest order. It follows that the sentence I must now impose on you should
make plain to those who choose to engage in criminal enterprises of this nature
that they should expect to forfeit their liberty for a very long time.
Sentence
113 Taking all relevant matters into account, you will be sentenced as follows:
114 On Charge 1, armed robbery, you will be convicted and sentenced to 12 years
imprisonment.
115 On Charge 2, false imprisonment, you will be convicted and sentenced to 4 years
imprisonment.
116 On Charge 3, money laundering, you will be convicted and sentenced to 4 years
imprisonment.
117 On Charge 4, money laundering, you will be convicted and sentenced to 4 months
imprisonment.
118 On Charge 5, money laundering, you will be convicted and sentenced to 4 months
imprisonment.
119 On Charge 6, money laundering, you will be convicted and sentenced to 4 months
imprisonment.
120 On Charge 7, money laundering, you will be convicted and sentenced to 4 months
imprisonment.
121 On Charge 8, money laundering, you will be convicted and sentenced to 4 months
imprisonment.
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DPP v LANCIANA
122 On Charge 9, money laundering, you will be convicted and sentenced to 4 months
imprisonment.
123 I will order that 18 months of the sentence imposed on Charge 3 and 1 month of
imposed on this day are to run concurrently with the sentence imposed on Charge
10 years.
125 I will declare pursuant to s 18 of the Sentencing Act 1991 (Vic) that you have
already served 1,054 days by way of pre-sentence detention, and I will cause that
24 SENTENCE
VCC:
DPP v LANCIANA