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As of 2007, Dupas has been convicted of three murders
and is a prime suspect in at least three other murders committed in the
vicinity of the Melbourne area during the 1980s and 1990s.
Early life
Dupas was the youngest of three children, born into
what has been described as "a fairly normal family". Born in Sydney, New
South Wales, his family moved to Melbourne while he was still a toddler.
With both siblings considerably older, his elderly parents treated him
much like an only child. Dupas left high school upon completing Form 5,
and later obtained his Higher School Certificate while in custody.
On October 3, 1968, at the age of 15, Dupas, still
attending high school at Waverley High School in the eastern Melbourne
suburb of Mount Waverley, visited his next door neighbour requesting to
borrow a knife for the purpose of peeling vegetables. Dupas was
apprehended after he stabbed the woman in the face, neck and hand as she
attempted to fight off his attack. He later told police he could not
help himself and did not know why he began to attack the woman. He was
placed on 18 months probation and admitted to the Larundel Psychiatric
Hospital for evaluation; he was released after two weeks and treated as
an outpatient.
In October 1969, a mortuary located at the Austin
Hospital was broken into. The bodies of two elderly women were mutilated
using a pathologist's knife. One body contained a strange wound
inflicted with a knife to the area of the thigh. Police now believe
Dupas was involved in the break-in as the wounds inflicted matched that
of a later murder victim, Nicole Patterson.
“He stood out. To me the guy was just pure evil … His
attacks were all carefully planned and he showed no remorse. We could
see where he was going. I remember thinking, 'This guy could go all the
way'.
He is an unmitigated liar … he is a very dangerous
young person who will continue to offend where females are concerned and
will possibly cause the death of one of his victims if he is not
straightened out.”
After Dupas received a term of nine years
imprisonment for rape in 1974, prison psychiatrist Dr. Allen Bartholomew
noted Dupas was in constant denial of his criminal activity, noting at
the time: "I am reasonably certain that this youth has a serious
psychosexual problem, that he is using the technique of denial as a
coping device and that he is to be seen as potentially dangerous. The
denial technique makes for huge difficulty in treatment."
In 1979, approximately two months after his release
from prison, Dupas again molested women in four separate attacks over a
10 day period. On February 28, 1980, Dupas received a five year minimum
prison sentence for three charges of assault with intent to rape,
malicious wounding, assault with intent to rob, and indecent assault. A
1980 report on Dupas stated "There is little that can be said in Dupas'
favour. He remains an extremely disturbed, immature and dangerous man.
His release on parole was a mistake."
Dupas was again released from prison in February
1985. Approximately one month later, he raped a 21-year-old woman on a
beach at Blairgowrie. After alighting from his car, Dupas followed the
woman and attacked her, holding her to the ground at knifepoint before
raping her. He later told police: "I'm sorry for what happened. Everyone
was telling me I'm OK now. I never thought it was going to happen again.
I only wanted to live a normal life."
On June 28, 1985, Dupas was sentenced to 12 years
imprisonment for the Blairgowrie rape, and released in 1992 after
serving seven years of his sentence.
On August 18, 1994, after entering a guilty plea to
one count of false imprisonment in the Country Court in Bendigo, Dupas
was sentenced to three years and nine months imprisonment, with a
minimum period of two years and nine months. In September 1996, Dupas
was again released from prison and moved into a house in the Melbourne
suburb of Pascoe Vale.
Two neighbours reported hearing the screams of a
young woman coming from Patterson's house between 9.00a.m. and 9.30a.m.
on the day of her murder. Attempts by Patterson's boyfriend to contact
her in the afternoon failed, raising suspicions.
On April 19, 1999 the body of Nicole Amanda Patterson
was discovered by a friend in the front room of her Harper Street,
Northcote residence. Patterson's friend had visited to attend a dinner
engagement. Upon hearing music from a radio and discovering the front
door unlocked, she entered the house and found the body of Patterson
severely mutilated.
Patterson died from 27 stab wounds to her chest and
back. Her body was discovered naked from the waist down, with her skirt
found in a nearby bedroom and her underwear around her ankles. Small
pieces of yellow PVC tape were attached to her body and both of her
breasts had been removed using a sharp knife. Her handbag and drivers
licence were stolen during the attack. The murder weapon and Patterson's
breasts have never been recovered.
Telephone records revealed Dupas had made three prior
telephone calls to Patterson to arrange a counselling session to treat
depression and a gambling addiction, the first from a public telephone
booth approximately six weeks before her murder. Over the course of the
next six weeks, Dupas made calls to Patterson in an attempt to establish
her vulnerability. Dupas later told police he cancelled his appointment
with Patterson after being told by her his problem was something he was
able to work through of his own accord.
Police also noticed scratches on Dupas' face and hand,
consistent with a recent struggle. Dupas claimed the scratches had
occurred when he was working in his backyard shed and a piece of wood
hit him while using a lathe; Dupas did not own a lathe, however. He
later changed his story to the effect that the injuries were sustained
while working in the shed and walking by a protruding piece of wood.
A police search of Dupas' home revealed blood stained
clothing, PVC tape similar to that located at the crime scene, a ski
mask, newspaper clippings detailing Patterson's murder and also a paper
containing her advertisement for psychotherapy services.
Dupas appeared in the Supreme Court of Victoria Court
of Appeal in August 2001 to appeal his conviction for the murder of
Patterson. His appeal was dismissed.
Her body was discovered under a cardboard box
containing computer parts at 1.45p.m. on October 4, 1997 by Ronald Frank
McDonald, who made the discovery while he was collecting aluminium cans
beside Cliffords Road, Somerton with his wife, Eva and their children. A
black woollen glove was found near Maher's body which police later
confirmed contained DNA matching that of Dupas.
A post-mortem examination revealed Maher had suffered
a stab wound to her left wrist, bruising to her neck, blunt force trauma
to the area of her right eyebrow and lacerations to her right arm.
Maher's left breast had been removed and placed into her mouth. At the
time of Maher's murder, Dupas had been out of prison for just over a
year after serving time for rape offences and was no longer under the
supervision of the government corrections agency, Corrections Victoria.
Dupas was already serving a life sentence without
parole for the murder of Nicole Patterson at the time of his arrest for
the murder of Margaret Maher. With Dupas in custody, police were able to
obtain a DNA sample, linking him to the 1997 murder of Maher.
After the guilty verdict, Kylie Nicholas, Nicole
Pattersons sister, described Dupas as "...the most evil predator, a
psychopath, a true evil predatory, cunning repulsive person. It's such a
rare evil that comes into this world that's destroyed these women and
our lives. We're just praying that this man is held accountable for
everything he has done."
On August 16, 2004, Dupas was convicted of the
October 4, 1997, murder of Maher and sentenced to a second term of life
imprisonment.
Ian Joblin, a Melbourne-based forensic psychologist,
released a report to the court attempting to explain Dupas’ sexual
reoffending behaviour:
"Dupas attacked women to fulfil fantasies of conquest
and control…For Dupas, the actual assault has not lived up to the
fantasy which preceded the assault, and is seen at times as
disappointing…He does not feel reassured by either his performance or
his victim’s response and must find another victim, this time ‘the right
one’. Thus, his offences become quite repetitive."
During sentencing, Kaye remarked he would have
sentenced Dupas for a life term for Maher's murder even if he had not
killed Patterson, saying:
After Dupas received his second murder conviction,
Victorian Attorney General Rob Hulls stated judges needed discretionary
powers to tailor punishments for criminals such as Dupas and that more
training may be needed to assist them in making their judgments. Hulls
was quoted as saying, "There's no question that a formalised judicial
education and training needs to be introduced in Victoria. I intend to
investigate how that can best be done".
"whether the judge erred in ruling that the facts of
the mutilation of Patterson’s body should have been admitted at trial".
"whether the directions of the judge aimed at keeping
the evidence of the Patterson murder discrete were sufficient".
"whether the judge incorrectly directed the jury
regarding the compression applied to the deceased’s neck as one of three
possible causes of death".
"if the matters relied upon in the other grounds
listed above did not result in a miscarriage of justice, their "aggregate
effect" did".
His appeal was dismissed.
Halvagis' body was discovered at 4.35 a.m. on
November 5, 1997, by Halvagis' fiancée in an empty plot, three graves
from where her grandmother was buried. Police believe Halvagis was
attacked from behind while kneeling to attend to a flower arrangement,
and that she died from massive injuries, including 87 stab wounds about
her knees, neck, with most wounds concentrated around her breasts. Her
upper clothing had been pulled over her head towards her chest.
Dupas' home in Coane Street, Pascoe Vale was near the
cemetery. Halvagis' murder had remained unsolved since 1997, with the
Victorian state government, together with police offering a AUD$1
million reward for information leading to an arrest. The large reward
was the fourth such reward of AUD$1 million in Victoria's history.
Frank Cole, an elderly resident of Pascoe Vale,
claims he saw Dupas leaving the Fawkner Cemetery on the day of the
murder. Cole had earlier claimed he shot a dingo he suspected had killed
two-month-old Azaria Chamberlain who went missing at an Ayers Rock
camping ground on August 17, 1980.
An anonymous female who was visiting her parents'
grave on the day of the murder had seen Dupas wearing sunglasses jogging
through out the cemetery casually.
Inquest
An inquest into Halvagis's death before coroner
Graeme Johnstone heard circumstantial evidence in the case against Dupas
in relation to the murder:
Dupas' grandfather's gravesite is located 128 metres
from the crime scene.
Dupas frequented the 'First and Last Hotel', located
opposite Fawkner Cemetery.
Dupas lied to police about a facial injury received
about the time of the attack on Halvagis.
Dupas attempted to alter his appearance after
Halvagis' murder.
Dupas was identified by a woman from police
photographs, who said she saw him minutes before the attack 20 metres
from where Halvagis' murder occurred.
Forensic pathologist Professor David Ransom, who
compared wounds suffered by Halvagis to the wounds suffered by Patterson
and Maher, told the inquest there was insufficient evidence to suggest
the wounds suffered by Halvagis were inflicted using the same knife or
by the same person who had murdered Dupas' other victims.
Dupas' lawyer, David Drake, advised the inquest that
the only evidence linking Dupas to the murder of Halvagis was the fact
that Dupas had lived nearby to the Fawkner Cemetery, and his reputation
based on prior convictions for similar offences. He further said police
had relied upon their beliefs that Dupas had a propensity to attack
women using knives, thereby linking him to the crime.
Arrest
After obtaining a court order granting permission to
interview Dupas in relation to Halvagis' murder, police collected Dupas
from HM Prison Barwon on September 2, 2006, taking him to the St Kilda
Road Police Headquarters in Melbourne for questioning. On September 11,
2006, police charged Dupas with the murder of Mersina Halvagis, after
disgraced Melbourne lawyer, Andrew Fraser, revealed Dupas confessed to
the killing of Halvagis while gardening weeds in Port Phillip Prison
during 2002.
Fraser told police he once found a homemade knife
concealed among weeds at Port Phillip Prison and he called Dupas over to
inspect it, which is when the confession occurred:
"We regularly used to find stuff hidden in the garden,
drugs, weapons and other stuff. I once found a homemade knife and called
Dupas over to show it to him. He took it off me and started handling it,
almost caressing it in a sexual way. Dupas then started saying 'Mersina,
Mersina' over and over with this strange look on his face. I was
certainly left in no doubt that Dupas murdered Mersina. "This wasn't
some sort of jailhouse confession where somebody has gone in and sat in
a cell one night and had a brew with another prisoner and somebody has
allegedly said something. It's a lot stronger than that. Dupas and I
spoke regularly, just the two of us. This was over months and months
that he was talking to me and confiding in me. "There was one occasion
when another prisoner came up to us when we were gardening and started
abusing Dupas. This prisoner was yelling at Dupas saying 'You killed
Mersina, you killed Mersina'. "After he had gone, Dupas turned to me and
said 'How does that cunt know I did it?'
After agreeing to give evidence against Dupas, Fraser
was released from Fulham Correctional Centre in Sale on September 11,
2006, two months early of his five year sentence for drug trafficking.
The Victorian government has said Fraser is now eligible to apply for a
share of the AUD$1 million reward offered for information leading to an
arrest on Halvagis' murder.
Prosecution witness and disgraced lawyer Andrew
Fraser described to the jury how Dupas attacked Halvagis. Fraser has now
submitted a claim to the $1 million reward.
Dupas was found guilty of the murder of Mersina
Halvagis on August 9, 2007 and appeared for a pre-sentencing hearing
eight days later. Dupas was sentenced to his third life sentence with no
minimum term. The sentencing judge allowed permission for one television
camera to record the sentencing of Dupas, the only televised sentencing
in Australia since the 1995 sentencing of child killer Nathan John Avent.
Upon sentencing Dupas, the judge said "life means life".
On September 10, 2007, lawyers for Dupas submitted an
appeal on the basis the verdict of guilty for the murder of Halvagis was
unsafe and unsatisfactory.
On September 17, 2009, Dupas's appeal against the
conviction was upheld in Victoria's Court of Appeal by a two to one
majority. The Court ruled that the directions of the judge in the
original trial were inadequate.
On October 14, 2009, Lawyers for Dupas argued that
the procedings against him should be stayed permenanently based on the
publicity surrounding the case. Victorian Supreme Court Justice Paul
Coghlan disagreed and set the trial date for April 7, 2010.
McMahon was sunbathing topless on the beach when
attacked. Her body was discovered naked, covered by her beach towel. The
location of the murder of McMahon was nearby to the location where Dupas
had earlier raped a 21-year-old woman at a beach in Blairgowrie, for
which he was convicted and served a term of imprisonment. Police believe
McMahon may have been Dupas' first murder victim, although her murder
officially remains unsolved.
Murder of Renita Brunton
Dupas is a suspect in the murder of 31-year old
Renita Brunton at Sunbury, Victoria in 1993.
Murder of Kathleen Downes
Dupas is a suspect in the murder of 95-year-old
Kathleen Downes at the Brunswick Lodge nursing home in Brunswick. Downes
was stabbed to death at 6:30a.m. on December 31, 1997, a month after
Halvagis' murder. Police investigations revealed Dupas had telephoned
the nursing home some time before the murder. No charges have been laid
regarding Downes' murder. Her murder is being considered for referral to
the State Coroner.
July 25, 1974- Rape - Sentenced to 9 years
imprisonment.
February 28, 1980 - Rape - Committed two months after
his release from prison. Sentenced to 5 years imprisonment.
June 28, 1985 - Rape - Committed 4 days after his
release from prison. Sentenced to 12 years imprisonment.
August 18, 1994 - False imprisonment - Sentenced to 3
years imprisonment.
August 22, 2000 - Murder - Nicole Patterson.
Sentenced to life imprisonment with no minimum period.
August 16, 2004 - Murder - Margaret Maher. Sentenced
to life imprisonment with no minimum period.
August 9, 2007 - Murder - Mersina Halvagis. Sentenced
to life imprisonment with no minimum period on August 27, 2007.
Chronology
July 6, 1953 born
October 3, 1968 at age fifteen he stabbed his female
neighbour and received eighteen months probation
July 25, 1974 sentenced to 5 to 9 years imprisonment
for rape aged 21
1979 approximately two months after his release from
prison, Dupas again molested women in four separate attacks over a ten
day period.
February 28, 1980 Dupas received a five year minimum
prison sentence for three charges of assault with intent to rape,
malicious wounding, assault with intent to rob, and indecent assault.
1985 February released from prison
June 28, 1985 Dupas was sentenced to twelve years
imprisonment for rape that was committed four days after his release
from prison. Less than two years after his release from prison, Dupas
was arrested on charges of false imprisonment over an incident at Lake
Eppalock during January 1994
August 18, 1994 after entering a guilty plea to one
count of false imprisonment, Dupas was sentenced to three years and nine
months imprisonment, with a minimum period of two years and nine months.
1996 September Dupas released from prison
October 4, 1997 The murdered body of Margaret
Josephine Maher was discovered.
November 4, 1997 Mersina Halvagis murdered. Body
discovered the next day.
April 19, 1999 The murdered body of Nicole Amanda
Patterson was discovered.
April 22, 1999 police arrested Dupas
August 22, 2000 Sentenced to life imprisonment for
the murder of Nicole Patterson with no minimum period.
August 16, 2004 Dupas was convicted of the murder of
Maher and sentenced to a second term of life imprisonment.
September 11, 2006 police charged Dupas with the
murder of Mersina Halvagis August 9, 2007 Dupas was convicted of the
murder of Mersina Halvagis.
August 27, 2007 Dupas sentenced to serve life
imprisonment for the murder of Mersina Halvagis.
September 17, 2009 Dupas' appeal upheld against
conviction for the murder of Mersina Halvagis, verdict set aside.
R v Dupas [2000] VSC 356 (22 August 2000)
SUPREME COURT OF VICTORIA
CRIMINAL DIVISION
No. 1524 of 1999
THE QUEEN
v. PETER NORRIS DUPAS
JUDGE: VINCENT, J.
HIS HONOUR:
Peter Norris Dupas, you have been found guilty by
the jury empanelled upon your trial in this Court of the murder at
Northcote in the State of Victoria on the 19th day of April 1999 of
Nicole Amanda Patterson.
It is now my responsibility to impose sentence upon
you.
Miss Patterson, who was 28 years of age at the
time, carried on practice as a qualified psychotherapist and youth
counsellor. She worked at the Ardoch Centre, an organization which
endeavours to assist homeless or disadvantaged young people, and she
also assisted in activities associated with the Australian Drug
Foundation.
However, she had an ambition to develop her own
private practice. To this end, she inserted an advertisement in a
local newspaper circulating in the Northcote area in which she lived.
It indicated that Miss Patterson engaged in the counselling of persons
with respect to relationship and sexuality problems. The advertisement
also made clear that strict confidentiality concerning any disclosures
made by clients to her would be maintained. I suspect, but do not find,
that your interest was excited by these references as you are a
secretive individual with very disturbed sexuality.
When and how you learned that the person who
inserted the advertisement was an extremely attractive young woman is
unknown. Perhaps, as the prosecutor suggested to you in cross-examination,
you saw a photograph of Miss Patterson which appeared in a local
newspaper, although you denied this was the case.
However your attention was attracted to her, it is
evident that you must have selected her as a potential victim some
time before her death. Without initially appreciating the significance
of the answer in the course of cross-examination, you made the
startling admission that you first attempted to contact her by calling
her on a public telephone a day or so before 3 March 1999, that is,
approximately six weeks before she was killed.
You claimed that you are unable to recall where the
particular telephone was located and you were evasive when asked about
your reason for adopting this course, rather than ringing her from
your home. It is highly likely that you were already seriously
contemplating the possibility of attacking her at that time.
I doubt that we will ever learn how you went about
the task of gaining the information that you required to assess the
extent of her vulnerability so that you could feel confident about the
safety of proceeding further, including the need to ensure that Miss Patterson
would be alone and unsuspecting at the time that you chose to put your
intentions into effect.
Although you had obtained her mobile telephone
number and would probably have experienced little difficulty in
speaking to her had you really wished to do so, for some unexplained
reason you made a number of telephone calls to her home between 3
March and 12 April when the appointment for you to see her was made.
There is, in the circumstances, force in the prosecutor's contention
that you were stalking Miss Patterson trying to ascertain her movement
patterns and endeavouring to determine whether there was ever anyone
else present in the house in which she lived and conducted her
practice.
It is also clear from the history of your earlier
offences that you possess the ability to present yourself as quite
inoffensive to those to may be described as your targets, so that your
unsuspecting victims are caught unawares when you strike. I have
little doubt that on the occasions on which you did speak to Miss Patterson
you adopted the same approach, exercising significant skills in
manipulation.
Ultimately on the morning of Monday 19 April 1999,
and not long after your partner, Miss Cruz, with whom you were living
in a house at Pascoe Vale, left for work, you set out for your
victim's home. She was, it appears clear, expecting a client named
Malcolm who was suffering from depression, as those words were found
on a note in her handwriting that was subsequently located by the
police.
One of the relatively few statements that you had
made in the witness box which I accept is that you indicated in the
telephone conversations which led to the appointment being made that
you were experiencing problems in your relationship with your partner
arising from a low level of self-esteem. You stated in your evidence
that she was nice to you and responded to your concerns. This would
have been exactly the situation which you were hoping to achieve.
I have no doubt that Miss Patterson experienced no
sense of danger as she prepared for an appointment with a client who
had presented such issues and who was to see her at the innocent hour
of 9 o'clock on a Monday morning.
She almost certainly felt comfortable and secure in
the safety of her own home in a normal suburban street at that hour
and on an ordinary working day.
We are unlikely ever to know precisely what took
place upon your arrival or for how long you were present in the house
before you commenced a savage attack upon Miss Patterson. The terror
experienced by her at that moment, which you had contemplated in your
perverted imagination and for which you had carefully planned, now
became a terrible reality. You struck at her again and again, using a
knife capable of inflicting deep wounds. That weapon has never been
found.
Defensive injuries to her hands provide silent
evidence of her unsuccessful attempts to defend herself against what
must have been a sustained and determined assault.
Altogether Miss Patterson received 27 stab wounds.
Her breasts were completely cut from her body, probably, but not
necessarily, after death in a depraved act of contempt. They were
never located and it appears likely that in a further act of obscenity
they were taken as a kind of trophy.
After checking the house to ensure that there was
nothing left which might incriminate you, and collecting her handbag
and driver's licence, also presumably as trophies, you returned to
your home where you resumed your normal daily activities as if nothing
had occurred and with your urge to kill, at least temporarily, sated.
At that stage, you must have felt reasonably
confident that you were safe from detection. But you had made two
mistakes. First, although you had given the false name Malcolm and had
provided Miss Patterson with a false telephone number, the number was,
in fact, that of a student who you had engaged to do labouring work
for you.
Second, although you appear to have partially
searched the premises, you had not seen Miss Patterson's diary which
was underneath some other items on a couch in the living room. It
contained a reference to the appointment and, importantly, the
incriminating telephone number. Not surprisingly, when the
investigating police members became aware of your possible connection
with that number, you quickly came under suspicion. You were arrested
and a search of your house was conducted, in the course of which
important evidence that led to your conviction was found.
As this summary suggests, there is much that is
unknown concerning the selection of your victim, the preparations
which you undertook to gain access to her and exactly what took place
when you arrived at her home.
However, the information that has emerged enables
the finding to be made beyond reasonable doubt, in my opinion, that
you regarded Nicole Patterson as nothing more than prey to be
entrapped and killed. Her life, youth and personal qualities assumed
importance in your mind only by reason of the sense of satisfaction
and power which you experienced in taking them from her.
For the normal decent members of this community, it
is difficult to comprehend that anyone could have acted as you did.
There is absolutely nothing in the circumstances which could
conceivably be regarded as extenuating in any possible way. You are
reasonably intelligent and cannot be described as suffering any mental
illness as that term is currently understood. You did not act
impulsively or in a state of high emotion, whether engendered by some
external incident or otherwise, or whilst you were affected by alcohol
or drugs. Rather, you carried out your crime with remorseless
deliberation and after careful manipulation of the situation, in full
understanding of the significance of your actions. Your level of
personal culpability must be regarded, accordingly, as extremely high.
Viewed from the perspective of the community which
this Court represent, your offence constitutes a profoundly serious
example of the most serious crime known to our society. That degree of
seriousness and the unequivocal denunciation of conduct of the kind in
which you engaged must be reflected in the response of this Court.
You have breached the most fundamental principle
upon which any decent society must be based; the sanctity of the life
of each of those who dwell peacefully in it. In so doing, I have no
doubt that you have increased significantly the regrettably
understandable level of fear experienced, I would suggest, by almost
every woman in this society that she may become the victim of sexual
violence. The Court in a case such as the present one must, through
the sentences that is impose, assert commitment to this principle and
make it perfectly clear that such behaviour will not be tolerated. The
courts must endeavour to deter those who may be inclined to act in
this way.
I have read the victim-impact statements which have
been made by a number of the members of the deceased's friends and
family, and once again found myself deeply saddened by the complex
range of emotions which are experienced by people in their position as
they endeavour to come to terms with the enormity of what has happened.
It is, I think, the almost inevitable consequence of the commission of
such a crime that there will be some who will be so deeply affected
that they may never recover. Others will cope one way or another and
more or less adequately, but the lives of all who are close to the
victim will be irrevocably changed. They too are appropriately
designated as victims.
With respect to the victim-impact statements I
repeat comments that I made not that long ago in R v. Beckett,
unreported, 20 August 1998:
"The introduction of such statements was not, as
I see it, intended to effect any change in the sentencing principles
which govern the exercise of discretion by a sentencing judge. What
such statements do is to introduce in a more specific way factors
which a Court would ordinarily have considered in a broader context.
They constitute a reminder of what might be described as the human
impact of crime. They draw to the attention of the judge, who would,
of necessity, have to consider the possible and probable
consequences of criminal behaviour, not only its significance to
society in general but the actual effect of a specific crime upon
those who have been intimately affected by it. The statements
provide an opportunity for those whose lives are often tragically
altered by criminal behaviour to draw to the court's attention the
damage and sense of anguish which has been created and which can
often be of very long duration. To that extent, they relate to an
aspect of the criminal law to which reference is not often made.
They play their part in achieving what might be termed social and
individual rehabilitation. Rehabilitation, in this sense, is not
perceived from the perspective of the offender, but from that of
those persons who have sustained loss and damage by reason of the
commission of an offence. To that extent, statements of this kind
place the crime in a wider and yet paradoxically more specific
context to be considered by a judge when imposing sentence. This
notion of social rehabilitation to which I have referred is one that
I do not believe has been accorded anything approaching significant
recognition as an identifiable underlying object of the criminal
justice system. It seems to me that the process of social and
personal recovery which we attempt to achieve in order to ameliorate
the consequences of crime can be impeded or facilitated by the
response of the courts. The imposition of a sentence often
constitutes both a practical and ritual completion of a protracted
painful period. If the balancing of values represented by the system
is perceived as just, the process of recovery will be assisted. If
not, there will be created within the minds of those directly
affected by the crime, and the wider community generally, a sense of
injustice and hurt and of the failure of the system that may never
be removed."
At a fundamental level, as human beings, you
present for us the awful, threatening and unanswerable question - how
did you come to be as you are?
Accordingly, I now turn to your personal
background.
I note that you have an appalling criminality
history, involving repeated acts of sexual violence and which extends
over approximately 30 years. I do not think that I need set out the
detail of the various crimes which you have committed in these remarks.
It is sufficient for present purposes, I think, to state that you have
admitted 16 prior convictions involving 6 court appearances, between
27 March 1972 and 11 November 1994.
However, I will append the presentment on which
they are set out, and the sentencing remarks of three of the four
County Court judges before whom you appeared, to the written version
of these remarks. Unfortunately, although extensive searches have been
made, I have been unable to locate the remarks of Judge Lazarus who
dealt with you in 1980.
All of the offences were sexually related or
motivated. A number of them involved physical violence and use of a
knife. On three separate appearances you were sentenced to terms of
imprisonment for the commission of rape, aggravated rape or assault
with intent to rape. On the second and third of those occasions, you
committed your offences within a very short time of your release from
custody. It appears that the only periods during which you were at
large in the community without committing offences were two periods of
approximately 12 months each during which you were subject to strict
parole conditions following your release from prison in 1992 and 1996.
However, it was not long after that form of control was lifted by the
expiration of the sentence to which it was related that you reverted
to your usual type of criminal behaviour.
I suspect that these periods simply reflect an
ability to exercise a considerable degree of control over your
underlying impulses which were then released when you considered that
it was safe to do so and they emphasize your resistance to any
rehabilitation endeavour.
I have considered the substantial amount of
material which was provided to the Court in anticipation of the
possibility that an attempt might be made to introduce evidence of
propensity in the trial. Although it was subsequently not considered
to be necessary by the prosecutor to proceed on that basis, the
various statements, transcripts and reports present a clear and
elaborate history of your background and personality.
You were born on 6 July 1953. You were the youngest
of three children born into what appears to have been a fairly normal
family. The suggestion was advanced by Mr Brustman in the course of
presenting a plea on your behalf that the family environment may not
have been as unproblematic as it appears from the various reports in
the material. However, he did not contend there was anything in that
environment that could provide a plausible explanation for your early
development of significant personality problems. You attended high
school and left at the age of 17 years after completing Form 5. You
later obtained your HSC whilst in custody. It is apparent that you are
intelligent and there has never been any suggestion, as I understand
the situation, that you have been the victim of neglect or abuse.
The genesis of your impulse to attack and sexually
assault females can only be the subject of speculation, but it was
recognized at a quite early stage. There are constant references to
the danger which you pose to potential victims in the documents. Dr
Bartholomew, a recognized expert in the area, reported, for example,
in 1974:
"I am reasonably certain that this youth has a
serious psycho-sexual problem, that he is using the technique of
denial as a coping device and this he is to be seen as potentially
dangerous."
That potential has been repeatedly demonstrated
over the years.
You are now 47 years with a deeply entrenched
desire to engage in sexually violent behaviour. In this context, I
have referred to your criminal history, but I note that the member of
the counsel who represented you in the County Court in 1974 informed
the sentencing judge of an incident in 1968 when you would have been
only 14 years of age and in which you attacked and wounded a female
neighbour with a knife. I understand that you appeared before the
Children's Court in relation to that matter and were placed on
probation for a period of 18 months.
Whether or not the situation may have been
different had there been available at that time the early intervention
programs which are now conducted must remain a matter of idle
conjecture. In any event, the position with which I am confronted is
patently clear. You have committed an horrendous crime in
circumstances meriting the imposition of a sentence of imprisonment
for life.
There is absolutely nothing in the material before
the Court to suggest that the serious risk which you pose would
diminish other than perhaps as a consequence of physical infirmity
associated with age. Setting to one side, your categorization under
the law as a serious sexual offender and the obligation imposed by
legislation to regard the protection of the public as the paramount
sentencing consideration in your situation, commonsense would dictate
that this must be the case.
You have not responded in anything remotely
approaching an appropriate fashion to sentences of imprisonment,
psychiatric treatment or community supervision. Realistically
considered, the prospects of your eventual rehabilitation must be
regarded as so close to hopeless that they can be effectively
discounted. There is no indication whatever that you have experienced
any sense of remorse for what you have done, and I doubt that you are
capable of any such human response.
I have had regard to the sentences which have been
imposed by the Court over recent years upon persons who have committed
the crime of murder in circumstances of sexually motivated violence.
I have considered the judgment of the Court of
Criminal Appeal in R v. Denyer [1995] 1 V.R. 186 and those of
the Court of Appeal in R v. Coulston [1977] 2 V.R. 446 and R
v. Lowe [1977] 2 V.R. 465 which were all cases in which no minimum
term was fixed by the sentencing judge.
When regard is had to the seriousness of the crime
which you committed and the other sentencing considerations to which I
have adverted, including your high level of culpability, the nature of
the offence which you committed, the need to protect the community
from the risk that you will continue to present for the foreseeable
future, the total lack of remorse and the absence of any significant
prospect of rehabilitation, only one course can sensibly be seen to
remain. You must as a consequence of the commission of the terrible
crime which has brought you before this Court be removed permanently
from the society upon whose female members you have preyed for over 30
years. I do not consider that it would be appropriate to fix a minimum
term in your case.
The sentence of the Court is that you be imprisoned
for the rest of your natural life and without the opportunity for
release on parole.
I declare that the period of 489 days that you have
undergone as pre-sentence detention be reckoned as having been served
under the sentence hereby imposed and I direct that this declaration
and its details be entered in the records of the Court.
*****
APPENDIX A
COUNT - And the Director of Public Prosecutions further
presents that the said
PETER NORRIS DUPAS
Was previously convicted at the Magistrates' Court at
Oakleigh on the 27th day of March, 1972 of
Being found on premises without lawful excuse
and was sentenced to pay a fine of $50 in default to be
imprisoned for a period of 14 days.
COUNT - And the Director of Public Prosecutions further
presents that the said
PETER NORRIS DUPAS
Was previously convicted at the Magistrates' Court at
Dromana on the 2nd day of April, 1974 of
Loitering with the intent to commit a felony;
Behaving in an offensive manner in a public place
and was sentenced to pay a fine of $100 in default to be
imprisoned for a period of 20 days on the 1st charge, the matter
having been found proven the charge was adjourned to a date not
exceeding one month on the 2nd charge.
COUNT - And the Director of Public Prosecutions further
presents that the said
PETER NORRIS DUPAS
Was previously convicted at the County Court at Melbourne
on the 1st day of July, 1974 of
Rape, housebreaking and stealing;
Housebreaking; and
Housebreaking and stealing
and was sentenced to be imprisoned for a period of 9
years in relation to the first count and was sentenced to be
imprisoned for a period of 6 months in relation to each of counts 2
and 3 such sentences to be served concurrently with each other and
concurrently with the sentence imposed in relation to the first count
making a total effective sentence of 9 years and he was ordered to
serve a minimum of 5 years before being eligible for parole.
COUNT - And the Director of Public Prosecutions further
presents that the said
PETER NORRIS DUPAS
Was previously convicted at the County Court at Melbourne
on the 2nd day of June, 1980 of
Rape;
Assault with intent to rape (3 counts);
Malicious wounding;
Assault with intent to rob; and
Indecent assault
and was sentenced to be imprisoned for a period of 5
years in relation to the first count, sentenced to be imprisoned for a
period of 4 years in relation to the second count, with 3½ years of
such sentence to be served concurrently with the sentence imposed on
the first count and was sentenced to be imprisoned for a period of 3
years in relation to each of counts 3 and 4 with 2½ years of such
sentences to be served concurrently with each other and concurrently
with the sentence imposed in relation to the first count and was
sentenced to be imprisoned for a period of 3 years in relation to the
fifth count such sentence to be served concurrently with the sentence
imposed on the first count and was sentenced to be imprisoned for a
period of 2 years in relation to the sixth count such sentence to be
served concurrently with the sentence imposed on the first count and
was sentenced to be imprisoned for a period of 12 months in relation
to the seventh count such sentence to be served concurrently with the
sentence imposed on the first count making a total effective sentence
of 6½ years and he was ordered to serve a minimum of 5 years before
being eligible for parole.
COUNT - And the Director of Public Prosecutions further
presents that the said
PETER NORRIS DUPAS
Was previously convicted at the County Court at Melbourne
on the 3rd day of June, 1985 of
Aggravated rape;
Indecent assault with aggravating circumstances
and was sentenced to be imprisoned for a period of 12
years in relation to the first count, sentenced to be imprisoned for a
period of 6 years in relation to the second count such sentence to be
served concurrently with the sentence imposed on the first count and
was ordered to serve a minimum of 10 years before being eligible for
parole.
COUNT - And the Director of Public Prosecutions further
presents that the said
PETER NORRIS DUPAS
Was previously convicted at the County Court at Bendigo
on the 21st day of November, 1994 of
False imprisonment
and was sentenced to be imprisoned for a period of 3
years and 9 months and he was ordered to serve a minimum of 2 years
and 9 months before being eligible for parole.
APPENDIX B
R. v. PETER NORRIS DUPAS
Monday 30 September 1974
1. Peter Norris Dupas, you were found guilty at your trial
on one count of rape, one count of housebreaking and stealing, and one
count of housebreaking with intent to commit a felony. Leaving aside
the so-called pack rapes, this was one of the worst rapes that could
be imagined. You raped a young married woman who was previously
unknown to you in her own home and on her own bed. You invaded the
sanctity of her home by a false story about your car having broken
down, relying upon her willingness to help in order to gain admission.
You threatened her with a knife, you tied her up with cord, you struck
her when she tried to resist, and, worst of all, you threatened to
harm her baby when she tried to resist. This was no sudden impulse,
because you must have left home that morning armed with a knife and
provided with the cord to bind your victim. One prior conviction was
alleged. In 1972 you were convicted of being found on premises without
lawful excuse; that offence had apparently some sexual background to
it. But your counsel properly disclosed an incident in 1969 in which
you attacked and wounded a woman, living next door, with a knife. This
was not a prior. It could not be alleged as a prior, because of an
hiatus in the legislation, which has previously been pointed out by
the Courts, and so I do not take it as a prior conviction, that is to
say, as a matter which might add to the appropriate length of the
sentence, but I must have regard to it in considering whether you are
a potential danger to the community. As a consequence of this incident
in 1968, you were admitted to Larundel Hospital in October of that
year, but after a series of examinations you were discharged next day
and attended thereafter as an out-patient. I have been given a report
prepared soon after by a consultant psychiatrist, Ms Julie Jones. She
considered that on that occasion you lost normal control when pent-up
feelings of sexual needs and aggression overwhelmed you. This is in
contrast to some extent to the crime for which you now stand for
sentence, because, as I have pointed out, you set out from home
prepared for what you eventually did. In view of this history I have
obtained pre-sentence and psychiatric reports. Dr. Bartholomew
conducted a very thorough investigation, but found it difficult to
make any definite diagnostic statement in the absence of any
admissions by you. He is reasonably certain that you have a serious
psycho-sexual problem and you are to be seen as potentially dangerous.
The problem of potential danger to the community is also adverted to
in the report of a psychologist who tested you. A fortnight after the
rape you entered the homes of two women in a different suburb, using
the same false pretence as you used at Mitcham. In one house you stole
some money; in the other you did not commit a further crime; but the
jury has found you entered with intent to commit a felony, but in that
case the woman told you she was expecting her husband home shortly,
which may explain why you went no further. These further matters are
additional reasons why I am unable to accept that the rape was
committed in sudden impulse. All these offences would seem to have
been premeditated. Moreover, whilst accepting that you are
psychologically disturbed, I believe you were fully responsible for
your actions. The attempt after the rape to establish a partial alibi
helps to establish this. In view of the potential danger to the
community which you present, there is obviously no alternative but to
sentence you to a term of imprisonment. In determining what the length
of that sentence should be, I have regard not only to the seriousness
of the offences, but also to your youth, your background, the reports
I have received, the evidence of the witness who was called on your
behalf, and several references which were submitted. On the count of
rape you are sentenced to be imprisoned for nine years, and on each of
the breaking counts to six months' imprisonment, cumulative upon each
other, but each concurrent with the sentence on the first. That makes
a total of nine years, and I fix five years as the term to be served
before you become eligible for parole. Remove the prisoner.
APPENDIX C
R. v. PETER NORRIS DUPAS
Friday 28 June 1985
Before His Honour Judge Leckie
County Court
1. Peter Norris Dupas you have pleaded guilty to one count
of indecent assault with aggravating circumstances and one count of
rape with aggravating circumstances.
2. The evidence in relation to these offences is that you
went in your motor car to the beach in the vicinity of Blairgowrie,
got out of the car, taking with you a knife, with the intention of
using that knife - should the opportunity present itself - to frighten
a female so that you could have intercourse with her.
3. You went down on to the beach and this girl, Margaret
Bathman was there and you followed her round for some time and then,
coming behind her, you forced your arm across her throat and forced
her down to the ground, threatened her with the knife, and took her
bathing costume off and raped her against her will and without her
consent. It must have been a horrifying experience for her.
4. I do not go into those details just for the record,
because, on the evidence which I have had before me this morning there
seems to be a very good chance - if you were at large again - that
some other girl might suffer in the same way.
5. You have admitted prior convictions and these are of
immediate concern to me. Apart from some minor matters dealt with in
the Magistrates' Court, which apparently were sexually related, you
were convicted in July of 1974 of rape and with other offences related
to the rape, and were sentenced to a total of nine years' imprisonment
with a minimum of five years before becoming eligible for parole.
6. In June of 1980 you were convicted, amongst other
offences, of indecent assault, rape and assault with intent to rape,
and that was the occasion upon which Dr. Myers gave evidence. You were
sentenced then, with concurrencies, to a total period of six and a
half years with a minimum of five years before becoming eligible for
parole. In other words, in view of the sentence imposed on the earlier
offence of rape, it becomes clear that Judge Lazarus accepted what Dr.
Myers then told him and imposed what, on the face of it, appeared to
be a light sentence, for the purposes of seeing whether you could be
rehabilitated and could be allowed at large in the community.
7. That attempt failed miserably because, I am told, it was
within a month of your release upon parole that you committed these
present offences. One cannot help by being struck with the fact that
if the sentence which appeared to be appropriate - leaving aside the
question of rehabilitation - had been imposed, this girl would not
have suffered as she did.
8. Now, the question is what can I do? I have got that
dreadful example of what did happen in front of me. Dr. Myers puts it
that, without specific treatment, there is a strong probability of
your re-offending, that the recidivism rate in cases of your type is
between 80% and 90% or even higher and he acceded to counsel's
expression that "You carried a loaded time bomb in your pocket".
9. Consequently, I think, the question of releasing you at
this stage is not to be considered. The community, I am sure would be
both outraged and apprehensive if that were to be done. But what is
suggested is that a further attempt upon your subsequent release
should be made to give you the appropriate treatment including the
medication of Depo Provera if no other drug is then considered
effective, with of course no guarantee that even that would be
effective.
10. The situation is that I am not empowered to prescribe
conditions of parole when you are eventually released. So I have no
guarantee - even in any order that I could make - that you would
receive that treatment.
11. I accept readily that you feel remorse and that you
endeavour to overcome this enormous urge which you must have. But
quite simply, I am not prepared to run the risk of some other girl
being attacked by you in the same fashion.
12. I think the only course open to me, because I am of the
opinion that a custodial sentence is the only course open having
considered all the other alternatives, I think I can only impose what
I regard as the appropriate sentence for the offence, and apply that
in contemplation of the earlier offences because not only are these
offences accompanied by aggravating circumstances - that you carried a
knife with you an offensive weapon - but because of the prior
convictions, there are six other grounds upon which each of these
offences is accompanied by aggravated circumstances, in accordance
with the provisions of the Crimes Act. One must have sympathy for you
but the community must also be protected.
13. On the first count of indecent assault with aggravating
circumstances you are sentenced to be imprisoned for six years. On the
second count of rape with aggravating circumstances you are sentenced
to be imprisoned for twelve years. The two offences were really one, a
rolled up matter, and consequently I make those two sentences
concurrent, making a total of twelve years. I fix ten years as the
minimum term to be served before you become eligible for parole.
3. APPENDIX D
R. v. PETER NORRIS DUPAS
Monday 21 November 1994
Before His Honour Judge Hart
County Court
You have pleaded guilty to one count of false
imprisonment which occurred on 3 January of this year. On that day a
lady aged about 26 years was picnicking at Lake Eppalock. At about
11.30 a.m. she left her friends and walked some 150 metres to a public
toilet block, she entered a cubicle and removed her shorts and sat
there. As she was getting up, you entered the cubicle, forcing the
door open and wielding a knife. You were wearing a hood with eye-holes
and holding the knife towards her face. She attempted to fend off the
knife and suffered lacerations to her left hand. You kept telling her
to turn around and you were trying to force her to turn around and
face the rear, but she resisted this. You took her arm and led her out
of the cubicle and at the exit of the toilet block, unexpectedly let
her go and told her to go off.
You then entered your own car and drove away. She
alerted her friends who chased you in their car, caught you and
restrained you until the police arrived.
In your pockets you had a roll of insulation tape
and a pair of metal handcuffs. She would not have known this at the
time but no doubt had learned of these items subsequently and they
would have no doubt confirmed her worst fears that she was to be raped
and perhaps otherwise injured or even worse. Her statement indicates
that this was her state of mind during her detention and it was a very
reasonable view to hold in the circumstances.
As can only be expected, this experience has had a
terrible, immediate and lasting effect on her. Apart from her physical
lacerations, she suffered emotional and psychological detriments which
persist. She required constant counselling for some two months and
suffered nightmares, re-enacting the events which, fortunately, are
reducing in frequency. She has required sedatives for sleeping and the
need for these is again, fortunately tapering off and she has
continuing fears of certain places and circumstances. Hopefully these
problems will reduce or even abate with time but there is no way of
knowing with confidence. She may suffer from these troubles for years
or even for her life and her situation may deteriorate.
Learning of your prior convictions which I have no
doubt she has, will have been yet another factor confirming her
original fear and perhaps compounding it.
Mr. Dupas, your prior convictions and criminal
history are breathtaking.
On 1 July 1974 you were convicted of rape and
associated offences and sentenced to be imprisoned for a period of
nine years with a minimum of five years. You were released on parole
on 4 September 1979.
Very shortly after your release you offended again
in a similar manner and on 2 June 1980 you were convicted again of
rape and associated offences and violence was involved. You were
sentenced to be imprisoned for a period of six and a half years with a
minimum of five years.
You were released on 27 February 1985 and again
very shortly after release, offended in yet the same way. On 3 June
1985 you were convicted of aggravated rape and sentenced to
imprisonment for a period of twelve years with a minimum of ten.
From this sentence you were paroled in March of
1992. In this instance and uncharacteristically, there was a gap of
almost two years to this offence. This offence is not a sexual offence
nor a violent offence nor a serious violent offence as those terms are
defined and you are not subject, in this case, to the penalties
introduced by the Sentencing (Amendment) Act 1993 although you will
clearly be found to be a serious sexual offender, as defined, should
you ever be convicted of a sexual offence or a violent offence in the
future.
Whilst your motivation for this offence is a matter
proper for me to consider in assessing your moral culpability and I
infer that your motive was to commit an offence of a sexual nature, I
remind myself that no matter what the victim might have thought your
purpose was, nor what I might think your purpose was, the offence
cannot be elevated or altered thereby to an offence other than what it
is and I must sentence you for the offence of false imprisonment and
for nothing else.
That offence, especially in the following
circumstances, is nonetheless a serious and significant offence, high
on the scale of gravity of such offences. It was not spontaneous, it
was planned and you must have been watching and waiting nearby. Steps
were taken to conceal your identity, a weapon was used and other
equipment was at hand, if required. It was an offence carried out on a
single, by that I mean a lone defenceless woman in degrading
circumstances in the seclusion of an isolated toilet block when she
was separated from her friends and at your mercy. It was calculated to
and did engender terror into her mind. It involved a physical assault
and the likely consequence of using a knife eventuated. It was a
significant affront to her and a serious violation of her rights and
self-esteem. What is more, it was carried out by a person with the
prior convictions and criminal history that you have.
As was said in Veen (No. 2) [1988] HCA 14;
(1988) 33 A.Crim.R. 230 at pp.238-9:
"The antecedent criminal history of an offender
is a factor which may be taken into account in determining the
sentence to be imposed but it cannot be given such weight as to lead
to the imposition of a penalty which is disproportionate to the
gravity of the instant offence. To do so would be to impose a fresh
penalty for past offences, see the DPP and Ottowell. The
antecedent criminal history is relevant, however, to show whether
the instant offence is an uncharacteristic aberration or whether the
offender has manifested in his commission of the instant offence a
continuing attitude of disobedience to the law. In the latter case,
retribution, deterrence and protection of society may all indicate
that a more severe penalty is warranted. It is legitimate to take
account of the antecedent criminal history when it illuminates the
moral culpability of the offender in the instant case or shows his
dangerous propensity or shows a need to impose condign punishment to
deter the offender or other offenders from committing further
offences of a like kind."
2. Deterrence, both special and general looms large as a
sentencing consideration in this matter, but again I remind myself
that you are not subject to the provisions of the Sentencing (Amendment)
Act 1993 and that I must punish you only for the offence charged and
not for what I think you were going to do, but did not.
3. The only matters that I can think of which tend, to some
extent, to mitigate the gravity of the offence and your criminality
are that it was mercifully short. That is, the detention was over in
minutes, although I am sure it seemed a much longer period for the
girl and that you released her voluntarily and not because you were
disturbed or prevented from continuing. I do not know why you did this
but it is an important matter in your favour, indeed, a very important
matter.
4. By ceasing when you did, although you had already
offended as I have outlined, you spared the girl the terrible fate you
originally intended and which she expected and you acted in such a
manner as to give rise to at least the hope and perhaps the prospect
that realisation of the significance of what you are about to do
activated your conscience in such a way as had not happened on the
occasions of your previous offences. I cannot, therefore, preclude the
possibility of rehabilitation notwithstanding that your history
suggests otherwise.
5. You are aged 41 years, you have come from a good family.
You were a poor student, leaving school at Form 5. You then completed
an apprenticeship but soon thereafter at age 21, received the first
prison term that I have spoken of.
6. Whilst serving your last prison term, you married and,
on release, lived with your wife happily until about six months before
this offence. You completed your parole but did express fears to your
Parole Officers that upon completion, you would be left without the
supervision and assistance you needed and here, again, is perhaps a
glimmer of conscience shining through.
7. Whilst you have been in custody awaiting trial you have
twice attempted suicide and you had made similar attempts in 1985 and
1986. I wrote this at the time when I originally prepared my reasons,
at that stage you were currently prescribed anti-depressant tablets.
8. Any time you spend in prison will no doubt be "done hard",
as they say, because of the nature of the offences and because of the
prison culture.
9. You pleaded guilty to this offence at an earlyish time
and thereby spared the victim the trauma of a trial and I take into
account that plea in reduction of what might otherwise have been the
appropriate sentence and the plea, is again, consistent with the hints
of conscience that I have referred to.
10. I bear in mind s.10 of the Sentencing Act and the need
to scale down, as it were, the appropriate sentences to take account
of the abolition of remissions. I have sought to find some points of
reference or guides from decided cases as to the proper sentence in
this case. The nearest I can find is the case of Lakeland (unreported)
19 November 1993 referred to by counsel. There are, of course, many
differences between your case and that of Lakeland. For example,
the period of imprisonment in Lakeland was much longer.
Lakeland went on to commit a number of sexual offences on his victim.
He did not plead guilty and in any event I do not know the details of
his prior convictions. Nonetheless, that case has been of some
assistance in my sentencing task as has been the case of Rizzo &
Ors. 21 June 1994 to some extent.
11. Mr. Dupas, I sentence you to be imprisoned for a period
of three years and nine months. I fix a non-parole period of two years
and nine months and, although I am not clear whether there is any
balance owing, as it were, to the Parole Board, but so that there is
no doubt about it, I order that the sentence be served cumulatively
upon the balance, if any, of any sentence ordered to be served by the
Adult Parole Board.
12. I declare pursuant to s.18 that the period of 323 days
be reckoned as already served pursuant to this sentence and I will
cause the records of the court to be endorsed accordingly.
R v Dupas [2004] VSC 281 (16 August 2004)
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF VICTORIA
AT MELBOURNE
CRIMINAL DIVISION
No. 1503 of 2003
THE QUEEN v PETER NORRIS DUPAS
JUDGE:
KAYE J.
HIS HONOUR:
Peter Norris Dupas, you have been found guilty by
the jury empanelled upon your trial in this Court of the murder of
Margaret Josephine Maher on 4 October 1997 at Somerton.
You are already serving a term of life imprisonment,
without a non-parole period, imposed on you by order of this Court on
22 August 2000. Notwithstanding that any sentence which I now impose
will not have any practical effect on your disposition, nevertheless
the process of sentencing you for the murder of Margaret Maher should
not be considered to be an academic or futile exercise.
The functions and purposes of sentencing are not
confined to questions of punishment and deterrence of you as the
offender. Importantly, they also include the denunciation by this
Court of your conduct, and in particular the public condemnation of
the intentional taking by you of the life of Margaret Josephine Maher.
Secondly, the process of sentencing involves the imposition by this
Court of a just punishment for what is a very serious offence, and the
vindication of the rights of the victim, who is deceased, and of those
who are left behind to struggle with the grief and trauma occasioned
by her violent murder. Thirdly, in a case such as this, the principle
of general deterrence is an important consideration in the
determination of an appropriate sentence.
The Crown case against you was circumstantial. It
is not therefore possible to draw conclusions as to the precise
circumstances in which Margaret Maher met her end. It is clear from
the verdict that the jury accepted that Margaret Maher was last seen
alive when she departed from the Safeway supermarket at Broadmeadows
Town Shopping Centre at 12.20 a.m. on 4 October 1997, and was seen
walking in the direction of Pascoe Vale Road. The circumstances in
which her body was found located by the side of Cliffords Road,
Somerton shortly before 2.00 p.m. on the same day indicate that you
had murdered her at a different location, and then dumped and left her
mutilated body where it was found.
The evidence was that you commenced work on that
day at 6.38 a.m. The pathologist who attended the scene and later
conducted the autopsy, Dr Lynch, placed the likely time of death
between 9.00 p.m. on 3 October and 7.00 a.m. on 4 October. It is
therefore apparent that you murdered Margaret Maher in the early hours
of 4 October after you either met her or intercepted her, probably
while she was travelling along or in the vicinity of the Hume Highway,
as she often did.
The evidence of Dr Lynch was that there were three
possible causes of death, namely, drug toxicity, advanced coronary
artery disease, and the application of compression to the neck. By its
verdict the jury accepted that death resulted from compression of the
neck. The jury came to that view based on injuries which were found on
the neck, considered in the context of other injuries to the deceased,
including a wound caused by blunt trauma over the right eyebrow and
lacerations to the right arm. In addition, either shortly before or
immediately after death, there was a stab wound inflicted to the
deceased's left wrist with a sharp implement.
Whatever the precise circumstances, it is clear
that the jury accepted that you compressed the deceased's neck with
the intention either to kill her or to cause her really serious injury.
There has been no suggestion that there was any legal justification
for you killing Margaret Maher.
After you murdered her, you then mutilated the
deceased's body in the manner which has already been described to the
jury, and left it by the side of a road, in a desolate place, as a
disgusting display of loathing for the deceased and contempt for her
dignity. Not content with what you had done to her in life, you robbed
her of her dignity in death. Those actions are, I consider, an
eloquent insight into the unmitigated evil which actuated you to kill
Margaret Maher and to behave as you did.
The offence for which you have been found guilty is
the most serious crime known to our legal system. It involved the
intentional deprivation by you of the life of another human being. You
have violated the most sacred and unique right any person has, namely,
the right to live his or her life as they wish. Margaret Maher had the
same right to life as each and every other member of our community.
You have taken that from her, and have thereby done the greatest wrong
known to our law. Your act has also deprived those who loved her of
their daughter, sister and mother. Victim impact statements have been
produced to me and I have read them. Those statements are a salutary
and specific reminder of the trauma, grief and anguish your actions
have caused, and will undoubtedly continue to cause for the indefinite
future, to those left struggling with their bereavement for the woman
you so cruelly murdered.
You have an appalling background of previous
criminality. The hallmark of your previous convictions involves wanton
and despicable acts of violence to defenceless women. I have had the
opportunity to read the reasons for sentence in three of those cases,
as they have been appended to the sentence pronounced by Vincent J
when he sentenced you, in August 2000, for the murder of Nicole
Patterson (R v Dupas [2000] VSC 356). They are a chilling
account of some of your criminal history. It is relevant for me to
briefly summarise some of the details of your record. In short, your
history reveals the following:
(1) On 25 July 1974 (30 years ago) you were
convicted at the County Court at Melbourne of rape, housebreaking
with intent to commit a felony, and housebreaking and stealing. A
total effective sentence was imposed on you of nine years'
imprisonment with a minimum term of five years. The sentencing judge
described it as "one of the worst rapes that could be imagined". You
broke into the house of a defenceless young married woman,
threatened her with a knife, tied her up with cord, and when she
tried to resist, threatened to harm her baby. The offence was
clearly well planned by you. I note that the eminent psychiatrist,
the late Dr Alan Bartholemew, reported in 1974 that you had a
serious psychosexual problem, and that he considered you to be
potentially dangerous.
(2) Shortly after your release you offended again.
On 28 February 1980 you were convicted at the County Court of rape,
assault with intent to rape (3 counts), malicious wounding, assault
with intent to rob, and indecent assault. The reasons for your
sentence have not been located. However, at your next appearance,
the judge noted that the court which sentenced you in 1980 was
persuaded by a psychiatrist to impose what might be regarded as a
merciful sentence in the hope that you had some prospects of
rehabilitation. Accordingly a sentence of six years and six months
was imposed with a minimum of five years.
(3) The hope for your rehabilitation proved to be
forlorn. Within one month of your release from prison, you offended
yet again. On 28 June 1985 you were convicted at the County Court of
aggravated rape and indecent assault with aggravating circumstances.
The court imposed upon you a total effective sentence of 12 years'
imprisonment with a minimum term of ten years. The offences occurred
when you drove to a beach near Blairgowrie, got out of the car, and
took a knife with you. You noticed a girl, followed her for some
time, attacked her, forced her to the ground, threatened her with a
knife, and raped her. The sentencing judge remarked that it must
have been a horrifying experience for your unfortunate victim.
(4) You were paroled in March 1992. Two years
later, in January 1994, you offended again. On 18 August 1994 you
were convicted at the County Court at Bendigo of one count of false
imprisonment and were sentenced to be imprisoned for three years and
nine months, with a minimum of two years and nine months. The
offence occurred at Lake Eppalock. A woman picnicking there, went to
a public toilet. You apparently followed her there, wearing a hood
with eye holes. You entered her cubicle with a knife. She suffered
lacerations to her hand when she attempted to fend off the knife.
You took her arm and led her out of the cubicle. Unexpectedly you
let her go and told her to go off. She alerted her friends who
chased you in their car and caught you.
As I understand it you were released on parole in
1996. The present offence occurred on 4 October 1997. It occurred in
the context of a man who has displayed an abominable and despicable
disposition to repeatedly violate the basic rights of women in our
community. Insofar as the Sentencing Act requires me to take
into account your character and background, this is by far the most
outstanding and salient feature of it. Secondly, your record of
recurrent recidivism over three decades demonstrates that there is no
hope at all for your rehabilitation into society.
As I noted at the outset of these remarks, you were
further convicted in August 2000 for the murder of Nicole Patterson on
19 April 1999. You were arrested for that crime on 22 April 1999. In
the present trial some of the evidence given in your previous trial
was adduced again. The murder of Nicole Patterson was brutal and cold
blooded. You had planned it for some time. You murdered her in her own
home, when she had no prospect at all of defending herself. The
evidence relating to that offence was adduced because of the striking
similarity between the mutilation of Margaret Maher after her death
and the mutilation which was inflicted on Nicole Patterson after you
murdered her. The evidence of your further offending, and your
conviction for it, although a subsequent and not a previous conviction,
is relevant to your character; R v Coulston [1997] 2 VR 446 at
459; R v Poulton [1974] VR 716. It is also relevant because it
cannot be said that, notwithstanding your previous violent past, the
present murder for which I now sentence you was in some way or other a
"diversion" from your usual conduct. In addition, the murder by you of
Nicole Patterson, only 18 months after you had murdered Margaret Maher,
makes it plain that you lacked the slightest recognition of the
enormity of what you had done to Margaret Maher, yet alone feel even
the faintest twinge of remorse for it.
In view of your appalling criminal history, and in
view of the particularly serious nature of the crime for which you
have been convicted, it is only appropriate that you be sentenced to
life imprisonment. Even if the murder of Nicole Patterson had never
occurred, I would have no hesitation in imposing a term of life
imprisonment upon you. Bearing in mind the principles discussed in
R v Coulston (above), R v Denyer [1995] 1 VR 186, and R
v Lowe [1997] 2 VR 465, I also consider that I should not fix a
minimum term. It is clear, both in the present case and from your
previous convictions for rape and like offences, that your offending
is connected with a need by you to vindicate a perverted and sadistic
hatred of women and a contempt for them and their right to live. As
such the present offence must be characterised as being in one of the
most serious categories of murders which come before this Court. You
intentionally killed a harmless, defenceless woman who, like all your
other victims, had no prospect of protecting herself against you. At
the time you committed that offence, you had, over almost three
decades, terrorised women in this State. You have repeatedly violated
a central norm of a decent civilised society. Your conduct in the
present case is without mitigation or palliation. There has been no
recognition by you of your wrongdoing. Rather, you repeated the same
offence, with even more brutality, 18 months after murdering Margaret
Maher. Based on your repeated violent offences, and on the gravity of
this offence, there is no prospect of your rehabilitation. Nothing was
advanced on your behalf to reflect that there is even the faintest
glimmer of hope for you. Even if there were, any considerations of
rehabilitation must, in this case, be subordinated to the gravity of
your offending, the need for the imposition of a just punishment, and
the principle of general deterrence. All those circumstances combine,
in my view, not only to justify, but also to require that I do not fix
a minimum term.
In addition, at the request of the Crown I declare
you a serious offender for the purpose of Part 2A of the Sentencing
Act 1991. That declaration will be entered in the records of the
Court under s.6F of the Act.
I also grant an order permitting retention of the
sample of DNA taken from the prisoner pursuant to s.464ZFB of the
Crimes Act 1958.
The sentence of the Court is that, for the murder
of Margaret Josephine Maher at Somerton on 4 October 1997, you be
imprisoned for the rest of your natural life and without the
opportunity for release on parole. Accordingly, the Court sentences
Peter Norris Dupas to be imprisoned for the rest of his natural life
and without the opportunity for release on parole.