The general deadline for lodging a severity appeal is 28 days after the sentencing date.
However, that deadline may be extended to 3 months if there were good reasons for the delay eg you were ill and hospitalised or were otherwise unable to lodge the appeal within the general timeframe.
The appeal hearing will normally occur within a month of the appeal being filed.
At the hearing, the District Court Judge will read a ‘sentencing bundle’ tendered by the prosecution.
That bundle will have a cover sheet stating the charge/s, the penalty imposed by the Local Court, the applicable maximum penalties etc.
The bundle will also contain the Court Attendance Notice, various court papers and any reports and/or character references tendered in the Local Court.
After that bundle is read, your criminal lawyer can:
- Call you to the witness stand and ask you questions, eg why you need to remain conviction-free or have your licence back; and/or
- Make verbal submissions on your behalf; and/or
- Tender any additional materials on your behalf eg additional character references, reports etc.
You don’t have to take the witness stand if you feel uncomfortable or nervous; your criminal lawyer can do the talking for you.
Also, some Judges like to hear from people on the witness stand whereas others prefer to hear from your criminal lawyer only.
It pays to know the Judge and what he or she likes.
The Judge will then decide whether to give you a lesser penalty or to confirm the Local Court penalty.
The good thing is that the Judge cannot give you a worse penalty unless he or she warns you that this is about to occur and you nevertheless continue with the appeal.
This is called a ‘Parker warning’.
Experienced criminal lawyers will always know when the Judge is giving a ‘Parker warning’ and will immediately obtain your instructions to withdraw the appeal.
So in practice, you can only get the same sentence or a better sentence.