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Supreme Court of Samoa |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF SAMOA
Police v Tuamoheloa [2026] WSSC 17 (2 April 2026)
| Case name: | Police v Tuamoheloa |
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| Citation: | |
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| Decision date: | 2nd April 2026 |
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| Parties: | POLICE (Informant) v STEVEN TUAMOHELOA a.k.a KING AFA a.k.a TOE, male of Leone and American Samoa. |
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| Hearing date(s): | 25th March 2026 |
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| File number(s): | 2026-00016 |
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| Jurisdiction: | Supreme Court – Criminal |
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| Place of delivery: | Mulinuu |
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| Judge(s): | Justice Leiataualesa Daryl Clarke |
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| On appeal from: | |
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| Order: | Bail is denied. This matter will be further mentioned before me to Wednesday, 8th April at 12:00pm for prosecution to identify a hearing date within two months of today’s date. This matter can then be placed
in the Call-over list on standby for that week for setting down for hearing. |
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| Representation: | T. Roma for Prosecution |
| | Q. Sauaga for Accused |
| Catchwords: | bail, risk of offending, narcotics, marijuana. |
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| Words and phrases: | denial of bail, real and significant risk of the accused offending whilst on bail. |
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| Legislation cited: | |
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| Cases cited: | Police v Faualo [2024] WSSC 115; Police v Foai [2018] WSSC 99; Lam v Police [2018] WSSC 119; Police v Pule [2017] WSSC 127; Police v Barlow [2017] WSSC 103; Police v Leleimalefaga [2017] WSSC 121; Police v Ah Ching [2016] WSSC 31; Police v Posala [2015] WSSC 92; B v Police (No. 2) [2001] 1 NZLR 31. |
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| Summary of decision: | |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF SAMOA
HELD AT MULINUU.
BETWEEN
P O L I C E
Informant
AND
STEVEN TUAMOHELOA a.k.a KING AFA a.k.a TOE, male of Leone and American Samoa.
Accused
Counsels: T. Roma for Prosecution
Q. Sauaga for Accused
Bail Hearing: 25 March 2026
Ruling: 02 April 2026
BAIL RULING
Relevant Law:
Approach to Application for Bail:
“8. In Police v Posala [2015] WSSC 92, this Court, on the basis of New Zealand authorities, said that in dealing with a bail application, the real question to be considered is whether there is just cause for the continued detention of the accused in custody. In considering that question, the Court must take into account:
(c) whether there is a risk that the accused may offend while on bail; and
[9] As it appears from Police v Posala [2015] WSSC 92, paras 3, 17; Police v Ah Ching [2016] WSSC 31, para 12, it is not just any type of risk that will be enough to justify denying bail to the accused. The risk must be a ‘real and significant’ one and it is for the prosecution to establish that such a risk exists. Whether such a risk exists requires a proper inference to be drawn from proved facts.”
Discussion:
T13. Leai sau faamtalaga aua e leai se mea e tau nana ai fua, o a’u maluaga sa ou faatauina e fai ai la’u galuega.”
- Although the accused has no prior convictions and is presumed innocent until proven guilty, this does not by itself lead to the inevitable conclusion that there does not exist a real and significant risk of offending. The caution statement is potentially highly persuasive evidence of the accused guilt, at least in respect of his possession of marijuana. Directed not to offend, the accused has been charged with similar serious offending, for which he has made an alleged admission, and which involves an allegedly substantial quantity of that narcotic. In these circumstances, I am satisfied that there is a real and significant risk of the accused offending whilst on bail.
- Having reached this conclusion, I am also not satisfied that bail conditions can sufficiently mitigate the risk of offending by the accused. While the application for bail will be denied at this juncture, I am deeply concerned with the risk of the accused remaining in custody for a prolonged period. He has been in custody since about 31st December 2025, a period of three months. The trial for this matter is not until 2nd November, 7 months time. This means he will have been in custody for some 10 months or so by the time of his trial. Prosecution also too often fail to proceed. Such prolonged detention and delay may be unfair and inconsistent with the accused’s presumption of innocence. As such, prosecution is to identify an existing prosecution fixture within the next two months that can be vacated for this matter to instead be listed for hearing. In my view, while I am satisfied that just cause exists for the continued detention of the accused for a further period, beyond that two months, delay will weigh against continued just cause for the denial of bail.
Result:
JUSTICE CLARKE
[1] Section 99(a), 99(b) and 99(d), Criminal Procedure Act 2026.
[2] B v Police (No. 2) [2001] 1 NZLR 31 at [11].
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