In March, Pene sought a sentence indication in the Whangārei District Court on six charges of driving while disqualified, and single charges of failing to stop, failing to remain stopped, driving while impaired with drugs, refusing blood, and resisting arrest.
In his sentence indication, Judge Keith de Ridder said he would be prepared to consider a sentence of home detention if a suitable address was available given Pene's health situation.
Pene accepted the sentence indication, pleaded guilty to all charges, and appeared in court on a wheelchair last Friday for sentencing.
Judge de Ridder imposed a sentence of six months' home detention on all charges, saying there was no point in imposing any other sentence including imprisonment which otherwise would have been ordered.
He fixed a minimum starting point of 20 months in jail with a three-month deduction for guilty pleas.
There were multiple instances of offending while on bail, failing to stop, and two charges of driving while disqualified involved either drug or alcohol-impaired driving.
Given the repeated driving offences, he said no sentence less than jail would be sufficient to mark the seriousness of Pene's offending.
"However, acknowledging the difficult health situation you face, I would be prepared in the particular circumstances of your case to consider home detention if there was a suitable address," he ruled.
Pene was disqualified from driving for 18 months. He is indefinitely disqualified at the moment.