Bills Digest No. 68 2003-04
ASIO Legislation Amendment Bill 2003
WARNING:
This Digest was prepared for debate. It reflects the legislation as introduced
and does not canvass subsequent amendments. This Digest does not have
any official legal status. Other sources should be consulted to determine
the subsequent official status of the Bill.
CONTENTS
Passage History
Purpose
Background
Main Provisions
Concluding Comments
Endnotes
Contact Officer & Copyright Details
Passage History
ASIO
Legislation Amendment Bill 2003
Date Introduced:
27 November 2003
House:
House of Representatives
Portfolio:
Attorney-General
Commencement:
The day after Royal Assent
To amend Division 3, Part III of the Australian Security
Intelligence Organisation Act 1979 (the ASIO Act) to:
-
extend the maximum period during which a person using an interpreter
can be held for questioning under an ASIO warrant
-
require
the subject of an ASIO warrant to surrender their passport/s and make
them criminally liable if they leave Australia
without permission from the Director-General of Security while a warrant
is in force
-
create new offences relating to the primary or secondary disclosure
of information about ASIO warrants or operational information.
Background
The Australian Security Intelligence Organisation Legislation
Amendment (Terrorism) Bill 2002, giving ASIO new and unprecedented powers
to question and detain, was introduced into the Australian Parliament
in March 2002. It was the subject of two parliamentary committee reports
and amendment in both Chambers. However, it was laid aside by the House
of Representatives after the Senate insisted on amendments with which
the House would not agree.
The Australian Security Intelligence Organisation Legislation
Amendment (Terrorism) Bill 2002 [No.2] was introduced into the House of
Representatives in March 2003. After considerable debate and some amendment
it finally passed both Houses in June 2003 and commenced operation on
23 July 2003.
The Australian Security Intelligence Organisation
Legislation Amendment (Terrorism) Act 2003 inserted Division 3, Part
III into the ASIO Act. In early November 2003, the Attorney-General said
he had asked for a report on ‘shortcomings’ of the ASIO legislation.(1)
The ASIO Legislation Amendment Bill 2003 (the Bill) proposes to amend
Division 3.
Background information on the Australian Security
Intelligence Organisation Legislation Amendment (Terrorism) Act 2003,
can be found in:
For convenience, warrants issued under Division 3 (section
34D) of the ASIO Act are referred to as ‘ASIO warrants’ in this Digest.
The Bill proposes to increase the amount of time during
which a person can be questioned (with or without detention) under an
ASIO warrant if that person uses an interpreter because they are not fluent
in English or have a physical disability. A brief description of the current
questioning and detention provisions and the interpreter provisions in
the ASIO Act is set out below.
The ASIO Act enables ASIO to obtain a warrant from an
‘issuing authority’(4) for the questioning of an adult when
there are reasonable grounds for believing that issuing the warrant will
substantially assist the collection of intelligence that is important
in relation to a terrorism offence.(5) In other words, ASIO
warrants for adults can involve both suspects and non-suspects. The warrant
may also enable the person to be detained—if there are reasonable grounds
for believing that the person may alert someone involved in a terrorism
offence, may not appear before the prescribed authority or may destroy
or damage evidence.
ASIO warrants for questioning and detention may also
be issued in relation to children aged between 16 and 18 years but only
if it is likely that the child will commit or has committed a terrorism
offence.(6)
The subject of an ASIO warrant cannot be detained for
more than 168 hours.(7) They can be questioned under a warrant
for no more than a total of 24 hours(8) and once they have
been questioned for this period of time they must be released.(9)
Questioning is conducted in the presence of a ‘prescribed authority’.(10)
Within the 24 hour period, adults can be questioned for
up to eight hours. Just before the end of the eighth hour, the prescribed
authority must decide whether questioning can continue.(11)
A person exercising authority under the warrant can ask that questioning
continue. This request can be made in the absence of the person being
questioned, their lawyer, parent or guardian.(12)
The prescribed authority can permit questioning to continue
only if satisfied that:
-
there
are reasonable grounds for believing that continuing the questioning
will substantially assist the collection of intelligence that is important
in relation to a terrorism offence, and
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those exercising authority under the warrant conducted the questioning
properly and without delay.(13)
There are special rules for young people aged between
16 years and 18 years.(14) For instance, they can only be questioned
for continuous periods of 2 hours or less, separated by breaks ordered
by the prescribed authority.(15) Apart from this young people,
like adults, can be questioned for a maximum period of 24 hours with the
prescribed authority deciding just before the end of each eight hour period,
whether the questioning can continue.(16) Additionally, like
adults, young people can be detained for up to 168 hours but must be released
once they have been questioned for 24 hours.
The ASIO Act does not prevent a person being subject
to more than one warrant. Conditions under which new warrants can be requested
and issued are set out in the ASIO Act.(17)
Section 34H of the ASIO Act provides that when a person
first appears before a prescribed authority for questioning and the prescribed
authority believes ‘on reasonable grounds’ that the person cannot ‘communicate
with reasonable fluency’ in English because of ‘inadequate knowledge of
the English language or a physical disability’, then the person exercising
authority under the warrant must arrange for an interpreter to be present.
The ASIO Act additionally allows the person who is the
subject of a warrant to request an interpreter (section 34HAA). In such
a case, an interpreter must be arranged:
… unless the prescribed authority believes on reasonable
grounds that the person who made the request has an adequate knowledge
of English, or is physically able, to communicate with reasonable fluency
in that language.(18)
Section 34E requires the prescribed authority to inform
a person who is before them for questioning about a number of things including
whether the warrant authorises their detention, what the warrant authorises
ASIO to do, offences that may apply if the person does not answer questions
or provide information, the complaint mechanisms that exist and whether
any limits have been placed on the person contacting others.
If the prescribed authority believes that a person needs
the services of an interpreter, then the explanation that must be given
under section 34E cannot occur until an interpreter is present.(19)
Further, a person exercising authority under the warrant cannot commence
questioning the person until the interpreter is present.(20)
If a request for an interpreter by the subject of warrant
has been granted, then if questioning has not commenced, the prescribed
authority must delay informing the person of the matters set out in section
34E and the person exercising authority under the warrant must delay questioning
the person until the interpreter is present.(21) If the questioning
has commenced before the person asks for an interpreter, then the person
exercising authority under the warrant must defer further questioning
until the interpreter arrives and the prescribed authority must inform
the person again of the matters set out in section 34E.(22)
The Bill provides for the confiscation of a person’s
passport or passports while they are the subject of an ASIO warrant. It
will be an offence for a person who is the subject of an ASIO warrant
to leave or attempt to leave Australia
without the permission of the Director-General of Security.
At present there is no power in the ASIO Act for the
confiscation of a person’s passport. However, the Passports Act 1938
enables:
-
an
Australian passport to be cancelled(23)—for instance, if
the Minister considers that the person is likely to engage in conduct
prejudicial to the security of Australia
or a foreign country
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an officer(24) to demand that any passport that has been
obtained by means of a false or misleading statement or has been used
in connection with an offence against the Passports Act or regulations
be delivered up(25)
-
an officer to demand that any person who needs a passport to enter
Australia
deliver up that passport.(26)
Offences relating to these provisions—such as failure
to deliver up a passport when required—attract a maximum penalty of $2,000
or imprisonment for 1 year, or both.
The Bill proposes to repeal existing secrecy provisions
in Division 3, Part III of the ASIO Act and insert new provisions. The
existing secrecy provisions relate to lawyers and to children’s ‘representatives’.
The Bill proposes to insert general requirements and general offences
which criminalise primary and secondary disclosures of information about
an ASIO warrant or about operational information.
At present, it is an offence for a detained person’s
lawyer to communicate information about their questioning or detention
to a third person while the detainee is being detained under the ASIO
warrant. There are exceptions to this general rule. For instance:
-
a lawyer’s communication with a third person will not be an offence
if the third person is the prescribed authority, a person exercising
authority under the warrant, the Inspector-General of Intelligence
and Security (who has supervisory and complaints functions) or the
Ombudsman (who has complaints functions)(27)
-
a
lawyer will be able to communicate with a third person if authorised
to do so by the prescribed authority, in accordance with any relevant
regulations that are made,(28) and
-
a
lawyer must not be prevented by the prescribed authority or by regulation
from communicating with a federal court in order to seek a remedy
relating to the warrant or treatment of the detained person.(29)
Division 3 enables a young person who is the subject of
an ASIO warrant to have a ‘representative’ present at their questioning—ie
a parent, guardian, or someone able to represent their interests. The
prescribed authority may permit a ‘representative’ to communicate information
about the questioning or detention to a third person. However, the representative
commits an offence if, while the child is being detained, they communicate
with a third person without permission and the third person is not a parent,
guardian or sibling of the subject, a prescribed authority, a person exercising
authority under the warrant, the IGIS or the Ombudsman. (30)Certain
secondary disclosures committed by parents, guardians or siblings while
a child is being detained are also offences.(31)
Item 1 of Schedule 1 enables a person to
be questioned under an ASIO warrant for a maximum period of 48 hours (subject
to the prescribed authority permitting questioning to continue every eight
hours) if ‘an interpreter is present at any time’(32)
while they are being questioned under the warrant.
These amendments apply to warrants issued on or after
the Bill commences (item 2).
Item 3, inserting proposed section 34JC,
requires a person who has been issued with an ASIO warrant to surrender
their passport or passports (Australian and/or foreign) to someone exercising
authority under the warrant. Failure to do so is an offence punishable
by a maximum period of 5 years imprisonment.
Under the ASIO Act, an ASIO warrant cannot be in force
for more than 28 days.(33) A confiscated passport must be returned
‘as soon as practicable’ after the warrant has expired but can be returned
earlier. The passport/s must be surrendered again if the person is subject
to another warrant. A passport that has been cancelled need not be returned.
During the period it is surrendered a passport may be inspected or copied.
Proposed section 34JC applies to all passports
irrespective of when they were issued where the person is notified on
or after the commencement of the Bill that an ASIO warrant has been issued
(item 4).
Once a person who is the subject of an ASIO warrant has
been told that a warrant has been issued and of the prohibition on their
leaving Australia,
they commit offence if they leave or attempt to leave Australia
while the warrant is in force, unless they obtain the written permission
of the Director-General of Security. The maximum penalty on conviction
is 5 years imprisonment. The offence provision applies to a person who
leaves Australia
on or after proposed section 34JD commences, irrespective of when
notice of the issue of the warrant was given to them.
Proposed subsection 34F(2A), inserted by item
5, is intended to clarify that a prescribed authority can order the
detention of a person who is before them for questioning even though the
warrant itself is for questioning rather than detention. It applies to
warrants issued on or after the Bill commences (item 6).
Items 8 and 9 repeal existing provisions in the
ASIO Act that deal with disclosures by lawyers [subsections 34U(7)-(11)]
and children’s representatives [subsections 34V(4)-(6)]. New secrecy provisions
are contained in proposed section 34VAA (discussed below).
They encompass both primary and secondary disclosures [proposed subsection
34VAA(10)]. Additionally, they introduce offences relating to disclosures
that occur after an ASIO warrant has expired.
Proposed subsection 34VAA(1) provides that person
commits an offence if, while an ASIO warrant is current, they disclose
information:
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about
the content of a warrant or the fact that it has been issued, or
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about
the questioning or detention of a person under the warrant.
It will also be an offence, while a warrant is current,
to disclose ‘operational information’—if the person has the information
as a direct or indirect result of the warrant being issued, because of
anything done in connection with the warrant or because of directions
issued by the prescribed authority under subsection 34F(1)(34)
of the ASIO Act.
The penalty is a maximum period of 5 years imprisonment.
No offence is committed if the disclosure is a ‘permitted
disclosure’.
Proposed subsection 34VAA(2) provides that a person
commits an offence if, during the period of 2 years after a warrant has
expired, they disclose operational information which is in their possession
as a direct or indirect result of a warrant being issued or because of
anything done in connection with the warrant or because of a direction
issued by a prescribed authority under subsection 34F(1) of the ASIO Act.
The penalty is a maximum period of 5 years imprisonment.
No offence is committed if the disclosure is a ‘permitted
disclosure’.
The expression, ‘operational information’, is defined to
mean information that ASIO has or had; a source of information that ASIO
has or had; or an operational capability, method or plan of ASIO [proposed
subsection 34VAA(5)].
As stated above, disclosure will not be an offence if
it is a ‘permitted disclosure’, a term defined in proposed subsection
34VAA(5).
Permitted disclosures include disclosures made by a person:
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exercising
powers or functions under the ASIO Act
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doing something they are authorised to do under an ASIO warrant
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doing something pursuant to a prescribed authority’s directions
about the detention or further appearance of a person, and
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exercising a power or function under the Complaints (Australian
Federal Police) Act 1981 or the Inspector-General of Intelligence
and Security Act 1986.
Permitted disclosures also include:
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disclosures
made in the course of questioning under a warrant
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disclosures
made to a lawyer for the purpose of obtaining legal advice about a
warrant or for the purpose of getting representation in proceedings
relating to a warrant
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disclosures made for the purpose of initiating or conducting legal
proceedings for a remedy relating to a warrant
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disclosures
allowed by a prescribed authority
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certain
disclosures made by a child’s representative, or the child’s parent,
guardian or sibling—for example to the child’s parents, guardian or
siblings, the child’s representative, a prescribed authority or a
person acting under the authority of an ASIO warrant, and
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disclosures permitted in writing by the Director-General of Security,
the Minister or prescribed by regulation. Permissions may be made
subject to conditions. The Minister’s permission can only be given
after he or she has consulted with the Director-General of Security.
In general, Commonwealth offences consist of physical
elements and fault elements. This is because it is a general principle
of criminal law that fault be proved in relation to each physical element
of an offence. There are some exceptions to this rule. For example, an
offence may be a strict liability offence or contain physical elements
where no ‘fault’ needs to be proved by the prosecution. In such cases,
the Commonwealth Criminal Code provides a defence of mistake of fact to
an accused person.
The Bill imports strict liability into one vital element
of each of the disclosure offences if the discloser is the subject of
the warrant or a lawyer who has been connected with the warrant.(35)
In these cases, the prosecution need not prove that the accused put their
mind to whether the information they disclosed was about the warrant or
was ‘operational information’. In the case of any other accused person,
the standard fault element of ‘recklessness’ will apply to this element
of the offences.
The disclosure offences will attract extended geographical
jurisdiction—category D(36) [proposed subsection 34VAA(4)].
This means that an offence may occur irrespective of whether a person
makes a prohibited disclosure in Australia
or overseas.
Proposed subsection 334VAA(12) is designed to
create a constitutional safety net by providing that the secrecy provisions
do not apply to the extent that they infringe the implied constitutional
freedom of political communication.
The amended secrecy provisions apply to warrants issued
on or after the commencement of the legislation [item 11].
Item 1 of Schedule 2 inserts a date by which Division
3 of Part III of ASIO Act (as amended) must be reviewed by the Parliamentary
Joint Committee on ASIO, ASIS and DSD—22 January 2006. This does not change
the timetable first inserted by the ASIO Legislation Amendment (Terrorism)
Act 2003.
The Government has said:
… in the context of implementing the new regime [under
the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation Legislation Amendment
(Terrorism) Act 2003] ASIO has identified a number of significant
practical limitations in the existing provisions. The … Bill
has been drafted to address these limitations and to provide ASIO with
a better legal basis upon which it can collect intelligence for the purpose
of combating terrorism.(37)
Newspaper reports say that the ALP
is expected to support the Bill.(38)
On 27 November 2003,
it was reported that the University
of Sydney’s
Associate Professor Don Rothwell
had said that doubling the maximum ASIO questioning period for those whose
first language is not English will breach article 26 of the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR).(39) Article
26 reads:
All persons are equal before the law and are entitled
without any discrimination to the equal protection of the law. In this
respect, the law shall prohibit any discrimination and guarantee to all
persons equal and effective protection against discrimination on any ground
such as race, colour, sex, language, religion, political or other opinion,
national or social origin, property, birth or other status.
The Government’s view is that its proposals do
not violate article 26 because differential treatment is not discriminatory
‘so long as the distinction is based on objective and reasonable criteria’.(40)
The United Nations Human Rights Committee has commented
that different treatment will not amount to discrimination ‘if the criteria
for such differentiation are reasonable and objective and if the aim is
to achieve a purpose which is legitimate under the Covenant.’(41)
International case law to date indicates that the
range of permissible distinctions on the basis of race (and sex) is limited.
In other words, distinctions on the basis of race (and sex) are likely
to constitute a breach of article 26 as they are unlikely to be considered
reasonable, objective and have a legitimate aim. In contrast, there is
a greater range of permissible distinctions on other grounds. That said,
acceptable differences of treatment in the area of core civil and political
rights, such as the right to liberty of the person, would be narrowly
construed. Relevant factors would include whether the treatment can be
considered a penalty.
In assessing the amendments proposed to Division
3, a point of comparison may be the Crimes Act 1914 (Cwlth). The
Crimes Act provides for the use of interpreters if an arrested person
is being questioned by the police. Under the Crimes Act, the investigation
period is four hours, except in the case of an Indigenous person or a
child, in which case the period is two hours.(42) In determining
whether the investigation period has expired, various times are disregarded
(‘time out’). These include times:
-
for bringing the person to
the investigating premises
-
involved in suspending
or delaying questioning so that the person can communicate with their
lawyer, interview friend, parent or interpreter
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involved in suspending
or delaying questioning while the person’s lawyer, interview friend,
parent or interpreter arrives
-
involved in suspending
or delaying questioning while the person receives medical treatment
etc.
The Crimes Act also provides that in any
proceedings, the burden lies on the prosecution to show that any particular
period of time was ‘time out’.(43)
In other words, there is no automatic doubling
of the maximum questioning period available to police simply because a
person has an interpreter. And the Crimes Act speaks of ‘time out’ in
terms of ‘delays’ and ‘suspension’ of questioning that occurs.
A further question that might be asked relates
to Article 9(1) of the ICCPR which reads:
Everyone has the right to liberty and security of person.
No one shall be subjected to arbitrary arrest or detention. No
one shall be deprived of his liberty except on such grounds and in accordance
with such procedure as are established by law.
Does the doubling of the maximum amount of time
that a person may be questioned (and possibly, detained) under an ASIO
warrant, simply because an interpreter is present ‘at any time
while a person is questioned under … [an ASIO] warrant’ make it more likely
that a person’s detention is arbitrary under the ICCPR? Or is the Government
correct when it says that the doubling of time is necessary:
… because questioning time is effectively halved where
questions and answers need to pass through the interpreter to the recipient
of the communication.(44)
Some other questions that are relevant to the reasonableness
of the interpreter amendments relate to:
-
children aged between 16 and 18 years who need
an interpreter. Should ASIO be able to question them for up to 48
hours?
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presence of the interpreter.
Increases in the maximum questioning times operate once ‘an interpreter
is present at any time while a person is being questioned under a
warrant issued under section 34D’. Does the presence of an interpreter
facilitate or impede questioning? Should the bare fact that an interpreter
has been present at some stage during the questioning process trigger
a potential doubling of a person’s questioning time—irrespective of
how long they have been present, whether questioning has been conducted
through them and whether their presence has in fact facilitated or
impeded the questioning process?
-
the wording of proposed
subsection 34HB(8). Proposed subsection 34HB(8) includes
the following words: ‘an interpreter is present at any time while
a person is questioned under a warrant issued under section 34D.’
For clarity, should the provision read instead, ‘an interpreter is
present at any time while a person is questioned through an interpreter
under a warrant issued under section 34D’?
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decisions about extending questioning periods.
At present, the prescribed authority can only decide to extend questioning
at the end of each eight hour period if satisfied that questioning
will substantially assist the collection of intelligence about terrorism
and that the person exercising authority under the warrant has conducted
the questioning properly and without delay. Should there be additional
matters about which the prescribed authority must be satisfied if
questioning is to be extended because an interpreter has been present—for
example, that the presence of the interpreter has contributed or substantially
contributed to delays to or suspension of questioning?
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existing offence provisions. It is an offence
under the ASIO Act to fail to provide information or documents when
being questioned under an ASIO warrant.(45) The maximum
penalty for these offences is 5 years imprisonment. Is the potential
leverage provided by these offences such that it is not necessary
to provide for extended questioning periods when interpreters are
used?(46)
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people with physical disabilities.
Concerns have been expressed about the impact of the proposed amendments
on non-English speakers. The amendments will also double the maximum
questioning period for those who have an interpreter because they
are unable to communicate with reasonable fluency in English because
of a ‘physical disability’. Does the maximum questioning time for
people with physical disabilities need to be doubled?
-
impact on the use of
interpreters. Will the amendments mean that people will be less likely
to ask for an interpreter even if they might need one? On the other
hand, will the amendments mean that interpreters will be provided
more frequently, especially given the fact that the doubling of maximum
questioning times will be triggered if an interpreter is present ‘at
any time’ during questioning under a warrant.
-
constitutional issues. Does
the doubling of the maximum time for questioning when an interpreter
has been used, if combined with detention under the warrant, amount
to punitive detention of the sort that requires judicial sanction
under the Commonwealth Constitution?
-
reporting. Section 94 of
the ASIO Act provides that the annual report of the Director-General
of Security must contain specified information. This includes the
total number of ASIO warrants issued under section 34D, the number
of hours each person was questioned under a warrant, and the number
of hours they were detained. Should there be additional reporting
requirements inserted into the ASIO Act relating to the use of interpreters
and the use of the extended questioning periods?
-
other enhancements relating to interpreters?
Should the ASIO Act be amended to require that a person brought before
a prescribed authority be given a copy of the ASIO Protocol in English
or in a community language in which they are fluent? Should there
be a statutory requirement that an interpreter be competent and/or
accredited?(47)
There are two disclosure offences in the Bill.
The first relates to disclosures that occur before the expiration of the
warrant. An important element in this offence is that:
-
the information disclosed
indicates that the warrant has been issued or is about the content
of the warrant or the questioning or detention, and/or
-
the information is operational
information.
The second offence relates to disclosures that
occur within 2 years of the warrant’s expiration. An important element
in this offence is that the information is operational information.
The Bill provides that
where the subject of a warrant or a lawyer who has been connected with
the warrant is accused of one of these offences, the prosecution need
not prove that the accused put their mind to matters which, arguably,
form the crux of the offence. The standard fault element that would otherwise
be applied by the Commonwealth Criminal Code is ‘recklessness’.(48)
Parliament may wish to consider whether the fault element of recklessness
should be dispensed with, given the importance of the physical element
in the offence and the maximum penalty that applies (5 years’ imprisonment).
On 8 November 2003,
the Weekend Australian reported:
At least one of the seven men raided by armed police
and ASIO on suspicion of being linked to al-Qa’ida suspect Willie
Brigitte was detained and questioned
this week under new national anti-terrorism laws.
The questioning of the suspect marks the first time
ASIO has used its contentious anti-terror powers, which were introduced
in July this year in the wake of the Bali
bombing.
The man was taken to the Australian Crime Commission
offices in Sydney’s
CBD for questioning in two eight-hour sessions about his connections to
Brigitte, who was deported to France
last month.
The man was later released and no changes have been
laid.(49)
Parliament may wish to consider whether this sort
of reporting would and should be caught by the new disclosure offences.
Additionally, while the Bill attempts to provide
a constitutional safety net, it is unclear what sort of reporting or disclosures,
this will permit.
-
See, for instance, ‘Sunday’, 2 November 2003; ‘Immigration net
is not so shark proof’, The Sun-Herald, 2
November 2003.
-
Nathan Hancock, Bills Digest No.
128, 2001–02.
-
Nathan Hancock, Bills Digest No.
133, 2002–03.
-
Issuing authorities are Judges, Federal Magistrates or others in
a prescribed class who have consented to being appointed—section 34AB.
-
See subsections 34C(3) & (3B) which set out the matters about
which the Minister must be satisfied before he or she consents to
the Director-General of Security applying to an issuing authority
for a warrant.
-
See subsections 34NA(4)-(6).
-
Section 34HC.
-
Subsection 34HB(6).
-
Paragraph 34HB(7)(c).
-
A ‘prescribed authority’ is a person
appointed by the Attorney-General. The ASIO Act provides that the
Attorney-General can appoint, as a prescribed authority, a former
superior court judge with at least 5 years experience in that role.
If there is an insufficient number of former judges available, then
serving State or Territory superior court judges can be appointed,
so long as they have at least 5 years experience. If there are insufficient
numbers of serving superior court judges, the Attorney can appoint
legal practitioners of at least 5 years standing who hold appointments
as President or Deputy President of the AAT.
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Subsections 34HB(1)-(2).
-
Subsection 34HB(3).
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Subsection 34HB(4).
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ASIO warrants cannot be issued in relation to children under 16 years—section
34NA.
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Subparagraph 34NA(6)(b)(ii) & paragraph 34F(1)(e).
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Subsection 34NA(10).
-
See sections 34C and 34D.
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Subsection 34HAA(2).
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Subsection 34H(3).
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Subsection 34H(4).
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Subsection 34HAA(3).
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Subsection 34HAA(4).
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Section 8.
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‘An officer’ is defined in section 5 of the Passports Act as ‘any
officer of the Department [of Foreign Affairs and Trade], and includes
any officer of Customs, any member or special member of the Australian
Federal Police, any member of the Police Force of a State or Territory
of the Commonwealth, and any person authorized by the Minister to
exercise the powers conferred on officers by this Act.’
-
Subsections 9(1) & (1A)
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Subsections 9(2)-(4).
-
Subsection 34U(7).
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Subsection 34U(8).
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Subsections 34U(9) & (11).
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Subsections 34V(4)-(5).
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Subsection 34V(6).
-
Emphasis added.
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Paragraph 34D(6)(b).
-
Subsection 34F(1) enables the prescribed authority to make directions
about the detention or further detention of the subject of an ASIO
warrant when that person appears before the prescribed authority for
questioning.
-
Lawyers caught by the provision are lawyers that have been present
at questioning as the person’s legal adviser, have been contacted
for the purpose of the subject of the warrant obtaining legal advice
about the warrant, or have been contacted for the purpose of the subject
of the warrant obtaining legal representation in proceedings about
the warrant—proposed subsection 34VAA(3). The Bill does not
indicate whether ‘the purpose’ is the sole purpose or any purpose.
-
See section 15.4, Criminal Code.
-
Attorney-General, Second Reading Speech, ASIO Legislation Amendment
Bill 2003, House of Representatives, Hansard, 27 November 2003,
p. 22885.
-
See, for example, ‘Labor to back tougher ASIO laws’, The Australian,
27 November 2003; ‘Liberals block Ruddock on security blitz’, Sydney
Morning Herald, 26 November 2003.
-
‘ASIO grillings will breach civil rights, warns expert’, Sydney
Morning Herald, 27 November
2003.
-
ibid.
-
Human Rights Committee, General Comment 18, pr 13; See also Broeks
and Zwaan-de Vries communications no. 172 and 182/1984.
-
Section 23C. The investigation period can be extended by order of
a judicial officer but cannot be extended for more than eight hours
and only one extension can be granted—section 23D.
-
Paragraph 23C(8)(b).
-
Explanatory Memorandum, ASIO Legislation Amendment Bill 2003, p.
2.
-
Section 34G.
-
See, for example, George Williams,
‘Terrorist laws tough enough now, if used’, Sydney Morning Herald,
4 November 2003.
-
Some Australian crimes statutes recognise the importance of competent
interpreters. For instance, the Crimes Act 1958 (Vic) provides
that:
If a person in custody does not have a knowledge
of the English language that is sufficient to enable the person to
understand the questioning, an investigating official must, before
any questioning or investigation under section 464A(2) commences,
arrange for the presence of a competent interpreter and defer the
questioning or investigation until the interpreter is present— section
464D, Crimes Act 1958 (Vic).
-
Section 5.4.
-
‘ASIO flexes fresh muscle’, Weekend Australian, 8 November 2003.
Jennifer Norberry
1 December 2003
Bills Digest Service
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