An Act to provide for confiscation of the proceeds of crime, and
for other purposes
Chapter 1—Introduction
Part 1‑1—Preliminary
1 Short title [see Note 1]
This Act may be cited as the Proceeds
of Crime Act 2002.
2
Commencement
(1) Each provision of this Act specified in
column 1 of the table commences, or is taken to have commenced, on the day or
at the time specified in column 2 of the table.
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Commencement
information
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Column 1
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Column 2
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Column 3
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Provision(s)
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Commencement
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Date/Details
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1. Sections 1 and 2 and anything in this Act not
elsewhere covered by this table
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The day on which this Act receives the Royal Assent
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11 October 2002
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2. Sections 3 to 338
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A single day to be fixed by Proclamation, subject to subsection (3)
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1 January 2003 (Gazette 2002, No. GN44)
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Note: This table relates only to the provisions of
this Act as originally passed by the Parliament and assented to. It will not be
expanded to deal with provisions inserted in this Act after assent.
(2) Column 3 of the table is for additional
information that is not part of this Act. This information may be included in
any published version of this Act.
(3) If a provision covered by item 2 of
the table does not commence under subsection (1) within the period of 6
months beginning on the day on which it receives the Royal Assent, it commences
on the first day after the end of that period.
3
Identifying defined terms
(1) Many of the terms in this Act are defined
in the Dictionary in Chapter 6.
(2) Most of the terms that are defined in the
Dictionary in Chapter 6 are identified by an asterisk appearing at the
start of the term: as in “*proceeds”.
The footnote with the asterisk contains a signpost to the Dictionary.
(3) An asterisk usually identifies the first
occurrence of a term in a section (if not divided into subsections), subsection
or definition. Later occurrences of the term in the same provision are not
usually asterisked.
(4) Terms are not asterisked in headings,
notes, examples, explanatory tables, guides, outline provisions or diagrams.
(5) If a term is not identified by an
asterisk, disregard that fact in deciding whether or not to apply to that term
a definition or other interpretation provision.
(6) The following basic terms used throughout
the Act are not identified with an asterisk:
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Terms that are not
identified
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Item
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This term:
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is defined in:
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1
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charged
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section 338
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2
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convicted
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section 331
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3
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deal
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section 338
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4
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derived
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section 336
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5
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property
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section 338
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4
Application of the Criminal Code
Chapter 2
of the Criminal Code applies to all offences against this Act.
Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code
sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.
Part 1‑2—Objects
5
Principal objects
The principal objects of this Act are:
(a) to deprive persons of the *proceeds of offences, the *instruments of offences, and *benefits derived from offences, against
the laws of the Commonwealth or the *non‑governing
Territories; and
(b) to deprive persons of *literary proceeds derived from the
commercial exploitation of their notoriety from having committed offences; and
(c) to punish and deter persons from
breaching laws of the Commonwealth or the non‑governing Territories; and
(d) to prevent the reinvestment of
proceeds, instruments, benefits and literary proceeds in further criminal
activities; and
(e) to enable law enforcement
authorities effectively to trace proceeds, instruments, benefits and literary
proceeds; and
(f) to give effect to Australia’s
obligations under the Council of Europe Convention on Laundering, Search,
Seizure and Confiscation of the Proceeds from Crime, and other international
agreements relating to proceeds of crime; and
(g) to provide for confiscation orders
and restraining orders made in respect of offences against the laws of the
States or the *self‑governing
Territories to be enforced in the other Territories.
Part 1‑3—Outline of this Act
6
General
This Act establishes a scheme to
confiscate the proceeds of crime. It does this by:
(a) setting out in Chapter 2
processes by which confiscation can occur; and
(b) setting out in Chapter 3 ways
in which Commonwealth law enforcement agencies can obtain information relevant
to these processes; and
(c) setting out in Chapter 4
related administrative matters.
It concludes with miscellaneous provisions and with
definitions and other interpretive material.
Note: See also Part IAE of the Crimes Act
1914 (video link evidence).
7 The
confiscation scheme (Chapter 2)
Chapter 2 sets out 5 processes
relating to confiscation:
(a) restraining orders prohibiting
disposal of or dealing with property (see Part 2‑1); and
(b) forfeiture orders under which
property is forfeited to the Commonwealth (see Part 2‑2); and
(c) forfeiture of property to the
Commonwealth on conviction of a serious offence (see Part 2‑3); and
(d) pecuniary penalty orders requiring
payment of amounts based on benefits derived from committing offences (see Part 2‑4);
and
(e) literary proceeds orders requiring
payment of amounts based on literary proceeds relating to offences (see Part 2‑5).
8
Information gathering (Chapter 3)
Chapter 3 sets out 5 ways to obtain
information:
(a) examining any person about the
affairs of people covered by examination orders (see Part 3‑1); and
(b) requiring people, under production
orders, to produce property‑tracking documents or make them available for
inspection (see Part 3‑2); and
(c) requiring financial institutions
to provide information and documents relating to accounts and transactions (see
Part 3‑3); and
(d) requiring financial institutions,
under monitoring orders, to provide information about transactions over
particular periods (see Part 3‑4); and
(e) searching for and seizing tainted
property or evidential material, either under search warrants or in relation to
conveyances (see Part 3‑5).
9
Administration (Chapter 4)
Chapter 4 sets out the following
administrative matters:
(a) the powers and duties of the
Official Trustee, which largely relate to property that is subject to
restraining orders (see Part 4‑1);
(b) the provision of legal assistance
(see Part 4‑2);
(c) the Confiscated Assets Account
(see Part 4‑3);
(d) charges over restrained property
for payment of certain amounts (see Part 4‑4);
(e) enforcement of interstate orders
in certain Territories (see Part 4‑5).
10
Miscellaneous (Chapter 5)
Chapter 5 deals with miscellaneous
matters.
11
Interpreting this Act (Chapter 6)
Chapter 6 contains the Dictionary,
which sets out a list of all the terms that are defined in this Act. It also
sets out the meanings of some important concepts.
Part 1‑4—Application
12 Act
to bind Crown
(1) This Act binds the Crown in right of the
Commonwealth, each of the States and each of the *self‑governing Territories.
(2) This Act does not make the Crown liable
to be prosecuted for an offence.
13 Act
to apply both within and outside Australia
This Act extends, except so far as the
contrary intention appears:
(a) to acts, matters and things
outside *Australia, whether or
not in or over a foreign country; and
(b) to all persons, irrespective of
their nationality or citizenship.
14
Application
This Act applies in relation to:
(a) an offence committed at any time
(whether or not any person is convicted of the offence); and
(b) a person’s conviction of an
offence at any time;
whether the offence or conviction occurred before or after
the commencement of this Act.
15
Concurrent operation of State/Territory laws
It is the intention of the Parliament
that this Act is not to apply to the exclusion of a law of a State or Territory
to the extent that the law is capable of operating concurrently with this Act.
Chapter 2—The confiscation scheme
Part 2‑1—Restraining orders
16
Simplified outline of this Part
Restraining orders can be made against
property, in relation to certain offences, on grounds that relate to possible
forfeiture or confiscation orders relating to those offences. (There is not
always a requirement that a person has been convicted of such an offence.)
Division 1—Making restraining orders
17
Restraining orders—people convicted of or charged with indictable offences
When a restraining order must be made
(1) A court with *proceeds jurisdiction must order that:
(a) property must not be disposed of
or otherwise dealt with by any person; or
(b) property must not be disposed of
or otherwise dealt with by any person except in the manner and circumstances
specified in the order;
if:
(c) the *DPP applies for the order; and
(d) a person has been convicted of, or
has been charged with, an *indictable
offence, or it is proposed that he or she be charged with an indictable
offence; and
(e) any affidavit requirements in subsection (3)
for the application have been met; and
(f) (unless there are no such
requirements) the court is satisfied that the *authorised
officer who made the affidavit holds the suspicion or suspicions stated in the
affidavit on reasonable grounds.
Property that a restraining order may cover
(2) The order must specify, as property that
must not be disposed of or otherwise dealt with, the property specified in the
application for the order, to the extent that the court is satisfied that there
are reasonable grounds to suspect that that property is any one or more of the
following:
(a) all or specified property of the *suspect;
(aa) all or specified *bankruptcy property of the suspect;
(b) all property of the suspect other
than specified property;
(ba) all bankruptcy property of the
suspect other than specified bankruptcy property;
(c) specified property of another
person (whether or not that other person’s identity is known) that is subject
to the *effective control of
the suspect;
(d) specified property of another
person (whether or not that other person’s identity is known) that is *proceeds of the offence or an *instrument of the offence.
Affidavit requirements
(3) The application for the order must be
supported by an affidavit of an *authorised
officer stating:
(a) if the *suspect has not been convicted of an
indictable offence—that the authorised officer suspects that the suspect committed
the offence; and
(b) if the application is to restrain
property of a person other than the suspect but not to restrain *bankruptcy property of the suspect—that
the authorised officer suspects that:
(i) the property is
subject to the *effective control
of the suspect; or
(ii) the property is *proceeds of the offence or an *instrument of the offence.
The affidavit must include the grounds on which the *authorised officer holds those
suspicions.
Refusal to make a restraining order
(4) Despite subsection (1), the court
may refuse to make a *restraining
order in relation to an *indictable
offence that is not a *serious
offence if the court is satisfied that it is not in the public interest to make
the order.
Note: A court can also refuse to make a restraining
order if the Commonwealth refuses to give an undertaking: see section 21.
Risk of property being disposed of etc.
(5) The court must make a *restraining order even if there is no
risk of the property being disposed of or otherwise dealt with.
Later acquisitions of property
(6) The court may specify that a *restraining order covers property that is
acquired by the *suspect after
the court makes the order. Otherwise, no property that is acquired after a
court makes a restraining order is covered by the order.
18
Restraining orders—people suspected of committing serious offences
When a restraining order must be made
(1) A court with *proceeds jurisdiction must order that:
(a) property must not be disposed of
or otherwise dealt with by any person; or
(b) property must not be disposed of
or otherwise dealt with by any person except in the manner and circumstances
specified in the order;
if:
(c) the *DPP applies for the order; and
(d) there are reasonable grounds to
suspect that:
(i) a person has committed
a *serious offence; and
(ii) if the offence is not
a *terrorism offence—the
offence was committed within the 6 years preceding the application, or since
the application was made; and
(e) any affidavit requirements in subsection (3)
for the application have been met; and
(f) the court is satisfied that the *authorised officer who made the affidavit
holds the suspicion or suspicions stated in the affidavit on reasonable
grounds.
Note: A court can refuse to make a restraining order
if the Commonwealth refuses to give an undertaking: see section 21.
Property that a restraining order may cover
(2) The order must specify, as property that
must not be disposed of or otherwise dealt with, the property specified in the
application for the order, to the extent that the court is satisfied that there
are reasonable grounds to suspect that that property is any one or more of the
following:
(a) all or specified property of the *suspect;
(aa) all or specified *bankruptcy property of the suspect;
(b) all property of the suspect other
than specified property;
(ba) all bankruptcy property of the
suspect other than specified bankruptcy property;
(c) specified property of another
person (whether or not that other person’s identity is known) that is subject
to the *effective control of
the suspect;
(d) specified property of another
person (whether or not that other person’s identity is known) that is:
(i) in any case—*proceeds of the offence; or
(ii) if the offence to
which the order relates is a *terrorism
offence—an *instrument of the
offence.
Affidavit requirements
(3) The application for the order must be
supported by an affidavit of an *authorised
officer stating:
(a) that:
(i) the authorised officer
suspects that the *suspect
committed the offence within the 6 years preceding the application, or since
the application was made; or
(ii) the offence is a *terrorism offence; and
(b) if the application is to restrain
property of a person other than the suspect but not to restrain *bankruptcy property of the suspect—that
the authorised officer suspects that:
(i) the property is
subject to the *effective
control of the suspect; or
(ii) in any case—the
property is *proceeds of the
offence; or
(iii) if the offence to
which the order relates is a terrorism offence—the property is an *instrument of the offence.
The affidavit must include the grounds on which the *authorised officer holds those
suspicions.
Restraining order need not be based on commission of a
particular offence
(4) The reasonable grounds referred to in paragraph (1)(d)
need not be based on a finding as to the commission of a particular *serious offence.
Risk of property being disposed of etc.
(5) The court must make a *restraining order even if there is no
risk of the property being disposed of or otherwise dealt with.
Later acquisitions of property
(6) The court may specify that a *restraining order covers property that is
acquired by the *suspect after
the court makes the order. Otherwise, no property that is acquired after a
court makes a restraining order is covered by the order.
19
Restraining orders—people suspected of committing indictable offences etc.
When a restraining order must be made
(1) A court with *proceeds jurisdiction must order that:
(a) property must not be disposed of or
otherwise dealt with by any person; or
(b) property must not be disposed of
or otherwise dealt with by any person except in the manner and circumstances
specified in the order;
if:
(c) the *DPP applies for the order; and
(d) there are reasonable grounds to
suspect that the property is:
(i) the *proceeds of a *terrorism offence or any other *indictable offence, a *foreign indictable offence or an *indictable offence of Commonwealth
concern (whether or not the identity of the person who committed the offence is
known); or
(ii) an *instrument of a terrorism offence;
and,
if the offence is not a terrorism offence, that the offence was
committed within the 6 years preceding the application, or since the
application was made; and
(e) the application for the order is
supported by an affidavit of an *authorised
officer stating that the authorised officer suspects that:
(i) in any case—the
property is proceeds of the offence; or
(ii) if the offence to
which the order relates is a terrorism offence—the property is an *instrument of the offence;
and including the grounds on
which the authorised officer holds the suspicion; and
(f) the court is satisfied that the *authorised officer who made the affidavit
holds the suspicion stated in the affidavit on reasonable grounds.
Property that a restraining order may cover
(2) The order must specify, as property that
must not be disposed of or otherwise dealt with, the property specified in the
application for the order, to the extent that the court is satisfied that there
are reasonable grounds to suspect that that property is:
(a) in any case—*proceeds of the offence; or
(b) if the offence to which the order
relates is a *terrorism
offence—an *instrument of the
offence.
Refusal to make a restraining order
(3) Despite subsection (1), the court
may refuse to make a *restraining
order in relation to an *indictable
offence that is not a *serious
offence if the court is satisfied that it is not in the public interest to make
the order.
Note: A court can also refuse to make a restraining
order if the Commonwealth refuses to give an undertaking: see section 21.
Restraining order need not be based on commission of a
particular offence
(4) The reasonable grounds referred to in paragraph (1)(d)
need not be based on a finding as to the commission of a particular *indictable offence.
Risk of property being disposed of etc.
(5) The court must make a *restraining order even if there is no
risk of the property being disposed of or otherwise dealt with.
20
Restraining orders—people suspected of deriving literary proceeds from
indictable offences etc.
When a restraining order must be made
(1) A court with *proceeds jurisdiction must order that:
(a) property must not be disposed of
or otherwise dealt with by any person; or
(b) property must not be disposed of
or otherwise dealt with by any person except in the manner and circumstances
specified in the order;
if:
(c) the *DPP applies for the order; and
(d) there are reasonable grounds to
suspect that a person has committed an *indictable
offence or a *foreign
indictable offence, and that the person has derived *literary proceeds in relation to the
offence; and
(e) any affidavit requirements in subsection (3)
for the application have been met; and
(f) (unless there are no such requirements)
the court is satisfied that the *authorised
officer who made the affidavit holds the suspicion or suspicions stated in the
affidavit on reasonable grounds.
Property that a restraining order may cover
(2) The order must specify, as property that
must not be disposed of or otherwise dealt with, the property specified in the
application for the order, to the extent that the court is satisfied that there
are reasonable grounds to suspect that that property is any one or more of the
following:
(a) all or specified property of the *suspect;
(aa) all or specified *bankruptcy property of the suspect;
(b) all property of the suspect other
than specified property;
(ba) all bankruptcy property of the
suspect other than specified bankruptcy property;
(c) specified property of another
person (whether or not that other person’s identity is known) that is subject
to the *effective control of
the suspect.
Affidavit requirements
(3) The application for the order must be
supported by an affidavit of an *authorised
officer stating:
(a) if the *suspect has not been convicted of the
offence—that the authorised officer suspects that the suspect committed the
offence; and
(c) that the authorised officer
suspects that the suspect derived *literary
proceeds in relation to the offence; and
(d) if the application is to restrain
property of a person other than the suspect but not to restrain *bankruptcy property of the suspect—that
the authorised officer suspects that the property is subject to the *effective control of the suspect.
The affidavit must include the grounds on which the *authorised officer holds those
suspicions.
Refusal to make a restraining order
(4) Despite subsection (1), the court
may refuse to make a *restraining
order in relation to an *indictable
offence that is not a *serious
offence if the court is satisfied that it is not in the public interest to make
the order.
Note: A court can also refuse to make a restraining
order if the Commonwealth refuses to give an undertaking: see section 21.
Restraining order need not be based on commission of a
particular offence
(5) The reasonable grounds referred to in paragraph (1)(d)
need not be based on a finding as to the commission of a particular *indictable offence or *foreign indictable offence (as the case
requires).
Risk of property being disposed of etc.
(6) The court must make a *restraining order even if there is no
risk of the property being disposed of or otherwise dealt with.
Later acquisitions of property
(7) The court may specify that a *restraining order covers property that is
acquired by the *suspect after
the court makes the order. Otherwise, no property that is acquired after a
court makes a restraining order is covered by the order.
21
Refusal to make an order for failure to give undertaking
(1) The court may refuse to make a *restraining order if the Commonwealth
refuses or fails to give the court an appropriate undertaking with respect to
the payment of damages or costs, or both, for the making and operation of the
order.
(2) The *DPP
may give such an undertaking on behalf of the Commonwealth.
22
Restraining orders must only relate to one suspect
(1) A *restraining
order must only relate to one *suspect.
Note: A restraining order might not relate to any
suspect if the person who is suspected of committing the offence is not known
and the restraining order only restrains proceeds of the offence. The
restraining order may also cover the property of one or more other persons who
are not the suspect.
(2) A *restraining
order may relate to more than one offence in relation to that *suspect.
23
Conditions on restraining orders
A *restraining
order may be made subject to conditions.
24
Allowance for expenses
(1) The court may allow any one or more of
the following to be met out of property, or a specified part of property,
covered by a *restraining
order:
(a) the reasonable living expenses of
the person whose property is restrained;
(b) the reasonable living expenses of
any of the *dependants of that
person;
(c) the reasonable business
expenses of that person;
(d) a specified debt incurred in good
faith by that person.
(2) The court may only make an order under subsection (1)
if:
(a) the person whose property is
restrained has applied for the order; and
(b) the person has notified the *DPP in writing of the application and the
grounds for the application; and
(c) the person has disclosed all of
his or her *interests in
property, and his or her liabilities, in a statement on oath that has been
filed in the court; and
(ca) the
court is satisfied that the expense or debt does not, or will not, relate to
legal costs that the person has incurred, or will incur, in connection with:
(i) proceedings
under this Act; or
(ii) proceedings
for an offence against a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory; and
(d) the court is satisfied that the
person cannot meet the expense or debt out of property that is not covered by:
(i) a *restraining order; or
(ii) an *interstate restraining order; or
(iii) a *foreign restraining order that is
registered under the *Mutual
Assistance Act.
(3) Property that is covered by:
(a) a *restraining order; or
(b) an *interstate restraining order; or
(c) a *foreign restraining order that is registered under the *Mutual Assistance Act;
is taken, for the purposes of paragraph (2)(d), not
to be covered by the order if it would not be reasonably practicable for the *Official Trustee to take custody and
control of the property.
24A Excluding property from or revoking restraining
orders in certain cases when expenses are not allowed
(1) If:
(a) because
of the operation of subsection 24(3), property that is covered by a *restraining order is taken, for the purposes of
paragraph 24(2)(d), not to be covered by the order; and
(b) as
a result, and for no other reason, the court refuses an application to make an
order under subsection 24(1);
the court may:
(c) exclude
the property from the restraining order; or
(d) if
the property is the only property covered by the restraining order—revoke the
restraining order.
(2) The
court must not exclude the property or revoke the order unless the court is
satisfied that the property is needed to meet any one or more of the following:
(a) the
reasonable living expenses of the person whose property is restrained;
(b) the
reasonable living expenses of any of the *dependants
of that person;
(c) the
reasonable business expenses of that person;
(d) a
specified debt incurred in good faith by that person.
(3) If
the court excludes the property from the *restraining order, the *DPP must give written notice of the
exclusion to:
(a) the owner of the property (if the
owner is known); and
(b) any other person the DPP
reasonably believes may have an *interest
in the property.
However, the DPP need not give notice to the applicant for
the order under subsection 24(1).
(4) If the
court revokes the *restraining order,
the *DPP must give written
notice of the revocation to:
(a) the owner of any property covered
by the restraining order (if the owner is known); and
(b) any other person the DPP
reasonably believes may have an *interest
in the property.
However, the DPP need not give notice to the applicant for
the order under subsection 24(1).
Division 2—How restraining orders are obtained
25 DPP
may apply for a restraining order
The *DPP
may apply for a *restraining
order.
26
Notice of application
(1) Subject to subsection (4), the *DPP must:
(a) give written notice of an
application for a *restraining
order covering property to the owner of the property (if the owner is known);
and
(b) include with the notice a copy of
the application and any affidavit supporting the application.
(2) Subject to subsection (4), the *DPP must also:
(a) give written notice of an
application for a *restraining
order covering property to any other person the DPP reasonably believes may
have an *interest in the
property; and
(b) include with the notice:
(i) a copy of the
application; and
(ii) a further notice that
the person may request that the DPP give the person a copy of any affidavit supporting
the application.
The DPP must comply with any such request as soon as
practicable.
(3) The court must not (unless subsection (4)
applies) hear the application unless it is satisfied that the owner of the
property to which the application relates has received reasonable notice of the
application.
(4) The court must consider the application
without notice having been given if the *DPP
requests the court to do so.
(5) The court may, at any time before finally
determining the application, direct the *DPP
to give or publish notice of the application to a specified person or class of
persons. The court may also specify the time and manner in which the notice is
to be given or published.
(6) A person who claims an *interest in property may appear and adduce
evidence at the hearing of the application.
27 DPP
may choose under which section it applies for a restraining order
To avoid doubt, the fact that the *DPP may apply for a *restraining order under a section of
Division 1 against property in relation to an offence does not prevent the
DPP from applying for a *restraining
order under a different section of Division 1 against that property in
relation to that offence.
28
Prejudice to investigations
A witness who is giving evidence
relating to an application for a *restraining
order is not required to answer a question or produce a document if the court
is satisfied that the answer or document may prejudice the investigation of, or
the prosecution of a person for, an offence.
Division 3—Excluding property from restraining orders
Note: In addition to this Division, section 44
provides for property to be excluded from a restraining order on the giving of
satisfactory security.
29
Court may exclude property from a restraining order
(1) The court to which an application for a *restraining order under section 17,
18 or 19 was made may, when the order is made or at a later time, exclude
specified property from the order if:
(a) an application is made under
section 30 or 31; and
(b) the court is satisfied that the
relevant reason under subsection (2) or (3) for excluding the property
from the order exists.
Note: Section 31A may prevent the court from
hearing the application until the DPP has had a reasonable opportunity to
conduct an examination of the applicant.
(2) The reasons for excluding specified
property from a *restraining
order are:
(a) for a restraining order under
section 17 if the offence, or any of the offences, to which the order
relates is a *serious
offence—the property is neither *proceeds
nor an *instrument of *unlawful activity; or
(b) for a restraining order under
section 17 if paragraph (a) does not apply—the property is neither
proceeds nor an instrument of the offence, or any offence, to which the order
relates; or
(c) for a restraining order under
section 18—the property is neither:
(i) in any case—proceeds
of unlawful activity; nor
(ii) if an offence to which
the order relates is a *terrorism
offence—an *instrument of any
terrorism offence; or
(d) for a restraining order under
section 19—the property is neither:
(i) in any case—proceeds
of an *indictable offence, a *foreign indictable offence or an *indictable offence of Commonwealth
concern; nor
(ii) if an offence to which
the order relates is a *terrorism
offence—an *instrument of any
terrorism offence.
Note: One of the circumstances in which property
ceases to be proceeds of an offence or unlawful activity involves acquisition
of the property by an innocent third party for sufficient consideration: see
paragraph 330(4)(a).
(3) If the offence, or each offence, to which
a *restraining order relates is
a *serious offence that is an
offence against section 15, 24, 29 or 31 of the Financial Transaction
Reports Act 1988 or section 53, 59, 136, 137, 139, 140, 141, 142 or
143 of the Anti‑Money Laundering and Counter‑Terrorism Financing
Act 2006, a further reason for excluding property from the order is that
each of the following requirements is met:
(a) there are no reasonable grounds to
suspect that the property is *proceeds
of the offence, or any of the offences;
(b) there is a *suspect in relation to the order, but he
or she has not been convicted of, or charged with, the offence, or any of the
offences;
(c) the conduct in question was not
for the purpose of, in preparation for, or in contemplation of, any other *indictable offence, any *State indictable offence or any *foreign indictable offence;
(d) the property could not have been
covered by a restraining order if none of the offences had been serious
offences.
(4) However, the court must not exclude
property from a *restraining
order under section 17 or 18 unless it is also satisfied that neither a *pecuniary penalty order nor a *literary proceeds order could be made
against:
(a) the person who owns the property;
or
(b) if the property is not owned by
the *suspect but is under his
or her *effective control—the
suspect.
30
Application to exclude property from a restraining order after notice of the
application for the order
(1) A person whose property would be covered
by a *restraining order may
apply to the court to exclude specified property from the restraining order
within 14 days after being notified of the application for the order.
(2) The person must give written notice to
the *DPP of both the
application and the grounds on which the exclusion is sought.
(3) The *DPP
may appear and adduce evidence at the hearing of the application.
(4) The *DPP
must give the person notice of any grounds on which it proposes to contest the
application.
31
Application to exclude property from a restraining order after notice of the
order
(1) A person may apply to the court to
exclude specified property from the *restraining
order at any time after being notified of the order.
(2) However, unless the court gives leave,
the person cannot apply if he or she:
(a) was notified of the application
for the *restraining order, but
did not appear at the hearing of that application; or
(b) appeared at the hearing of that
application.
(3) The court may give the person leave to
apply if the court is satisfied that:
(a) if paragraph (2)(a)
applies—the person had a good reason for not appearing; or
(b) if paragraph (2)(b)
applies—the person now has evidence relevant to the person’s application that
was not available to the person at the time of the hearing; or
(c) in either case—there are other
special grounds for granting the leave.
(4) The person must give written notice to
the *DPP of both the
application and the grounds on which the exclusion is sought.
(5) The *DPP
may appear and adduce evidence at the hearing of the application.
(6) The *DPP
must give the person notice of any grounds on which it proposes to contest the
application.
32
Application not to be heard unless DPP has had reasonable opportunity to
conduct an examination
The court must not hear an application
to exclude specified property from the *restraining
order if:
(a) the restraining order is in force;
and
(b) the *DPP has not been given a reasonable opportunity to conduct
an *examination of the
applicant.
Division 4—Giving effect to restraining orders
33
Notice of a restraining order
(1) If a court makes a *restraining order covering property that
a person owns, the *DPP must
give written notice of the order to the person.
Note: A person who was not notified of the
application for a restraining order may apply to revoke the restraining order
within 28 days of being notified of the order: see section 42.
(2) The *DPP
must include a copy of the application and any affidavit supporting the
application with the notice (if those documents have not already been given to
the person).
(3) However, the court may order that:
(a) all or part of the application or
affidavit is not to be given to the person; or
(b) the *DPP delay giving the notice (and the documents included
with the notice) for a specified period;
if the DPP requests the court to do so and the court
considers that this is appropriate in order to protect the integrity of any
investigation or prosecution.
(4) If the court orders the *DPP to delay giving the notice (and the
documents included with the notice) for a specified period, the DPP must give
the notice as soon as practicable after the end of that period.
34
Registering restraining orders
(1) A *registration
authority that keeps a register of property of a particular kind may record in
the register particulars of a *restraining
order covering property of that kind.
(2) The *registration
authority can only do so on the application of the *DPP.
(3) Each person who subsequently deals with
the property:
(a) is taken not to be acting in good
faith for the purposes of section 36; and
(b) is taken to have notice of the *restraining order for the purposes of
section 37.
35
Notifying registration authorities of exclusions from or variations to
restraining orders
(1) If the *DPP
has previously applied to a *registration
authority under section 34 for the recording in a register of particulars
of a *restraining order
covering particular property, the DPP must notify the registration authority
if:
(a) the property is no longer covered
by the order because it is excluded from the order under section 29 or
because the property covered by the order is varied under section 39; or
(b) a condition to which a restraining
order is subject is varied under section 39.
(2) The notice must be given within a
reasonable time after the order under section 39 is made.
36
Court may set aside a disposition contravening a restraining order
(1) The *DPP
may apply to the court to set aside a disposition or dealing with property that
contravenes a *restraining
order if that disposition or dealing was:
(a) not for *sufficient consideration; or
(b) not in favour of a person who
acted in good faith.
(2) The *DPP
must give, to each party to the disposition or dealing, written notice of both
the application and the grounds on which it seeks the setting aside of the
disposition or dealing.
(3) The court may:
(a) set aside the disposition or
dealing from the day it occurred; or
(b) set aside the disposition or
dealing from the day on which the order is made and declare the rights of any
persons who acquired *interests
in the property on or after the day of the disposition or dealing and before
the day on which the order is made.
37
Contravening restraining orders
(1) A person is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the person disposes of, or
otherwise deals with, property; and
(b) the person knows that, or is
reckless as to the fact that, the property is covered by a *restraining order; and
(c) the disposition or dealing
contravenes the order.
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 5 years or 300 penalty
units, or both.
(2) A person is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the person disposes of, or
otherwise deals with, property; and
(b) the property is covered by a *restraining order; and
(c) the disposition or dealing
contravenes the order; and
(d) either:
(i) particulars of the
order were recorded in a register under subsection 34(1); or
(ii) the person was given
notice of the order under section 33.
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 5 years or 300 penalty
units, or both.
(3) Strict liability applies to paragraphs (2)(b)
and (c) and subparagraph (2)(d)(i).
Division 5—Further orders
38
Court may order Official Trustee to take custody and control of property
The court may order the *Official Trustee to take custody and
control of property, or specified property, covered by a *restraining order if the court is
satisfied that this is required.
Note: Part 4‑1 sets out the Official
Trustee’s powers over the property.
39
Ancillary orders
(1) The court that made a *restraining order, or any other court
that could have made the restraining order, may make any ancillary orders that
the court considers appropriate and, without limiting the generality of this,
the court may make any one or more of the following orders:
(a) an order varying the property
covered by the *restraining
order;
(b) an order varying a condition to
which the restraining order is subject;
(c) an order relating to an
undertaking required under section 21;
(d) an order directing the owner of
the property (including, if the owner is a body corporate, a specified *director of the body corporate) to give a
sworn statement to a specified person, within a specified period, setting out
particulars of, or dealings with, the property;
(e) if the *Official Trustee is ordered under section 38
to take custody and control of property:
(i) an order regulating
the manner in which the Official Trustee may exercise its powers or perform its
duties under the restraining order; or
(ii) an order determining
any question relating to the property, including a question relating to the
liabilities of the owner or the exercise of powers or the performance of duties
of the Official Trustee; or
(iii) an order directing any
person to do anything necessary or convenient to enable the Official Trustee to
take custody and control of the property;
(f) an order giving directions about
the operation of the restraining order and any one or more of the following:
(i) a *forfeiture order that covers the same
property as the restraining order;
(ii) a *pecuniary penalty order or a *literary proceeds order that relates to
the same offence as the restraining order;
(g) an order requiring a person whose
property is covered by a restraining order to do anything necessary or
convenient to bring the property within the jurisdiction.
Note: If there is a pecuniary penalty order that
relates to the same offence as a restraining order, the court may also order
the Official Trustee to pay an amount equal to the relevant pecuniary penalty
out of property covered by the restraining order: see section 282.
(2) The court can only make an ancillary
order on the application of:
(a) the *DPP; or
(b) the owner of the property covered
by the order; or
(c) if the *Official Trustee was ordered to take
custody and control of the property—the Official Trustee; or
(d) any other person who has the leave
of the court.
(3) A person who applies for an ancillary
order must give written notice of the application to all other persons entitled
to make such an application.
(4) An ancillary order may be made:
(a) if it is made by the court that
made the *restraining
order—when making the restraining order; or
(b) in any case—at any time after the
restraining order is made.
(5) An order that is ancillary to a *restraining order does not cease to have
effect merely because the restraining order, or part of it, ceases to be in
force under subsection 45(4) or (5).
Note: A restraining order ceases to be in force
under those subsections if a confiscation order covering the same property or
relating to the same offence is satisfied.
40
Contravening ancillary orders relating to foreign property
A person is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the court makes an order under
paragraph 39(1)(g); and
(b) the person contravenes the order.
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 5 years or 300 penalty
units, or both.
Note: An order under paragraph 39(1)(g) requires a
person whose property is covered by a restraining order to do anything
necessary or convenient to bring the property within the jurisdiction.
Division 6—Duration of restraining orders
41
When a restraining order is in force
A *restraining
order is in force from the time at which it is made.
42
Application to revoke a restraining order
(1) A person who was not notified of the
application for a *restraining
order may apply to the court to revoke the order.
(1A) The application must be made:
(a) within 28 days after the person is
notified of the order; or
(b) if the person applies to the court,
within that period of 28 days, for an extension of the time for applying for
revocation—within such longer period, not exceeding 3 months, as the court
allows.
(2) The applicant must give written notice to
the *DPP and the *Official Trustee of both the application
and the grounds on which the revocation is sought.
(3) However, the *restraining order remains in force until the court revokes
the order.
(4) The *DPP
may adduce additional material to the court relating to the application to
revoke the *restraining order.
(5) The court may revoke the *restraining order if satisfied that there
are no grounds on which to make the order at the time of considering the
application to revoke the order.
43
Notice of revocation of a restraining order
If a *restraining
order is revoked under section 42, the *DPP
must give written notice of the revocation to:
(a) the owner of any property covered
by the restraining order (if the owner is known); and
(b) any other person the DPP
reasonably believes may have an *interest
in the property.
However, the DPP need not give notice to the applicant for
the revocation.
44
Giving security etc. to revoke etc. a restraining order
(1) A court may:
(a) revoke a *restraining order that covers a *suspect’s property; or
(b) exclude specified property from
such a restraining order;
if:
(c) the suspect applies to the court
to revoke the order or exclude the property; and
(d) the suspect gives written notice
of the application to the *DPP;
and
(e) the suspect gives security that is
satisfactory to the court to meet any liability that may be imposed on the
suspect under this Act.
(2) A court may:
(a) revoke a *restraining order that covers the
property of a person who is not a *suspect;
or
(b) exclude specified property from such
a restraining order;
if:
(c) the person applies to the court to
revoke the order or exclude the property; and
(d) the person gives written notice of
the application to the *DPP;
and
(e) the person gives an undertaking
concerning the person’s property that is satisfactory to the court.
45
Cessation of restraining orders
Effect on restraining orders of withdrawal of charges,
acquittals etc.
(1) A *restraining
order that relates to one or more offences ceases to be in force 28 days after
one of the following occurs:
(a) the charge, or all of the charges,
that relate to the restraining order are withdrawn;
(b) the *suspect is acquitted of the offence, or all of the
offences, with which he or she was charged;
(c) the suspect’s conviction for the
offence, or all of the offences, of which he or she was convicted are *quashed;
unless:
(d) there is a *confiscation order that relates to the
offence; or
(e) there is an application for such a
confiscation order before the court; or
(f) there is an application under:
(i) Division 6 of
Part 2‑2; or
(ii) Division 4 of
Part 2‑3; or
(iii) Division 5 of
Part 2‑4 or 2‑5;
for confirmation of a
forfeiture, or a confiscation order, that relates to the offence; or
(g) the suspect is charged with a *related offence.
Restraining orders if there is no conviction etc.
(2) A *restraining
order ceases to be in force if, within 28 days after the order was made:
(a) the *suspect has not been convicted of, or charged with, the
offence, or at least one offence, to which the restraining order relates; and
(b) there is no *confiscation order or application
for a confiscation order that relates to the offence.
Restraining orders and forfeiture orders etc.
(3) A *restraining
order ceases to be in force in respect of property covered by the restraining
order if:
(a) either:
(i) the court refuses an
application for a *forfeiture
order that would have covered the property; or
(ii) the court excludes the
property from a forfeiture order; or
(iii) a forfeiture order
that covers the property is discharged or ceases to have effect; or
(iv) the court excludes the
property under section 94 from forfeiture under Part 2‑3; and
(b) in the case of a refusal of an
application for a *forfeiture
order:
(i) the time for an appeal
against the refusal has expired without an appeal being lodged; or
(ii) an appeal against the
refusal has lapsed; or
(iii) an appeal against the
refusal has been dismissed and finally disposed of; and
(c) no application for another *confiscation order relating to:
(i) an offence to which
the restraining order relates; or
(ii) a *related offence;
is yet to be determined; and
(d) no other confiscation order
relating to such an offence is in force.
(4) A *restraining
order ceases to be in force to the extent that property that it covers vests
absolutely in the Commonwealth under Division 4 of Part 2‑2 or
Division 1 of Part 2‑3.
Restraining orders, pecuniary penalty orders and
literary proceeds orders
(5) A *restraining
order that relates to one or more offences ceases to be in force in respect of
property covered by the restraining order if:
(a) a *pecuniary penalty order or a *literary proceeds order relates to that offence or those
offences; and
(b) one or more of the following
occurs:
(i) the pecuniary penalty
order or the literary proceeds order is satisfied;
(ii) the property is sold
or disposed of to satisfy the pecuniary penalty order or literary proceeds
order;
(iii) the pecuniary penalty
order or the literary proceeds order is discharged or ceases to have effect.
Restraining orders and instruments owned by third
parties
(6) Despite subsection (1), if:
(a) a *restraining order covers property of a person who is not a
*suspect; and
(b) the property is an *instrument of an offence to which the order
relates; and
(c) the property is not *proceeds of such an offence; and
(ca) the
property is not an instrument of a *terrorism
offence to which the order relates; and
(d) the property is not subject to the
*effective control of another
person who is a suspect in relation to the order;
the restraining order ceases to be in force in respect of
that property if the suspect has not been charged with the offence or a *related offence within 28 days after the
restraining order is made.
Part 2‑2—Forfeiture orders
46
Simplified outline of this Part
Forfeiture orders can be made,
forfeiting property to the Commonwealth, if certain offences have been
committed. (It is not always a requirement that a person has been convicted of
such an offence.)
Orders are made on the application of
the DPP. Other orders can be made to reduce the effect of forfeiture orders on
grounds such as hardship to the person’s dependants.
Note: If a person is convicted of a serious offence,
forfeiture can be automatic under Part 2‑3. There is no need for a
forfeiture order.
Division 1—Making forfeiture orders
47
Forfeiture orders—conduct constituting serious offences
(1) A court with *proceeds jurisdiction must make an order that property
specified in the order is forfeited to the Commonwealth if:
(a) the *DPP applies for the order; and
(b) the property to be specified in
the order is covered by a *restraining
order under section 18 that has been in force for at least 6 months; and
(c) the
court is satisfied that:
(i) a person whose conduct or suspected conduct formed the
basis of the restraining order engaged in conduct constituting one or
more *serious offences; and
(ii) for each such
suspected offence that is not a *terrorism
offence—the offence was committed within the 6 years preceding the application for the restraining order, or since that
application was made.
Note: The order can be made before the end of the
period of 6 months referred to in paragraph (1)(b) if it is made as a
consent order: see section 316.
(2) A finding of the court for the purposes
of paragraph (1)(c) need not be based on a finding as to the commission of
a particular offence, and can be based on a finding that some *serious offence or other was committed.
(3) The raising of a doubt as to whether a
person engaged in conduct constituting a *serious
offence is not of itself sufficient to avoid a finding by the court under paragraph (1)(c).
48
Forfeiture orders—convictions for indictable offences
(1) A court with *proceeds jurisdiction must make an order that property
specified in the order is forfeited to the Commonwealth if:
(a) the *DPP applies for the order; and
(b) a person has been convicted of one
or more *indictable offences;
and
(c) the court is satisfied that the
property to be specified in the order is *proceeds
of one or more of the offences.
(2) A court with *proceeds jurisdiction may make an order that property
specified in the order is forfeited to the Commonwealth if:
(a) the *DPP applies for the order; and
(b) a person has been convicted of one
or more *indictable offences;
and
(c) subsection (1) does not
apply; and
(d) the court is satisfied that the
property to be specified in the order is an *instrument
of one or more of the offences.
(3) In considering whether it is appropriate to
make an order under subsection (2) in respect of particular property, the
court may have regard to:
(a) any hardship that may reasonably
be expected to be caused to any person by the operation of the order; and
(b) the use that is ordinarily made,
or was intended to be made, of the property to be specified in the order; and
(c) the gravity of the offence or
offences concerned.
Note: Section 52 limits the court’s power to
make a forfeiture order if one or more of the person’s convictions were due to
the person absconding.
49
Forfeiture orders—conduct constituting indictable offences etc.
(1) A court with *proceeds jurisdiction must make an order that property
specified in the order is forfeited to the Commonwealth if:
(a) the *DPP applies for the order; and
(b) the property to be specified in
the order is covered by a *restraining
order under section 19 that has been in force for at least 6 months; and
(c) the court is satisfied that one or
more of the following applies:
(i) the property is *proceeds of one or more *indictable offences;
(ii) the property is
proceeds of one or more *foreign
indictable offences;
(iii) the property is
proceeds of one or more *indictable
offences of Commonwealth concern;
(iv) the property is an
instrument of one or more *terrorism
offences; and
(d) the court is satisfied that each
such offence that is not a terrorism offence was committed within the 6 years
preceding the application for the restraining order, or since that application
was made; and
(e) the court is satisfied that the
DPP has taken reasonable steps to identify and notify persons with an *interest in the property.
(2) A finding of the court for the purposes
of paragraph (1)(c):
(a) need not be based on a finding
that a particular person committed any offence; and
(b) need not be based on a finding as
to the commission of a particular offence, and can be based on a finding that
some offence or other of a kind referred to in paragraph (1)(c) was
committed.
(3) Paragraph (1)(c) does not apply if
the court is satisfied that:
(a) no application has been made under
Division 3 of Part 2‑1 for the property to be excluded from the
*restraining order; or
(b) any such application that has been
made has been withdrawn.
50
Existence of other confiscation orders
The court’s power to make a *forfeiture order in relation to an
offence is not affected by the existence of another *confiscation order in relation to that
offence.
Note: There are restrictions on the DPP applying for
forfeiture orders if previous applications for forfeiture etc. have already
been made: see section 60.
51
Acquittals do not affect forfeiture orders under section 47 or 49
The fact that a person has been
acquitted of an offence with which the person has been charged does not affect
the court’s power to make a *forfeiture
order under section 47 or 49 in relation to the offence.
52
Making of forfeiture order if person has absconded
If, because of paragraph 331(1)(d), a
person is taken to have been convicted of an *indictable
offence, a court must not make a *forfeiture
order relating to the person’s conviction unless:
(a) the court is satisfied, on the
balance of probabilities, that the person has *absconded;
and
(b) either:
(i) the person has been
committed for trial for the offence; or
(ii) the court is
satisfied, having regard to all the evidence before the court, that a
reasonable jury, properly instructed, could lawfully find the person guilty of
the offence.
53
Jurisdictional issues concerning forfeiture orders
(1) A court cannot make a *forfeiture order in respect of property
if the court does not have jurisdiction with respect to the recovery of
property of that kind.
(2) A court may make a *forfeiture order in respect of property
even though, apart from section 314, the court does not have jurisdiction
with respect to property whose value equals the value of that property.
(3) A reference in subsection (1) to a
court having jurisdiction with respect to the recovery of property includes a
reference to the court having jurisdiction, under a *corresponding law, to make an *interstate forfeiture order in respect of
property.
Division 2—Other relevant matters when a court is considering whether to
make forfeiture orders
54
Presumption in certain cases that property is an instrument of an offence
If:
(a) the *DPP applies for:
(i) a *forfeiture order under section 47 or
49 against particular property in relation to a person’s commission of a *terrorism offence; or
(ii) a forfeiture order
under section 48 against particular property in relation to a person’s
conviction of an *indictable
offence; and
(b) evidence is given, at the hearing
of the application, that the property was in the person’s possession at the
time of, or immediately after, the person committed the offence;
then:
(c) if no evidence is given that tends
to show that the property was not used in, or in connection with, the
commission of the offence—the court must presume that the property was used in,
or in connection with, the commission of the offence; or
(d) in any other case—the court must
not make a forfeiture order against the property unless it is satisfied that
the property was used or intended to be used in, or in connection with, the
commission of the offence.
55
Forfeiture orders can extend to other interests in property
(1) In specifying an *interest in property in a *forfeiture order, the court may also
specify other interests in the property (regardless of whose they are) if:
(a) the amount received from disposing
of the combined interests would be likely to be greater than the amount
received from disposing of each of the interests separately; or
(b) disposing of the interests
separately would be impracticable or significantly more difficult than
disposing of the combined interests.
(2) If the court so specifies other *interests in the *forfeiture order, the court may make such
ancillary orders as it thinks fit for the protection of a person having one or
more of those other interests. These ancillary orders may include:
(a) an order directing the
Commonwealth to pay the person a specified amount as the value of the person’s
interest in the property; or
(b) an order directing that specified
other interests in the property be transferred to the person.
(3) In deciding whether to make an ancillary
order, the court must have regard to:
(a) the nature, extent and value of
the person’s *interest in the
property concerned; and
(b) if the court is aware that any
other person claims an interest in the property—the nature, extent and value of
the interest claimed; and
(c) any other matter that the court
considers relevant.
56
Forfeiture orders must specify the value of forfeited property
The court must specify, in any *forfeiture order it makes, the amount it
considers to be the value, at the time the order is made, of the property
(other than money) specified in the order.
57 A
person may buy back forfeited property
A court that makes a *forfeiture order against property may, if
it is satisfied that:
(a) it would not be contrary to the
public interest for a person’s *interest
in the property to be transferred to the person; and
(b) there is no other reason why the
person’s interest in the property should not be transferred to that person;
by order:
(c) declare the nature, extent and
value (as at the time when the order is made) of the interest; and
(d) declare that the interest may be
excluded, under section 89, from the operation of the forfeiture order.
58 The
court may also make supporting directions
(1) If a court makes a *forfeiture order, the court has power to
give all directions that are necessary or convenient for giving effect to the
order.
(2) This includes, for a *forfeiture order specifying *registrable property, a direction to an
officer of the court to do anything necessary and reasonable to obtain
possession of any document necessary for the transfer of the property.
Division 3—How forfeiture orders are obtained
59 DPP
may apply for a forfeiture order
(1) The *DPP
may apply for a *forfeiture
order.
(2) If the application relates to a person’s
conviction of an *indictable
offence, the application must be made before the end of the period of 6 months
after the *conviction day.
60
Additional application for a forfeiture order
(1) The *DPP
cannot, unless the court gives leave, apply for a *forfeiture order under a section of Division 1 in
relation to an offence if:
(a) an application has previously been
made:
(i) under this Division
for an order under the same section of Division 1; or
(ii) under another law of
the Commonwealth (other than Division 1); or
(iii) under a law of a *non‑governing Territory;
for the forfeiture or
condemnation of the property in relation to the offence; and
(b) the application has been finally
determined on the merits.
(2) The court must not give leave unless it
is satisfied that:
(a) the property to which the new
application relates was identified only after the first application was
determined; or
(b) necessary evidence became
available only after the first application was determined; or
(c) it is in the interests of justice
to grant the leave.
(3) To avoid doubt:
(a) the *DPP may apply for a *forfeiture
order under a section of Division 1 against property in relation to an
offence even though an application has previously been made under a different
section of Division 1 for forfeiture of that property in relation to that
offence; and
(b) the DPP may apply for a forfeiture
order against property in relation to an offence even though an application has
previously been made for a *pecuniary
penalty order or a *literary
proceeds order in relation to that offence.
61
Notice of application
(1) The *DPP
must give written notice of an application for a *forfeiture order to:
(a) if the order is sought relating to
a person’s conviction of an offence—the person; and
(b) any person who claims an *interest in property covered by the
application; and
(c) any person whom the DPP reasonably
believes may have an interest in that property.
(2) The court hearing the application may, at
any time before finally determining the application, direct the *DPP to give or publish notice of the
application to a specified person or class of persons. The court may also
specify the time and manner in which the notice is to be given or published.
62
Amending an application
(1) The court hearing an application for a *forfeiture order may amend the
application:
(a) on application by the *DPP; or
(b) with the consent of the DPP.
(2) However, the court must not amend the
application to include additional property in the application unless:
(a) the court is satisfied that:
(i) the property was not
reasonably capable of identification when the application was originally made;
or
(ii) necessary evidence
became available only after the application was originally made; or
(b) the *forfeiture order applied for is an order under section 47
or 49 and the court is satisfied that:
(i) including the
additional property in the application for the order might have prejudiced the
investigation of, or the prosecution of a person for, an offence; or
(ii) it is for any other
reason appropriate to grant the application to amend.
(3) On applying for an amendment to include
additional property in the application, the *DPP
must give written notice of the application to amend to any person whom the DPP
reasonably believes may have an *interest
in that additional property.
(4) If the *forfeiture
order applied for is an order under section 48, any person who claims an *interest in that additional property may
appear and adduce evidence at the hearing of the application to amend.
63
Court may dispense with notice requirements if person has absconded
The court to which an application for a *forfeiture order is made in relation to
an offence may, on application by the *DPP,
dispense with the requirements to give notice to a person under subsections
61(1) and 62(3) if the court is satisfied that the person has *absconded in connection with the offence.
64
Procedure on application
(1) Any person who claims an *interest in property covered by an
application for a *forfeiture
order may appear and adduce evidence at the hearing of the application.
(2) If the application relates to a person’s
conviction of an *indictable
offence, the court may, in determining the application, have regard to:
(a) the transcript of any proceeding
against the person for:
(i) that offence; or
(ii) if the person is taken
to be convicted of that offence because of paragraph 331(1)(c)—the other
offence referred to in that paragraph; and
(b) the evidence given in any such
proceeding.
(3) The court may still make a *forfeiture order if a person entitled to
be given notice of the relevant application fails to appear at the hearing of
the application.
65
Applications to courts before which persons are convicted
If an application for a *forfeiture order is made to a court
before which a person was convicted of an *indictable
offence:
(a) the application may be dealt with
by the court; and
(b) any power in relation to the
relevant order may be exercised by the court;
whether or not the court is constituted in the same way in
which it was constituted when the person was convicted of the indictable
offence.
Division 4—Effect of forfeiture orders
66
What property is forfeited and when—general rule
Property specified in a *forfeiture order vests absolutely in the
Commonwealth at the time the order is made.
67
First exception—registrable property
(1) Despite section 66, if property
specified in the *forfeiture
order is *registrable property:
(a) that property vests in equity in
the Commonwealth but does not vest in the Commonwealth at law until the
applicable registration requirements have been complied with; and
(b) the *DPP has power, on behalf of the Commonwealth, to do
anything necessary or convenient to give notice of, or otherwise protect, the
Commonwealth’s equitable interest in that property; and
(c) the Commonwealth is entitled to be
registered as the owner of that property; and
(d) the *Official Trustee has power, on behalf of the Commonwealth,
to do, or authorise the doing of, anything necessary or convenient to obtain
the registration of the Commonwealth as the owner.
(2) Any action by the *DPP under paragraph (1)(b) is not a
dealing for the purposes of subsection 69(1).
(3) The *Official
Trustee’s powers under paragraph (1)(d) include executing any instrument
required to be executed by a person transferring an *interest in property of that kind.
68
Second exception—if a joint owner dies before the order was made
(1) Despite
section 66, if a person:
(a) was, immediately before his or her
death, the joint owner of property specified in the *forfeiture order; but
(b) died before the order was made,
but:
(i) after the *DPP applied for the order; or
(ii) while a *restraining order covering the property
was in force;
that property is taken to have vested in the Commonwealth
immediately before the person’s death.
(2) Any such *restraining order is also taken to have continued to apply
to the property as if the person had not died.
69
When can the Commonwealth begin dealing with forfeited property?
(1) The Commonwealth, and persons acting on
its behalf, can only dispose of, or otherwise deal with, property specified in
a *forfeiture order after, and
only if the order is still in force at, the later of the following times:
(a) when:
(i) if the period provided
for lodging an appeal against the order has ended without such an appeal having
been lodged—that period ends; or
(ii) if an appeal against
the order has been lodged—the appeal lapses or is finally determined;
(b) if the order was made in relation
to a person’s conviction of an offence—when:
(i) if the period provided
for lodging an appeal against the conviction has ended without such an appeal
having been lodged—that period ends; or
(ii) if an appeal against
the conviction has been lodged—the appeal lapses or is finally determined.
(2) However, such disposals and dealings may
occur earlier with the leave of the court and in accordance with any directions
of the court.
(3) For the purposes of paragraph (1)(b):
(a) if the person is to be taken to
have been convicted of the offence because of paragraph 331(1)(b)—an appeal
against the finding of the person guilty of the offence is taken to be an
appeal against the conviction; and
(b) if the person is to be taken to
have been convicted of the offence because of paragraph 331(1)(c)—an appeal
against the person’s conviction of the other offence referred to in that
paragraph is taken to be an appeal against the conviction.
70 How
must the Commonwealth deal with forfeited property?
(1) If the *forfeiture
order is still in force at the later time mentioned in subsection 69(1), the *Official Trustee must, on the
Commonwealth’s behalf and as soon as practicable:
(a) dispose of any property specified
in the order that is not money; and
(b) apply:
(i) any amounts received
from that disposal; and
(ii) any property specified
in the order that is money;
to payment of its remuneration
and other costs, charges and expenses of the kind referred to in subsection
288(1) payable to or incurred by it in connection with the disposal and with
the *restraining order that
covered the property; and
(c) credit the remainder of the money
and amounts received to the *Confiscated
Assets Account as required by section 296.
(2) However, if the *Official Trustee is required to deal with
property specified in a *forfeiture
order but has not yet begun:
(a) the Minister; or
(b) a *senior Departmental officer authorised by the Minister for
the purposes of this subsection;
may direct that the property be alternatively disposed of,
or otherwise dealt with, as specified in the direction.
(3) Such a direction could be that property
is to be disposed of in accordance with the provisions of a specified law.
Note: The quashing of a conviction of an offence
relating to a forfeiture may prevent things being done under this section: see
section 86.
71
Dealings with forfeited property
A person is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the person knows that a *forfeiture order has been made in respect
of *registrable property; and
(b) the person disposes of, or
otherwise deals with, the property before the Commonwealth’s interest has been
registered on the appropriate register; and
(c) the forfeiture order has not been
discharged.
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 5 years or 300 penalty
units, or both.
Division 5—Reducing the effect of forfeiture orders
Subdivision A—Relieving hardship
72
Relieving certain dependants from hardship
(1) The court making a *forfeiture order specifying a *person’s property must make another order
directing the Commonwealth to pay a specified amount to a *dependant of the person if:
(a) the forfeiture order is not to be
made under section 48; and
(b) the court is satisfied that:
(i) the forfeiture order would
cause hardship to the dependant; and
(ii) the specified amount
would relieve that hardship; and
(iii) if the dependant is
aged at least 18 years—the dependant had no knowledge of the person’s conduct
that is the subject of the forfeiture order.
(2) The specified amount must not exceed the
difference between:
(a) what the court considers is likely
to be the amount received from disposing of the *person’s property under the *forfeiture order; and
(b) what the court considers is likely
to be the sum of any payments of the kind referred to in paragraph 70(1)(b) in
connection with the forfeiture order.
(3) An order under this section may relate to
more than one of the person’s *dependants.
Subdivision B—Excluding property from a forfeiture order
73 Making
exclusion orders
(1) A court that made a *forfeiture order, or that is hearing, or
is to hear, an application (a forfeiture application) for a
forfeiture order, must make an order excluding property from forfeiture (an exclusion
order) if:
(a) a person applies for the exclusion
order; and
(b) the forfeiture order, or the
forfeiture application, specifies the applicant’s property; and
(c) if the forfeiture order was (or
the forfeiture order applied for would be) made under section 47 or 49 and
the applicant is the person on whose commission of an offence the order was (or
would be) based—the court is satisfied that the property to be specified in the
exclusion order is neither:
(i) *proceeds of *unlawful activity; nor
(ii) if an offence on which
the order is (or would be) based is a *terrorism
offence—an *instrument of any
terrorism offence; and
(d) if the forfeiture order was (or
the forfeiture order applied for would be) made under section 47 or 49 and
the applicant is not the person on whose commission of an offence the order was
(or would be) based—the court is satisfied that:
(i) the applicant was not,
in any way, involved in the commission of any of the offences to which the
forfeiture order or forfeiture application relates; and
(ii) the property to be
specified in the exclusion order is not proceeds of unlawful activity; and
(iii) if an offence on which
the order is (or would be) based is a terrorism offence—the property to be
specified in the exclusion order is not an instrument of any terrorism offence;
and
(e) if the forfeiture order was (or
the forfeiture order applied for would be) made under section 48—the court
is satisfied that:
(i) the applicant was not,
in any way, involved in the commission of any of the offences to which the forfeiture
order or forfeiture application relates; and
(ii) the property to be
specified in the exclusion order is neither proceeds nor an *instrument of any of those offences.
(2) An *exclusion order must:
(a) specify the nature, extent and
value (at the time of making the order) of the property concerned; and
(b) direct that the property be
excluded from the operation of the relevant *forfeiture
order; and
(c) if the property has vested (in law
or equity) in the Commonwealth under this Part and is yet to be disposed
of—direct the Commonwealth to transfer the property to the applicant; and
(d) if the property has vested (in law
or equity) in the Commonwealth under this Part and has been disposed of—direct
the Commonwealth to pay the applicant an amount equal to the value specified
under paragraph (a).
74
Applying for exclusion orders
Before a forfeiture order has been made
(1) A person may apply for an *exclusion order if a *forfeiture order that could specify the *person’s property has been applied for,
but is yet to be made.
After a forfeiture order has been made
(2) A person cannot, unless the court gives
leave, apply for an *exclusion
order after a *forfeiture order
specifying the *person’s
property has been made if:
(a) he or she was given notice of the
application for the forfeiture order, but did not appear at the hearing of that
application; or
(b) he or she appeared at the hearing
of that application; or
(c) 6 months have elapsed since the
forfeiture order was made.
(3) The court may give the person leave to
apply if the court is satisfied that:
(a) if paragraph (2)(a)
applies—the person had a good reason for not appearing; or
(b) if paragraph (2)(b)
applies—the person now has evidence relevant to the person’s application that
was not available to the person at the time of the hearing; or
(c) if paragraph (2)(c)
applies—the person’s failure to apply was not due to any neglect by the person;
or
(d) there are other special grounds
for giving the leave.
75
Giving notice of matters relevant to an application
(1) An applicant for an *exclusion order must give written notice
to the *DPP of both the
application and the grounds on which the order is sought.
(2) The *DPP
may appear and adduce evidence at the hearing of the application.
(3) The *DPP
must give the applicant notice of any grounds on which it proposes to contest
the application. However, the DPP need not do so until it has had a reasonable
opportunity to examine the applicant under Part 3‑1.
76
When an application can be heard
An application for an *exclusion order must not be heard until
the *DPP has had a reasonable
opportunity to examine the applicant under Part 3‑1.
Subdivision C—Compensating for the proportion of property that did not
involve proceeds of an offence
77 Making
compensation orders
(1) A court that made a *forfeiture order must make an order (a compensation
order) if:
(a) a person has applied for the
compensation order; and
(b) the forfeiture order specifies the
applicant’s property as *proceeds
of an offence to which the forfeiture order relates; and
(c) the court is satisfied that, when
the property first became proceeds of that offence, a proportion of the value
of the property was not acquired using the proceeds of any offence.
(2) A *compensation
order must:
(a) specify the proportion found by
the court under paragraph (1)(c); and
(b) direct the Commonwealth to:
(i) if the property has
not been disposed of—dispose of the property; and
(ii) pay the applicant an
amount equal to that proportion of the difference between the amount received
from disposing of the property and the sum of any payments of the kind referred
to in paragraph 70(1)(b) in connection with the *forfeiture order.
78
Applying for compensation orders
(1) A person whose property is specified in a
*forfeiture order may apply for
a *compensation order.
(2) However, if a person was given notice of
an application for a *forfeiture
order, the person cannot apply for a *compensation
order relating to that forfeiture order unless:
(a) the person applies for the
compensation order within 6 months after the forfeiture order was made; and
(b) the court gives leave.
(3) If a person was not given such notice,
the person cannot apply for a *compensation
order relating to a *forfeiture
order unless:
(a) the person applies for the
compensation order within 6 months after the forfeiture order was made; or
(b) the court gives leave.
79
Giving notice of matters relevant to an application
(1) An applicant for a *compensation order must give written
notice to the *DPP of both the
application and the grounds on which the order is sought.
(2) The *DPP
may appear and adduce evidence at the hearing of the application.
(3) The *DPP
must give the applicant notice of any grounds on which it proposes to contest
the application.
Division 6—The effect on forfeiture orders of acquittals and quashing of
convictions
80
Forfeiture order made under section 47 or 49 unaffected by acquittal or
quashing of conviction
A *forfeiture
order made under section 47 or 49 against a person in relation to an
offence is not affected if:
(a) having been charged with the
offence, the person is acquitted; or
(b) the person is convicted of the
offence and the conviction is subsequently *quashed.
81
Discharge of forfeiture order made under section 48 on quashing of
conviction
(1) A *forfeiture
order made under section 48 in relation to a person’s conviction of an
offence is discharged if:
(a) the person’s conviction of the
offence is subsequently *quashed
(whether or not the order relates to the person’s conviction of other offences
that have not been quashed); and
(b) the *DPP does not, within 14 days after the conviction is
quashed, apply to the court that made the order for the order to be confirmed.
(2) However, unless and until a court decides
otherwise on such an application, the *quashing
of the conviction does not affect the *forfeiture
order:
(a) for 14 days after the conviction
is quashed; and
(b) if the *DPP makes such an application.
82
Notice of application for confirmation of forfeiture order
(1) The *DPP
must give written notice of an application for confirmation of the *forfeiture order to:
(a) the person whose conviction was *quashed; and
(b) any person who claims, or prior to
the forfeiture claimed, an *interest
in property covered by the order; and
(c) any person whom the DPP reasonably
believes may have had an interest in that property before the forfeiture.
Note: If the DPP applies for confirmation of a
forfeiture order, it can also apply for an examination order under Part 3‑1.
(2) The court hearing the application may, at
any time before finally determining the application, direct the *DPP to give or publish notice of the
application to a specified person or class of persons. The court may also specify
the time and manner in which the notice is to be given or published.
83
Procedure on application for confirmation of forfeiture order
(1) Any person who claims an *interest in property covered by the *forfeiture order may appear and adduce
evidence at the hearing of the application for confirmation of the order.
(2) The court may, in determining the
application, have regard to:
(a) the transcript of any proceeding
against the person for:
(i) the offence of which
the person was convicted; or
(ii) if the person was
taken to be convicted of that offence because of paragraph 331(1)(c)—the other
offence referred to in that paragraph;
including any appeals relating
to the conviction; and
(b) the evidence given in any such
proceeding.
84
Court may confirm forfeiture order
(1) The court may confirm the *forfeiture order if the court is
satisfied that:
(a) it could have made a forfeiture
order under section 47 in relation to the offence in relation to which the
person’s conviction was *quashed
if, when the *DPP applied for
an order under section 48, it had instead applied for an order under
section 47; or
(b) it could have made a forfeiture
order under section 49 in relation to the offence in relation to which the
person’s conviction was quashed if, when the DPP applied for an order under
section 48, it had instead applied for an order under section 49.
(2) For the purposes of paragraph (1)(a),
the court is to treat any relevant conduct of the person (other than conduct
that constitutes a *terrorism
offence) as having been made within the period of 6 years referred to in
paragraph 47(1)(c).
85
Effect of court’s decision on confirmation of forfeiture order
(1) If the court confirms the *forfeiture order under paragraph
84(1)(a), the order is taken not to be affected by the *quashing of the person’s conviction of
the offence.
(2) If the court confirms the *forfeiture order under paragraph
84(1)(b):
(a) to the extent that the order
covers property that is:
(i) in any case—*proceeds of the offence; or
(ii) if the offence is a *terrorism offence—an *instrument of the offence;
the order is taken not to be
affected by the *quashing of
the person’s conviction of the offence; but
(b) to the extent that the order
covers property that is:
(i) in any case—not
proceeds of the offence; and
(ii) if the offence is a
terrorism offence—not an instrument of the offence;
the order is discharged.
(3) If the court decides not to confirm the *forfeiture order, the order is
discharged.
86
Official Trustee must not deal with forfeited property before the court decides
on confirmation of forfeiture order
During
the period:
(a) starting
on the day after the person’s conviction of the offence was *quashed; and
(b) ending when the court decides
whether to confirm the *forfeiture
order;
the *Official
Trustee must not do any of the things required under section 70 in
relation to property covered by the order or amounts received from disposing of
such property.
Division 7—Miscellaneous
87
Giving notice if a forfeiture order is discharged on appeal or by quashing of a
conviction
(1) This section applies in relation to
particular property if:
(a) a *forfeiture order that covered that property is discharged
by a court hearing an appeal against the making of the order; or
(b) a forfeiture order that covered
that property is discharged under section 81 or subsection 85(3); or
(c) a forfeiture order that covered
the property is discharged under subsection 85(2) in relation to that property.
(2) The *DPP
must, as soon as practicable, give written notice of the discharge to any
person the DPP reasonably believes may have had an *interest in that property immediately before the order was
made.
(3) The *DPP
must, if required by a court, give or publish notice of the discharge to a
specified person or class of persons. The court may also specify the time and
manner in which the notice is to be given or published.
(4) A notice given under this section must
include a statement to the effect that a person claiming to have had an *interest in that property may apply under
section 88 for the transfer of the interest, or its value, to the person.
88
Returning property etc. following the discharge of a forfeiture order
(1) The Minister must arrange for:
(a) if property specified in a *forfeiture order is vested in the
Commonwealth—an *interest in
the property to be transferred to a person claiming to have had the interest in
the property immediately before the order was made; or
(b) if property specified in a
forfeiture order is no longer vested in the Commonwealth—an amount equal to the
value of the interest in the property to be paid to the person;
if:
(c) the forfeiture order has been
discharged in relation to the property:
(i) by a court hearing an
appeal against the making of the order; or
(ii) under section 81
or 85; and
(d) the person applies to the
Minister, in writing, for the transfer of the interest to the person; and
(e) the person had that interest in
the property immediately before the order was made.
(2) If the Minister must arrange for the
property to be transferred, the Minister may also, on behalf of the
Commonwealth, do or authorise the doing of anything necessary or convenient to
give effect to the transfer.
(3) Without limiting subsection (2),
things that may be done or authorised under that subsection include:
(a) executing any instrument; and
(b) applying for registration of an *interest in the property on any
appropriate register.
89
Person with interest in forfeited property may buy back the interest
(1) If a court:
(a) makes a *forfeiture order against property; and
(b) makes an order under section 57
in respect of an *interest in
the property;
then:
(c) the payment to the Commonwealth,
while the interest is still vested in the Commonwealth, of the amount specified
in the order under section 57 as the value of the interest discharges the
forfeiture order to the extent to which it relates to the interest; and
(d) the Minister:
(i) must arrange for the
interest to be transferred to the person in whom it was vested immediately
before the property was forfeited to the Commonwealth; and
(ii) may, on behalf of the
Commonwealth, do or authorise the doing of anything necessary or convenient to
effect the transfer.
(2) Without limiting subparagraph (1)(d)(ii),
things that may be done or authorised under that subparagraph include:
(a) executing any instrument; and
(b) making an application for
registration of an *interest in
the property on any appropriate register.
90
Buying out other interests in forfeited property
The Minister must arrange for an *interest in property to be transferred to
a person (the purchaser) if:
(a) the property is forfeited to the
Commonwealth under this Part; and
(b) the interest is required to be
transferred to the purchaser under subsection 88(1) or 89(1), or under a
direction under paragraph 73(2)(c); and
(c) the purchaser’s interest in the
property, immediately before the forfeiture took place, was not the only
interest in the property; and
(d) the purchaser gives written notice
to each other person who had an interest in the property immediately before the
forfeiture took place that:
(i) the purchaser intends
to purchase that other interest from the Commonwealth; and
(ii) the person served with
the notice may, within 21 days after receiving the notice, lodge a written
objection to the purchase of that interest with the Minister; and
(e) no person served with notice under
paragraph (d) in relation to that interest lodges a written objection to
the purchase of that interest with the Minister within the period referred to
in that paragraph; and
(f) the purchaser pays to the
Commonwealth, while that interest is still vested in the Commonwealth, an
amount equal to the value of that interest.
Part 2‑3—Forfeiture on conviction of a serious offence
91
Simplified outline of this Part
If a person is convicted of a serious
offence, property that is subject to a restraining order relating to the
offence is forfeited to the Commonwealth unless the property is excluded from
forfeiture.
There are cases in which forfeited
property can be recovered from the Commonwealth.
Note: Property can be forfeited in relation to a
serious offence, without a conviction, under a forfeiture order under Part 2‑2.
Division 1—Forfeiture on conviction of a serious offence
92
Forfeiting restrained property without a forfeiture order if a person has been
convicted of a serious offence
(1) Property is forfeited to the Commonwealth
at the end of the period applying under subsection (3) if:
(a) the person is convicted of a *serious offence; and
(b) either:
(i) at the end of that
period, the property is covered by a *restraining
order against the person that relates to the offence; or
(ii) the property was
covered by such a restraining order against the person, but the order was
revoked under section 44 or the property was excluded from the order under
that section; and
(c) the property is not subject to an
order under section 94 excluding the property from forfeiture under this
Part.
(2) It does not matter whether:
(a) the *restraining order was made before or after the person’s
conviction of the *serious
offence; or
(b) immediately before forfeiture, the
property is the *person’s
property or another person’s property.
(3) The period at the end of which the
property is forfeited is:
(a) the 6 month period starting on the
day of the conviction; or
(b) if an *extension order is in force at the end of that period—the
extended period relating to that extension order.
(4) This section does not apply if the person
is taken to have been convicted of the offence because the person *absconded in connection with the offence.
(5) A *restraining
order in relation to a *related
offence with which the person has been charged, or is proposed to be charged, is
taken, for the purposes of this section, to be a restraining order in relation
to the offence of which the person was convicted.
(6) If:
(a) under section 44, a *restraining order that covered particular
property is revoked, or particular property is excluded from a restraining
order; and
(b) the security referred to in
paragraph 44(1)(e), or the undertaking referred to in paragraph 44(2)(e), in
connection with the revocation or exclusion is still in force;
the property is taken, for the purposes of this section,
to be covered by the restraining order.
93
Making an extension order extending the period before property is forfeited
(1) The court that made the *restraining order referred to in
paragraph 92(1)(b) may make an order (an extension order) specifying
an extended period for the purposes of subsection 92(3) if:
(a) an application for the order is
made within 6 months after the start of the day of the relevant conviction; and
(b) the applicant has also applied to
the court under section 31 to exclude property from the restraining order;
and
(c) the court is satisfied that the
applicant made the application under section 31 without undue delay, and
has since diligently followed up that application.
The extended period specified must end no later than 15
months from the start of the day of the relevant conviction.
(2) The *extension
order stops being in force if the application under section 31 is finally
determined before the end of the 6 month period starting on the day of the
relevant conviction.
(3) The extended period ends if the
application under section 31 is finally determined before the end of that
period.
94
Excluding property from forfeiture under this Part
(1) The court that made the *restraining order referred to in
paragraph 92(1)(b) may make an order excluding particular property from
forfeiture under this Part if:
(a) the person referred to in
paragraph 92(1)(a) applies for an order under this section; and
(b) the property is covered by the
restraining order; and
(c) the person owns the property; and
(d) the person has been convicted of a
*serious offence to which the
restraining order relates; and
(e) the court is satisfied that the
property is neither *proceeds
of *unlawful activity nor an *instrument of unlawful activity; and
(f) the court is satisfied that the
defendant’s interest in the property was lawfully acquired.
(2) To avoid doubt, an order under this
section cannot be made in relation to property if the property has already been
forfeited under this Part.
(3) The person must give written notice to
the *DPP of both the
application and the grounds on which the order is sought.
(4) The *DPP
may appear and adduce evidence at the hearing of the application.
(5) The *DPP
must give the applicant notice of any grounds on which it proposes to contest
the application.
95
Court may declare that property has been forfeited under this Part
The court that made the *restraining order referred to in
paragraph 92(1)(b) may declare that particular property has been forfeited under
this Part if:
(a) the *DPP applies to the court for the declaration; and
(b) the court is satisfied that that
property is forfeited under this Part.
Division 2—Effect of forfeiture on conviction of a serious offence
96
When is property forfeited—general rule
Property forfeited under section 92
vests absolutely in the Commonwealth at the time of the forfeiture.
97
First exception—registrable property
(1) Despite section 96, if property
forfeited under section 92 is *registrable
property:
(a) that property vests in equity in
the Commonwealth but does not vest in the Commonwealth at law until the
applicable registration requirements have been complied with; and
(b) the *DPP has power, on behalf of the Commonwealth, to do
anything necessary or convenient to give notice of, or otherwise protect, the
Commonwealth’s equitable interest in that property; and
(c) the Commonwealth is entitled to be
registered as the owner of that property; and
(d) the *Official Trustee has power, on behalf of the Commonwealth,
to do, or authorise the doing of, anything necessary or convenient to obtain
the registration of the Commonwealth as the owner.
(2) Any action by the *DPP under paragraph (1)(b) is not a
dealing for the purposes of subsection 99(1).
(3) The *Official
Trustee’s powers under paragraph (1)(d) include executing any instrument
required to be executed by a person transferring an *interest in property of that kind.
98
Second exception—if a joint owner dies
Despite
section 96, if:
(a) a person who is convicted of a *serious offence was, immediately before
his or her death, the joint owner of property; and
(b) the period that would apply under
subsection 92(3) if the property were subject to forfeiture under section 92
in relation to the conviction had not ended before his or her death; and
(c) if that period had ended
immediately before his or her death—the property would have been forfeited
under section 92;
the property is taken to have vested in the Commonwealth
immediately before his or her death.
99
When can the Commonwealth begin dealing with forfeited property?
(1) The Commonwealth, and persons acting on
its behalf, can dispose of, or otherwise deal with, property forfeited under
section 92 in relation to a person’s conviction of a *serious offence if and only if:
(a) the period applying under subsection (3)
has come to an end; and
(b) the conviction has not been *quashed by that time.
(2) However, such disposals and dealings may
occur earlier with the leave of the court and in accordance with any directions
of the court.
(3) The period at the end of which the
Commonwealth, and persons acting on its behalf, can dispose of or otherwise
deal with the property is:
(a) if the conviction is one in
relation to which neither paragraph 331(1)(b) nor (c) applies, the period
ending:
(i) if the period provided
for lodging an appeal against the conviction has ended without such an appeal
having been lodged—at the end of that period; or
(ii) if an appeal against
the conviction has been lodged—when the appeal lapses or is finally determined;
or
(b) if the person is taken to have
been convicted because of paragraph 331(1)(b), the period ending:
(i) if the period provided
for lodging an appeal against the finding of the person guilty of the offence
has ended without such an appeal having been lodged—at the end of that period;
or
(ii) if an appeal against
the finding of the person guilty of the offence has been lodged—when the appeal
lapses or is finally determined; or
(c) if the person is taken to have
been convicted because of paragraph 331(1)(c), the period ending:
(i) if the period provided
for lodging an appeal against the person’s conviction of the other offence
referred to in that paragraph has ended without such an appeal having been
lodged—at the end of that period; or
(ii) if an appeal against
the person’s conviction of the other offence referred to in that paragraph has
been lodged—when the appeal lapses or is finally determined.
100
How must forfeited property be dealt with?
(1) If subsection 99(1) no longer prevents
disposal of or dealing with particular property forfeited under section 92,
the *Official Trustee must, on
the Commonwealth’s behalf and as soon as practicable:
(a) dispose of any of the forfeited
property that is not money; and
(b) apply:
(i) any amounts received
from that disposal; and
(ii) any of the forfeited
property that is money;
to payment of its remuneration
and other costs, charges and expenses of the kind referred to in subsection
288(1) payable to or incurred by it in connection with the disposal and with
the *restraining order that
covered the property; and
(c) credit the remainder of the money
and amounts received to the *Confiscated
Assets Account as required by section 296.
(2) However, if the *Official Trustee has not yet begun to
deal with property forfeited under section 92, as required by this
section:
(a) the Minister; or
(b) a *senior Departmental officer authorised by the Minister for
the purposes of this subsection;
may direct that the property be disposed of, or otherwise
dealt with, as specified in the direction.
(3) Such a direction could be that property
is to be disposed of in accordance with the provisions of a specified law.
Note: The quashing of a conviction of an offence
relating to the forfeiture will prevent things being done under this section:
see section 112.
101
Minister may give supporting directions
(1) The Minister may give all directions that
are necessary or convenient to realise the Commonwealth’s *interest in property forfeited under
section 92.
(2) This includes, for *registrable property forfeited under
section 92, directing an officer of the Department or a *police officer to do anything necessary
and reasonable to obtain possession of any document necessary for the transfer
of the property.
Division 3—Recovery of forfeited property
102
Court may make orders relating to transfer of forfeited property etc.
(1) If property is forfeited to the
Commonwealth under section 92, the court that made the *restraining order referred to in
paragraph 92(1)(b) may, if:
(a) a person who claims an *interest in the property applies under
section 104 for an order under this section; and
(b) the court is satisfied that the
grounds set out in subsection (2) or (3) exist;
make an order:
(c) declaring the nature, extent and
value of the applicant’s interest in the property; and
(d) either:
(i) if the interest is
still vested in the Commonwealth—directing the Commonwealth to transfer the
interest to the applicant; or
(ii) declaring that there
is payable by the Commonwealth to the applicant an amount equal to the value
declared under paragraph (c).
(2) An order under this section may be made
if:
(a) the applicant was not, in any way,
involved in the commission of the offence to which the forfeiture relates; and
(b) the applicant’s *interest in the property is not subject
to the *effective control of
the person whose conviction caused the forfeiture; and
(c) the applicant’s interest in the
property is not *proceeds of
the offence or an *instrument
of the offence.
(3) An order under this section may also be
made if:
(a) the property was not used in, or
in connection with, any *unlawful
activity and was not derived or realised, directly or indirectly, by any person
from any unlawful activity; and
(b) the applicant acquired the
property lawfully; and
(c) the applicant is not the person
convicted of the offence to which the forfeiture relates.
103
Court may make orders relating to buying back forfeited property
If property is forfeited to the
Commonwealth under section 92, the court that made the *restraining order referred to in
paragraph 92(1)(b) may, if:
(a) a person who claims an *interest in the property applies under
section 104 for an order under this section; and
(b) the court is satisfied that:
(i) it would not be
contrary to the public interest for the interest to be transferred to the
person; and
(ii) there is no other
reason why the interest should not be transferred to the person;
make an order:
(c) declaring the nature, extent and
value (as at the time when the order is made) of the interest; and
(d) declaring that the forfeiture
ceases to operate in relation to the interest if payment is made under section 105.
104
Applying for orders under sections 102 and 103
(1) An application for an order under section 102
or 103 must, unless the court gives leave under subsection (2), be made
before the end of the period of 6 months commencing on the day on which the
property to which the application relates is forfeited to the Commonwealth.
(2) The court may give a person leave to
apply after the end of that period if the court is satisfied that the delay in
making the application is not due to neglect on the part of the applicant.
(3) A person who was given notice of:
(a) proceedings for the application
for the *restraining order by
virtue of which the property is forfeited; or
(b) the making of the restraining
order;
must not apply for an order under section 102 or 103
relating to the property unless the court gives leave under subsection (4).
(4) The court may give a person leave to
apply if the court is satisfied that the person’s failure to seek to have the
property excluded from the forfeiture by an order under section 94 was not
due to any neglect on the part of the applicant.
105
Person with interest in forfeited property may buy back the interest
(1) If:
(a) property is forfeited to the
Commonwealth under section 92; and
(b) a court makes an order under
section 103 in respect of an *interest
in the property; and
(c) the amount specified in the order
as the value of the interest is paid to the Commonwealth, while the interest is
still vested in the Commonwealth;
section 92 ceases to apply in relation to the
interest, and the Minister:
(d) must arrange for the interest to
be transferred to the person in whom it was vested immediately before the
property was forfeited to the Commonwealth; and
(e) may, on behalf of the
Commonwealth, do or authorise the doing of anything necessary or convenient to
effect the transfer.
(2) Without limiting paragraph (1)(e),
things that may be done or authorised under that paragraph include:
(a) executing any instrument; and
(b) applying for registration of an *interest in the property on any
appropriate register.
106
Buying out other interests in forfeited property
The
Minister must arrange for an *interest
in property to be transferred to a person (the purchaser) if:
(a) the property is forfeited to the
Commonwealth under section 92; and
(b) the interest is required to be
transferred to the purchaser under section 105, or under a direction under
subparagraph 102(1)(d)(i); and
(c) the purchaser’s interest in the
property, immediately before the forfeiture took place, was not the only
interest in the property; and
(d) the purchaser gives written notice
to each other person who had an interest in the property immediately before the
forfeiture took place that:
(i) the purchaser intends
to purchase that other interest from the Commonwealth; and
(ii) the person served with
the notice may, within 21 days after receiving the notice, lodge a written
objection to the purchase of that interest with the Minister; and
(e) no person served with the notice
under paragraph (d) in relation to that interest lodges a written
objection to the purchase of that interest with the Minister within the period
referred to in that paragraph; and
(f) the purchaser pays to the
Commonwealth, while that interest is still vested in the Commonwealth, an
amount equal to the value of that interest.
Division 4—The effect on forfeiture of convictions being quashed
107
The effect on forfeiture of convictions being quashed
(1) A forfeiture of property to the
Commonwealth under section 92 in relation to a person’s conviction of an
offence ceases to have effect if:
(a) the person’s conviction of the
offence is subsequently *quashed;
and
(b) the forfeiture does not also
relate to the person’s conviction of other offences that have not been quashed;
and
(c) the *DPP does not, within 14 days after the conviction is quashed,
apply to the court that made the *restraining
order referred to in paragraph 92(1)(b) for the forfeiture to be confirmed.
(2) However, unless and until a court decides
otherwise on such an application, the *quashing
of the conviction does not affect the forfeiture:
(a) for 14 days after the conviction
is quashed; and
(b) if the *DPP makes such an application.
108
Notice of application for confirmation of forfeiture
(1) The *DPP
must give written notice of an application for confirmation of the forfeiture
to:
(a) the person whose conviction was *quashed; and
(b) any person who claims, or prior to
the forfeiture claimed, an *interest
in property covered by the forfeiture; and
(c) any person whom the DPP reasonably
believes may have had an interest in that property before the forfeiture.
Note: If the DPP applies for confirmation of a
forfeiture, it can also apply for an examination order under Part 3‑1.
(2) The court hearing the application may, at
any time before finally determining the application, direct the *DPP to give or publish notice of the
application to a specified person or class of persons. The court may also
specify the time and manner in which the notice is to be given or published.
109
Procedure on application for confirmation of forfeiture
(1) Any person who claims an *interest in property covered by the
forfeiture may appear and adduce evidence at the hearing of the application for
confirmation of the forfeiture.
(2) The court may, in determining the
application, have regard to:
(a) the transcript of any proceeding
against the person for:
(i) the offence of which
the person was convicted; or
(ii) if the person was
taken to be convicted of that offence because of paragraph 331(1)(c)—the other
offence referred to in that paragraph;
including any appeals relating
to the conviction; and
(b) the evidence given in any such
proceeding.
110
Court may confirm forfeiture
(1) The court may confirm the forfeiture if
the court is satisfied that:
(a) it could make a *forfeiture order under section 47 in
relation to the offence in relation to which the person’s conviction was *quashed if the *DPP were to apply for an order under that
section; or
(b) it could make a forfeiture order
under section 49 in relation to the offence in relation to which the
person’s conviction was quashed if the DPP were to apply for an order under
that section.
(2) For the purposes of paragraph (1)(a),
the court is to treat any relevant conduct of the person (other than conduct
that constitutes a *terrorism offence)
as having been made within the period of 6 years referred to in paragraph
47(1)(c).
111
Effect of court’s decision on confirmation of forfeiture
(1) If the court confirms the forfeiture
under paragraph 110(1)(a), the forfeiture is taken not to be affected by the *quashing of the person’s conviction of
the offence.
(2) If the court confirms the forfeiture
under paragraph 110(1)(b):
(a) to the extent that the property
covered by the forfeiture is:
(i) in any case—*proceeds of the offence; or
(ii) if the offence is a *terrorism offence—an *instrument of the offence;
the forfeiture is taken not to
be affected by the *quashing of
the person’s conviction of the offence; but
(b) to the extent that the property
covered by the forfeiture is:
(i) in any case—not
proceeds of the offence; and
(ii) if the offence is a
terrorism offence—not an instrument of the offence;
the forfeiture ceases to have
effect.
(3) If the court decides not to confirm the
forfeiture, the forfeiture ceases to have effect.
112
Official Trustee must not deal with forfeited property before the court decides
on confirmation of forfeiture
During the period:
(a) starting on the day after the
person’s conviction of the offence was *quashed;
and
(b) ending when the court decides
whether to confirm the forfeiture;
the *Official
Trustee must not do any of the things required under section 100 in
relation to property covered by the forfeiture or amounts received from
disposing of such property.
113
Giving notice if forfeiture ceases to have effect on quashing of a conviction
(1) This section applies in relation to
particular property if:
(a) the property was forfeited to the
Commonwealth under section 92 but the forfeiture ceases to have effect
under section 107 or subsection 111(3); or
(b) the property was forfeited to the
Commonwealth under section 92 but the forfeiture ceases to have effect in
relation to that property under subsection 111(2).
(2) The *DPP
must, as soon as practicable after the forfeiture ceases to have effect, give
written notice of the cessation to any person the DPP reasonably believes may
have had an *interest in that
property immediately before the forfeiture.
(3) The *DPP
must, if required by a court, give or publish notice of the cessation to a
specified person or class of persons. The court may also specify the time and
manner in which the notice is to be given or published.
(4) A notice given under this section must
include a statement to the effect that a person claiming to have had an *interest in that property may apply under
section 114 for the transfer of the interest, or its value, to the person.
114
Returning property etc. following forfeiture ceasing to have effect
(1) The Minister must arrange for:
(a) if property forfeited to the
Commonwealth under section 92 is vested in the Commonwealth—an *interest in the property to be
transferred to a person claiming to have had the interest in the property
immediately before the forfeiture; or
(b) if property forfeited to the
Commonwealth under section 92 is no longer vested in the Commonwealth—an
amount equal to the value of the interest in the property to be paid to the
person;
if:
(c) the forfeiture has ceased to have
effect under section 107 or 111; and
(d) the person applies to the
Minister, in writing, for the transfer of the interest to the person; and
(e) the person had that interest in
the property at that time.
(2) If the Minister must arrange for the
property to be transferred, the Minister may also, on behalf of the
Commonwealth, do or authorise the doing of anything necessary or convenient to
give effect to the transfer.
(3) Without limiting subsection (2),
things that may be done or authorised under that subsection include:
(a) executing any instrument; and
(b) applying for registration of an *interest in the property on any
appropriate register.
Part 2‑4—Pecuniary penalty orders
115
Simplified outline of this Part
If certain offences have been
committed, pecuniary penalty orders can be made, ordering payments to the
Commonwealth of amounts based on:
(a) the benefits
that a person has derived from such an offence; and
(b) (in some
cases) the benefits that the person has derived from other unlawful activity.
(It is not always a requirement that a
person has been convicted of the offence.)
Division 1—Making pecuniary penalty orders
116
Making pecuniary penalty orders
(1) A court with *proceeds jurisdiction must make an order requiring a
person to pay an amount to the Commonwealth if:
(a) the *DPP applies for the order; and
(b) the court is satisfied of either
or both of the following:
(i) the person has been
convicted of an *indictable
offence, and has derived *benefits
from the commission of the offence;
(ii) subject to subsection (2),
the person has committed a *serious
offence.
Note: The conviction for, or reasonable grounds for
suspecting commission of, an indictable offence could be used as grounds for a
restraining order under Part 2‑1 covering all or some of the
person’s property.
(2) Subparagraph (1)(b)(ii) does not apply
in relation to a *serious
offence that is not a *terrorism
offence unless the court is satisfied that the offence was committed:
(a) within the 6 years preceding the
application (or, if some or all of the *person’s
property is already covered by a *restraining
order, preceding the application for the restraining order); or
(b) since the application was made.
The period of 6 years may be a period that began before
the commencement of this Act.
(3) In determining whether a person has
derived a *benefit, the court
may treat as property of the person any property that, in the court’s opinion,
is subject to the person’s *effective
control.
(4) The court’s power to make a *pecuniary penalty order in relation to an
offence is not affected by the existence of another *confiscation order in relation to that
offence.
Note: There are restrictions on the DPP applying for
pecuniary penalty orders if previous applications for pecuniary penalty orders
have already been made: see section 135.
117
Pecuniary penalty orders made in relation to serious offence convictions
(1) A court must not make a *pecuniary penalty order in relation to a
person’s conviction of a *serious
offence until after the end of the period of 6 months commencing on the *conviction day.
(2) However, if the court before which the
person was convicted has *proceeds
jurisdiction, the court may make a *pecuniary
penalty order in relation to the person’s conviction when it passes sentence on
the person.
Note: Pecuniary penalty orders made under this subsection
cannot be enforced within 6 months: see subsection 140(3).
(3) Subsection (1) does not apply if the
person is taken to have been convicted of the *serious
offence because of paragraph 331(1)(d).
118
Making of pecuniary penalty order if person has absconded
If, because of paragraph 331(1)(d), a
person is taken to have been convicted of an *indictable
offence, a court must not make a *pecuniary
penalty order in relation to the person’s conviction unless:
(a) the court is satisfied, on the
balance of probabilities, that the person has *absconded;
and
(b) either:
(i) the person has been
committed for trial for the offence; or
(ii) the court is
satisfied, having regard to all the evidence before the court, that a
reasonable jury, properly instructed, could lawfully find the person guilty of
the offence.
119
Ancillary orders
The court that made a *pecuniary penalty order, or any other
court that could have made the pecuniary penalty order, may make orders
ancillary to the pecuniary penalty order, either when it makes the pecuniary
penalty order or at a later time.
120
Acquittals do not affect pecuniary penalty orders
The fact that a person has been
acquitted of an offence with which the person has been charged does not affect
the court’s power to make a *pecuniary
penalty order in relation to the offence.
Division 2—Penalty amounts
Subdivision A—General
121
Determining penalty amounts
(1) The amount that a person is ordered to
pay to the Commonwealth under a *pecuniary
penalty order (the penalty amount) is the amount the court
determines under this Division.
(2) If the offence to which the order relates
is not a *serious offence, the *penalty amount is determined by:
(a) assessing under Subdivision B the
value of the *benefits the
person derived from the commission of the offence; and
(b) subtracting from that value the
sum of all the reductions (if any) in the penalty amount under Subdivision C.
(3) If the offence to which the order relates
is a *serious offence, the *penalty amount is determined by:
(a) assessing under Subdivision B the
value of the *benefits the
person derived from:
(i) the commission of that
offence; and
(ii) subject to subsection (4),
the commission of any other offence that constitutes *unlawful activity; and
(b) subtracting from that value the
sum of all the reductions (if any) in the penalty amount under Subdivision C.
Note: Pecuniary penalty orders can be varied under
Subdivision D to increase penalty amounts in some cases.
(4) Subparagraph (3)(a)(ii) does not
apply in relation to an offence that is not a *terrorism
offence unless the offence was committed:
(a) within:
(i) if some or all of the
person’s property is covered by a *restraining
order—the period of 6 years preceding the application for the restraining
order; or
(ii) otherwise—the period
of 6 years preceding the application for the *pecuniary
penalty order; or
(b) during the period since that
application for the restraining order or the pecuniary penalty order was made
Subdivision B—The value of benefits derived from the commission of an
offence
122
Evidence the court is to consider
(1) In assessing the value of *benefits that a person has derived from
the commission of an offence or offences (the illegal activity),
the court is to have regard to the evidence before it concerning all or any of
the following:
(a) the money, or the value of the
property other than money, that, because of the illegal activity, came into the
possession or under the control of:
(i) the person; or
(ii) another person at the
person’s request or direction;
(b) the value of any other benefit
that, because of the illegal activity, was provided to:
(i) the person; or
(ii) another person at the
person’s request or direction;
(c) if any of the illegal activity
consisted of doing an act or thing in relation to a *narcotic substance:
(i) the market value, at
the time of the offence, of similar or substantially similar narcotic
substances; and
(ii) the
amount that was, or the range of amounts that were, ordinarily paid for the
doing of a similar or substantially similar act or thing;
(d) the value of the *person’s property before, during and
after the illegal activity;
(e) the person’s income and
expenditure before, during and after the illegal activity.
(2) At the hearing of an application for a *pecuniary penalty order, a *police officer, or a *Customs officer, who is experienced in
the investigation of narcotics offences may testify, to the best of the
officer’s information, knowledge and belief:
(a) with respect to the amount that
was the market value of a *narcotic
substance at a particular time or during a particular period; or
(b) with respect to the amount, or the
range of amounts, ordinarily paid at a particular time, or during a particular
period, for the doing of an act or thing in relation to a narcotic substance.
(3) The officer’s testimony under subsection (2):
(a) is admissible at the hearing
despite any rule of law or practice relating to hearsay evidence; and
(b) is prima facie evidence of the
matters testified.
123
Value of benefits derived—non‑serious offences
(1) If:
(a) an application is made for a *pecuniary penalty order against a person
in relation to an offence or offences (the illegal activity); and
(b) the offence is not a *serious offence, or none of the offences
are serious offences; and
(c) at the hearing of the application,
evidence is given that the value of the *person’s
property during or after the illegal activity exceeded the value of the
person’s property before the illegal activity;
the court is to treat the value of the *benefits derived by the person from the
commission of the illegal activity as being not less than the amount of the
greatest excess.
(2) The amount treated as the value of the *benefits under this section is reduced to
the extent (if any) that the court is satisfied that the excess was due to
causes unrelated to the illegal activity.
124
Value of benefits derived—serious offences
(1) If:
(a) an application is made for a *pecuniary penalty order against a person
in relation to an offence or offences (the illegal activity); and
(b) the offence is a *serious offence, or one or more of the
offences are serious offences; and
(c) at the hearing of the application,
evidence is given that the value of the *person’s
property during or after:
(i) the illegal activity;
or
(ii) any other *unlawful activity that the person has
engaged in that constitutes a *terrorism
offence; or
(iii) any other unlawful
activity that the person has engaged in, within the period referred to in subsection (5),
that does not constitute a terrorism offence;
exceeded the value of the
person’s property before the illegal activity;
the court is to treat the value of the *benefits derived by the person from the
commission of the illegal activity as being not less than the amount of the
greatest excess.
(2) The amount treated as the value of the *benefits under subsection (1) is
reduced to the extent (if any) that the court is satisfied that the excess was
due to causes unrelated to:
(a) the illegal activity; or
(b) any other *unlawful activity that the person has
engaged in that constitutes a *terrorism
offence; or
(c) any other unlawful activity that
the person has engaged in, within the period referred to in subsection (5),
that does not constitute a terrorism offence;
(3) If evidence is given, at the hearing of
the application, of the person’s expenditure during the period referred to in subsection (5),
the amount of the expenditure is presumed, unless the contrary is proved, to be
the value of a *benefit that,
because of the illegal activity, was provided to the person.
(4) Subsection (3) does not apply to
expenditure to the extent that it resulted in acquisition of property that is
taken into account under subsection (1).
(5) The period for the purposes of subparagraph (1)(c)(iii),
paragraph (2)(c) and subsection (3) is:
(a) if some or all of the person’s
property is covered by a *restraining
order—the period of 6 years preceding the application for the restraining
order;
(b) otherwise—the period of 6 years
preceding the application for the *pecuniary
penalty order;
and includes the period since that application for the
restraining order or the pecuniary penalty order was made.
125
Value of benefits may be as at time of assessment
(1) In quantifying the value of a *benefit for the purposes of this
Subdivision, the court may treat as the value of the benefit the value that the
benefit would have had if derived at the time the court makes its assessment of
the value of benefits.
(2) Without limiting subsection (1), the
court may have regard to any decline in the purchasing power of money between
the time when the *benefit was
derived and the time the court makes its assessment.
126
Matters that do not reduce the value of benefits
In assessing the value of *benefits that a person has derived from
the commission of an offence or offences (the illegal activity),
none of the following are to be subtracted:
(a) expenses or outgoings the person
incurred in relation to the illegal activity;
(b) the value of any benefits that the
person derives as *agent for,
or otherwise on behalf of, another person (whether or not the other person
receives any of the benefits).
127
Benefits already the subject of pecuniary penalty
(1) A *benefit
is not to be taken into account for the purposes of this Subdivision if a
pecuniary penalty has been imposed in respect of the benefit under:
(a) this Act; or
(b) Division 3 of Part XIII
of the Customs Act 1901; or
(c) a law of a Territory; or
(d) a law of a State.
(2) To avoid doubt, an amount payable under a
*literary proceeds order is a
pecuniary penalty for the purposes of this section.
128
Property under a person’s effective control
In assessing the value of *benefits that a person has derived, the court
may treat as property of the person any property that, in the court’s opinion,
is subject to the person’s *effective
control.
129
Effect of property vesting in an insolvency trustee
In assessing the value of *benefits that a person has derived, the *person’s property is taken to continue to
be the person’s property if it vests in any of the following:
(a) in relation to a bankruptcy—the
trustee of the estate of the bankrupt; or
(b) in relation to a composition or
scheme of arrangement under Division 6 of Part IV of the Bankruptcy
Act 1966—the trustee of the composition or scheme of arrangement; or
(c) in relation to a personal
insolvency agreement under Part X of the Bankruptcy Act 1966—the
trustee of the agreement; or
(d) in relation to the estate of a
deceased person in respect of which an order has been made under Part XI
of the Bankruptcy Act 1966—the trustee of the estate.
Subdivision C—Reducing penalty amounts
130
Reducing penalty amounts to take account of forfeiture and proposed forfeiture
The *penalty
amount under a *pecuniary
penalty order against a person is reduced by an amount equal to the value, as
at the time of the making of the order, of any property that is *proceeds of the offence to which the
order relates if:
(a) the property has been forfeited,
under this Act or another law of the Commonwealth or under a law of a *non‑governing Territory, in
relation to the offence to which the order relates; or
(b) an application has been made for a
*forfeiture order that would
cover the property.
131
Reducing penalty amounts to take account of tax paid
(1) The court must reduce the *penalty amount under a *pecuniary penalty order against a person
by an amount that, in the court’s opinion, represents the extent to which tax
that the person has paid is attributable to the *benefits to which the order relates.
(2) The tax may be tax payable under a law of
the Commonwealth, a State, a Territory or a foreign country.
132
Reducing penalty amounts to take account of fines etc.
The court may, if it considers it
appropriate to do so, reduce the *penalty
amount under a *pecuniary
penalty order against a person by an amount equal to the amount payable by the
person by way of fine, restitution, compensation or damages in relation to an
offence to which the order relates.
Subdivision D—Varying pecuniary penalty orders to increase penalty amounts
133
Varying pecuniary penalty orders to increase penalty amounts
(1) The court may, on the application of the *DPP, vary a *pecuniary penalty order against a person by increasing the
*penalty amount if one or both
of subsections (2) and (3) apply. The amount of each increase is as
specified in the relevant subsection.
(2) The *penalty amount may be increased if:
(a) the penalty amount was reduced
under section 130 to take account of a forfeiture of property or a
proposed *forfeiture order
against property; and
(b) an appeal against the forfeiture
or forfeiture order is allowed, or the proceedings for the proposed forfeiture
order terminate without the proposed forfeiture order being made.
The amount of the increase is equal to the value of the
property.
(3) The *penalty
amount may be increased if:
(a) the penalty amount was reduced
under section 131 to take account of an amount of tax the person paid; and
(b) an amount is repaid or refunded to
the person in respect of that tax.
The amount of the increase is equal to the amount repaid
or refunded.
(4) The *DPP’s
application may deal with more than one increase to the same *penalty amount.
Division 3—How pecuniary penalty orders are obtained
134
DPP may apply for a pecuniary penalty order
(1) The *DPP
may apply for a *pecuniary
penalty order.
(2) If the application relates to a person’s
conviction of a *serious
offence, the application must be made before:
(a) the end of the period of 9 months
after the *conviction day; or
(b) if an *extension order is in force at the end of that period—the
end of the period of 3 months after the end of the extended period relating to
that extension order.
(3) If the application relates to a person’s
conviction of an *indictable
offence that is not a *serious
offence, the application must be made before the end of the period of 6 months
after the *conviction day.
(4) An application may be made in relation to
one or more offences.
(5) An application may be made for a *pecuniary penalty order in relation to an
offence even if:
(a) a *forfeiture order in relation to the offence, or an
application for such a forfeiture order, has been made; or
(b) Part 2‑3 (forfeiture on
conviction of a serious offence) applies to the offence.
135
Additional application for a pecuniary penalty order
(1) The *DPP
cannot, unless the court gives leave, apply for a *pecuniary penalty order against a person in respect of *benefits the person derived from the
commission of an offence if:
(a) an application has previously been
made:
(i) under this Division;
or
(ii) under another law of
the Commonwealth; or
(iii) under a law of a *non‑governing Territory;
for a pecuniary penalty in respect
of those benefits the person derived from the commission of the offence; and
(b) the
application has been finally determined on the merits.
(2) The court must not give leave unless it
is satisfied that:
(a) the *benefit to which the new application relates was
identified only after the first application was determined; or
(b) necessary evidence became
available only after the first application was determined; or
(c) it is in the interests of justice
to give the leave.
(3) An application for a *literary proceeds order is not, for the
purposes of this section, an application for a pecuniary penalty.
136
Notice of application
(1) The *DPP
must give written notice of the application to a person who would be subject to
the *pecuniary penalty order if
it were made.
(2) The *DPP
must include a copy of the application, and any affidavit supporting the
application, with the notice.
(3) However, the *DPP may delay giving a copy of an affidavit to the person
if the court to which the application was made so orders.
(4) The court must not make such an order
unless it is satisfied that:
(a) including a copy of the affidavit
with the notice would prejudice the investigation of, or the prosecution of a
person for, an offence; or
(b) it is for any other reason
appropriate to make the order.
137
Amendment of application
(1) The court hearing the application may
amend the application:
(a) on application by the *DPP; or
(b) with the consent of the DPP.
(2) However, the court must not amend the
application so as to include an additional *benefit
in the application unless the court is satisfied that:
(a) the benefit was not reasonably
capable of identification when the application was originally made; or
(b) necessary evidence became
available only after the application was originally made.
(3) On applying for an amendment to include
an additional *benefit in the
application, the *DPP must give
to the person against whom the *pecuniary
penalty order would be made a written notice of the application to amend.
138
Procedure on application
(1) The person who would be subject to the *pecuniary penalty order if it were made
may appear and adduce evidence at the hearing of the application.
(2) If the application relates to a person’s
conviction of an *indictable
offence, the court may, in determining the application, have regard to:
(a) the transcript of any proceeding
against the person for:
(i) that offence; or
(ii) if the person is taken
to be convicted of that offence because of paragraph 331(1)(c)—the other
offence referred to in that paragraph; and
(b) the evidence given in any such
proceeding.
139
Applications to courts before which persons are convicted
If an application for a *pecuniary penalty order is made to a
court before which a person was convicted of an *indictable offence:
(a) the application may be dealt with
by the court; and
(b) any power in relation to the
relevant order may be exercised by the court;
whether or not the court is constituted in the same way in
which it was constituted when the person was convicted of the indictable
offence.
Division 4—Enforcement of pecuniary penalty orders
140
Enforcement of pecuniary penalty orders
(1) An amount payable by a person to the
Commonwealth under a *pecuniary
penalty order is a civil debt due by the person to the Commonwealth.
(2) A *pecuniary
penalty order against a person may be enforced as if it were an order made in
civil proceedings instituted by the Commonwealth against the person to recover
a debt due by the person to the Commonwealth.
(3) However, if the order was made under
subsection 117(2) when sentence was being passed on the person for the offence
to which the order relates, the order cannot be enforced against the person
within the period of 6 months after the order was made.
(4) The debt arising from the order is taken
to be a judgment debt.
(5) If a *pecuniary
penalty order is made against a person after the person’s death, this section
has effect as if the person had died on the day after the order was made.
141
Property subject to a person’s effective control
(1) If:
(a) a person is subject to a *pecuniary penalty order; and
(b) the *DPP applies to the court for an order under this section;
and
(c) the court is satisfied that
particular property is subject to the *effective
control of the person;
the court may make an order declaring that the whole, or a
specified part, of that property is available to satisfy the pecuniary penalty
order.
(2) The order under subsection (1) may
be enforced against the property as if the property were the *person’s property.
(3) A *restraining
order may be made in respect of the property as if:
(a) the property were the *person’s property; and
(b) the person had committed a *serious offence.
(4) If the *DPP
applies for an order under subsection (1) relating to particular property,
the DPP must give written notice of the application to:
(a) the person who is subject to the *pecuniary penalty order; and
(b) any person whom the DPP has reason
to believe may have an *interest
in the property.
(5) The person who is subject to the *pecuniary penalty order, and any person
who claims an *interest in the
property, may appear and adduce evidence at the hearing of the application.
142
Charge on property subject to restraining order
(1) If:
(a) a *pecuniary penalty order is made against a person in
relation to an *indictable
offence; and
(b) a *restraining order is, or has been, made against:
(i) the *person’s property; or
(ii) another person’s
property in relation to which an order under subsection 141(1) is, or has been,
made; and
(c) the restraining order relates to
that offence or a *related
offence;
then, upon the making of the later of the orders, there is
created, by force of this section, a charge on the property to secure the payment
to the Commonwealth of the *penalty
amount.
(2) The charge ceases to have effect in
respect of the property:
(a) if the *pecuniary penalty order was made in
relation to the person’s conviction of the *indictable
offence and that conviction is *quashed—upon
the order being discharged under Division 5; or
(b) upon the discharge of the
pecuniary penalty order or the *restraining
order by a court hearing an appeal against the making of the order; or
(c) upon payment to the Commonwealth
of the *penalty amount in
satisfaction of the pecuniary penalty order; or
(d) upon the sale or other disposition
of the property:
(i) under an order under
Division 4 of Part 4‑1; or
(ii) by the owner of the
property with the consent of the court that made the pecuniary penalty order;
or
(iii) if the restraining
order directed the *Official
Trustee to take custody and control of the property—by the owner of the
property with the consent of the Official Trustee; or
(e) upon the sale of the property to a
purchaser in good faith for value who, at the time of purchase, has no notice
of the charge;
whichever first occurs.
(3) The charge:
(a) is subject to every *encumbrance on the property that came
into existence before the charge and that would, apart from this subsection,
have priority over the charge; and
(b) has priority over all other
encumbrances; and
(c) subject to subsection (2), is
not affected by any change of ownership of the property.
143
Charges may be registered
(1) If:
(a) a charge is created by section 142
on property of a particular kind; and
(b) the provisions of any law of the
Commonwealth or of a State or Territory provide for the registration of title
to, or charges over, property of that kind;
the *Official
Trustee or the *DPP may cause
the charge so created to be registered under the provisions of that law.
(2) A person who purchases or otherwise
acquires an *interest in the
property after the registration of the charge is, for the purposes of paragraph
142(2)(e), taken to have notice of the charge at the time of the purchase or
acquisition.
144
Penalty amounts exceeding the court’s jurisdiction
(1) If:
(a) a court makes a *pecuniary penalty order of a particular
amount; and
(b) the court does not have
jurisdiction with respect to the recovery of debts of an amount equal to that
amount;
the registrar of the court must issue a certificate
containing the particulars specified in the regulations.
(2) The certificate may be registered, in
accordance with the regulations, in a court having jurisdiction with respect to
the recovery of debts of an amount equal to the amount of the relevant order.
(3) Upon registration in a court, the
certificate is enforceable in all respects as a final judgment of the court in
favour of the Commonwealth.
Division 5—The effect on pecuniary penalty orders of convictions being
quashed
145
Pecuniary penalty order unaffected if not made in relation to a conviction
A *pecuniary
penalty order made in relation to an offence but not made in relation to a
person’s conviction of the offence is not affected if the person is convicted
of the offence and the conviction is subsequently *quashed.
146
Discharge of pecuniary penalty order if made in relation to a conviction
(1) A *pecuniary
penalty order made in relation to a person’s conviction of a *serious offence is discharged if:
(a) the person’s conviction of the
offence is subsequently *quashed
(whether or not the order relates to the person’s conviction of other offences
that have not been quashed); and
(b) the *DPP does not, within 14 days after the conviction is
quashed, apply to the court that made the order for the order to be confirmed.
(2) However, unless and until a court decides
otherwise on such an application, the *quashing
of the conviction does not affect the *pecuniary
penalty order:
(a) for 14 days after the conviction
is quashed; and
(b) if the *DPP makes such an application.
(3) A *pecuniary
penalty order made in relation to a person’s conviction of an offence that is
not a *serious offence is discharged
if the person’s conviction of the offence is subsequently *quashed.
147
Notice of application for confirmation of pecuniary penalty order
The *DPP
must give to the person written notice of an application for confirmation of
the *pecuniary penalty order.
Note: If the DPP applies for confirmation of a
pecuniary penalty order, it can also apply for an examination order under Part 3‑1.
148
Procedure on application for confirmation of pecuniary penalty order
(1) The person may appear and adduce evidence
at the hearing of the application for confirmation of the order.
(2) The court may, in determining the
application, have regard to:
(a) the transcript of any proceeding
against the person for:
(i) the offence of which
the person was convicted; or
(ii) if the person was
taken to be convicted of that offence because of paragraph 331(1)(c)—the other
offence referred to in that paragraph;
including any appeals relating
to the conviction; and
(b) the evidence given in any such
proceeding.
149
Court may confirm pecuniary penalty order
The court may confirm the *pecuniary penalty order if the court is
satisfied that, when the *DPP
applied for the order, the court could have made the order:
(a) on the ground that:
(i) if the offence in
relation to which the person’s conviction was *quashed
is a *terrorism offence—the
person had committed the offence; or
(ii) if the offence in
relation to which the person’s conviction was *quashed
is not a *terrorism offence—the
person had committed the offence within the period of 6 years referred to in
subsection 116(2) in relation to that order, or since the end of that period;
and
(b) without relying on the person’s
conviction of the offence.
150
Effect of court’s decision on confirmation of pecuniary penalty order
(1) If the court confirms the *pecuniary penalty order under section 149,
the order is taken not to be affected by the *quashing
of the person’s conviction of the offence.
(2) If the court decides not to confirm the *pecuniary penalty order, the order is
discharged.
Part 2‑5—Literary proceeds orders
151
Simplified outline of this Part
If certain offences have been
committed, literary proceeds orders can be made, ordering payments to the
Commonwealth of amounts based on the literary proceeds that a person has
derived in relation to such an offence. (There is no requirement that a person
has been convicted of the offence.)
Division 1—Making literary proceeds orders
152
Making literary proceeds orders
(1) A court with *proceeds jurisdiction may make an order requiring a person
to pay an amount to the Commonwealth if:
(a) the *DPP applies for the order; and
(b) the court is satisfied that the
person has committed an *indictable
offence (whether or not the person has been convicted of the offence); and
(c) the court is satisfied that the
person has derived *literary
proceeds in relation to the offence.
(2) A court with *proceeds jurisdiction may make an order requiring a person
to pay an amount to the Commonwealth if:
(a) the *DPP applies for the order; and
(b) the court is satisfied that the
person has committed a *foreign
indictable offence (whether or not the person has been convicted of the
offence); and
(c) the court is satisfied that the
person has derived *literary
proceeds in relation to the offence.
(3) However, the *literary proceeds must have been derived after the
commencement of this Act.
Note: Because of section 14, it does not matter
whether the offence to which the order relates was committed before or after
the commencement of this Act.
(4) The court’s power to make a *literary proceeds order in relation to an
offence is not affected by the existence of another *confiscation order in relation to that
offence.
153
Meaning of literary proceeds
(1) Literary proceeds are any *benefit that a person derives from the
commercial exploitation of:
(a) the person’s notoriety resulting,
directly or indirectly, from the person committing an *indictable offence or a *foreign indictable offence; or
(b) the notoriety of another person,
involved in the commission of that offence, resulting from the first‑mentioned
person committing that offence.
(2) The commercial exploitation may be by any
means, including:
(a) publishing any material in written
or electronic form; or
(b) any use of media from which visual
images, words or sounds can be produced; or
(c) any live entertainment,
representation or interview.
(3) If the offence is an *indictable offence, it does not matter
whether the *benefits are
derived within or outside *Australia.
(3A) If the offence is a *foreign indictable offence, then a *benefit is not treated as *literary proceeds unless the benefit is
derived in *Australia or
transferred to Australia.
(4) In determining:
(a) whether a person has derived *literary proceeds; or
(b) the value of literary proceeds
that a person has derived;
the court may treat as property of the person any property
that, in the court’s opinion:
(c) is subject to the person’s *effective control; or
(d) was not received by the person,
but was transferred to, or (in the case of money) paid to, another person at
the person’s direction.
154
Matters taken into account in deciding whether to make literary proceeds orders
In deciding whether to make a *literary proceeds order, the court:
(a) must take into account:
(i) the nature and purpose
of the product or activity from which the *literary
proceeds were derived; and
(ii) whether supplying the
product or carrying out the activity was in the public interest; and
(iii) the social, cultural
or educational value of the product or activity; and
(iv) the seriousness of the
offence to which the product or activity relates; and
(v) how long ago the
offence was committed; and
(b) may take into account such other
matters as it thinks fit.
155
Additional literary proceeds orders
More than one *literary proceeds order may be made
against a person in relation to the same offence.
156
Ancillary orders
The court that made a *literary proceeds order, or any other
court that could have made the literary proceeds order, may make orders
ancillary to the literary proceeds order, either when it makes the literary
proceeds order or at a later time.
157
Acquittals do not affect literary proceeds orders
The fact that a person has been
acquitted of an offence with which the person has been charged does not affect
the court’s power to make a *literary
proceeds order in relation to the offence.
Division 2—Literary proceeds amounts
158
Determining literary proceeds amounts
(1) The amount that a person is ordered to
pay to the Commonwealth under a *literary
proceeds order (the literary proceeds amount) is the amount that
the court thinks appropriate.
(2) However, the amount:
(a) must not exceed the amount of the *literary proceeds relating to the offence
to which the order relates, less any deductions arising under section 159;
and
(b) may be further reduced under
section 160.
(3) In determining the *literary proceeds amount, the court is to
have regard to such matters as it thinks fit, including any of the following:
(a) the amount of the *literary proceeds relating to the
offence;
(b) if the person stood trial for the
offence—the evidence adduced in the proceedings for the offence;
(c) if the person was convicted of the
offence—the transcript of the sentencing proceedings.
159
Deductions from literary proceeds amounts
In determining the *literary proceeds amount under a *literary proceeds order against a person,
the court must deduct the following:
(a) any expenses and outgoings that
the person incurred in deriving the *literary
proceeds;
(b) the value of any property of the
person forfeited under:
(i) a *forfeiture order; or
(ii) an *interstate forfeiture order; or
(iii) a *foreign forfeiture order;
relating to the offence to which
the literary proceeds order relates, to the extent that the property is
literary proceeds;
(c) any amount payable by the person
under:
(i) a *pecuniary penalty order; or
(ii) an order under section 243B
of the Customs Act 1901; or
(iii) an *interstate pecuniary penalty order; or
(iv) a *foreign pecuniary penalty order;
relating to the offence to which
the literary proceeds order relates, to the extent that the amount is literary
proceeds;
(d) the amount of any previous
literary proceeds order made against the person in relation to the same
exploitation of the person’s notoriety resulting from the person committing the
offence in question.
160
Reducing literary proceeds amounts to take account of tax paid
(1) The court may reduce the *literary proceeds amount under a *literary proceeds order against a person
by an amount that, in the court’s opinion, represents the extent to which tax
that the person has paid is attributable to the *literary proceeds to which the order relates.
(2) The tax may be tax payable under a law of
the Commonwealth, a State, a Territory or a foreign country.
161
Varying literary proceeds orders to increase literary proceeds amounts
(1) The court may, on the application of the *DPP, vary a *literary proceeds order against a person by increasing the
*literary proceeds amount if
one or more of subsections (2), (3) and (4) apply. The amount of each
increase is as specified in the relevant subsection.
(2) The *literary
proceeds amount may be increased if:
(a) the value of property of the
person forfeited under a *forfeiture
order, an *interstate
forfeiture order or a *foreign
forfeiture order was deducted from the literary proceeds amount under paragraph
159(b); and
(b) an appeal against the forfeiture,
or against the order, is allowed.
The amount of the increase is equal to the value of the
property.
(3) The *literary
proceeds amount may be increased if:
(a) an amount payable under a *pecuniary penalty order, an order under
section 243B of the Customs Act 1901, an *interstate pecuniary penalty order or a *foreign pecuniary penalty order was
deducted from the *literary
proceeds amount under paragraph 159(c); and
(b) an appeal against the amount
payable, or against the order, is allowed.
The amount of the increase is equal to the amount that was
payable.
(4) The *literary
proceeds amount may be increased if:
(a) in determining a *literary proceeds amount, the court took
into account, under section 160, an amount of tax paid by the person who
is the subject of the order; and
(b) an amount is repaid or refunded to
the person in respect of that tax.
The amount of the increase is equal to the amount repaid
or refunded.
(5) The *DPP’s
application may deal with more than one increase to the same *literary proceeds amount.
Division 3—How literary proceeds orders are obtained
162
DPP may apply for a literary proceeds order
(1) The *DPP
may apply for a *literary
proceeds order.
(2) An application may be made in relation to
one or more offences.
163
Notice of application
(1) The *DPP
must give written notice of the application to the person who would be subject
to the *literary proceeds order
if it were made.
(2) The *DPP
must include a copy of the application, and any affidavit supporting the
application, with the notice.
164
Amendment of application
(1) The court hearing the application may
amend the application:
(a) on application by the *DPP; or
(b) with the consent of the DPP.
(2) However, the court must not amend the
application so as to include additional *literary
proceeds in the application unless the court is satisfied that:
(a) the literary proceeds were not
reasonably capable of identification when the application was originally made;
or
(b) necessary evidence became
available only after the application was originally made.
(3) If:
(a) the *DPP applies to amend the application for a *literary proceeds order against a person;
and
(b) the effect of the amendment would
be to include additional *literary
proceeds in the application;
the DPP must give the person written notice of the application
to amend.
165
Procedure on application
The person who would be subject to the *literary proceeds order if it were made
may appear and adduce evidence at the hearing of the application.
166
Applications to courts before which persons are convicted
If an application for a *literary proceeds order is made to a
court before which a person was convicted of an *indictable offence:
(a) the application may be dealt with
by the court; and
(b) any power in relation to the
relevant order may be exercised by the court;
whether or not the court is constituted in the same way in
which it was constituted when the person was convicted of the indictable
offence.
Division 4—Enforcement of literary proceeds orders
167
Enforcement of literary proceeds orders
(1) An amount payable by a person to the
Commonwealth under a *literary
proceeds order is a civil debt due by the person to the Commonwealth.
(2) A *literary
proceeds order against a person may be enforced as if it were an order made in
civil proceedings instituted by the Commonwealth against the person to recover
a debt due by the person to the Commonwealth.
(3) The debt arising from the order is taken
to be a judgment debt.
168
Property subject to a person’s effective control
(1) If:
(a) a person is subject to a *literary proceeds order; and
(b) the *DPP applies to the court for an order under this section;
and
(c) the court is satisfied that
particular property is subject to the *effective
control of the person;
the court may make an order declaring that the whole, or a
specified part, of that property is available to satisfy the literary proceeds
order.
(2) The order under subsection (1) may
be enforced against the property as if the property were the *person’s property.
(3) A *restraining
order may be made in respect of the property as if:
(a) the property were the *person’s property; and
(b) the person had committed a *serious offence.
(4) If the *DPP
applies for an order under subsection (1) relating to particular property,
the DPP must give written notice of the application to:
(a) the person who is subject to the *literary proceeds order; and
(b) any person whom the DPP reasonably
believes may have an *interest
in the property.
(5) The person who is subject to the *literary proceeds order, and any person
who claims an *interest in the
property, may appear and adduce evidence at the hearing of the application.
169
Charge on property subject to restraining order
(1) If:
(a) a *literary proceeds order is made against a person in
relation to an *indictable
offence; and
(b) a *restraining order is, or has been, made against:
(i) the *person’s property; or
(ii) another person’s
property in relation to which an order under subsection 168(1) is, or has been,
made; and
(c) the restraining order relates to
that offence or a *related
offence;
then, upon the making of the later of the orders, there is
created, by force of this section, a charge on the property to secure the
payment to the Commonwealth of the *literary
proceeds amount.
(2) The charge ceases to have effect in
respect of the property:
(a) if the *literary proceeds order was made in
relation to the person’s conviction of the *indictable
offence and that conviction is *quashed—upon
the order being discharged under Division 5; or
(b) upon the discharge of the literary
proceeds order or the *restraining
order by a court hearing an appeal against the making of the order; or
(c) upon payment to the Commonwealth
of the *literary proceeds
amount in satisfaction of the literary proceeds order; or
(d) upon the sale or other disposition
of the property:
(i) under an order under
Division 4 of Part 4‑1; or
(ii) by the owner of the
property with the consent of the court that made the literary proceeds order;
or
(iii) where the restraining order
directed the *Official Trustee
to take custody and control of the property—by the owner of the property with
the consent of the Official Trustee; or
(e) upon the sale of the property to a
purchaser in good faith for value who, at the time of purchase, has no notice
of the charge;
whichever first occurs.
(3) The charge:
(a) is subject to every *encumbrance on the property that came
into existence before the charge and that would, apart from this subsection,
have priority over the charge; and
(b) has priority over all other
encumbrances; and
(c) subject to subsection (2), is
not affected by any change of ownership of the property.
170
Charges may be registered
(1) If:
(a) a charge is created by section 169
on property of a particular kind; and
(b) the provisions of any law of the
Commonwealth or of a State or Territory provide for the registration of title
to, or charges over, property of that kind;
the *Official
Trustee or the *DPP may cause
the charge so created to be registered under the provisions of that law.
(2) A person who purchases or otherwise
acquires an *interest in the
property after the registration of the charge is, for the purposes of paragraph
169(2)(e), taken to have notice of the charge at the time of the purchase or
acquisition.
171
Literary proceeds amounts exceeding the court’s jurisdiction
(1) If:
(a) a court makes a *literary proceeds order; and
(b) the court does not have
jurisdiction with respect to the recovery of debts of an amount equal to the *literary proceeds amount under the order;
the registrar of the court must issue a certificate
containing the particulars specified in the regulations.
(2) The certificate may be registered, in
accordance with the regulations, in a court having jurisdiction with respect to
the recovery of debts of an amount equal to the *literary proceeds amount.
(3) Upon registration in a court, the
certificate is enforceable in all respects as a final judgment of the court in
favour of the Commonwealth.
Division 5—The effect on literary proceeds orders of convictions being
quashed
172
Literary proceeds order unaffected if not made in relation to a conviction
A *literary
proceeds order made in relation to an offence but not made in relation to a
person’s conviction of the offence is not affected if the person is convicted
of the offence and the conviction is subsequently *quashed.
173
Discharge of literary proceeds order if made in relation to a conviction
(1) A *literary
proceeds order made in relation to a person’s conviction of an offence is
discharged if:
(a) the person’s conviction of the
offence is subsequently *quashed
(whether or not the order relates to the person’s conviction of other offences
that have not been quashed); and
(b) the *DPP does not, within 14 days after the conviction is
quashed, apply to the court that made the order for the order to be confirmed.
(2) However, unless and until a court decides
otherwise on such an application, the *quashing
of the conviction does not affect the *literary
proceeds order:
(a) for 14 days after the conviction
is quashed; and
(b) if the *DPP makes such an application.
174
Notice of application for confirmation of literary proceeds order
The *DPP
must give to the person written notice of an application for confirmation of
the *literary proceeds order.
Note: If the DPP applies for confirmation of a
forfeiture order, it can also apply for an examination order under Part 3‑1.
175
Procedure on application for confirmation of literary proceeds order
(1) The person may appear and adduce evidence
at the hearing of the application for confirmation of the order.
(2) The court may, in determining the
application, have regard to:
(a) the transcript of any proceeding
against the person for:
(i) the offence of which
the person was convicted; or
(ii) if the person was
taken to be convicted of that offence because of paragraph 331(1)(c)—the other
offence referred to in that paragraph;
including any appeals relating
to the conviction; and
(b) the evidence given in any such
proceeding.
176
Court may confirm literary proceeds order
The court may confirm the *literary proceeds order if the court is
satisfied that, when the *DPP
applied for the order, the court could have made the order:
(a) on the ground that the person had
committed the offence in relation to which the person’s conviction was *quashed; and
(b) without relying on the person’s
conviction of the offence.
177
Effect of court’s decision on confirmation of literary proceeds order
(1) If the court confirms the *literary proceeds order under section 176,
the order is taken not to be affected by the *quashing
of the person’s conviction of the offence.
(2) If the court decides not to confirm the *literary proceeds order, the order is
discharged.
Division 6—Literary proceeds orders covering future literary proceeds
178
Literary proceeds orders can cover future literary proceeds
(1) The court may include in a *literary proceeds order one or more
amounts in relation to *benefits
that the person who is the subject of the order may derive in the future if the
court is satisfied that:
(a) the person will derive the
benefits; and
(b) if the person derives the
benefits, they will be *literary
proceeds in relation to the offence to which the order relates.
(2) However, the court must not include an
amount in the order unless the *DPP,
in its application for the order, requested the inclusion in the order of one
or more amounts in relation to *benefits
that the person who would be the subject of the order may derive in the future.
(3) Each amount included in the order is to
be an amount that the court considers would be a *literary proceeds amount in relation to a *benefit that the person may derive in the
future, if the court were to make a *literary
proceeds order after the person derived the benefit.
Note: Division 2 describes how literary
proceeds amounts are determined.
179
Enforcement of literary proceeds orders in relation to future literary proceeds
If:
(a) an amount is included in a *literary proceeds order in relation to *benefits that the person who is the
subject of the order may derive in the future; and
(b) the person subsequently derives
those benefits;
immediately the benefits are derived, Division 4
applies to the amount as if it were a *literary
proceeds amount under a literary proceeds order.
Chapter 3—Information gathering
Part 3‑1—Examinations
Division 1—Examination orders
180
Examination orders relating to restraining orders
(1) If a *restraining
order is in force, the court that made the restraining order, or any other
court that could have made the restraining order, may make an order (an examination
order) for the *examination
of any person, including:
(a) a person whose property is, or a
person who has or claims an *interest
in property that is, the subject of the restraining order; or
(b) a person whom the restraining
order states to be a *suspect
for the offence to which the restraining order relates; or
(c) the spouse (including de facto
spouse) of a person referred to in paragraph (a) or (b);
about the affairs (including the nature and location of
any property) of a person referred to in paragraph (a), (b) or (c).
(2) The *examination
order ceases to have effect if the *restraining
order to which it relates ceases to have effect.
181
Examination orders relating to applications for confirmation of forfeiture
(1) If an application relating to the *quashing of a person’s conviction of an
offence is made, as mentioned in section 81, 107, 146 or 173, the court to
which the application is made may make an order (an examination order)
for the *examination of any
person, including:
(a) the person whose conviction is
quashed; or
(b) a person whose property is, or a
person who has an *interest in
property that is, the subject of the forfeiture, *pecuniary penalty order or *literary proceeds order to which the application relates;
or
(c) the spouse (including de facto
spouse) of a person referred to in paragraph (a) or (b);
about the affairs (including the nature and location of
any property) of a person referred to in paragraph (a), (b) or (c).
(2) The *examination
order ceases to have effect:
(a) if the application is withdrawn;
or
(b) when the court makes a decision on
the application.
182
Applications for examination orders
An *examination
order can only be made on application by the *DPP.
Division 2—Examination notices
183
Examination notices
(1) An *approved
examiner may, on application by the *DPP,
give to a person who is the subject of an *examination
order a written notice (an examination notice) for the *examination of the person.
(2) However, the *approved examiner must not give the *examination notice if:
(a) an application has been made under
section 42 for the *restraining
order to which the notice relates to be revoked; and
(b) the court to which the application
is made orders that *examinations
are not to proceed.
(3) The fact that criminal proceedings have
been instituted or have commenced (whether or not under this Act) does not
prevent the *approved examiner
giving the *examination notice.
(4) An approved examiner is a
person who:
(a) holds an office, or is included in
a class of people, specified in the regulations; or
(b) is appointed by the Minister under
this section.
184
Additional examination notices
A person who is the subject of an *examination order may be given more than
one *examination notice.
185
Form and content of examination notices
(1) The *examination
notice:
(a) must be in the prescribed form;
and
(b) must require the person to attend
the *examination; and
(c) must specify the time and place of
the examination; and
(d) must specify such further
information as the regulations require.
(2) The *examination
notice may require the person to produce at the *examination the documents specified in the notice.
Division 3—Conducting examinations
186
Time and place of examination
(1) The *examination
of a person must be conducted:
(a) at the time and place specified in
the *examination notice; or
(b) at such other time and place as
the *approved examiner decides
on the request of a person referred to in paragraph 188(3)(b), (c) or (d).
(2) However, the *approved examiner must:
(a) give the person a written notice
withdrawing the *examination
notice; and
(b) if the *examination of the person has started
(but not finished)—stop the examination;
if, after the examination notice is given:
(c) an application has been made under
section 42 for the *restraining
order to which the notice relates to be revoked; and
(d) the court to which the application
is made orders that examinations are not to proceed.
(3) This section does not prevent the *approved examiner giving the person a
further *examination notice if
the application for revocation of the *restraining
order is unsuccessful.
(4) The fact that criminal proceedings have
been instituted or have commenced (whether or not under this Act) does not
prevent the *examination of a
person.
187
Requirements made of person examined
(1) The person may be examined on oath or
affirmation by:
(a) the *approved examiner; and
(b) the *DPP.
(2) The *approved examiner may, for that purpose:
(a) require the person either to take
an oath or to make an affirmation; and
(b) administer an oath or affirmation
to the person.
(3) The oath or affirmation to be taken or
made by the person for the purposes of the *examination
is an oath or affirmation that the statements that the person will make will be
true.
(4) The *examination
must not relate to a person’s affairs:
(a) if the *examination relates to a *restraining order and the person is no
longer a person whose affairs can, under section 180, be subject to the
examination; or
(b) if the examination relates to the *quashing of a conviction for an offence
and the person is no longer a person whose affairs can, under section 181,
be subject to the examination.
(5) The *approved
examiner may require the person to answer a question that:
(a) is put to the person at the *examination; and
(b) is relevant to the affairs
(including the nature and location of any property) of a person referred to in
paragraph 180(1)(a), (b) or (c) or 181(1)(a), (b) or (c).
188
Examination to take place in private
(1) The *examination
is to take place in private.
(2) The *approved
examiner may give directions about who may be present during the *examination, or during a part of it.
(3) These people are entitled to be present
at the *examination:
(a) the *approved examiner;
(b) the person being examined, and the
person’s *lawyer;
(c) the *DPP;
(d) any person who is entitled to be
present because of a direction under subsection (2).
189
Role of the examinee’s lawyer
(1) The *lawyer
of the person being examined may, at such times during the *examination as the *approved examiner determines:
(a) address the approved examiner; and
(b) examine the person;
about matters about which the approved examiner, or the *DPP, has examined the person.
(2) The *approved
examiner may require a *lawyer
who, in the approved examiner’s opinion, is trying to obstruct the *examination by exercising rights under subsection (1),
to stop addressing the approved examiner, or stop his or her examination, as
the case requires.
190
Examination by video link or telephone
(1) The *approved
examiner may, on the request of a person referred to in paragraph 188(3)(b), (c)
or (d), direct that a person be examined by video link if:
(a) the facilities required by subsection (2)
are available or can reasonably be made available; and
(b) the approved examiner is satisfied
that attendance of the person at the place of the *examination would cause unreasonable expense or
inconvenience; and
(c) the approved examiner is satisfied
that it is consistent with the interests of justice that the person be examined
by video link.
(2) The person can be examined under the
direction only if the place where the person is to attend for the purposes of
the *examination is equipped
with video facilities that enable the people referred to in subsection 188(3)
to see and hear the person be examined.
(3) An oath or affirmation to be sworn or made
by a person who is to be examined under such a direction may be administered
either:
(a) by means of video link, in as
nearly as practicable the same way as if the person were to be examined at the
place of the *examination; or
(b) on behalf of the *approved examiner, by a person authorised
by the approved examiner, at the place where the person to be examined attends
for the purposes of the examination.
(4) The *approved
examiner may, on the request of a person referred to in paragraph 188(3)(b),
(c) or (d), direct that a person be examined by telephone if:
(a) the approved examiner is satisfied
that attendance of the person at the place of the *examination would cause unreasonable expense or
inconvenience; and
(b) the approved examiner is satisfied
that it is consistent with the interests of justice that the person be examined
by telephone.
191
Record of examination
(1) The *approved
examiner:
(a) may cause a record to be made of
statements made at the *examination;
and
(b) must make such a record if the
person being examined, or the *DPP,
so requests; and
(c) if the record is not a written
record—must cause the record to be reduced to writing if the person being
examined, or the DPP, so requests.
(2) If a record made under subsection (1)
is in writing or is reduced to writing:
(a) the *approved examiner may require the person being examined to
read it, or to have it read to him or her, and may require him or her to sign
it; and
(b) if the person being examined
requests in writing that the approved examiner give to the person a copy of the
written record—the approved examiner must comply with the request without
charge.
(3) The *approved
examiner may, in complying with the request under paragraph (2)(b), impose
on the person being examined such conditions (if any) as the approved examiner
reasonably considers to be necessary to prevent improper disclosure of the
record.
(4) The fact that a person being *examined signs a record as required under
paragraph (2)(a) does not of itself constitute an acknowledgment that the
record is accurate.
192
Questions of law
The *approved
examiner may:
(a) on his or her own initiative; or
(b) at the request of the person being
examined, or the *DPP;
refer a question of law arising at the *examination to the court that made the *examination order.
193
Approved examiner may restrict publication of certain material
(1) The *approved
examiner may:
(a) on his or her own initiative; or
(b) at the request of the person being
examined, or the *DPP;
give directions preventing or restricting disclosure to
the public of matters contained in answers given or documents produced in the
course of the *examination.
(2) In deciding whether or not to give a
direction, the *approved
examiner is to have regard to:
(a) whether:
(i) an answer that has
been or may be given; or
(ii) a document that has
been or may be produced; or
(iii) a matter that has
arisen or may arise;
during the *examination is of a confidential nature
or relates to the commission, or to the alleged or suspected commission, of an
offence against a law of the Commonwealth or a State or Territory; and
(b) any unfair prejudice to a person’s
reputation that would be likely to be caused unless the approved examiner gives
the direction; and
(c) whether giving the direction is in
the public interest; and
(d) any other relevant matter.
194
Protection of approved examiner etc.
(1) The *approved
examiner has, in the performance of his or her duties as an approved examiner,
the same protection and immunity as a Justice of the High Court.
(2) A *lawyer
appearing at the *examination:
(a) on behalf of the person being
examined; or
(b) as or on behalf of the *DPP;
has the same protection and immunity as a barrister has in
appearing for a party in proceedings in the High Court.
(3) Subject to this Act, the person being *examined:
(a) has the same protection; and
(b) in addition to the penalties
provided by this Act, is subject to the same liabilities;
as a witness in proceedings in the High Court.
Division 4—Offences
Note: In addition to the offences in this Division,
there are other offences that may be relevant to examinations, such as sections 137.1
(false or misleading information) and 137.2 (false or misleading documents) of
the Criminal Code.
195
Failing to attend an examination
A person is guilty of an offence if the
person:
(a) is required by an *examination notice to attend an *examination; and
(b) refuses or fails to attend the
examination at the time and place specified in the notice.
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months or 30 penalty
units, or both.
196
Offences relating to appearance at an examination
(1) A person attending an *examination to answer questions or
produce documents must not:
(a) refuse or fail to be sworn or to
make an affirmation; or
(b) refuse or fail to answer a
question that the *approved
examiner requires the person to answer; or
(c) refuse or fail to produce at the
examination a document specified in the *examination
notice that required the person’s attendance; or
(d) leave the examination before being
excused by the approved examiner.
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months or 30 penalty
units, or both.
(2) Paragraph (1)(c) does not apply if
the person complied with the notice in relation to production of the document
to the extent that it was practicable to do so.
Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in
relation to the matter in subsection (2): see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal
Code.
197
Privileged information
(1) Paragraph 196(1)(b) or (c) does not apply
if, under:
(a) a law of the Commonwealth; or
(b) a law of the State or Territory in
which the *examination takes
place;
the person could not, in proceedings before a court, be
compelled to answer the question or produce the document.
Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in
relation to the matter in subsection (1): see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal
Code.
(2) However, paragraph 196(1)(b) or (c)
applies if the only reason or reasons why the person could not be so compelled
are one or more of the following:
(a) answering the question or
producing the document would tend to incriminate the person or to expose the
person to a penalty;
(b) the answer would be privileged
from being disclosed, or the document would be privileged from being produced,
in legal proceedings on the ground of *legal
professional privilege;
(c) the answer or document would,
under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory relating to the law of
evidence, be inadmissible in legal proceedings for a reason other than because:
(i) the answer would be
privileged from being disclosed; or
(ii) the document would be
privileged from being produced.
(3) To avoid doubt, the following are not
reasons why a person cannot, in proceedings before a court, be compelled to
answer a question or produce a document:
(a) the person is contractually
obliged not to disclose information, and answering the question or producing
the document would disclose that information;
(b) the person is obliged under a law
of a foreign country not to disclose information, and answering the question or
producing the document would disclose that information.
198
Admissibility of answers and documents
An answer given or document produced in
an *examination is not
admissible in evidence in civil or criminal proceedings against the person who
gave the answer or produced the document except:
(a) in criminal proceedings for giving
false or misleading information; or
(b) in proceedings on an application
under this Act; or
(c) in proceedings ancillary to an
application under this Act; or
(d) in proceedings for enforcement of
a *confiscation order; or
(e) in the case of a document—in civil
proceedings for or in respect of a right or liability it confers or imposes.
199
Unauthorised presence at an examination
A person is guilty of an offence if the
person:
(a) is present at an *examination; and
(b) is not entitled under subsection
188(3) to be present.
Maximum penalty: 30 penalty units.
200
Breaching conditions on which records of statements are provided
A person is guilty of an offence if the
person breaches a condition imposed under subsection 191(3) relating to a
record given to the person under that subsection.
Maximum penalty: 30 penalty units.
201
Breaching directions preventing or restricting publication
(1) A person is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the person publishes a matter
contained in answers given or documents produced in the course of an *examination; and
(b) the publication is in
contravention of a direction given under section 193 by the *approved examiner who conducted the
examination.
Maximum penalty: 30 penalty units.
(2) This section does not apply to disclosure
of a matter:
(a) to obtain legal advice or legal
representation in relation to the order; or
(b) for the purposes of, or in the
course of, legal proceedings.
Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in
relation to the matters in subsection (2): see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal
Code.
Part 3‑2—Production orders
202
Making production orders
(1) A magistrate may make an order (a production
order) requiring a person to:
(a) produce one or more *property‑tracking documents to an *authorised officer; or
(b) make one or more property‑tracking
documents available to an authorised officer for inspection.
(2) However:
(a) the magistrate must not make a *production order unless the magistrate is
satisfied by information on oath that the person is reasonably suspected of
having possession or control of such documents; and
(b) a production order cannot require
documents that are not:
(i) in the possession or
under the control of a body corporate; or
(ii) used or intended to be
used in the carrying on of a business;
to be produced or made available
to an *authorised officer; and
(c) a production order cannot require
any accounting records used in the ordinary business of a *financial institution (including ledgers,
day‑books, cash‑books and account books) to be produced to an *authorised officer.
(3) The *production
order can only be made on application by an *authorised
officer of an *enforcement
agency.
(4) The *authorised
officer need not give notice of the application to any person.
(5) Each of the following is a property‑tracking
document:
(a) a document relevant to
identifying, locating or quantifying property of any person:
(i) who has been convicted
of, charged with, or whom it is proposed to charge with, an *indictable offence; or
(ii) whom there are
reasonable grounds to suspect of having engaged in conduct constituting a *terrorism offence; or
(iii) whom there are
reasonable grounds to suspect of having, within the last 6 years, engaged in
conduct constituting any other *serious
offence;
(b) a document relevant to identifying
or locating any document necessary for the transfer of property of such a
person;
(c) a document relevant to
identifying, locating or quantifying:
(i) *proceeds of an indictable offence, or an *instrument of an indictable offence, of
which a person has been convicted or with which a person has been charged or is
proposed to be charged; or
(ii) proceeds of a
terrorism offence, or an instrument of a terrorism offence, that a person is
reasonably suspected of having committed; or
(iii) proceeds of any other
serious offence, or an instrument of any other serious offence, that a person
is reasonably suspected of having committed within the last 6 years;
(d) a document relevant to identifying
or locating any document necessary for the transfer of such property;
(e) a document relevant to
identifying, locating or quantifying *literary
proceeds in relation to an indictable offence or a *foreign indictable offence of which a person has been
convicted or which a person is reasonably suspected of having committed;
(f) a document that would assist in
the reading or interpretation of a document referred to in paragraph (a),
(b), (c), (d) or (e).
(6) It is sufficient for the purposes of subparagraph (5)(c)(ii)
or (iii) that the document is relevant to identifying, locating or quantifying *proceeds of some offence or other of a
kind referred to in that subparagraph. It does not need to be relevant to
identifying, locating or quantifying proceeds of a particular offence.
203
Contents of production orders
(1) A *production
order must:
(a) specify the nature of the documents
required; and
(b) specify the place at which the
person must produce the documents or make the documents available; and
(c) specify the time at which, or the
times between which, this must be done; and
(d) specify the name of the *authorised officer who, unless he or she
inserts the name of another authorised officer in the order, is to be
responsible for giving the order to the person; and
(e) if the order specifies that
information about the order must not be disclosed—set out the effect of section 210
(disclosing existence or nature of production orders); and
(f) set out the effect of section 211
(failing to comply with an order).
(2) The time or times specified under paragraph (1)(c)
must be at least 14 days from the day on which the order is given. However, the
magistrate making the order may specify an earlier time or times if satisfied
that it will not cause hardship to the person required to produce documents or
make documents available.
204
Powers under production orders
The *authorised
officer may inspect, take extracts from, or make copies of, a document produced
or made available under a *production
order.
205
Retaining produced documents
(1) The *authorised
officer may also retain a document produced under a *production order for as long as is
necessary for the purposes of this Act.
(2) The person to whom a *production order is given may require the
*authorised officer to:
(a) certify in writing a copy of the
document retained to be a true copy and give the person the copy; or
(b) allow the person to do one or more
of the following:
(i) inspect the document;
(ii) take extracts from the
document;
(iii) make copies of the
document.
206 Privilege against self‑incrimination etc.
does not apply
(1) A
person is not excused from producing a document or making a document available
under a *production order on the ground that:
(a) to
do so would tend to incriminate the person or expose the person to a penalty;
or
(b) producing
the document or making it available would breach an obligation (whether imposed
by an enactment or otherwise) of the person not to disclose the existence or
contents of the document; or
(c) producing
the document or making it available would disclose information that is the
subject of *legal professional privilege.
(2) However,
in the case of a natural person, the document is not admissible in evidence in
a *criminal proceeding against the person, except in
proceedings under, or arising out of, section 137.1 or 137.2 of the Criminal
Code (false or misleading information or documents) in relation to
producing the document or making it available.
207
Varying production orders
(1) A person who is required to produce a
document to an *authorised
officer under a *production
order may apply to:
(a) the magistrate who made the order;
or
(b) if that magistrate is
unavailable—any other magistrate;
to vary the order so that it instead requires the person
to make the document available for inspection.
(2) The magistrate may vary the *production order if satisfied that the
document is essential to the person’s business activities.
208
Jurisdiction of magistrates
A magistrate in a State or a *self‑governing Territory may issue
a *production order relating to
one or more documents that are located in:
(a) that State or Territory; or
(b) another State or self‑governing
Territory if he or she is satisfied that there are special circumstances that
make the issue of the order appropriate; or
(c) a *non‑governing Territory.
209
Making false statements in applications
A person is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the person makes a statement
(whether orally, in a document or in any other way); and
(b) the statement:
(i) is false or
misleading; or
(ii) omits any matter or
thing without which the statement is misleading; and
(c) the statement is made in, or in
connection with, an application for a *production
order.
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 12 months or 60 penalty
units, or both.
210
Disclosing existence or nature of production orders
(1) A person is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the person is given a *production order; and
(b) the order specifies that
information about the order must not be disclosed; and
(c) the person discloses the existence
or nature of the order to another person.
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 2 years or 120 penalty
units, or both.
(2) A person is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the person is given a *production order; and
(b) the order specifies that
information about the order must not be disclosed; and
(c) the person discloses information
to another person; and
(d) that other person could infer the
existence or nature of the order from that information.
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 2 years or 120 penalty
units, or both.
(3) Subsections (1) and (2) do not apply
if:
(a) the person discloses the
information to an employee, *agent
or other person in order to obtain a document that is required by the order in
order to comply with it, and that other person is directed not to inform the
person to whom the document relates about the matter; or
(b) the disclosure is made to obtain
legal advice or legal representation in relation to the order; or
(c) the disclosure is made for the
purposes of, or in the course of, legal proceedings.
Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in
relation to the matters in subsection (3): see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal
Code.
211
Failing to comply with a production order
(1) A person is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the person is given a *production order in relation to a *property‑tracking document; and
(b) the person fails to comply with
the order; and
(c) the person has not been notified
of sufficient compliance under subsection (2).
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months or 30 penalty
units, or both.
Note: Sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal
Code also create offences for providing false or misleading information or
documents.
(2) A person is notified of sufficient
compliance under this subsection if:
(a) the person gives an *authorised officer a statutory
declaration stating that the person does not have possession or control of the
document; and
(b) the officer notifies the person in
writing that the statutory declaration is sufficient compliance with the *production order.
212
Destroying etc. a document subject to a production order
A person is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the person destroys, defaces or
otherwise interferes with a *property‑tracking
document; and
(b) a *production order is in force requiring the document to be
produced or made available.
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months or 30 penalty
units, or both.
Part 3‑3—Notices to financial institutions
213
Giving notices to financial institutions
(1) An officer specified in subsection (3)
may give a written notice to a *financial
institution requiring the institution to provide to an *authorised officer any information or
documents relevant to any one or more of the following:
(a) determining whether an *account is held by a specified person
with the financial institution;
(b) determining whether a particular
person is a signatory to an account;
(c) if a person holds an account with
the institution, the current balance of the account;
(d) details of transactions on such an
account over a specified period of up to 6 months;
(e) details of any related accounts
(including names of those who hold those accounts);
(f) a transaction conducted by the
financial institution on behalf of a specified person.
(2) The officer must not issue the notice
unless the officer reasonably believes that giving the notice is required:
(a) to determine whether to take any
action under this Act; or
(b) in relation to proceedings under
this Act.
(3) The officers who may give a notice to a *financial institution are:
(a) the Commissioner of the Australian
Federal Police; or
(b) a Deputy Commissioner of the
Australian Federal Police; or
(c) a senior executive AFP employee
(within the meaning of the Australian Federal Police Act 1979) who is a
member of the Australian Federal Police and who is authorised in writing by the
Commissioner for the purposes of this section; or
(ca) the Integrity Commissioner (within
the meaning of the Law Enforcement Integrity Commissioner Act 2006); or
(d) the Chief Executive Officer of the
Australian Crime Commission; or
(e) an examiner (within the meaning of
the Australian Crime Commission Act 2002).
214
Contents of notices to financial institutions
The notice must:
(a) state that the officer giving the
notice believes that the notice is required:
(i) to determine whether
to take any action under this Act; or
(ii) in relation to
proceedings under this Act;
(as the case requires); and
(b) specify the name of the *financial institution; and
(c) specify the kind of information or
documents required to be provided; and
(d) specify the form and manner in
which that information or those documents are to be provided; and
(e) state that the information or
documents must be provided within 14 days of the notice; and
(f) if the notice specifies that
information about the notice must not be disclosed—set out the effect of
section 217 (disclosing existence or nature of a notice); and
(g) set out the effect of section 218
(failing to comply with a notice).
215
Protection from suits etc. for those complying with notices
(1) No action, suit or proceeding lies
against:
(a) a *financial institution; or
(b) an *officer, employee or *agent
of the institution acting in the course of that person’s employment or agency;
in relation to any action taken by the institution or
person under a notice under section 213 or in the mistaken belief that
action was required under the notice.
(2) A *financial institution, or person who is
an *officer, employee or *agent of a financial institution, who
provides information under a notice under section 213 is taken, for the
purposes of Part 10.2 of the Criminal Code (offences relating to
money‑laundering), not to have been in possession of that information at
any time.
216
Making false statements in notices
A person is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the person makes a statement
(whether orally, in a document or in any other way); and
(b) the statement:
(i) is false or
misleading; or
(ii) omits any matter or
thing without which the statement is misleading; and
(c) the statement is made in, or in
connection with, a notice under section 213.
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 12 months or 60 penalty
units, or both.
217
Disclosing existence or nature of notice
A person is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the person is given a notice under
section 213; and
(b) the notice specifies that
information about the notice must not be disclosed; and
(c) the person discloses the existence
or nature of the notice.
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 2 years or 120 penalty
units, or both.
218
Failing to comply with a notice
A person is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the person is given a notice under
section 213; and
(b) the person fails to comply with
the notice:
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months or 30 penalty
units, or both.
Note: Sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal
Code also create offences for providing false or misleading information or
documents.
Part 3‑4—Monitoring orders
219
Making monitoring orders
(1) A judge of a court of a State or
Territory that has jurisdiction to deal with criminal matters on indictment may
make an order (a monitoring order) that a *financial institution provide information
about transactions conducted during a particular period through an *account held by a particular person with
the institution.
(2) The judge must not make a *monitoring order unless the judge is
satisfied that there are reasonable grounds for suspecting that:
(a) the person in respect of whose *account the information is sought:
(i) has committed, or is
about to commit, a *serious
offence; or
(ii) was involved in the
commission, or is about to be involved in the commission, of a serious offence;
or
(iii) has *benefited directly or indirectly, or is
about to benefit directly or indirectly, from the commission of a serious
offence; or
(b) the account is being used to
commit an offence against Part 10.2 of the Criminal Code (money
laundering).
(3) It does not matter, for the purposes of paragraph (2)(b),
whether the person holding the account in question commits or is involved in
the offence against Part 10.2 of the Criminal Code.
(4) The *monitoring
order can only be made on application by an *authorised
officer of an *enforcement
agency.
220
Contents of monitoring orders
(1) A *monitoring
order must:
(a) specify the name or names in which
the *account is believed to be
held; and
(b) specify the kind of information
that the *financial institution
is required to provide; and
(c) specify the period during which
the transactions must have occurred; and
(d) specify to which *enforcement agency the information is to
be provided; and
(e) specify the form and manner
in which the information is to be given; and
(f) if the order specifies that
information about the order must not be disclosed—set out the effect of section 223
(disclosing existence or operation of an order); and
(g) set out the effect of section 224
(failing to comply with an order).
(2) The period mentioned in paragraph (1)(c)
must:
(a) begin no earlier than the day on
which notice of the *monitoring
order is given to the *financial
institution; and
(b) end no later than 3 months after
the date of the order.
221
Protection from suits etc. for those complying with orders
(1) No action, suit or proceeding lies
against:
(a) a *financial institution; or
(b) an *officer, employee or *agent
of the institution acting in the course of that person’s employment or agency;
in relation to any action taken by the institution or
person in complying with a *monitoring
order or in the mistaken belief that action was required under the order.
(2) A *financial
institution, or person who is an *officer,
employee or *agent of a
financial institution, who provides information under a *monitoring order is taken, for the
purposes of Part 10.2 of the Criminal Code (offences relating to
money‑laundering), not to have been in possession of that information at
any time.
222
Making false statements in applications
A person
is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the person makes a statement
(whether orally, in a document or in any other way); and
(b) the statement:
(i) is false or
misleading; or
(ii) omits any matter or
thing without which the statement is misleading; and
(c) the statement is made in, or in
connection with, an application for a *monitoring
order.
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 2 years or 120 penalty units,
or both.
223
Disclosing existence or operation of monitoring order
(1) A person is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the person discloses the existence
or the operation of a *monitoring
order to another person; and
(b) the disclosure is not to a person
specified in subsection (4); and
(c) the disclosure is not for a
purpose specified in subsection (4).
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 5 years or 300 penalty
units, or both.
(2) A person is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the person discloses information
to another person; and
(b) the other person could infer the
existence or operation of a *monitoring
order from that information; and
(c) the disclosure is not to a person
specified in subsection (4); and
(d) the disclosure is not for a
purpose specified in subsection (4).
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 5 years or 300 penalty
units, or both.
(3) A person is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the person receives information
relating to a *monitoring order
in accordance with subsection (4); and
(b) the person ceases to be a person
to whom information could be disclosed in accordance with subsection (4);
and
(c) the person makes a record of, or
discloses, the existence or the operation of the order.
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 5 years or 300 penalty
units, or both.
(4) A person may disclose the existence or
the operation of a *monitoring
order to the following persons for the following purposes:
(a) the head of the *enforcement agency specified under
paragraph 220(1)(d) or an *authorised
officer of that agency:
(i) for the purpose of
performing that person’s duties; or
(ii) for the purpose of, or
for purposes connected with, legal proceedings; or
(iii) for purposes arising
in the course of proceedings before a court;
(b) the Chief Executive Officer of *AUSTRAC, or a member of the staff of
AUSTRAC who is authorised by the Chief Executive Officer of AUSTRAC as a person
who may be advised of the existence of a monitoring order:
(i) for the purpose of
performing that person’s duties; or
(ii) for the purpose of, or
for purposes connected with, legal proceedings; or
(iii) for purposes arising
in the course of proceedings before a court;
(c) an *officer or *agent
of the *financial institution
for the purpose of ensuring that the order is complied with;
(d) a barrister or solicitor for the
purpose of obtaining legal advice or representation in relation to the order.
224
Failing to comply with monitoring order
A person is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the person is given a *monitoring order; and
(b) the person fails to comply with
the order.
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months or 30 penalty
units, or both.
Note: Sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal
Code also create offences for providing false or misleading information or
documents.
Part 3‑5—Search and seizure
Division 1—Search warrants
Subdivision A—Issuing search warrants
225
Issuing a search warrant
(1) A magistrate may issue a warrant to
search *premises if the
magistrate is satisfied by information on oath that there are reasonable
grounds for suspecting that there is at the premises, or will be within the
next 72 hours, *tainted
property or *evidential
material.
(2) If an application for a *search warrant is made under section 229
(applying for warrants by telephone or other electronic means), this section
applies as if subsection (1) referred to 48 hours rather than 72 hours.
(3) The *search
warrant can only be issued on application by an *authorised officer of an *enforcement
agency.
226
Additional contents of the information
(1) If the person applying for a warrant to
search *premises suspects that
it will be necessary to use firearms in executing the warrant, the person must
state that suspicion, and the grounds for that suspicion, in the information.
(2) A person applying for a warrant to search
*premises who has previously
applied for a warrant relating to the same premises, must include particulars
of the application and its outcome in the information.
227
Contents of warrants
(1) A *search warrant must state:
(a) the nature of the property in
respect of which action has been or could be taken under this Act; and
(b) the nature of that action; and
(c) a description of the *premises to which the warrant relates;
and
(d) the kinds of *tainted property or *evidential material that is to be
searched for under the warrant; and
(e) the name of the *authorised officer who is responsible for
executing the warrant, unless he or she inserts the name of another authorised
officer in the warrant; and
(f) the time at which the warrant
expires (see subsection (2)); and
(g) whether the warrant may be
executed at any time or only during particular hours; and
(h) that the warrant authorises the
seizure of other things found at the premises in the course of the search that
the *executing officer or a *person assisting believes on reasonable
grounds to be:
(i) tainted property to
which the warrant relates; or
(ii) evidential material in
relation to property to which the warrant relates; or
(iii) evidential material
(within the meaning of the Crimes Act 1914) relating to an *indictable offence;
if he or she believes on
reasonable grounds that seizure of the things is necessary to prevent their
concealment, loss or destruction or their use in committing an offence; and
(i) whether the warrant authorises an
*ordinary search or a *frisk search of a person who is at or
near the premises when the warrant is executed if the executing officer or a
person assisting reasonably suspects that the person has any tainted property
or evidential material in his or her possession.
(2) The time stated in the *search warrant under paragraph (1)(f)
as the time at which the warrant expires must be a time that is not later than:
(a) if the application for the warrant
is made under section 229 (telephone warrants)—48 hours after the warrant
is issued; or
(b) otherwise, a time that is not
later than the end of the seventh day after the day on which the warrant is
issued.
Example: If a warrant is issued at 3 pm on a Monday, the expiry time specified must not be later than midnight on Monday in the
following week.
(3) Paragraph (1)(f) does not prevent
the issue of successive *search
warrants in relation to the same *premises.
228
The things that are authorised by a search warrant
(1) A *search
warrant authorises the *executing
officer or a *person assisting:
(a) to enter the *premises and, if the premises are a *conveyance, to enter the conveyance,
wherever it is; and
(b) to search for and record
fingerprints found at the premises and to take samples of things found at the
premises for forensic purposes; and
(c) to search the premises for the
kinds of *tainted property or *evidential material specified in the
warrant, and to seize things of that kind found at the premises; and
(d) to seize other things found at the
premises in the course of the search that the executing officer or a person
assisting believes on reasonable grounds to be:
(i) tainted property to
which the warrant relates; or
(ii) evidential material in
relation to property to which the warrant relates; or
(iii) evidential material
(within the meaning of the Crimes Act 1914) relating to an *indictable offence;
if he or she believes on
reasonable grounds that seizure of the things is necessary to prevent their
concealment, loss or destruction or their use in committing an offence; and
(e) if the warrant so allows—to
conduct an *ordinary search or
a *frisk search of a person at
or near the premises if the executing officer or a person assisting suspects on
reasonable grounds that the person has any tainted property or evidential
material in his or her possession.
(2) A *search
warrant authorises the *executing
officer to make things seized under the warrant available to officers of other *enforcement agencies if it is necessary
to do so for the purpose of:
(a) investigating or prosecuting an
offence to which the things relate; or
(b) recovering *proceeds of an offence or an *instrument of an offence.
Subdivision B—Applying for search warrants by telephone or other
electronic means
229 Applying
for search warrants by telephone or other electronic means
(1) An *authorised
officer may apply to a magistrate for a *search
warrant by telephone, fax or other electronic means:
(a) in an urgent case; or
(b) if the delay that would occur if an
application were made in person would frustrate the effective execution of the
warrant.
(2) An application under subsection (1):
(a) must include all information that
would be required in an ordinary application for a *search warrant; and
(b) if necessary, may be made before
the information is sworn.
(3) The magistrate may require:
(a) communication by voice to the
extent that it is practicable in the circumstances; and
(b) any further information.
230
Issuing warrants by telephone etc.
(1) The magistrate may complete and sign the
same form of *search warrant
that would be issued under section 225 if satisfied that:
(a) a search warrant in the terms of
the application should be issued urgently; or
(b) the delay that would occur if an
application were made in person would frustrate the effective execution of the
warrant.
(2) If the magistrate issues the *search warrant, he or she must inform the
applicant, by telephone, fax or other electronic means, of the terms of the
warrant and the day on which and the time at which it was signed.
(3) The applicant must then:
(a) complete a form of *search warrant in terms substantially
corresponding to those given by the magistrate; and
(b) state on the form:
(i) the name of the
magistrate; and
(ii) the day on which the
warrant was signed; and
(iii) the time at which the
warrant was signed.
(4) The applicant must give the magistrate:
(a) the form of *search warrant completed by the
applicant; and
(b) if the information was unsworn
under paragraph 229(2)(b)—the sworn information;
by the end of the day after whichever first occurs:
(c) the warrant expires; or
(d) the warrant is executed.
(5) The magistrate must attach the form of *search warrant completed by the
magistrate to the documents provided under subsection (4).
231
Unsigned telephone warrants in court proceedings
If:
(a) it is material, in any
proceedings, for a court to be satisfied that the exercise of a power under a *search warrant issued under this
Subdivision was duly authorised; and
(b) the form of search warrant signed
by the magistrate is not produced in evidence;
the court must assume that the exercise of the power was
not duly authorised unless the contrary is proved.
232
Offence for stating incorrect names in telephone warrants
A person is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the person states a name of a
magistrate in a document; and
(b) the document purports to be a form
of *search warrant under
section 230; and
(c) the name is not the name of the
magistrate that issued the warrant.
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 2 years or 120 penalty
units, or both.
233
Offence for unauthorised form of warrant
A person is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the person states a matter in a
form of *search warrant under
section 230; and
(b) the matter departs in a material
particular from the form authorised by the magistrate.
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 2 years or 120 penalty
units, or both.
234
Offence for execution etc. of unauthorised form of warrant
A person
is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the person executes a document or
presents a document to a person; and
(b) the document purports to be a form
of *search warrant under
section 230; and
(c) the document:
(i) has not been approved
by a magistrate under that section; or
(ii) departs in a material
particular from the terms authorised by the magistrate under that section.
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 2 years or 120 penalty
units, or both.
235
Offence for giving unexecuted form of warrant
A person is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the person gives a magistrate a
form of *search warrant under
section 230; and
(b) the document is not the form of *search warrant that the person executed.
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 2 years or 120 penalty
units, or both.
Subdivision C—Executing search warrants
236
Warrants that must be executed only during particular hours
A *search
warrant that states that it may be executed only during particular hours must
not be executed outside those hours.
237
Restrictions on personal searches
(1) A *search
warrant cannot authorise a *strip
search or a search of a person’s body cavities.
(2) If a *search
warrant authorises an *ordinary
search or a *frisk search of a
person:
(a) a different search from the one
authorised must not be done under the warrant; and
(b) the search must, if practicable,
be conducted by a person of the same sex as the person being searched.
(3) A person who is not an *authorised officer but who has been
authorised by the relevant *executing
officer to assist in executing a *search
warrant must not take part in searching a person.
238
Availability of assistance and use of force in executing a warrant
Executing officers
(1) In executing a *search warrant, an *executing officer may obtain such
assistance and use such force against persons and things as is necessary and
reasonable in the circumstances.
Authorised officers
(2) In executing a *search warrant, an *authorised officer who is assisting in
executing the warrant may use such force against persons and things as is necessary
and reasonable in the circumstances.
Persons who are not authorised officers
(3) In executing a *search warrant, a person who is not an *authorised officer but who has been
authorised to assist in executing the warrant may use such force against things
as is necessary and reasonable in the circumstances.
239
Announcement before entry
(1) An *executing
officer must, before any person enters *premises
under a *search warrant:
(a) announce that he or she is
authorised to enter the premises; and
(b) give any person at the premises an
opportunity to allow entry to the premises; and
(c) if the occupier of the premises,
or another person who apparently represents the occupier, is present at the
premises—identify himself or herself to that person.
(2) The *executing
officer is not required to comply with subsection (1) if he or she
believes on reasonable grounds that immediate entry to the *premises is required to ensure:
(a) the safety of a person (including
an *authorised officer); or
(b) that the effective execution of
the warrant is not frustrated.
240
Details of warrant to be given to occupier etc.
(1) If the occupier of the *premises, or another person who
apparently represents the occupier, is present at premises when a *search warrant is being executed, the *executing officer or a *person assisting must make available to
the person:
(a) a copy of the warrant; and
(b) a document setting out the rights
and obligations of the person.
(2) If a person is searched under a *search warrant, the *executing officer or a *person assisting must show the person a
copy of the warrant.
(3) The copy of the warrant need not include
the signature of the magistrate or the seal of the relevant court.
241
Occupier entitled to be present during search
(1) If an occupier of *premises, or another person who
apparently represents the occupier, is present at the premises while a *search warrant is being executed, the
occupier or person has the right to observe the search being conducted.
(2) However, the right ceases if:
(a) the person impedes the search; or
(b) the person is under arrest, and
allowing the person to observe the search being conducted would interfere with
the objectives of the search.
(3) This section does not prevent 2 or more
areas of the *premises being
searched at the same time.
242
Specific powers available to officers executing the warrant
(1) In executing a *search warrant, the *executing officer or a *person assisting may take photographs
(including video recordings) of the *premises
or of things at the premises:
(a) for a purpose incidental to the
execution of the warrant; or
(b) if the occupier of the premises
consents in writing.
(2) The *executing
officer and a *person assisting
may complete the execution of a *search
warrant, provided that the warrant is still in force, after all of them
temporarily leave the *premises:
(a) for not more than one hour; or
(b) for a longer period if the
occupier of the premises consents in writing.
(3) The execution of a *search warrant may be completed if:
(a) the execution is stopped by an
order of a court; and
(b) the order is later revoked or
reversed on appeal; and
(c) the warrant is still in force.
243
Use of equipment to examine or process things
(1) The *executing
officer or *person assisting
may bring to the *premises any
equipment reasonably necessary to examine or process a thing found at the
premises in order to determine whether it may be seized under the *search warrant in question.
(2) The *executing
officer or a *person assisting
may operate equipment already at the *premises
to carry out such an examination or processing if he or she believes on
reasonable grounds that:
(a) the equipment is suitable for this
purpose; and
(b) the examination or processing can
be carried out without damaging the equipment or thing.
244
Moving things to another place for examination or processing
(1) A thing found at the *premises may be moved to another place
for examination or processing in order to determine whether it may be seized
under a *search warrant if:
(a) both of the following apply:
(i) there are reasonable
grounds to believe that the thing contains or constitutes *tainted property or *evidential material;
(ii) it is significantly
more practicable to do so having regard to the timeliness and cost of examining
or processing the thing at another place and the availability of expert
assistance; or
(b) the occupier of the premises
consents in writing.
(2) The thing may be moved to another place
for examination or processing for no longer than 72 hours.
(3) An *executing
officer may apply to a magistrate for an extension of that time if the officer
believes on reasonable grounds that the thing cannot be examined or processed
within 72 hours.
(4) The *executing
officer must give notice of the application to the occupier of *premises, and the occupier is entitled to
be heard in relation to the application.
(5) If a thing is moved to another place
under subsection (1), the *executing
officer must, if it is practicable to do so:
(a) inform the occupier of the address
of the place and the time at which the examination or processing will be
carried out; and
(b) allow the occupier or his or her
representative to be present during the examination or processing.
245
Use of electronic equipment at premises
(1) The *executing
officer or a *person assisting
may operate electronic equipment at the *premises
to access *data (including data
not held at the premises) if he or she believes on reasonable grounds that:
(a) the data might constitute *evidential material; and
(b) the equipment can be operated
without damaging it.
Note: An executing officer can obtain an order
requiring a person with knowledge of a computer or computer system to provide
assistance: see section 246.
(2) If the *executing
officer or *person assisting
believes that any *data
accessed by operating the electronic equipment might constitute *evidential material, he or she may:
(a) copy the data to a disk, tape or
other similar device brought to the *premises;
or
(b) if the occupier of the premises
agrees in writing—copy the data to a disk, tape or other similar device at the
premises;
and take the device from the premises.
(3) The *executing
officer or a *person assisting
may do the following things if he or she finds that any *evidential material is accessible using
the equipment:
(a) seize the equipment and any disk,
tape or other similar device;
(b) if the material can, by using
facilities at the *premises, be
put in documentary form—operate the facilities to put the material in that form
and seize the documents so produced.
(4) An *authorised officer may seize equipment
under paragraph (3)(a) only if:
(a) it is not practicable to copy the *data as mentioned in subsection (2)
or to put the material in documentary form as mentioned in paragraph (3)(b);
or
(b) possession of the equipment by the
occupier could constitute an offence.
246
Person with knowledge of a computer or a computer system to assist access etc.
(1) An *executing
officer may apply to a magistrate for an order requiring a specified person to
provide any information or assistance that is reasonable or necessary to allow
the officer to do one or more of the following:
(a) access *data held in or accessible from a
computer that is on the *premises;
(b) copy the data to a *data storage device;
(c) convert the data into documentary
form.
(2) The magistrate may make an order if
satisfied that:
(a) there are reasonable grounds for
suspecting that *evidential
material is accessible from the computer; and
(b) the specified person is:
(i) reasonably suspected
of possessing, or having under his or her control, *tainted property or evidential material; or
(ii) the owner or lessee of
the computer; or
(iii) an employee of the
owner or lessee of the computer; and
(c) the specified person has knowledge
of:
(i) the computer or a
computer network of which the computer forms a part; or
(ii) measures applied to
protect *data held in or
accessible from the computer.
(3) A person is guilty of an offence if the person
fails to comply with the order.
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months or 30 penalty
units, or both.
247
Securing electronic equipment
(1) If the *executing
officer or a *person assisting
believes on reasonable grounds that:
(a) *evidential
material may be accessible by operating electronic equipment at the *premises; and
(b) expert assistance is required to
operate the equipment; and
(c) if he or she does not take action,
the material may be destroyed, altered or otherwise interfered with;
he or she may do whatever is necessary to secure the
equipment, whether by locking it up, placing a guard or otherwise.
(2) The *executing
officer or a *person assisting
must give notice to the occupier of the *premises
of:
(a) his or her intention to secure
equipment; and
(b) the fact that the equipment may be
secured for up to 24 hours.
(3) The equipment may be secured:
(a) for a period not exceeding 24
hours; or
(b) until the equipment has been
operated by the expert;
whichever happens first.
(4) If the *executing
officer or a *person assisting
believes on reasonable grounds that the expert assistance will not be available
within 24 hours, he or she may apply to the magistrate to extend the period.
(5) The *executing
officer or a *person assisting must
notify the occupier of the *premises
of his or her intention to apply for an extension, and the occupier is entitled
to be heard in relation to the application.
(6) The provisions of this Division relating
to the issue of *search
warrants apply, with such modifications as are necessary, to the issuing of an
extension.
248
Compensation for damage to electronic equipment
(1) This section applies if:
(a) damage is caused to equipment as a
result of it being operated as mentioned in section 243 or 245; or
(b) the *data recorded on the equipment is damaged or programs
associated with its use are damaged or corrupted;
because:
(c) insufficient care was exercised in
selecting the person who was to operate the equipment; or
(d) insufficient care was exercised by
the person operating the equipment.
(2) The Commonwealth must pay the owner of
the equipment, or the user of the *data
or programs, such reasonable compensation for the damage or corruption as they
agree on.
(3) However, if the owner or user and the
Commonwealth fail to agree, the owner or user may institute proceedings in the
Federal Court of Australia for such reasonable amount of compensation as the
Court determines.
(4) In determining the amount of compensation
payable, regard is to be had to whether the occupier of the *premises and his or her employees and *agents, if they were available at the
time, provided any appropriate warning or guidance on the operation of the
equipment.
(5) Compensation is payable out of money
appropriated by the Parliament.
(6) For the purposes of subsection (1),
damage to *data includes damage
by erasure of data or addition of other data.
249
Copies of seized things to be provided
(1) The occupier of the *premises, or another person who
apparently represents the occupier and who is present when a *search warrant is executed, may request
an *authorised officer who
seizes:
(a) a document, film, computer file or
other thing that can be readily copied; or
(b) a storage device the information
in which can be readily copied;
to give the occupier or other person a copy of the thing
or the information.
(2) The officer must do so as soon as
practicable after the seizure.
(3) However, the officer is not required to
do so if:
(a) the thing was seized under
subsection 245(2) or paragraph 245(3)(b) (use of electronic equipment at
premises); or
(b) possession by the occupier of the
document, film, computer file, thing or information could constitute an
offence.
250
Providing documents after execution of a search warrant
If:
(a) documents were on, or accessible
from, the *premises of a *financial institution at the time when a *search warrant relating to those premises
was executed; and
(b) those documents were not able to
be located at that time; and
(c) the financial institution provides
them to the *executing
officer as soon as practicable after the execution of the warrant;
then the documents are taken to have been seized under the
warrant.
Division 2—Stopping and searching conveyances
251
Searches without warrant in emergency situations
(1) This section applies if an *authorised officer suspects, on
reasonable grounds, that:
(a) a thing constituting *tainted property or *evidential material is in or on a *conveyance; and
(b) it is necessary to exercise a power
under subsection (2) in order to prevent the thing from being concealed,
lost or destroyed; and
(c) it is necessary to exercise the
power without the authority of a *search
warrant because the circumstances are serious and urgent.
(2) The officer may:
(a) stop and detain the *conveyance; and
(b) search the conveyance and any
container in or on the conveyance, for the thing; and
(c) seize the thing if he or she finds
it there.
(3) If, in the course of searching for the
thing, the officer finds another thing constituting *tainted property or *evidential material, the officer may
seize that thing if he or she suspects, on reasonable grounds, that:
(a) it is necessary to seize it in
order to prevent its concealment, loss or destruction; and
(b) it is necessary to seize it
without the authority of a *search
warrant because the circumstances are serious and urgent.
(4) The officer must exercise his or her
powers subject to section 252.
252
How an authorised officer exercises a power under section 251
When an *authorised officer exercises a power under section 251
in relation to a *conveyance,
he or she:
(a) may use such assistance as is
necessary; and
(b) must search the conveyance in a
public place or in some other place to which members of the public have ready
access; and
(c) must not detain the conveyance for
longer than is necessary and reasonable to search it and any container found in
or on the conveyance; and
(d) may use such force as is necessary
and reasonable in the circumstances, but must not damage the conveyance or any
container found in or on the conveyance by forcing open a part of the
conveyance or container unless:
(i) the person (if any)
apparently in charge of the conveyance has been given a reasonable opportunity
to open that part or container; or
(ii) it is not possible to
give that person such an opportunity.
Division 3—Dealing with things seized
Subdivision A—General requirements
253
Receipts for things seized under warrant
(1) The *executing
officer or a *person assisting
must provide a receipt for:
(a) a thing seized under a warrant; or
(b) a thing moved under subsection
244(1) (moving things to another place for examination or processing); or
(c) a thing seized under section 251
(searches without warrant in emergency situations).
(2) One receipt may cover 2 or more things.
254
Responsibility for things seized
(1) If a thing is seized under a *search warrant or under section 251,
the *responsible custodian of
the thing must:
(a) arrange for the thing to be kept
until it is dealt with in accordance with another provision of this Act; and
(b) ensure that all reasonable steps
are taken to preserve the thing while it is so kept.
(2) The responsible custodian
of a thing that is seized under a *search
warrant or under section 251 is the head of the *enforcement agency of the *authorised officer who is responsible for
executing the warrant, or who seized the thing under section 251.
255
Effect of obtaining forfeiture orders
If:
(a) a thing is seized under a *search warrant or under section 251;
and
(b) while the thing is in the
possession of the responsible custodian, a *forfeiture
order is made covering the thing;
the *responsible
custodian must deal with the thing as required by the order.
Subdivision B—Things seized as evidence
256
Returning seized things
(1) If:
(a) a thing is seized under a *search warrant or under section 251;
and
(b) it is seized on the ground that a
person believes on reasonable grounds that it is:
(i) *evidential material; or
(ii) evidential material
(within the meaning of the Crimes Act 1914) relating to an *indictable offence; and
(c) either:
(i) the reason for the
thing’s seizure no longer exists or it is decided that the thing is not to be
used in evidence; or
(ii) if the thing was
seized under section 251—the period of 60 days after the thing’s seizure
ends;
the *authorised
officer responsible for executing the warrant, or who seized the thing under
section 251, must take reasonable steps to return the thing to the person
from whom it was seized or to the owner if that person is not entitled to
possess it.
(2) However, the *authorised officer does not have to take those steps if:
(a) in a subparagraph (1)(c)(ii)
case:
(i) proceedings in respect
of which the thing might afford evidence have been instituted before the end of
the 60 days and have not been completed (including an appeal to a court in
relation to those proceedings); or
(ii) there is an order in
force under section 258 (retaining things for a further period); or
(b) in any case—the authorised officer
is otherwise authorised (by a law, or an order of a court, of the Commonwealth,
a State, the Australian Capital Territory or the Northern Territory) to retain,
destroy or dispose of the thing; or
(c) in any case—the thing is forfeited
or forfeitable to the Commonwealth or is the subject of a dispute as to
ownership.
257
Authorised officer may apply for a thing to be retained for a further period
(1) This section applies if an *authorised officer has seized a thing
under this Part and proceedings in respect of which the thing might afford
evidence have not commenced before the end of:
(a) 60 days after the seizure; or
(b) a period previously specified in
an order of a magistrate under this section.
(2) The *authorised
officer may apply to a magistrate for an order that the officer may retain the
thing for a further period.
(3) Before making the application, the *authorised officer must:
(a) take reasonable steps to discover
whose interests would be affected by the retention of the thing; and
(b) if it is practicable to do so,
notify each person whom the officer believes to be such a person of the
proposed application.
258
Magistrate may order that the thing be retained
(1) The magistrate may order that the *authorised officer who made an
application under section 257 may retain the thing if the magistrate
is satisfied that it is necessary for the officer to do so for the purpose of
initiating or conducting proceedings under this Act.
(2) The order must specify the period for
which the officer may retain the thing.
Subdivision C—Things seized on other grounds
259
Return of seized property to third parties
(1) A person who claims an *interest in a thing that has been seized
under a *search warrant, or
under section 251, on the ground that a person believes on reasonable
grounds that it is *tainted
property may apply to a court for an order that the thing be returned to the
person.
(2) The
court must be:
(a) if
the thing was seized under a *search
warrant—a court of the State or Territory in which the warrant was issued that
has *proceeds jurisdiction; or
(b) if
the thing was seized under section 251—a court of the State or Territory
in which the thing was seized that has proceeds jurisdiction.
(3) The court must order the *responsible custodian of the thing to
return the thing to the applicant if the court is satisfied that:
(a) the applicant is entitled to
possession of the thing; and
(b) the thing is not *tainted property in relation to the
relevant offence; and
(c) the person in respect of whose
suspected commission of, or conviction for, an offence the thing was seized has
no *interest in the thing.
(4) If the court makes such an order, the *responsible custodian of the thing must
arrange for the thing to be returned to the applicant.
260
Return of seized property if applications are not made for restraining orders
or forfeiture orders
(1) If:
(a) a thing has been seized under a *search warrant, or under section 251,
on the ground that a person believes on reasonable grounds that it is *tainted property; and
(b) at the time when the thing was
seized, an application had not been made for a *restraining order or a *forfeiture
order that would cover the thing; and
(c) such an application is not made
during the period of 14 days after the day on which the thing was seized;
the *responsible
custodian of the thing must arrange for the thing to be returned to the person
from whose possession it was seized as soon as practicable after the end of
that period.
(2) However, this section does not apply to a
thing to which section 261 applies.
261
Effect of obtaining restraining orders
(1) If:
(a) a thing has been seized under a *search warrant, or under section 251,
on the ground that a person believes on reasonable grounds that it is *tainted property; and
(b) but for this subsection, the *responsible custodian of the thing would
be required to arrange for the thing to be returned to a person as soon as
practicable after the end of a particular period; and
(c) before the end of that period, a *restraining order is made covering the
thing;
then:
(d) if the restraining order directs
the *Official Trustee to take
custody and control of the thing—the responsible custodian must arrange for the
thing to be given to the Official Trustee in accordance with the restraining
order; or
(e) if the court that made the
restraining order has made an order under subsection (3) in relation to
the thing—the responsible custodian must arrange for the thing to be kept until
it is dealt with in accordance with another provision of this Act.
(2) If:
(a) a thing has been seized under a *search warrant, or under section 251,
on the ground that a person believes on reasonable grounds that it is *tainted property; and
(b) a *restraining order is made in relation to the thing; and
(c) at the time when the restraining
order is made, the thing is in the possession of the responsible custodian;
the *responsible
custodian of the thing may apply to the court that made the restraining order
for an order that the responsible custodian retain possession of the property.
(3) The court may, if satisfied that there
are reasonable grounds for believing that the property may afford evidence as
to the commission of an offence, make an order that the responsible custodian
may retain the property for so long as the property is required as evidence as
to the commission of that offence.
(4) A witness who is giving evidence relating
to an application for an order under subsection (2) is not required to
answer a question or produce a document if the court is satisfied that the
answer or document may prejudice the investigation of, or the prosecution of a
person for, an offence.
262
Effect of refusing applications for restraining orders or forfeiture orders
If:
(a) a thing has been seized under a *search warrant, or under section 251,
on the ground that a person believes on reasonable grounds that it is *tainted property; and
(b) an application is made for a *restraining order or a *forfeiture order that would cover the
thing; and
(c) the application is refused; and
(d) at the time when the application
is refused, the thing is in the possession of the *responsible custodian;
the *responsible
custodian must arrange for the thing to be returned to the person from whose
possession it was seized as soon as practicable after the refusal.
Division 4—General
263
Application of Part
This Part is not intended to limit or
exclude the operation of another law of the Commonwealth, a State or a
Territory relating to:
(a) the search of persons or *premises; or
(b) the stopping, detaining or
searching of *conveyances; or
(c) the seizure of things.
264
Law relating to legal professional privilege not affected
This Part does not affect the law
relating to *legal professional
privilege.
265
Jurisdiction of magistrates
A magistrate in a State or a *self‑governing Territory may issue
a *search warrant in:
(a) that State or Territory; or
(b) another State or self‑governing
Territory if he or she is satisfied that there are special circumstances that
make the issue of the warrant appropriate; or
(c) a *non‑governing Territory.
266
Offence for making false statements in applications
A person is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the person makes a statement
(whether orally, in a document or in any other way); and
(b) the statement:
(i) is false or
misleading; or
(ii) omits any matter or
thing without which the statement is misleading; and
(c) the statement is made in, or in
connection with, an application for a *search
warrant.
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 2 years or 120 penalty
units, or both.
Chapter 4—Administration
Part 4‑1—Powers and duties of the Official Trustee
Division 1—Preliminary
267
Property to which the Official Trustee’s powers and duties under this Part
apply
(1) The powers conferred on the *Official Trustee under this Part may be
exercised, and the duties imposed on the Official Trustee under this Part are
to be performed, in relation to property if a court orders the Official Trustee
to take custody and control of the property under section 38.
(2) This property is controlled
property.
(3) However, powers conferred on the *Official Trustee under Division 4 may
be exercised, and the duties imposed on the Official Trustee under Division 4
are to be performed, in relation to any property that is the subject of a *restraining order, whether or not the
property is *controlled
property.
267A
Additional property to which the Official Trustee’s powers and duties under
Division 3 apply
(1) The powers conferred on the *Official Trustee under Division 3 may
be exercised, and the duties imposed on the Official Trustee under Division 3
are to be performed, in relation to property that, under paragraph 278(2)(d),
may be disposed of to pay, under Part 4‑2, a *legal aid commission’s costs.
(2) Without limiting the definition of controlled
property in section 267, for the purposes of Division 3 this
property is controlled property.
Division 2—Obtaining information about controlled property
268
Access to books
(1) The *Official Trustee, or another person
authorised in writing by the Official Trustee to exercise powers under this
section, may, for the purpose of:
(a) ensuring that all the *controlled property is under the Official
Trustee’s custody and control; or
(b) ensuring the effective exercise of
the Official Trustee’s powers or the performance of the Official Trustee’s
duties, under this Part in relation to the controlled property;
require:
(c) the *suspect in relation to the *restraining order covering the controlled property; or
(d) any other person entitled to, or
claiming an *interest in, the
controlled property;
to produce specified *books
in accordance with this section.
(2) The requirement must be by written
notice.
(3) The requirement must be to produce the *books:
(a) to a specified person; and
(b) at a specified place, and within a
specified period or at a specified time on a specified day, being a place, and
a period or a time and day, that are reasonable in the circumstances.
(4) The *books
must be:
(a) in the possession of the person of
whom the requirement is made; and
(b) in the opinion of the *Official Trustee or other person making
the requirement, relevant for the purpose for which they are required.
(5) If the *books
are so produced, the *Official
Trustee or other person making the requirement, or the specified person:
(a) may make copies of, or take
extracts from, the books; and
(b) may require:
(i) the person required
under this section to produce the books; or
(ii) any other person who
was a party to the compilation of the books;
to explain to the best of his or
her knowledge and belief any matter about the compilation of the books or to
which the books relate.
(6) If the *books
are not so produced, the *Official
Trustee or other person making the requirement, or the specified person, may
require the person required under this section to produce the books to state,
to the best of his or her knowledge or belief:
(a) where the books may be found; and
(b) who last had possession, custody
or control of the books and where that person may be found.
(7) The production of *books under this section does not
prejudice a lien that a person has on the books.
269
Suspect to assist Official Trustee
The *suspect
in relation to the *restraining
order covering the *controlled
property must, unless excused by the *Official
Trustee or prevented by illness or other sufficient cause:
(a) give to the Official Trustee such *books (including books of an associated
entity (within the meaning of the Bankruptcy Act 1966) of the person)
that:
(i) are in the person’s
possession; and
(ii) relate to any of the
person’s affairs;
as the Official Trustee
requires; and
(b) attend the Official Trustee
whenever the Official Trustee reasonably requires; and
(c) give to the Official Trustee such
information about any of the person’s conduct and examinable affairs as the
Official Trustee requires; and
(d) give to the Official Trustee such
assistance as the Official Trustee reasonably requires, in connection with the
exercise of the Official Trustee’s powers or the performance of the Official
Trustee’s duties under this Part in relation to the controlled property.
270
Power to obtain information and evidence
(1) The *Official
Trustee, by written notice given to any person, may require the person:
(a) to give to the Official Trustee
such information as the Official Trustee requires for the purposes of the
exercise of the Official Trustee’s powers or the performance of the Official
Trustee’s duties under this Part; and
(b) to attend before the Official
Trustee, or person authorised in writing by the Official Trustee to exercise
powers under this paragraph, and:
(i) give evidence; and
(ii) produce all *books in the possession of the person
notified;
relating to any matters
connected with the exercise of the Official Trustee’s powers or the performance
of the Official Trustee’s duties under this Part.
(2) The *Official
Trustee or person authorised under paragraph (1)(b):
(a) may require the information or
evidence to be given on oath, and either orally or in writing; and
(b) for that purpose may administer an
oath.
271
Privilege against self‑incrimination
(1) A
person is not excused from giving information or producing a document under
this Part on the ground that to do so would tend to incriminate the person or
expose the person to a penalty.
(2) However,
in the case of a natural person:
(a) the
information given; or
(b) the
giving of the document; or
(c) any
information, document or thing obtained as a direct or indirect consequence of
giving the information or document;
is not admissible in
evidence in *criminal proceedings against the natural person,
except proceedings under, or arising out of, section 137.1 or 137.2 of the
Criminal Code 1995 (false and misleading information and documents) in
relation to giving the information or document.
272
Offences relating to exercise of powers under section 268 or 269
(1) A person is guilty of an offence if the
person refuses or fails to comply with a requirement under section 268 or
269.
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months or 30 penalty
units, or both.
(2) A person is guilty of an offence if the
person obstructs or hinders a person in the exercise of a power under section 268
or 269.
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months or 30 penalty
units, or both.
273
Failure to provide information
A person is guilty of an offence if the
person refuses or fails to comply with a notice given to the person under
paragraph 270(1)(a).
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months or 30 penalty
units, or both.
274
Failure of person to attend
(1) A person
is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the person is required by a notice
under paragraph 270(1)(b) to attend before the *Official Trustee or a person authorised under that
paragraph; and
(b) the person:
(i) fails to attend as
required by the notice; or
(ii) fails to appear and
report from day to day, without being excused or released from further
attendance by the Official Trustee or person authorised under that paragraph,
as the case may be.
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months or 30 penalty
units, or both.
275
Refusal to be sworn or give evidence etc.
A person
is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the person attends before the *Official Trustee, or a person authorised
under paragraph 270(1)(b), as required by a notice under that paragraph; and
(b) the person refuses or fails:
(i) to be sworn or to make
an affirmation; or
(ii) to answer a question
that the person is required to answer by the Official Trustee or a person
authorised under that paragraph, as the case may be; or
(iii) to produce any books
that the person is required by the notice to produce.
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months or 30 penalty
units, or both.
Division 3—Dealings relating to controlled property
276
Preserving controlled property
The *Official
Trustee may do anything that is reasonably necessary for the purpose of
preserving the *controlled
property, including the following:
(a) becoming a party to any civil proceedings
affecting the property;
(b) ensuring that the property is
insured;
(c) realising or otherwise dealing
with any of the property that is securities or investments;
(d) if any of the property is a
business:
(i) employing, or
terminating the employment of, persons in the business; or
(ii) doing anything
necessary or convenient to carry on the business on a sound commercial basis.
277
Rights attaching to shares
The *Official
Trustee may exercise the rights attaching to any of the *controlled property that is shares as if
the Official Trustee were the registered holder of the shares, to the exclusion
of the registered holder.
278
Destroying or disposing of property
(1) The *Official
Trustee may destroy the *controlled
property if:
(a) it is in the public interest to do
so; or
(b) it is required for the health or
safety of the public.
(2) The *Official
Trustee may dispose of the *controlled
property, by sale or other means:
(a) with the agreement of all parties
with an *interest in the property;
or
(b) if the property is likely to lose
value in the opinion of the Official Trustee; or
(c) if, in the Official Trustee’s
opinion, the cost of controlling the property until the Official Trustee
finally deals with it is likely to exceed, or represent a significant
proportion of, the value of the property when it is finally dealt with; or
(d) if, in the opinion of the Official
Trustee, the disposal of the property or part of the property is necessary to
pay, under Part 4‑2, a *legal
aid commission’s costs.
279
Notice of proposed destruction or disposal
(1) The *Official
Trustee must give written notice of the proposed destruction or disposal to:
(a) the owner of the *controlled property; and
(b) any other person whom the Official
Trustee has reason to believe may have an *interest
in the property.
(2) A person who has been so notified may
object in writing to the *Official
Trustee within 14 days of receiving the notice.
(3) However, the person may object to the
disposal of the *controlled
property for the reason set out in paragraph 278(2)(d) only if:
(a) the value of the controlled
property exceeds the total amount of the money payable to the *legal aid commission in question; and
(b) the person and the *Official Trustee have failed to agree
on which item or items of, or which portion of, the controlled property should
be disposed of.
(4) An objection to which subsection (3)
applies must:
(a) relate only to which item or items
of, or which portion of, the *controlled
property should be disposed of; and
(b) specify the item or items of, or
the portion of, the controlled property that the person does not object to the *Official Trustee disposing of.
280
Procedure if person objects to proposed destruction or disposal
(1) If the *Official
Trustee wishes to continue with a proposed destruction or disposal that has
been objected to, the Official Trustee must apply to the court that made the *restraining order covering the *controlled property for an order that the
Official Trustee may destroy or dispose of the property.
(2) The court must make an order to destroy
the *controlled property if:
(a) it is in the public interest to do
so; or
(b) it is required for the health or
safety of the public.
(3) The court may take into account any
matters it sees fit in determining whether it is in the public interest to
destroy the *controlled
property, including:
(a) the use to which the property
would be put if it were sold; and
(b) whether the cost of restoring the
property to a saleable condition would exceed its realisable value; and
(c) whether the cost of sale would
exceed its realisable value; and
(d) whether the sale of the property
would otherwise be legal.
(4) The court may make an order to dispose of
the *controlled property if, in
the court’s opinion:
(a) the property is likely to lose
value; or
(b) the cost of controlling the
property until it is finally dealt with by the *Official Trustee is likely to exceed, or represent a
significant proportion of, the value of the property when it is finally dealt
with.
(4A) The court must make an order to dispose of
the *controlled property, or a
specified item or items of or a specified portion of the property, if in the
court’s opinion the disposal is necessary to pay, under Part 4‑2, a *legal aid commission’s costs.
(5) The court
may also:
(a) order that a specified person bear
the costs of controlling the *controlled
property until it is finally dealt with by the *Official Trustee; or
(b) order that a specified person bear
the costs of an objection to a proposed destruction or disposal of the
property.
281
Proceeds from sale of property
Amounts realised from any sale of the *controlled property under section 278:
(a) are taken to be covered by the *restraining order that covered the
property; and
(b) if the restraining order covered
the property on the basis that the property was *proceeds of an offence or an *instrument of an offence to which the order
relates—continue to be proceeds of that offence or an instrument of that
offence.
Division 4—Discharging pecuniary penalty orders and literary proceeds
orders
282
Direction by a court to the Official Trustee
(1) A court may, if subsection (2), (3)
or (4) applies, direct the *Official
Trustee to pay the Commonwealth, out of property that is subject to a *restraining order, an amount equal to:
(a) the *penalty amount under a *pecuniary
penalty order; or
(b) the *literary proceeds amount under a *literary proceeds order.
(2) The court that makes the *pecuniary penalty order or *literary proceeds order may include such
a direction in the order if:
(a) the order is made against a person
in relation to one or more offences; and
(b) the *restraining order has already been made against that
person in relation to that offence or one or more of those offences, or in
relation to one or more *related
offences.
(3) The court that makes the *restraining order may include such a
direction in the order if:
(a) the *pecuniary penalty order or *literary proceeds order has been made against a person in
relation to one or more offences; and
(b) the restraining order is
subsequently made:
(i) against that person in
relation to that offence or one or more of those offences; or
(ii) against property of
another person in relation to which an order is in force under subsection
141(1) in relation to the pecuniary penalty order, or under subsection 168(1)
in relation to the literary proceeds order.
(4) The court that made the *pecuniary penalty order, the *literary proceeds order or the *restraining order may, on application by
the *DPP, make the direction
if:
(a) the pecuniary penalty order or
literary proceeds order has been made against a person in relation to one or
more offences; and
(b) the restraining order has been
made:
(i) against that person in
relation to that offence or one or more of those offences; or
(ii) against property of
another person in relation to which an order is in force under subsection
141(1) in relation to the pecuniary penalty order, or under subsection 168(1)
in relation to the literary proceeds order.
283
Court may include further directions etc.
(1) For the purposes of enabling the *Official Trustee to comply with a
direction given by a court under section 282, the court may, in the order
in which the direction is given or by a subsequent order:
(a) direct the Official Trustee to
sell or otherwise dispose of such of the property that is subject to the *restraining order as the court specifies;
and
(b) appoint an officer of the court or
any other person:
(i) to execute any deed or
instrument in the name of a person who owns or has an *interest in the property; and
(ii) to do any act or thing
necessary to give validity and operation to the deed or instrument.
(2) The execution of the deed or instrument
by the person appointed by an order under this section has the same force and
validity as if the deed or instrument had been executed by the person who owned
or had the *interest in the
property.
284
Official Trustee to carry out directions
(1) If the *Official
Trustee is given a direction under section 282 in relation to property,
the Official Trustee must, as soon as practicable after the end of the appeal
period under section 285:
(a) to the extent that the property is
not money—sell or otherwise dispose of the property; and
(b) apply:
(i) to the extent that the
property is money—that money; and
(ii) the amounts received
from the sale or disposition of the other property;
in payment of the costs,
charges, expenses and remuneration, of the kind referred to in subsection
288(1), incurred or payable in connection with the *restraining order and payable to the Official Trustee
under the regulations; and
(c) credit the remainder of the money
and amounts received to the *Confiscated
Assets Account as required by section 296.
(2) However, if the remainder referred to in paragraph (1)(c)
exceeds the *penalty amount or *literary proceeds amount (as the case
requires), the *Official
Trustee must:
(a) credit to the *Confiscated Assets Account as required by
section 296 an amount equal to the penalty amount or literary proceeds
amount; and
(b) pay the balance to the person
whose property was subject to the *restraining
order.
285
Official Trustee not to carry out directions during appeal periods
(1) If the *Official
Trustee is given a direction under section 282 in relation to property,
the Official Trustee must not:
(a) if the property is money—apply the
money under section 284 until the end of the appeal period under this
section; and
(b) if the property is not money—sell
or otherwise dispose of the property until the end of that period.
(2) The appeal period under this section is
the period ending:
(a) if the period provided for lodging
an appeal against the *pecuniary
penalty order or *literary
proceeds order to which the direction relates has ended without such an appeal
having been lodged—at the end of that period; or
(b) if an appeal against the pecuniary
penalty order or literary proceeds order has been lodged—when the appeal lapses
or is finally determined.
(3) However, if the person is convicted of
the offence, or any of the offences, to which the *pecuniary penalty order or *literary proceeds order relates, the appeal period is:
(a) the period ending:
(i) if the period provided
for lodging an appeal against the conviction or convictions to which the
direction relates has ended without such an appeal having been lodged—at the
end of that period; or
(ii) if an appeal against
the conviction or convictions has been lodged—when the appeal lapses or is
finally determined; or
(b) the appeal period under subsection (2);
whichever ends last.
(4) For the purposes of subsection (3):
(a) if the person is to be taken to
have been convicted of an offence because of paragraph 331(1)(b)—references in
that subsection to lodging of an appeal against the conviction are references
to lodging of an appeal against the finding that the person is guilty of the
offence; and
(b) if the person is to be taken to
have been convicted of an offence because of paragraph 331(1)(c)—references in
that subsection to lodging of an appeal against the conviction are references
to lodging of an appeal against the person’s conviction of the other offence
referred to in that paragraph.
286
Discharge of pecuniary penalty orders and literary proceeds orders by credits
to the Confiscated Assets Account
(1) If the *Official
Trustee credits, under this Division, money to the *Confiscated Assets Account as required by section 296
in satisfaction of a person’s liability under a *pecuniary penalty order, the person’s liability under the
pecuniary penalty order is, to the extent of the credit, discharged.
(2) If the *Official
Trustee credits, under this Division, money to the *Confiscated Assets Account as required by section 296
in satisfaction of a person’s liability under a *literary proceeds order, the person’s liability under the
literary proceeds order is, to the extent of the credit, discharged.
Division 5—Miscellaneous
287
Money not to be paid into the Common Investment Fund
Money that is in the custody or control
of the *Official Trustee
because of a *restraining order
must not be paid into the Common Investment Fund under section 20B of the Bankruptcy
Act 1966 (despite anything in that Act).
288
Official Trustee’s costs etc.
(1) The regulations may make provision
relating to:
(a) the costs, charges and expenses
incurred in connection with the *Official
Trustee’s exercise of powers and performance of functions or duties under this
Act or under Part VI of the *Mutual
Assistance Act; and
(b) the Official Trustee’s
remuneration in respect of those activities.
(2) An amount equal to each amount of
remuneration that the *Official
Trustee receives under the regulations is to be paid to the Commonwealth.
289
Income generated from controlled property
(1) The *Official
Trustee may apply any income generated from *controlled
property to the payment of amounts payable to the Official Trustee, in relation
to the property, under regulations made for the purposes of section 288.
(2) However, if the *restraining order relating to the *controlled property ceases to be in force
and the property is returned to its owner, the *Official Trustee must arrange for an amount to be paid to
the owner that is equal to the difference between:
(a) the sum of all the amounts applied
under this section in relation to the property; and
(b) the sum of all the amounts of
expenditure by the *Official
Trustee that were necessary for maintaining the property or generating the
income from property.
(3) This section does not affect other ways
in which the *Official Trustee
may recover amounts payable to the Official Trustee under regulations made for
the purposes of section 288.
290
Official Trustee is not personally liable
(1) The *Official
Trustee is not personally liable for:
(a) any loss or damage, sustained by a
person claiming an *interest in
all or part of the *controlled
property, arising from the Official Trustee taking custody and control of the
property; or
(b) the cost of proceedings taken to
establish an interest in the property;
unless the court is satisfied that the Official Trustee is
guilty of negligence in respect of taking custody and control of the property.
(2) The *Official
Trustee is not personally liable for:
(a) any rates, land tax or municipal
or statutory charges imposed under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a
Territory in respect of the *controlled
property, except out of any rents or profits that the Official Trustee receives
from the property; and
(b) if, in taking custody and control
of the property, the Official Trustee carries on a business—any payment in
respect of long service leave or extended leave:
(i) for which the person
who carried on the business before the Official Trustee was liable; or
(ii) to which an employee
of the Official Trustee in its capacity as custodian and controller of the
business, or a legal representative of such an employee, becomes entitled after
the *restraining order covering
the property was made; and
(c) any other expenses in respect of
the property.
291 Indemnification
of Official Trustee
(1) The Commonwealth must indemnify the *Official Trustee against any personal
liability (including any personal liability as to costs) incurred by it for any
act done, or omitted to be done, by it in the exercise, or purported exercise,
of its powers and duties under this Act.
(2) The Commonwealth has the same right of
reimbursement in respect of a payment made under this indemnity as the *Official Trustee would have if the
Official Trustee had made the payment.
(3) This same right of reimbursement includes
reimbursement under another indemnity given to the *Official Trustee.
(4) Nothing in subsection (1) affects:
(a) any other right the *Official Trustee has to be indemnified in
respect of any personal liability referred to in that subsection; or
(b) any other indemnity given to the
Official Trustee in respect of any such personal liability.
Part 4‑2—Legal assistance
292
Payments to legal aid commissions for representing suspects and other persons
(1) The *Official
Trustee must pay to a *legal
aid commission, out of property of a *suspect
that is covered by a *restraining
order:
(a) the commission’s legal costs for
representing the suspect in proceedings for defending any criminal charge
against the suspect; and
(b) the commission’s legal costs for
representing the suspect in proceedings under this Act.
(2) The *Official
Trustee must pay to a *legal
aid commission, out of the property of a person (who is not the *suspect) that is covered by a *restraining order, the commission’s legal
costs for representing the person in proceedings under this Act.
(3) However, this section only applies to the
extent that the commission’s representation of the suspect or other person is
in accordance with guidelines included in an applicable agreement entered into
with the Commonwealth relating to provision of legal assistance in Commonwealth
matters.
293
Payments made out of the Confiscated Assets Account
(1) The *Official
Trustee must pay to a *legal
aid commission, out of the *Confiscated
Assets Account, legal costs mentioned in section 292 if:
(a) the Official Trustee certifies
that the costs exceed the value of the property of the person that is covered
by the *restraining order; and
(b) the costs have been certified by:
(i) the Attorney‑General;
or
(ii) a *senior Departmental officer authorised by
the Attorney‑General for the purposes of this section; and
(c) the Minister consents to the
payment.
The amount that the Official Trustee must pay is the
amount of the excess.
(2) The *Official
Trustee must pay to a *legal
aid commission, out of the *Confiscated
Assets Account, legal costs mentioned in section 292 if:
(a) the Official Trustee is satisfied
that it will take considerable time to dispose of the property of the person
that is covered by the *restraining
order in order to pay the costs; and
(b) the value of the property has been
assessed; and
(c) the costs have been certified by:
(i) the Attorney‑General;
or
(ii) a *senior Departmental officer authorised by
the Attorney‑General for the purposes of this section; and
(d) the Minister consents to the
payment.
However, the Official Trustee must not pay the legal aid
commission more than the assessed value of the property.
(3) If
the Commonwealth pays an amount to a *legal
aid commission under subsection (2), the person whose property is covered
by the *restraining order must pay to the Commonwealth an
amount equal to that amount.
(4) The
person’s obligation to pay the amount is discharged if there is forfeited
to the Commonwealth under this Act:
(a) all of the property that is covered by the *restraining
order; or
(b) some of the property that is so
covered, being property of a value that equals or exceeds the amount.
294
Disclosure of information to legal aid commissions
The *DPP
or the *Official Trustee may,
for the purpose of a *legal aid
commission determining whether a person should receive legal assistance under
this Part, disclose to the commission information obtained under this Act that
is relevant to making that determination.
Part 4‑3—Confiscated Assets Account
295
Establishment of Account
(1) There is hereby established the
Confiscated Assets Account.
(2) The Account is a Special Account for the
purposes of the Financial Management and Accountability Act 1997.
296
Credits to the Account
(1) There must be credited to the *Confiscated Assets Account amounts equal
to:
(a) *proceeds
of confiscated assets; and
(b) money paid to the Commonwealth by
a foreign country, within the meaning of the *Mutual
Assistance Act, under a treaty or arrangement providing for mutual assistance
in criminal matters; and
(c) money paid to the Commonwealth
under a *foreign pecuniary
penalty order registered under section 34 of the Mutual Assistance Act;
and
(d) money deriving from the
enforcement of an *interstate
forfeiture order registered in a *non‑governing
Territory, other than money covered by a direction under subsection 70(2) or
100(2); and
(e) the Commonwealth’s share, under
the *equitable sharing program,
of proceeds resulting from a breach of the criminal law of a State or a *self‑governing Territory; and
(f) money, other than money referred
to in paragraph (b), paid to the Commonwealth by a foreign country in
connection with assistance provided by the Commonwealth in relation to the
recovery by that country of the proceeds of *unlawful
activity or the investigation or prosecution of unlawful activity; and
(g) money
paid to the Commonwealth under subsection 293(3), and any amounts recovered by
the Commonwealth as a result of executing a charge created under section 302A.
(2) Subject to section 299, all amounts
credited to the *Confiscated
Assets Account are to be identified in accordance with the regulations as *distributable funds or *suspended funds and are to retain that
identity while they remain within the Account.
(3) The following are proceeds of
confiscated assets:
(a) the remainder of the money and
amounts referred to in paragraph 70(1)(c);
(b) the amount referred to in
paragraph 89(1)(c) or 90(f);
(c) the remainder of the money and
amounts referred to in paragraph 100(1)(c);
(d) the amount referred to in
paragraph 105(1)(c) or 106(f);
(e) the amount referred to in
subsection 140(1);
(f) the amount referred to in
subsection 167(1);
(g) the remainder of the money and
amounts referred to in paragraph 284(1)(c);
(h) the amount referred to in
paragraph 284(2)(a);
(i) the remainder of the money
referred to in paragraph 35G(1)(b) of the *Mutual
Assistance Act;
(j) the remainder of the proceeds
referred to in paragraph 35G(2)(c) of the *Mutual
Assistance Act;
(k) the remainder of the proceeds
referred to in paragraph 9A(c) of the Crimes Act 1914;
(l) the money referred to in
paragraph 208DA(3)(a) of the Customs Act 1901;
(m) the remainder of the proceeds
referred to in paragraph 208DA(3)(b) of the Customs Act 1901;
(n) the amount referred to in
subsection 243B(4) of the Customs Act 1901;
(o) the remainder of the money
referred to in paragraph 243G(6)(a) of the Customs Act 1901;
(p) the remainder of the proceeds
referred to in paragraph 243G(6)(b) of the Customs Act 1901.
(4) The equitable sharing program
is an arrangement under which any or all of the following happen:
(a) the Commonwealth shares with a
participating State or *self‑governing
Territory a proportion of any *proceeds
of any *unlawful activity
recovered under a Commonwealth law, if, in the Minister’s opinion, that State
or Territory has made a significant contribution to the recovery of those
proceeds or to the investigation or prosecution of the relevant unlawful
activity;
(b) each participating State or
Territory shares with the Commonwealth any proceeds resulting from a breach of
the criminal law of that State or Territory if, in the opinion of the
appropriate Minister of that State or Territory, officers of an *enforcement agency have made a
significant contribution to the recovery of those proceeds;
(c) the Commonwealth shares with a
foreign country a proportion of any proceeds of any unlawful activity recovered
under a Commonwealth law if, in the Minister’s opinion, the foreign country has
made a significant contribution to the recovery of those proceeds or to the
investigation or prosecution of the unlawful activity.
297
Payments out of the Account
(1) The following are purposes of the *Confiscated Assets Account in respect of *suspended funds:
(a) making any payments to the States,
to *self‑governing
Territories or to foreign countries that the Minister considers are appropriate
under the *equitable sharing
program;
(b) making any payments under a
program approved by the Minister under section 298;
(c) making any payments that the
Minister considers necessary to satisfy the Commonwealth’s obligations in
respect of:
(i) a registered *foreign forfeiture order; or
(ii) an order registered
under section 45 of the International War Crimes Tribunals Act 1995;
or
(iii) a registered *foreign pecuniary penalty order;
(d) making any payments to a State or
to a self‑governing Territory that the Attorney‑General considers
necessary following a crediting to the Account under paragraph 296(1)(b) of
money received from a foreign country;
(e) paying the *Official Trustee amounts that were
payable to the Official Trustee under regulations made for the purposes of
paragraph 288(1)(a) but that the Official Trustee has been unable to recover;
(f) paying the annual management fee
for the Official Trustee as specified in the regulations;
(g) making any payments by way of
restitution that are required under paragraph 73(2)(d) or 88(1)(b),
subparagraph 102(1)(d)(ii) or subsection 289(2);
(ga) making any payments in relation to
the conduct of an *examination,
so long as the payments have been approved by the *DPP;
(h) making any payments to a *legal aid commission under Part 4‑2.
(2) Suspended funds
are amounts credited to the *Confiscated
Assets Account that are:
(a) identified as suspended funds in
accordance with the regulations (other than money that is identified by the *Official Trustee under subsection 299(4)
as *distributable funds); or
(b) identified by the Official Trustee
under subsection 299(2) as suspended funds.
298
Programs for expenditure on law enforcement, drug treatment etc.
(1) The Minister may, in writing, approve a
program for the expenditure in a particular financial year of money standing to
the credit of the *Confiscated
Assets Account.
(2) The expenditure is to be approved for one
or more of the following purposes:
(a) crime prevention measures;
(b) law enforcement measures;
(c) measures relating to treatment of
drug addiction;
(d) diversionary measures relating to
illegal use of drugs.
299
Determinations by Official Trustee about suspended and distributable funds
(1) The *Official
Trustee may determine whether the amount of *suspended
funds credited to the *Confiscated
Assets Account:
(a) is likely to be insufficient to
meet the payments to be made out of those funds for the purposes of subsection
297(1); or
(b) is likely to exceed the amount
required to meet those payments.
(2) If the *Official
Trustee determines that the amount of *suspended
funds is likely to be insufficient to meet the payments to be made out of the
suspended funds, the Official Trustee must specify an amount of the *distributable funds that is to be
identified as suspended funds.
(3) The amount specified under subsection (2)
must not be more than the amount required to meet those payments.
(4) However, if the *Official Trustee determines that the
amount of *suspended funds is
likely to exceed the amount required to meet those payments, the Official
Trustee must specify an amount of the suspended funds that is to be identified
as *distributable funds.
(5) The amount specified under subsection (4)
must not be more than the amount of the likely excess.
(6) The *Official
Trustee may make a determination under subsection (1) at such times as it
considers appropriate, but must make at least one determination in every 6
months.
(7) Distributable funds are
amounts credited to the *Confiscated
Assets Account that are:
(a) identified as distributable funds
in accordance with the regulations (other than money that is identified by the *Official Trustee under subsection (2)
as *suspended funds); or
(b) identified by the Official Trustee
under subsection (4) as distributable funds.
Part 4‑4—Charges over restrained property for payment of certain
amounts
Division 1—Charges to secure
certain amounts payable to legal aid commissions
300
Legal aid commissions’ charges
If:
(a) a *legal aid commission is to be paid an amount out of property
that is covered by a *restraining
order; and
(b) either:
(i) the court revokes the
restraining order; or
(ii) the order ceases to be
in force under section 45;
there is created by force of this section a charge on the
property to secure the payment of the amount to the legal aid commission.
301
When the charge ceases to have effect
A charge created under section 300
ceases to have effect on a *person’s
property on the earliest of the following events:
(a) the amount owing is paid to the *legal aid commission;
(b) the person sells or disposes of
the property with the consent of the Official Trustee.
302
Priority of charge
If a charge is created under section 300
in favour of a *legal aid
commission, the commission’s charge:
(a) is subject to every *encumbrance on the property that came
into existence before it and that would otherwise have priority; and
(b) has priority over all other
encumbrances; and
(c) subject to section 301, is
not affected by any change of ownership of the property.
Division 2—Charges to secure
certain amounts payable to the Commonwealth
302A Charges to secure amounts payable under subsection 293(3)
If:
(a) a person whose property is covered by a *restraining
order is liable to pay an amount to the Commonwealth under subsection 293(3); and
(b) either:
(i) the court revokes the
restraining order; or
(ii) the order ceases to be
in force under section 45;
there is created by force of this section a charge on the
property to secure the payment of the amount to the Commonwealth.
302B
When the charge ceases to have effect
A charge created under section 302A
ceases to have effect on a *person’s
property on the earliest of the following events:
(a) the amount owing under subsection 293(3) is paid to the
Commonwealth;
(b) there is forfeited to the
Commonwealth under this Act:
(i) all of the property that is covered by the charge; or
(ii) some of the property
that is so covered, being property of a value that equals or exceeds the amount
owing under subsection 293(3);
(c) the person sells or disposes of
the property with the consent of the *Official
Trustee.
302C
Priority of charge
If a charge is created under section 302A
in favour of the Commonwealth, the Commonwealth’s charge:
(a) is subject to every *encumbrance on the property that came
into existence before it and that would otherwise have priority; and
(b) has priority over all other
encumbrances; and
(c) subject to section 302B, is
not affected by any change of ownership of the property.
Part 4‑5—Enforcement of interstate orders in certain Territories
Division 1—Interstate restraining orders
303
Registration of interstate restraining orders
(1) If an *interstate
restraining order expressly applies to:
(a) specified property in a *non‑governing Territory; or
(b) all property in such a Territory
of a specified person; or
(c) all property (other than specified
property) in such a Territory of a specified person;
a copy of the order, sealed by the court making the order,
may be registered in the Supreme Court of the Territory by:
(d) the person on whose application
the order was made; or
(e) an *appropriate officer.
(2) A copy of any amendments made to an *interstate restraining order (before or
after registration), sealed by the court making the amendments, may be
registered in the same way. The amendments do not, for the purposes of this
Act, have effect until they are registered.
(3) Registration of an *interstate restraining order may be
refused to the extent that the order would not, on registration, be capable of
enforcement in the Territory.
(4) Registration is to be effected in
accordance with the rules of the Supreme Court of the Territory.
304
Effect of registration
(1) An *interstate
restraining order registered in the Supreme Court of a Territory under this
Division may be enforced in the Territory as if it were a *restraining order made at the time of
registration.
(2) This Act (other than sections 33, 42
to 45, 142 and 169, Division 5 of Part 2‑1, Part 2‑3
and Division 4 of Part 4‑1) applies in relation to an *interstate restraining order registered
in the Supreme Court of a Territory under this Division as it applies in
relation to a *restraining
order.
305
Duration of registration
An *interstate
restraining order ceases to be registered under this Act if:
(a) the court in which it is
registered receives notice that it has ceased to be in force in the
jurisdiction in which it was made; or
(b) the registration is cancelled
under section 306.
306
Cancellation of registration
(1) The registration of an *interstate restraining order in the
Supreme Court of a Territory under this Division may be cancelled by the
Supreme Court or a prescribed officer of the Supreme Court if:
(a) the registration was improperly
obtained; or
(b) particulars of any amendments made
to:
(i) the interstate
restraining order; or
(ii) any ancillary orders
or directions made by a court;
are not communicated to the
Supreme Court in accordance with the requirements of the rules of the Supreme
Court.
(2) The registration of an *interstate restraining order in the
Supreme Court of a Territory under this Division may be cancelled by the
Supreme Court to the extent that the order is not capable of enforcement in the
Territory.
307
Charge on property subject to registered interstate restraining order
(1) If:
(a) an *interstate restraining order is made against property in
relation to a person’s conviction of an *interstate
indictable offence or in relation to the charging, or proposed charging, of a
person with an interstate indictable offence; and
(b) an *interstate pecuniary penalty order is made against the
person in relation to the person’s conviction of that offence or an interstate
indictable offence that is a *related
offence; and
(c) the interstate restraining order
is registered under this Division in the Supreme Court of a Territory; and
(d) the interstate pecuniary penalty
order is registered in a court of the Territory under the Service and
Execution of Process Act 1992;
then, upon the registration referred to in paragraph (c)
or the registration referred to in paragraph (d) (whichever last occurs),
a charge is created on the property to secure payment of the amount due under
the interstate pecuniary penalty order.
(2) If a charge is created by subsection (1)
on property of a person to secure payment of the amount due under an *interstate pecuniary penalty order, the
charge ceases to have effect in respect of the property:
(a) upon the *quashing of the conviction in relation to
which the interstate pecuniary penalty order was made; or
(b) upon the discharge of the
interstate pecuniary penalty order by a court hearing an appeal against the
making of the order; or
(c) upon payment of the amount due
under the interstate pecuniary penalty order; or
(d) upon the sale or other disposition
of the property:
(i) under an order made by
a court under the *corresponding
law of the State or Territory in which the interstate pecuniary penalty order
was made; or
(ii) by the owner of the
property with the consent of the court that made the interstate pecuniary
penalty order; or
(iii) where the *interstate restraining order directed a
person to take control of the property—by the owner of the property with the
consent of that person; or
(e) upon the sale of the property to a
purchaser in good faith for value who, at the time of purchase, has no notice
of the charge;
whichever first occurs.
(3) A charge created on property by subsection (1):
(a) is subject to every *encumbrance on the property that came
into existence before the charge and that would, apart from this subsection,
have priority over the charge; and
(b) has priority over all other
encumbrances; and
(c) subject to subsection (2), is
not affected by any change of ownership of the property.
(4) If:
(a) a charge is created by subsection (1)
on property of a particular kind; and
(b) the provisions of any law of the
Commonwealth or of a State or Territory provide for the registration of title
to, or charges over, property of that kind:
then:
(c) the *Official Trustee or the *DPP
may cause the charge so created to be registered under the provisions of that
law; and
(d) if the charge is so registered—a
person who purchases or otherwise acquires an *interest
in the property after the registration of the charge is, for the purposes of paragraph (2)(e),
taken to have notice of the charge at the time of the purchase or acquisition.
308
Powers of Official Trustee in relation to interstate restraining orders
If:
(a) an *interstate restraining order is registered in the Supreme
Court of a Territory under this Division; and
(b) the interstate restraining order
directs an official of a State or a *self‑governing
Territory to take control of property;
the *Official
Trustee may, with the agreement of the official, exercise the same powers in
relation to the property that the official would have been able to exercise if
the property were located in that State or self‑governing Territory.
Division 2—Interstate forfeiture orders
309
Registration of interstate forfeiture orders
(1) If an *interstate
forfeiture order expressly applies to property in a *non‑governing Territory, a copy of
the order, sealed by the court making the order, may be registered in the
Supreme Court of the Territory by:
(a) the person on whose application
the order was made; or
(b) an *appropriate officer.
(2) A copy of any amendments made to an *interstate forfeiture order (before or
after registration), sealed by the court making the amendments, may be
registered in the same way. The amendments do not, for the purposes of this
Act, have effect until they are registered.
(3) Registration of an *interstate forfeiture order may be
refused to the extent that the order would not, on registration, be capable of
enforcement in the Territory.
(4) Registration is to be effected in
accordance with the rules of the Supreme Court of the Territory.
310
Effect of registration
(1) An *interstate
forfeiture order registered in the Supreme Court of a Territory under this
Division may be enforced in the Territory as if it were a *forfeiture order made at the time of
registration.
(2) This Act (other than Divisions 5 and
6 of Part 2‑2 and section 322) applies to an *interstate forfeiture order registered in
the Supreme Court of a Territory under this Division as it applies to a *forfeiture order.
311
Duration of registration
An *interstate
forfeiture order ceases to be registered under this Act if:
(a) the order ceases to be in force in
the jurisdiction in which it was made; or
(b) the registration is cancelled
under section 312.
312
Cancellation of registration
(1) The registration of an *interstate forfeiture order in the
Supreme Court of a Territory under this Division may be cancelled by the
Supreme Court or a prescribed officer of the Supreme Court if:
(a) the registration was improperly
obtained; or
(b) particulars of any amendments made
to:
(i) the interstate
forfeiture order; or
(ii) any ancillary orders
or directions made by a court;
are not communicated to the
Supreme Court in accordance with the requirements of the rules of the Supreme
Court.
(2) The registration of an *interstate forfeiture order in the
Supreme Court of a Territory under this Division may be cancelled by the
Supreme Court to the extent that the order is not capable of enforcement in the
Territory.
Division 3—Miscellaneous
313
Interim registration of faxed copies
(1) A faxed copy of a sealed copy of:
(a) an *interstate restraining order; or
(b) an *interstate forfeiture order; or
(c) any amendments made to such an
order;
is, for the purposes of this Act, taken to be the same as
the sealed copy if the faxed copy is itself certified in accordance with the
rules of the Supreme Court.
(2) Registration effected by means of a faxed
copy ceases to have effect at the end of the period of 5 days commencing on the
day of registration unless a sealed copy that is not a faxed copy has been
filed in the Supreme Court by that time.
(3) Filing of the sealed copy before the end
of the period referred to in subsection (2) has effect, as if it were
registration of the sealed copy, from the day of registration of the faxed
copy.
Chapter 5—Miscellaneous
314
State and Territory courts to have jurisdiction
(1) Jurisdiction is vested in the several
courts of the States and Territories with respect to matters arising under this
Act.
(2) Subject to section 53, the
jurisdiction vested in a court by virtue of subsection (1) is not limited
by any limits to which any other jurisdiction of the court may be subject.
(3) Jurisdiction is vested in a court of a
Territory by virtue of subsection (1) so far only as the Constitution
permits.
315
Proceedings are civil, not criminal
(1) Proceedings on an application for a *restraining order or a *confiscation order are not criminal proceedings.
(2) Except in relation to an offence under
this Act:
(a) the rules of construction
applicable only in relation to the criminal law do not apply in the
interpretation of this Act; and
(b) the rules of evidence applicable
in civil proceedings apply, and those applicable only in criminal proceedings
do not apply, to proceedings under this Act.
316
Consent orders
(1) A court may make an order in a proceeding
under Chapter 2 with the consent of:
(a) the applicant in the proceeding;
and
(b) everyone whom the court has reason
to believe has an interest in the property that is the subject of the
proceeding.
(2) The order
may be made:
(a) without consideration of the
matters that the court would otherwise consider in the proceeding; and
(b) if the order is an order under
section 47 (forfeiture orders relating to conduct constituting serious
offences)—before the end of the period of 6 months referred to in paragraph
47(1)(b).
317
Onus and standard of proof
(1) The applicant in any proceedings under
this Act bears the onus of proving the matters necessary to establish the
grounds for making the order applied for.
(2) Subject to sections 52 and 118, any
question of fact to be decided by a court on an application under this Act is
to be decided on the balance of probabilities.
318
Proof of certain matters
(1) A certificate of conviction of an
offence, that is a certificate of a kind referred to in section 178
(Convictions, acquittals and other judicial proceedings) of the Evidence Act
1995:
(a) is admissible in any civil
proceedings under this Act; and
(b) is evidence of the commission of
the offence by the person to whom it relates.
(2) In any proceedings:
(a) on an application for an order
under this Act; or
(b) ancillary to such an application;
or
(c) for the enforcement of an order
made under this Act;
the transcript of any *examination
is evidence of the answers given by a person to a question put to the person in
the course of the examination.
319
Stay of proceedings
The fact that criminal proceedings have
been instituted or have commenced (whether or not under this Act) is not a
ground on which a court may stay proceedings under this Act that are not
criminal proceedings.
320
Effect of the confiscation scheme on sentencing
A court passing sentence on a person in
respect of the person’s conviction of an *indictable
offence:
(a) may have regard to any cooperation
by the person in resolving any action taken against the person under this Act;
and
(b) must not have regard to any *forfeiture order that relates to the
offence, to the extent that the order forfeits *proceeds of the offence; and
(c) must have regard to the forfeiture
order to the extent that the order forfeits any other property; and
(d) must not have regard to any *pecuniary penalty order, or any *literary proceeds order, that relates to
the offence.
321
Deferral of sentencing pending determination of confiscation order
If:
(a) an application is made for a *confiscation order in respect of a
person’s conviction of an *indictable
offence; and
(b) the application is made to the
court before which the person was convicted; and
(c) the
court has not, when the application is made, passed sentence on the person for
the offence;
the court may, if satisfied that it is reasonable to do so
in all the circumstances, defer passing sentence until it has determined the
application for the confiscation order.
322
Appeals
(1) A person:
(a) against whom a *confiscation order is made; or
(b) who has an *interest in property against which a *forfeiture order is made; or
(c) who has an interest in property
that is declared in an order under section 141 or 168 to be available to
satisfy a *pecuniary penalty
order or *literary proceeds
order;
may appeal against the confiscation order, forfeiture
order or order under section 141 or 168 (the targeted order)
in the manner set out in this section.
(2) If:
(a) the *confiscation order; or
(b) the *forfeiture order; or
(c) the *pecuniary penalty order or *literary proceeds order to which the order under section 141
or 168 relates;
(the primary order) was made
in relation to a conviction of an offence, the person may appeal against the
targeted order in the same manner as if the targeted order were, or were part
of, a sentence imposed on the person in respect of the offence.
(3) In any other case, the person may appeal
against the targeted order in the same manner as if:
(a) the person had been convicted of
the offence to which the primary order relates; and
(b) the targeted order were, or were
part of, a sentence imposed on the person in respect of the offence.
(4) However, despite subsection (2) or
(3), if the primary order related to a *foreign
indictable offence, the person may appeal against the targeted order in the
same manner as if:
(a) the person had been convicted of
the offence in the State or Territory in which the targeted order was made; and
(b) the targeted order were, or were
part of, a sentence imposed on the person in respect of the offence.
(5) The *DPP:
(a) has the same right of appeal
against a targeted order as the person referred to in subsection (1) has
under this section; and
(b) may appeal against a refusal by a
court to make a targeted order in the same manner as if such an order were made
and the DPP were appealing against that order.
(6) On an appeal against a targeted order,
the order may be confirmed, discharged or varied.
(7) This section does not affect any other
right of appeal.
323
Costs
(1) If:
(a) a person brings, or appears at,
proceedings under this Act before a court in order:
(i) to prevent a *forfeiture order or *restraining order from being made against
property of the person; or
(ii) to have property of
the person excluded from a forfeiture order or restraining order; and
(b) the person is successful in those
proceedings; and
(c) the court is satisfied that the
person was not involved in any way in the commission of the offence in respect
of which the forfeiture order or restraining order was sought or made;
the court may order the Commonwealth to pay all costs
incurred by the person in connection with the proceedings or such part of those
costs as is determined by the court.
(2) The costs referred to in subsection (1)
are not limited to costs of a kind that are normally recoverable by the successful
party to civil proceedings.
324
Powers conferred on judicial officers in their personal capacity
(1) A power:
(a) that is conferred by this Act on a
State or Territory judge or on a magistrate; and
(b) that is neither judicial nor
incidental to a judicial function or power;
is conferred on that person in a personal capacity and not
as a court or a member of a court.
Note: Magistrate is defined in section 16C
of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.
(2) The State or Territory judge, or the
magistrate, need not accept the power conferred.
(3) A State or Territory judge, or
magistrate, exercising a conferred power has the same protection and immunity
as if he or she were exercising that power as, or as a member of, the court of
which the judge or magistrate is a member.
325
Effect of a person’s death
(1) Any notice authorised or required to be
given to a person under this Act is, if the person has died, sufficiently given
if given to the person’s legal personal representative.
(2) A reference in this Act to a person’s *interest in property or a thing is, if
the person has died, a reference to an interest in the property or thing that
the person had immediately before his or her death.
(3) An order can be applied for and made
under this Act:
(a) in respect of a person’s *interest in property or a thing even if
the person has died, and
(b) on the basis of the activities of
a person who has died.
326
Operation of other laws not affected
Nothing
in this Act limits or restricts:
(a) the operation of any other law of
the Commonwealth or of a *non‑governing
Territory providing for the forfeiture of property or the imposition of
pecuniary penalties; or
(b) the remedies available to the
Commonwealth, apart from this Act, for the enforcement of its rights and the
protection of its interests.
327
Review of operation of Act
(1) The Minister must cause an independent
review of the operation of this Act to be undertaken as soon as practicable
after the third anniversary of the commencement of this Act.
(2) The persons who undertake such a review
must give the Minister a written report of the review.
(3) The Minister must cause a copy of each
report to be tabled in each House of the Parliament within 15 sitting days of
that House after its receipt by the Minister.
(4) However, this section does not apply if a
committee of one or both Houses of the Parliament has reviewed the operation of
this Act, or started such a review, before the third anniversary of the
commencement of this Act.
328
Regulations
The Governor‑General may make
regulations prescribing matters:
(a) required or permitted by this Act
to be prescribed; or
(b) necessary or convenient to be
prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.
Chapter 6—Interpreting this Act
Part 6‑1—Meaning of some important concepts
Division 1—Proceeds and instrument of an offence
329
Meaning of proceeds and instrument
(1) Property is proceeds of an
offence if:
(a) it is wholly derived or realised,
whether directly or indirectly, from the commission of the offence; or
(b) it is partly derived or realised,
whether directly or indirectly, from the commission of the offence;
whether the property is situated within or outside *Australia.
(2) Property is an instrument
of an offence if:
(a) the property is used in, or in
connection with, the commission of an offence; or
(b) the property is intended to be
used in, or in connection with, the commission of an offence;
whether the property is situated within or outside *Australia.
(3) Property can be proceeds of an offence or
an instrument of an offence even if no person has been convicted of the
offence.
(4) Proceeds or an instrument
of an *unlawful
activity means proceeds or an instrument of the offence constituted by the act
or omission that constitutes the unlawful activity.
330
When property becomes, remains and ceases to be proceeds or an instrument
(1) Property becomes *proceeds of an offence if it is:
(a) wholly or partly derived or
realised from a disposal or other dealing with proceeds of the offence; or
(b) wholly or partly acquired using
proceeds of the offence;
including because of a previous application of this
section.
(2) Property becomes an *instrument of an offence if it is:
(a) wholly or partly derived or
realised from the disposal or other dealing with an instrument of the offence;
or
(b) wholly or partly acquired using an
instrument of the offence;
including because of a previous application of this
section.
(3) Property remains *proceeds of an offence or an *instrument of an offence even if:
(a) it is credited to an *account; or
(b) it is disposed of or otherwise
dealt with.
(4) Property only ceases to be *proceeds of an offence or an *instrument of an offence:
(a) if it is acquired by a third party
for *sufficient consideration
without the third party knowing, and in circumstances that would not arouse a
reasonable suspicion, that the property was proceeds of an offence or an
instrument of an offence (as the case requires); or
(b) if the property vests in a person
from the distribution of the estate of a deceased person, having been
previously vested in a person from the distribution of the estate of another
deceased person while the property was still proceeds of an offence or an
instrument of an offence (as the case requires); or
(ba) the
property has been distributed in accordance with:
(i) an
order in proceedings under the Family Law Act 1975 with respect to the
property of the parties to a marriage or either of them; or
(ii) a
financial agreement within the meaning of that Act;
and
6 years have elapsed since that distribution; or
(c) if the property is acquired by a
person as payment for reasonable legal expenses incurred in connection with an
application under this Act or defending a criminal *charge; or
(d) if a *forfeiture order in respect of the property is satisfied;
or
(e) if an *interstate restraining order or an *interstate forfeiture order is satisfied
in respect of the property; or
(f) if the property is otherwise sold
or disposed of under this Act; or
(g) in any other circumstances
specified in the regulations.
(5) However, if:
(a) a person once owned property that
was *proceeds of an offence or
an *instrument of an offence;
and
(b) the person ceased to be the owner
of the property and (at that time or a later time) the property stopped being
proceeds of an offence or an instrument of the offence under subsection (4)
(other than under paragraph (4)(d)); and
(c) the person acquires the property
again;
then the property becomes proceeds of an offence or an
instrument of the offence again (as the case requires).
(5A) Paragraph (4)(ba)
does not apply if, despite the distribution referred to in that paragraph, the
property is still subject to the *effective
control of a person who:
(a) has
been convicted of; or
(b) has
been charged with, or who is proposed to be charged with; or
(c) has
committed, or is suspected of having committed;
the offence in
question.
(6) Property becomes, remains or ceases to be
*proceeds of an *unlawful activity, or an *instrument of an unlawful activity, if
the property becomes, remains or ceases to be proceeds of the offence, or an
instrument of the offence, constituted by the act or omission that constitutes
the unlawful activity.
Division 2—Convicted and related concepts
331
Meaning of convicted of an offence
(1) For the purposes of this Act, a person is
taken to be convicted of an offence if:
(a) the person is convicted, whether
summarily or on indictment, of the offence; or
(b) the person is charged with, and
found guilty of, the offence but is discharged without conviction; or
(c) a court, with the consent of the
person, takes the offence, of which the person has not been found guilty, into
account in passing sentence on the person for another offence; or
(d) the person *absconds in connection with the offence.
(2) Such a person is taken to have been
convicted of the offence in the following State or Territory:
(a) if paragraph (1)(a)
applies—the State or Territory in which the person was convicted;
(b) if paragraph (1)(b)
applies—the State or Territory in which the person was discharged without
conviction;
(c) if paragraph (1)(c)
applies—the State or Territory in which the court took the offence into account
in passing sentence on the person for the other offence;
(d) if paragraph (1)(d)
applies—the State or Territory in which the information was laid alleging the
person’s commission of the offence.
(3) If paragraph (2)(d) applies to a
person:
(a) the person is taken to have been
convicted of the offence before the Supreme Court of that State or Territory;
and
(b) the person is taken to have
committed the offence.
(4) This section does not apply to a *foreign serious offence.
332
Meaning of quashing a conviction of an offence
(1) For the purposes of this Act, a person’s
conviction of an offence is taken to be quashed if:
(a) if the person is taken to have
been convicted of the offence because of paragraph 331(1)(a)—the conviction is
quashed or set aside; or
(b) if the person is taken to have
been convicted of the offence because of paragraph 331(1)(b)—the finding of
guilt is quashed or set aside; or
(c) if the person is taken to have
been convicted of the offence because of paragraph 331(1)(c)—either of the
following events occur:
(i) the person’s conviction
of the other offence referred to in that paragraph is quashed or set aside;
(ii) the decision of the
court to take the offence into account in passing sentence for that other
offence is quashed or set aside; or
(d) if the person is taken to have been
convicted of the offence because of paragraph 331(1)(d)—after the person is
brought before a court in respect of the offence, the person is discharged in
respect of the offence or a conviction of the person for the offence is quashed
or set aside.
(2) This section does not apply to a *foreign serious offence.
333
Meaning of conviction day
(1) For the
purposes of this Act, the conviction day, in relation to a
person’s conviction of an *indictable
offence, is:
(a) if the person is taken to have
been convicted of the offence because of paragraph 331(1)(a)—the day on which
the person was convicted of the offence; or
(b) if the person is taken to have
been convicted of the offence because of paragraph 331(1)(b)—the day on which
the person was discharged without conviction; or
(c) if the person is taken to have
been convicted of the offence because of paragraph 331(1)(c)—the day on which
the court took the offence into account in passing sentence for the other
offence referred to in that paragraph; or
(d) if the person is taken to have
been convicted of the offence because of paragraph 331(1)(d)—the day on which
the person is taken to have *absconded
in connection with the offence.
(2) For the purposes of paragraph (1)(a),
the day on which the person was convicted of the offence is taken to be the
first day on which the court acted on the finding that the offence was proved
against the person (whether or not the court passed sentence on that day in
relation to the offence).
334
Meaning of abscond
(1) For the
purposes of this Act, a person is taken to abscond in connection
with an offence if and only if:
(a) an information is laid alleging
the person committed the offence; and
(b) a warrant for the person’s arrest
is issued in relation to that information; and
(c) subsection (2) applies to the
person and the warrant.
(2) This subsection applies to a person and a
warrant if either of the following occurs:
(a) at the end of the period of 6
months commencing on the day on which the warrant is issued:
(i) the person cannot be
found; or
(ii) the person is, for any
other reason, not amenable to justice and, if the person is outside *Australia, extradition proceedings are
not on foot;
(b) at the end of the period of 6
months commencing on the day on which the warrant is issued:
(i) the person is, because
he or she is outside Australia, not amenable to justice; and
(ii) extradition
proceedings are on foot;
and subsequently those
proceedings terminate without an order for the person’s extradition being made.
(3) Extradition proceedings taking place in a
jurisdiction in relation to a person are not taken, for the purposes of subsection (2),
to be on foot unless the person is in custody, or is on bail, in that
jurisdiction.
Division 3—Other concepts
335 Proceeds
jurisdiction
(1) Whether a court has proceeds
jurisdiction for an order depends on the circumstances of the offence
or offences to which the order would relate.
General rules
(2) If all or part of the conduct
constituting an offence to which the order would relate:
(a) occurred in a particular State or
Territory; or
(b) is reasonably suspected of having
occurred in that State or Territory;
the courts that have proceeds jurisdiction
for the order are those with jurisdiction to deal with criminal matters on
indictment in that State or Territory.
(3) If all of the conduct constituting an
offence to which the order would relate:
(a) occurred outside *Australia; or
(b) is reasonably suspected of having
occurred outside *Australia;
the courts that have proceeds jurisdiction
for the order are those of any State or Territory with jurisdiction to deal
with criminal matters on indictment.
Offender not identified
(4) If:
(a) the order would, if made, be:
(i) a *restraining order under section 19
that relates to an offence committed by a person whose identity is not known
and that is not based on a finding as to the commission of a particular
offence; or
(ii) a *forfeiture order under section 49
that is not based on a finding that a particular person committed any offence
and that is not based on a finding as to the commission of a particular
offence; and
(b) the property to which the order
would relate is located in a particular State or Territory;
despite subsections (2) and (3), the courts that have
proceeds jurisdiction for the order are those with jurisdiction
to deal with criminal matters on indictment in that State or Territory.
(5) If:
(a) the order would, if made, be:
(i) a *restraining order under section 19
that relates to an offence committed by a person whose identity is not known
and that is not based on a finding as to the commission of a particular
offence; or
(ii) a *forfeiture order under section 49
that is not based on a finding that a particular person committed any offence
and that is not based on a finding as to the commission of a particular
offence; and
(b) the property to which the order
would relate is located outside *Australia;
despite subsections (2) and (3), the courts that have
proceeds jurisdiction for the order are those of any State or
Territory with jurisdiction to deal with criminal matters on indictment.
Magistrates may have proceeds jurisdiction in some
cases
(6) If:
(a) the order would, if made, be a *restraining order under section 17,
or a *forfeiture order under
section 48, relating to an offence of which a person has been convicted;
and
(b) the person was convicted before a
magistrate;
the magistrate has proceeds jurisdiction for
the order. However, this does not prevent other courts having proceeds jurisdiction
for the order under subsection (2) or (3) (whichever is applicable).
Note: Although this Act is only concerned with
indictable offences, these offences can often be tried summarily. For example,
see section 4J of the Crimes Act 1914.
336
Meaning of derived
A reference to a person having derived
*proceeds, a *benefit or *literary proceeds includes a reference to:
(a) the person; or
(b) another person at the request or
direction of the first person;
having derived the proceeds, benefit or literary proceeds
directly or indirectly.
337
Meaning of effective control
(1) Property may be subject to the effective
control of a person whether or not the person has:
(a) a legal or equitable estate or *interest in the property; or
(b) a right, power or privilege in
connection with the property.
(2) Property that is held on trust for the
ultimate *benefit of a person
is taken to be under the effective control of the person.
(3) However, if a person is one of 2 or more
beneficiaries under a *discretionary
trust, the following undivided proportion of the trust property is taken to be
under the effective control of the person:

(4) If property is initially owned by a
person and, within 6 years either before or after an application for a *restraining order or a *confiscation order is made,
disposed of to another person without *sufficient
consideration, then the property is taken still to be under the effective
control of the first person.
(5) In determining whether or not property is
subject to the effective control of a person, regard may be had to:
(a) shareholdings in, debentures over
or *directorships of a company
that has an *interest (whether
direct or indirect) in the property; and
(b) a trust that has a relationship to
the property; and
(c) family, domestic and business
relationships between persons having an interest in the property, or in
companies of the kind referred to in paragraph (a) or trusts of the kind
referred to in paragraph (b), and other persons.
337A
Meaning of foreign indictable offence
(1) If:
(a) an application (the current
application) is made for a *restraining
order or *confiscation order in
relation to conduct that constituted an offence against a law of a foreign
country; and
(b) if the conduct had occurred in Australia
at the testing time referred to in subsection (2), the conduct would have
constituted an offence against a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a
Territory punishable by at least 12 months imprisonment;
then, for the purposes of the current application, the conduct
is treated as having constituted a foreign indictable offence at
all relevant times.
Example: X commits an offence against a law of a foreign
country at a time when the conduct is not an offence against Australian law. X
then derives literary proceeds in relation to the offence and transfers the
proceeds to Australia. After the proceeds are transferred, a new Commonwealth
offence is created that applies to the type of conduct concerned. An
application is then made for a literary proceeds order. For the purposes of the
proceedings for that order, the original conduct is treated as having
constituted a foreign indictable offence at all relevant times and accordingly
an order can be made in respect of those proceeds.
(2) The testing time for the
current application is:
(a) if the current application is an
application for a *restraining
order—the time when the current application was made; or
(b) if the current application is an
application for a *confiscation
order (other than a *literary
proceeds order) in relation to a restraining order—the time when the
application for the restraining order was made; or
(c) if:
(i) the current
application is an application for a literary proceeds order; and
(ii) an earlier restraining
order has been made in respect of the same offence;
the time when the application
was made for that earlier restraining order; or
(d) if the current application is an
application for a literary proceeds order but paragraph (c) does not
apply—the time when the current application was made.
(3) In this section:
offence against a law of a foreign country
includes an offence triable by a military commission of the United States of
America established under a Military Order of 13 November 2001 made by
the President of the United States of America and entitled “Detention,
Treatment, and Trial of Certain Non‑Citizens in the War Against
Terrorism”.
337B
Definition of serious offence—valuation rules
In determining the value of a
transaction or transactions for the purposes of paragraph (ea), (eb) or
(ec) of the definition of serious offence in section 338 of
this Act, apply the following provisions of the Anti‑Money Laundering
and Counter‑Terrorism Financing Act 2006:
(a) the definition of value
in section 5;
(b) section 18;
(c) section 19.
Part 6‑2—Dictionary
338
Dictionary
In this Act, unless the contrary
intention appears:
abscond has the meaning given by section 334.
account means any facility or arrangement
through which a *financial
institution accepts deposits or allows withdrawals and includes a facility or
arrangement for:
(a) a *fixed term deposit; and
(b) a safety deposit box.
AFP member means a member, or special member,
(within the meaning of the Australian Federal Police Act 1979) of the
Australian Federal Police.
agent includes, if the agent is a
corporation, the *officers and
agents of the corporation.
appropriate officer means the *DPP or a person included in a class of
persons declared by the regulations to be within this definition.
approved examiner has the meaning given by
subsection 183(4).
AUSTRAC means the Australian Transaction
Reports and Analysis Centre continued in existence by the Anti‑Money
Laundering and Counter‑Terrorism Financing Act 2006.
Australia, when used in a geographical sense,
includes the external Territories.
authorised officer means:
(a) an *AFP member who is authorised by the Commissioner of the
Australian Federal Police; or
(aa) any of the following:
(i) the Integrity
Commissioner (within the meaning of the Law Enforcement Integrity Commissioner
Act 2006);
(ii) an Assistant Integrity
Commissioner (within the meaning of that Act);
(iii) a staff member of
ACLEI (within the meaning of that Act) who is authorised in writing by the
Integrity Commissioner for the purposes of this paragraph; or
(b) any of the following:
(i) the Chief Executive
Officer of the Australian Crime Commission;
(ii) an examiner (within
the meaning of the Australian Crime Commission Act 2002) who is
authorised by the Chief Executive Officer of the Australian Crime Commission;
(iii) a member of the staff
of the ACC (within the meaning of the Australian Crime Commission Act 2002)
who is authorised by the Chief Executive Officer of the Australian Crime
Commission; or
(c) an officer of Customs (within the
meaning of the Customs Act 1901) who is authorised by the CEO of
Customs; or
(d) a member, or staff member, (within
the meaning of the Australian Securities and Investments Commission Act 2001)
of the Australian Securities and Investments Commission who is authorised by
the Chairperson of the Australian Securities and Investments Commission; or
(e) a member, officer or employee of
any other agency specified in the regulations who is authorised by the head of
that agency.
bankruptcy court means a court having
jurisdiction in bankruptcy under the Bankruptcy Act 1966.
bankruptcy property of a person means
property that:
(a) is vested in another person under
subsection 58(1) of the Bankruptcy Act 1966 but immediately before being
so vested was:
(i) property of the person;
or
(ii) subject to the *effective control of the person; or
(b) is vested in another person under
subsection 249(1) of the Bankruptcy Act 1966 but immediately before
being so vested was:
(i) property of the
person’s estate; or
(ii) subject to the effective
control of the executors of the person’s estate.
benefit includes service or advantage.
books includes any account, deed, paper,
writing or document and any record of information however compiled, recorded or
stored, whether in writing, on microfilm, by electronic process or otherwise.
charged: a person is charged with an offence
if an information is laid against the person for the offence whether or not:
(a) a summons to require the
attendance of the person to answer the information has been issued; or
(b) a warrant for the arrest of the
person has been issued.
compensation order means an order made under
subsection 77(1).
Confiscated Assets Account means the account
established under section 295.
confiscation order means a *forfeiture order, a *pecuniary penalty order or a *literary proceeds order.
controlled property has the meaning given by
section 267.
Note: Section 267A alters the meaning of this
term for the purposes of Division 3 of Part 4‑1.
conveyance includes an aircraft, vehicle or
vessel.
convicted has the meaning given by section 331.
conviction day has the meaning given by
section 333.
corresponding law means a law of a State or
of a *self‑governing
Territory that is declared by the regulations to be a law that corresponds to
this Act.
criminal proceeding, in relation to a *foreign serious offence, has the same
meaning as in the *Mutual
Assistance Act.
Customs officer means an officer of Customs
within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901.
data includes:
(a) information in any form; or
(b) any program (or part of a
program).
data held in a computer includes:
(a) *data
held in any removable *data
storage device for the time being held in a computer; or
(b) data held in a data storage device
on a computer network of which the computer forms a part.
data storage device means a thing containing,
or designed to contain, *data
for use by a computer.
deal: dealing with a person’s property
includes:
(a) if a debt is owed to that
person—making a payment to any person in reduction of the amount of the debt;
and
(b) removing the property from *Australia; and
(c) receiving or making a gift of the
property; and
(d) if the property is covered by a *restraining order—engaging in a
transaction that has the direct or indirect effect of reducing the value of the
person’s interest in the property.
dependant: each of the following is a
dependant of a person:
(a) the person’s spouse or de facto
partner;
(b) the person’s child, or member of
the person’s household, who depends on the person for support.
derived has the meaning given by section 336.
director, in relation to a *financial institution or a corporation,
means:
(a) if the institution or corporation
is a body corporate incorporated for a public purpose by a law of the
Commonwealth, of a State or of a Territory—a constituent member of the body
corporate; and
(b) any person occupying or acting in
the position of director of the institution or corporation, by whatever name
called and whether or not validly appointed to occupy or duly authorised to act
in the position; and
(c) any person in accordance with
whose directions or instructions the directors of the institution or
corporation are accustomed to act, other than when those directors only do so:
(i) in the proper
performance of the functions attaching to the person’s professional capacity;
or
(ii) in their business
relationship with the person.
discretionary trust means a trust where:
(a) a person (who may include the
trustee) is empowered (either unconditionally or on the fulfilment of a condition)
to exercise any power of appointment or other discretion; and
(b) the exercise of the power or
discretion, or the failure to exercise the power or discretion, has the effect
of determining, to any extent, either or both of the following:
(i) the identities of
those who may benefit under the trust;
(ii) how beneficiaries are
to benefit, as between themselves, under the trust.
distributable funds has the meaning given by
subsection 299(7).
DPP means the Director of Public
Prosecutions.
effective control has a meaning affected by
section 337.
encumbrance, in relation to property,
includes any *interest,
mortgage, charge, right, claim or demand in respect of the property.
enforcement agency means:
(a) an agency mentioned in paragraphs (a)
to (d) of the definition of *authorised
officer; or
(b) an agency specified in the
regulations to be a law enforcement, revenue or regulatory agency for the
purposes of this Act.
equitable sharing program has the meaning
given by subsection 296(4).
evidential material means evidence relating
to:
(a) property in respect of which
action has been or could be taken under this Act; or
(b) *benefits
derived from the commission of an *indictable
offence; or
(c) *literary
proceeds.
examination means an examination under Part 3‑1.
examination notice means a notice given under
section 183.
examination order means an order made under
section 180 or 181 that is in force.
exclusion order means an order made under
subsection 73(1).
executing officer,
in relation to a warrant, means:
(a) the
*authorised officer named in
the warrant by the magistrate as being responsible for executing the warrant;
or
(b) if that authorised officer does
not intend to be present at the execution of the warrant—another authorised
officer whose name has been written in the warrant by the first authorised
officer; or
(c) another authorised officer whose
name has been written in the warrant by the officer last named in the warrant.
executive officer, in relation to a *financial institution or a corporation,
means any person, by whatever name called and whether or not he or she is a *director of the institution or
corporation, who is concerned, or takes part, in the management of the
institution or corporation.
extension order means an order made under
section 93.
financial institution means:
(a) a body corporate that is an ADI
for the purposes of the Banking Act 1959; or
(b) the Reserve Bank of Australia; or
(c) a society registered or
incorporated as a co‑operative housing society or similar society under a
law of a State or Territory; or
(d) a person who carries on State
banking within the meaning of paragraph 51(xiii) of the Constitution; or
(e) a body corporate that is a
financial corporation within the meaning of paragraph 51(xx) of the Constitution;
or
(f) a body corporate that, if it had
been incorporated in *Australia,
would be a financial corporation within the meaning of paragraph 51(xx) of the
Constitution; or
(g) a trading corporation (within the
meaning of paragraph 51(xx) of the Constitution) that carries on a business of
operating a casino; or
(h) a trading corporation (within the
meaning of paragraph 51(xx) of the Constitution) that is a *totalisator agency board.
fixed term deposit means an interest bearing
deposit lodged for a fixed period.
foreign forfeiture order has the same meaning
as in the *Mutual Assistance
Act.
foreign indictable offence has the meaning
given by section 337A.
foreign pecuniary penalty order has the same
meaning as in the *Mutual
Assistance Act.
foreign restraining order has the same
meaning as in the *Mutual
Assistance Act.
foreign serious offence has the same meaning
as in the *Mutual Assistance
Act.
forfeiture order means an order made under
Division 1 of Part 2‑2 that is in force.
frisk search means:
(a) a search of a person conducted by
quickly running the hands over the person’s outer garments; and
(b) an examination of anything worn or
carried by the person that is conveniently and voluntarily removed by the
person.
indictable offence means an offence against a
law of the Commonwealth, or a *non‑governing
Territory, that may be dealt with as an indictable offence (even if it may
also be dealt with as a summary offence in some circumstances).
indictable offence of Commonwealth concern means
an offence against a law of a State or a *self‑governing
Territory:
(a) that may be dealt on indictment
(even if it may also be dealt with as a summary offence in some circumstances);
and
(b) the *proceeds of which were (or were attempted to have been)
dealt with in contravention of a law of the Commonwealth on:
(i) importation of goods
into, or exportation of goods from, *Australia;
or
(ii) a communication using
a postal, telegraphic or telephonic service within the meaning of paragraph
51(xx) of the Constitution; or
(iii) a transaction in the
course of banking (other than State banking that does not extend beyond the
limits of the State concerned).
instrument has the meaning given by sections 329
and 330.
interest, in
relation to property or a thing, means:
(a) a
legal or equitable estate or interest in the property or thing; or
(b) a
right, power or privilege in connection with the property or thing;
whether present or future and whether vested or
contingent.
Note: For references to an interest in
property of a person who has died, see subsection 325(2).
interstate forfeiture order means an order
that is made under a *corresponding
law and is of a kind declared by the regulations to be within this definition.
interstate indictable offence means an
offence against a law of a State or a *self‑governing
Territory, being an offence in relation to which an *interstate forfeiture order or an *interstate pecuniary penalty order may be
made under a *corresponding law
of that State or Territory.
interstate pecuniary penalty order means an
order that is made under a *corresponding
law and is of a kind declared by the regulations to be within this definition.
interstate restraining order means an order
that is made under a *corresponding
law and is of a kind declared by the regulations to be within this definition.
lawyer means a duly qualified legal
practitioner.
legal aid commission means an authority
established by or under a law of a State or a *self‑governing
Territory for the purpose of providing legal assistance.
legal professional privilege includes
privilege under Division 1 of Part 3.10 of the Evidence Act 1995.
literary proceeds has the meaning given by
section 153.
literary proceeds amount has the meaning
given by subsection 158(1).
literary proceeds order means an order made
under section 152 that is in force.
monitoring order means an order made under
section 219 that is in force.
Mutual Assistance Act means the Mutual
Assistance in Criminal Matters Act 1987.
narcotic substance means:
(a) a narcotic substance within the
meaning of the Customs Act 1901; or
(b) a substance specified in the
regulations for the purposes of this definition.
non‑governing Territory
means a Territory that is not a *self‑governing
Territory.
officer, in relation to a *financial institution or a corporation,
means a *director, secretary, *executive officer or employee.
Official Trustee means the Official Trustee
in Bankruptcy.
ordinary search means a search of a person or
of articles in the possession of a person that may include:
(a) requiring the person to remove his
or her overcoat, coat or jacket and any gloves, shoes and hat; and
(b) an examination of those items.
pecuniary penalty order means an order made
under section 116 that is in force.
penalty amount has the meaning given by subsection
121(1).
person assisting, in relation to a *search warrant, means:
(a) a person who is an *authorised officer and who is assisting
in executing the warrant; or
(b) a person who is not an authorised
officer and who has been authorised by the relevant *executing officer to assist in executing
the warrant.
person’s property: a person’s property
includes property in respect of which the person has the beneficial interest.
petition means a petition under the Bankruptcy
Act 1966.
police officer means:
(a) an *AFP member; or
(b) a member of the police force of a
State or Territory.
premises includes:
(a) any land; and
(b) any structure, building, aircraft,
vehicle, vessel or place (whether built on or not); and
(c) any part of such a structure, building,
aircraft, vehicle, vessel or place.
proceeds has the meaning given by sections 329
and 330.
proceeds jurisdiction has the meaning given
by section 335.
proceeds of confiscated assets has the
meaning given by subsection 296(3).
production order means an order made under
subsection 202(1) that is in force.
property means real or personal property of
every description, whether situated in *Australia
or elsewhere and whether tangible or intangible, and includes an *interest in any such real or personal property.
property‑tracking document has the
meaning given in subsection 202(5).
quashed has the meaning given by section 332.
registrable property means property title to
which is passed by registration on a register kept pursuant to a provision of
any law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory.
registration authority means an authority
responsible for administering a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory
providing for registration of title to, or charges over, property of a
particular kind.
related offence: an offence is related to
another offence if the physical elements of the 2 offences are substantially
the same acts or omissions.
responsible
custodian has the meaning
given by subsection 254(2).
restraining order means an order under section 17,
18, 19 or 20 that is in force.
search warrant means a warrant issued under
section 225 that is in force.
self‑governing Territory means:
(a) the Australian Capital Territory;
or
(b) the Northern Territory; or
(c) Norfolk Island.
senior Departmental officer means an SES
employee or acting SES employee in the Attorney‑General’s Department.
serious offence means:
(a) an *indictable offence punishable by imprisonment for 3 or
more years, involving:
(i) unlawful conduct
relating to a *narcotic substance;
or
(ia) unlawful conduct
constituted by or relating to a breach of Part 9.1 of the Criminal Code
(serious drug offences); or
(ii) unlawful conduct
constituted by or relating to a breach of section 81
of the Proceeds of Crime Act 1987 or Part 10.2 of the Criminal
Code (money‑laundering); or
(iii) unlawful
conduct by a person that causes, or is intended to cause, a *benefit to the value of at least $10,000
for that person or another person; or
(iv) unlawful conduct by a
person that causes, or is intended to cause, a loss to the Commonwealth or
another person of at least $10,000; or
(b) an offence against any of the
following provisions of the Migration Act 1958:
(i) section 232A
(organising bringing groups of non‑citizens into Australia);
(ii) subsection 233(1)
(bringing etc. non‑citizens into Australia in contravention of Act);
(iii) section 233A
(other offences relating to groups of non‑citizens); or
(c) an offence against any of the
following provisions of the Financial Transaction Reports Act 1988 involving
a transaction of at least $50,000 in value:
(i) section 15
(reports about transfers of currency into or out of Australia); or
(ii) section 29 (false
or misleading information); or
(d) an offence against section 24
(opening accounts etc. in false names) of the Financial Transaction Reports
Act 1988 if transactions on the relevant account total at least $50,000 in
value during any 6 month period; or
(e) an offence against section 31
(conducting transactions to avoid reporting requirements) of the Financial
Transaction Reports Act 1988 if transactions in breach of that section by
the person committing the offence total at least $50,000 in value during any 6
month period; or
(ea) an offence against any of the
following sections of the Anti‑Money Laundering and Counter‑Terrorism
Financing Act 2006 involving a transaction of at least $50,000 in value:
(i) section 53
(reports about movements of physical currency into or out of Australia);
(ii) section 59
(reports about movements of bearer negotiable instruments into or out of Australia);
(iii) section 136
(false or misleading information);
(iv) section 137 (false
or misleading documents); or
(eb) an offence against any of the
following sections of the Anti‑Money Laundering and Counter‑Terrorism
Financing Act 2006:
(i) section 139
(providing a designated service using a false customer name or customer
anonymity);
(ii) section 140
(receiving a designated service using a false customer name or customer
anonymity);
(iii) section 141 (non‑disclosure
of other name by which customer is commonly known);
if:
(iv) the customer concerned
had an account in relation to the provision of the designated service
concerned; and
(v) transactions on the
account total at least $50,000 in value during any 6 month period beginning
after the commencement of Part 12 of that Act; or
(ec) an offence against either of the
following sections of the Anti‑Money Laundering and Counter‑Terrorism
Financing Act 2006:
(i) section 142
(conducting transactions so as to avoid reporting requirements relating to
threshold transactions);
(ii) section 143
(conducting transfers so as to avoid reporting requirements relating to cross‑border
movements of physical currency);
if transactions in breach of
that section by the person committing the offence total at least $50,000 in
value during any 6 month period; or
(f) a *terrorism offence; or
(g) an offence against section 11.1,
11.2, 11.4 or 11.5 of the Criminal Code (extensions of criminal
responsibility) in relation to an offence referred to in this definition; or
(h) an indictable offence specified in
the regulations.
State indictable
offence means an offence against a law of a State or a *self‑governing Territory that may
be dealt with on indictment (even if it may also be dealt with as a summary
offence in some circumstances).
strip search means a search of a
person or of articles in the possession of a person that may include:
(a) requiring the person to remove all
of his or her garments; and
(b) an examination of the person’s
body (but not of the person’s body cavities) and of those garments.
sufficient consideration: an acquisition or
disposal of property is for sufficient consideration if it is for a
consideration that is sufficient and that reflects the value of the property,
having regard solely to commercial considerations.
suspect, in relation to a *restraining order or a *confiscation order, means the person who:
(a) has been convicted of; or
(b) has been *charged with, or is proposed to be
charged with; or
(c) if the order is a restraining
order—is suspected of having committed; or
(d) if the order is a confiscation
order—committed;
the offence or offences to which the order relates.
suspended funds has the meaning given by
subsection 297(2).
tainted property means:
(a) *proceeds
of an *indictable offence; or
(b) an *instrument of an indictable offence.
terrorism offence means an offence against
Part 5‑3 of the Criminal Code.
totalisator agency board means a board or
authority established by or under a law of a State or Territory for purposes
that include the purpose of operating a betting service.
unlawful activity
means an act or omission that constitutes:
(a) an
offence against a law of the Commonwealth; or
(b) an offence against a law of a
State or Territory that may be dealt with on indictment (even if it may also be
dealt with as a summary offence in some circumstances); or
(c) an offence against a law of a
foreign country.