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Beaton-Wells, C; Fisse, B --- "Criminalising Serious Cartel Conduct: Issues of Law and Policy" [2008] UMelbLRS 3

Last Updated: 30 June 2009

Criminalising serious cartel conduct: Issues of law and policy

Caron Beaton-Wells and Brent Fisse*

In January 2008 the government released an Exposure Draft Bill and associated materials relating to the long-promised introduction of criminal penalties for serious cartel conduct in Australia. These materials reflect the work of the previous government and are not endorsed necessarily by the new government. If enacted in the form released for public comment, the legislation would be the most significant reform of cartel regulation, if not competition regulation generally, since the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) was introduced. The Exposure Draft Bill proposes not only to criminalise certain forms of collusion (with consequences for immunity policy, investigatory powers, corporate liability, concurrent proceedings, mode of trials and many other aspects of enforcement) but also to broaden substantially, and controversially, the scope of the civil prohibitions against arrangements between competitors. These reforms would involve a major shift in competition policy and approach to regulatory enforcement and would have important practical consequences for the Australian business sector and its advisors, as well as for the agencies charged with administering the new regime and the judiciary. In addition to their national impact, the reforms would have international significance given the recent campaign of regulators world-wide to combat cartel activity with harsher penalties and greater co-operation between foreign agencies. The Exposure Draft Bill contains numerous amendments to the Trade Practices Act. The proposed amendments are far-reaching - they touch on every aspect of the law, policy and practice relating to cartel regulation in Australia. Many are complex. Several are highly controversial. Some are surprising because they go far beyond the proposals foreshadowed by the Report of the Dawson Committee in 2003 and the former Treasurer's Press Release in 2005. Few would dispute the merits of criminalising serious cartel conduct in principle. However, the specific means of implementation proposed in the Exposure Draft Materials raise many questions. This article outlines the key features of the Exposure Draft Materials and provides a basic explanation of the proposed amendments. It draws attention to the main legal and policy issues and highlights areas in which changes should be made or further work needs to be done.

* Caron Beaton-Wells is the Director of Studies for Competition Law at the Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne. Her publications include Proof of Antitrust Markets (2003); "Capturing the Criminality of Hard-Core Cartels: The Australian Proposal" [2007] MelbULawRw 29; (2007) 31 MULR 675; "The Politics of Cartel Criminahsation: A Pessimistic View from Australia" (2008) 3 ECLR 185; "The Cardboard Box Cartel Case: Was all the Fuss Warranted?" (2008) 36 ABLR 1 (with Neil Brydges); "Criminalising Cartels: Australia's Slow Conversion" (2008) 31(2) World Competition Law and Economics Review 205. Caron Beaton-Wells can be contacted at c.beaton-wells@unimelb.edu.au.

Brent Fisse is a Sydney competition lawyer, an Associate of the Ross Parsons Centre of Commercial, Corporate and Taxation Law, University of Sydney, and a Senior Fellow of the Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne. His publications include Corporations, Crime and Accountability (with John Braithwaite, 1993); The Impact of Publicity on Corporate Offenders (with John Braithwaite, 1983), Howard's Criminal Law (5th ed, 1989); and "The Cartel Offence: Dishonesty?" (2007) 35 ABLR 235. Brent Fisse can be contacted at brentfisse@ozemail.com.au.

This is a revised version of a paper presented at a seminar on Criminalising Cartel Conduct: Issues of Law and Policy at the University of Sydney on 21 February 2008 and the University of Melbourne on 25 February 2008.

The authors acknowledge the research assistance of Neil Brydges and Susan Cirillo. Thanks are also due to the commentators for their comments on the article and to several colleagues for their assistance on a number of issues. The usual disclaimers apply.

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Finally, it identifies and makes recommendations regarding the options for the government and Treasury going forward. The authors urge the government to tackle at least the most serious issues identified in their analysis in order to make the new law work.

1. SUMMARY

The Exposure Draft Materials released by the government for public consultation are welcome but raise numerous issues and possible concerns.

The more significant issues and possible concerns discussed in this article are:

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• the maximum penalties for individual and corporate offenders which are open to question - see Pt 17.

The extent to which these issues and possible concerns will be addressed as a result of the consultation process is unclear - see Pt 18 (Conclusion).

There are several topics that this article does not address, including ancillary liability for the new cartel offences. For example, the extension of liability for conspiracy to the new cartel offences creates a questionable form of double inchoate liability.1

2. INTRODUCTION - THE EXPOSURE DRAFT MATERIALS

On 11 January 2008, the government released exposure draft materials (Exposure Draft Materials) relating to the proposed criminalisation of serious cartel conduct in Australia. The documents released are a discussion paper (Discussion Paper) including a brief explanatory abstract; an Exposure Draft Bill containing proposed amendments to the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) (Exposure Draft Bill); and a draft memorandum of understanding between the ACCC and the CDPP setting out proposed cooperative arrangements between the two agencies (Draft MOU).

The Exposure Draft Bill and the Draft MOU are consistent largely with the proposals set out in the former Treasurer's Press Release of 2 February 2005 (Treasurer's Press Release). They thus appear to reflect the point reached in the development of a criminal cartel regime at the time when the former Coalition Government lost the election in November 2007. The new government has indicated that it may wish to amend the Exposure Draft Bill in light of submissions received in the consultation process. The timing for the consideration of submissions and the formulation of amendments has not been indicated, but the government's election promise is to introduce the legislation during 2008.

The release of the Exposure Draft Materials is most welcome. It is now possible for the first time to see the specific legislative changes proposed as well as the particular terms of the Draft MOU that has been drafted by the ACCC and the CDPP on the questions of the roles of and cooperation between these agencies in enforcing the new regime.

The Exposure Draft Bill contains numerous amendments to the Trade Practices Act. Many of the proposed amendments are complex. Several are highly controversial. Some are surprising because they go far beyond the proposals foreshadowed by the Report of the Dawson Committee in 2003 (Dawson Report) and the Treasurer's Press Release.

Few would dispute the merits of criminalising serious cartel conduct in principle. However, the specific means of implementation proposed in the Exposure Draft Materials raise many questions. The aims of this article are:

(a) to outline the key features of the Exposure Draft Bill and the Draft MOU and to give a basic explanation of the proposed amendments to the Trade Practices Act;
(b) to draw attention to the main legal and policy issues raised by the Exposure Draft Materials; and
(c) to highlight areas in which changes should be made or further work needs to be done.

In preparing this article we have been hampered by the absence of any detailed discussion or explanatory paper. The Discussion Paper is a document of merely seven pages. The Treasurer's Press Release was 13 pages in length and at the time no other material was made available. The Treasurer's Press Release purports to be based on a report of a working party commissioned by the Treasurer in 2003 to consider the steps required to implement the in-principle recommendation of the Dawson Committee that serious cartel conduct should be made an offence punishable by jail. That report (Working Party Report) has never been released and is the subject of proceedings under the Freedom of Information Act 1982 (Cth).2

It is difficult to review the proposed amendments to the Trade Practices Act without the aid of a consolidated version of the legislation with all proposed changes incorporated in the text. An

1 Fisse B, "Defining the Australian Cartel Offences: Disaster Recovery", Paper presented to the Competition Law Conference,
Sydney, 24 May 2008, Pt 4.11 (copy on file with authors).

2 Fisse v Treasury [2008] AATA 288. An appeal against the decision of the AAT has been lodged in the Federal Court.

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"unofficial" consolidated version of the relevant provisions was prepared by Caron Beaton-Wells to aid the analysis of the Exposure Draft Materials reflected in this article.

3. DIFFERENTIATING BETWEEN CRIMINAL AND CIVIL PROHIBITIONS

3.1 How the Exposure Draft Materials differentiate between criminal and civil prohibitions

3.1.1 Exposure Draft Bill

The Exposure Draft Bill differentiates between criminal and civil prohibitions in these main ways:

Prosecutions are handled by the CDPP, not the ACCC.

3.1.2 Draft MOU

The Draft MOU sets out factors that differentiate between criminal and civil prohibitions at the level of enforcement or prosecutorial discretion, at least by implication. In summary:

In considering whether a prosecution should be commenced, the CDPP will have regard to:

3.1.3 Discussion Paper

The Discussion Paper focuses on the element of an "intention dishonestly to obtain a benefit", which is taken to be a prime means of differentiating between criminal and civil penalty prohibitions against cartel conduct.

The Discussion Paper asserts that no distinction is drawn between criminal and civil liability in the definition of cartel conduct under s 1 of the Sherman Act 1890 (US) and that a different approach is needed in Australia.

The Discussion Paper requests submissions on whether there should be a distinction between the criminal and civil penalty prohibitions and, if so, how that distinction should be made in the legislation. The Discussion Paper refers to the possibility of using the concepts of fraud and/or secrecy as differentiators.

3 Ironically the maximum fine for individuals is lower than the maximum civil monetary penalty - see Pt 17.

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3.2 Do the Exposure Draft Materials adequately differentiate between criminal and civil prohibitions?

3.2.1 What is the framework of inquiry for differentiating between criminal and civil prohibitions?

The Discussion Paper does not canvas the various possible means that could be used to differentiate between the criminal and civil prohibitions proposed in the Exposure Draft Bill but focuses on a highly selective number of possible options, namely reliance on the concepts of dishonesty, fraud and/or secrecy.

The Dawson Report4 does not set out a framework of inquiry for differentiating between civil and criminal prohibitions. The Working Party Report may do so but has not been published. The Criminal Justice Division of the Attorney-General's Department has published A Guide to Framing Commonwealth Offences, Civil Penalties and Enforcement Powers (February 2004),5 which is useful when considering what the framework of inquiry should be. The discussion in the Australian Law Reform Commission's Report, Principled Regulation: Federal Civil and Administrative Penalties in Australia (Report No 95, 2002) is also relevant.6

The main ways in which criminal and civil prohibitions have been differentiated in the past are:

4 Trade Practices Review Committee, Review of the Competition Provisions of the Trade Practices Act (2003),
http://www.tpareview.treasury.gov.au/content/report.asp viewed 6 February 2008.

5 See http://www.ag.gov.au/www/agd/rwpattach.nsf/VAP/ (CFD7369FCAE9B8F32F341DBE097801FF)~ConsolidatedGuideFebruarv2004.pdf/$file/ConsolidatedGuideFebruary2004.pdf
viewed 12 February 2008.

6 See especially Chs 3-4. See also Australian Law Reform Commission, Compliance with the Trade Practices Act 1974, Report
No 68 (1994) Ch 9.

7 The concepts of fault elements and physical elements are fundamental to the structure of the Criminal Code (Cth). See further
Attorney General's Department, The Commonwealth Criminal Code: A Guide for Practitioners (2002) pp 7-9; Leader-Elliott I.
"Elements of Liability in the Commonwealth Criminal Code" (2002) 26 Crim LJ 28. See generally Odgers S, Principles of
Federal Criminal Law (Lawbook Co., 2007).

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Are the Exposure Draft Materials based on a systematic assessment of all of the ways in which the proposed criminal and civil prohibitions could be differentiated?8 The basic framework set out above raises numerous questions about the approach to differentiation taken in the Exposure Draft Materials: see Pt 3.3.1.

3.2.2 Is the concept of dishonesty (or fraud) a necessary or sufficient differentiator?

The concept of an intention dishonestly to obtain a benefit does not sufficiently distinguish criminal from civil prohibitions. It is self-evident that even very minor instances of deception or fraud are treated as being "dishonest" in everyday life. In the context of cartel conduct, dishonesty is likely to be present in so many civil penalty cases that it would be implausible to say that it is the hallmark of criminal cartel conduct only.9

Dishonesty has been criticised on the basis that it is an unnecessary and problematic element of a cartel offence.10 The criticisms are summarised in Pt 6.

Reliance on the concept of fraud instead of the concept of dishonesty would not overcome the problems discussed in Pt 6. Unless defined in terms of dishonesty and in the way that dishonesty is defined in the Exposure Draft Bill, "fraud" would raise issues and difficulties of interpretation (as is evident from the High Court's attempts to clarify what that concept means).11

3.2.3 Is the concept of secrecy a necessary or sufficient differentiator?

The concept of secrecy does not appear to be a necessary or sufficient differentiator between criminal and civil prohibitions against cartel conduct:12

[T]here are problems with the notion that mere secrecy can of itself render the price-fixing agreement criminal. It is not as if secrecy is always necessary for a price-fixing agreement to be effective, or that it is the secrecy which causes a purchaser loss.

8 This article does not address the underlying political, sociological or philosophical questions of criminalisation, as to which see
Ashworth A, Principles of Criminal Law (5th ed, Oxford University Press, 2006) Ch 2; Beaton-Wells C, "The Politics of Cartel
Criminalisation: A Pessimistic View from Australia" (2008) 3 ECLR 185; Beaton-Wells C, "Capturing the Criminality of
Hard-Core Cartels: The Australian Proposal" [2007] MelbULawRw 29; (2007) 31 MULR 675 (discussing the factors of culpability, harmfulness and
wrongfulness).

9 This is implicitly recognised by the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth), s 85(6). The power to excuse a defendant under this
provision is based partly on the concept of honesty and applies to civil and criminal prohibitions against cartel conduct.

10Fisse B, "The Cartel Offence: Dishonesty?" (2007) 35 ABLR 235.

11 See Peters v The Queen (1998) 192 CLR 431; Macleod v The Queen [2003] HCA 24; (2003) 214 CLR 230. For a detailed critique of Peters
v The Queen, see Steel A, "The Appropriate Test for Dishonesty" (2000) 24 Crim LJ 46.

12 See further Fisse, n 10 at 267.

13 Overt cartel conduct is rare but does occur. The Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) price fixing
arrangements are a notorious example; see Esan A, The Legality of OPEC under US Antitrust Law and EC Competition Law
(2005), http://www.dundee.ac.uk/cepmlp/car/html/car8 articlell.pdf viewed 1 July 2008. Overt but sham joint ventures are
further examples: see eg, General Leaseways Inc v National Truck Leasing Association [1984] USCA7 965; 744 F 2d 588 (1984).

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3.3 Alternative possible approaches?

3.3.1 Systematic differentiation?

The basic framework of inquiry set out in Pt 3.2.1 would recognise the fundamental importance of the need for the cartel offences to be proven beyond a reasonable doubt emphasised by Gyles J.14 It would also draw attention to further possible means of systematically differentiating between criminal and civil prohibitions against cartel conduct. The more significant further possible means of differentiation are as follows:

3.3.2 Pragmatic select improvements?

A systematic re-examination of all the possible differentiators between criminal and civil prohibitions may not occur given the government's election promise to criminalise serious cartel conduct within its first year in office.

14 See Gyles J's commentary on the original version of this article below at 241.

15 See further Fisse, n 10 at 275-277.

16 Gerakiteys v The Queen [1984] HCA 8; (1983) 153 CLR 317, as discussed in Fisse B, Howard's Criminal Law (5th ed, Lawbook Co., 1990)
pp 370-375.

17 Criminal Code (Cth), ss 5.1, 5.6, 12.3.

18 However, under s 84(4A) the imposition of vicarious criminal responsibility on the basis of s 84(3) or (4) precludes a jail
sentence.

19 See further Fisse, n 10 at 272-273.

20 Contrast Criminal Code (Cth), s 11.5(5).

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Pragmatic select improvements would include:

4. THE NEW REGIME OF PROHIBITIONS 4.1 The new regime

4.1.1 New cartel offences

Section 44ZZRF creates the offence of making a contract or arrangement or arriving at an understanding containing a cartel provision: 1) A corporation commits an offence if:

  1. the corporation makes a contract or arrangement, or arrives at an understanding, with the intention of dishonestly obtaining a benefit; and
  2. the contract, arrangement or understanding contains a cartel provision.

Section 44ZZRG creates the offence of giving effect to a cartel provision: 1) A corporation commits an offence if:

  1. a contract, arrangement or understanding contains a cartel provision; and
    1. the corporation gives effect to the cartel provision with the intention of dishonestly obtaining a benefit.

By virtue of s 6 (as proposed to be amended) there will be certain limited circumstances in which the new cartel offences and civil penalty prohibitions under the new Div 1 of Pt IV will apply to persons other than corporations. Generally otherwise, the Schedule version of the cartel offences and civil penalty prohibitions will apply to a "person".

"Cartel provision" is defined in s 44ZZRD, as discussed in Pt 5 of this article.

The offence under s 44ZZRG applies to contracts or arrangements made, or understandings arrived at, before, at or after the commencement of the section (s 44ZZRG(3)). There is no time limit on prosecution - see Pt 17.4.

4.1.2 New civil penalty prohibitions

Section 44ZZRJ creates the civil penalty prohibition of making a contract or arrangement or arriving at an understanding containing a cartel provision: 1) A corporation contravenes this section if:

  1. the corporation makes a contract or arrangement, or arrives at an understanding; and
  2. the contract, arrangement or understanding contains a cartel provision.

Section 44ZZRK creates the civil penalty prohibition of giving effect to a contract or arrangement or arriving at an understanding containing a cartel provision: 1) A corporation contravenes this section if:

a) a contract, arrangement or understanding contains a cartel provision; and

21 As recommended in Australian Law Reform Commission, Principled Regulation: Federal Civil and Administrative Penalties in Australia, Report No 95 (2002) at [9.12], http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/other/alrc/publications/reports/95 viewed 14 February 2008.

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b) the corporation gives effect to the cartel provision.

"Cartel provision" is defined in s 44ZZRD, as discussed in Pt 5.

The civil penalty prohibition under s 44ZZRK applies to contracts or arrangements made, or understandings arrived at, before, at or after the commencement of the section (s 44ZZRK(2)).

4.1.3 Changes to existing civil penalty prohibitions

The Exposure Draft Bill preserves the civil penalty prohibitions under s 45 against contracts, arrangements or understandings that (a) contain an exclusionary provision (as defined by s 4D); or (b) have the purpose, effect or likely effect of substantially lessening competition in a market.

The Exposure Draft Bill deletes s 45A. Price fixing is prohibited per se under the new cartel offences (ss 44ZZRF, 44ZZRG) and the new cartel civil penalty prohibitions (ss 44ZZRJ, 44ZZRK). By virtue of the definition of "cartel provision" in s 44ZZRD(2), the definition of price fixing under these provisions differs in several significant ways from the definition under s 45A(1) - see Pt 5 of this article.

4.2 Problems with this structure?

The proposed new regime of prohibitions is complex and does not reflect the following desiderata:

See further the discussion in Pt 5 to follow.

5. THE PHYSICAL ELEMENTS OF THE NEW CARTEL OFFENCES AND NEW CIVIL PENALTY PROVISIONS

5.1 Outline of the physical elements of the new cartel offences and new civil penalty prohibitions

Under the Criminal Code (Cth), an offence consists of physical elements and fault (mental) elements.

The physical elements of the cartel offences under ss 44ZZRF and 44ZZRG are respectively:

Under the Criminal Code (Cth), a physical element may be "conduct", "a result of conduct" or "a circumstance in which conduct or a result of conduct occurs." The characterisation of a physical element has implications for the fault element of the offence (see Pt 7).

The physical elements of the new civil penalty prohibitions are the same as for the new cartel offences - see ss 44ZZRJ and 44ZZRK. This is undesirable. Pursuant to the doctrine of one-dimensional interpretation espoused in Waugh v Kippen [1986] HCA 12; (1986) 160 CLR 156 at 165; [1986] HCA 12; 64 ALR 195 where the same wording is used for the purposes of criminal and civil proscription, the same interpretation must be adopted in both contexts (the legislature cannot be taken to have spoken "with a forked tongue"). However, a prohibition defined in the same way for the different particular contexts of criminal liability and civil liability is likely to be problematic. A narrow interpretation may be justified for criminal liability, eg but may not be warranted for the civil penalty context and, for that matter, may be quite unjustifiable for the purposes of civil remedies. Conversely, a broad interpretation adopted to suit the context of civil remedies may be too broad for the purposes of a civil penalty and quite unjustified as the basis for criminal liability.

These considerations are relevant to the question of differentiation between criminal and civil prohibitions (see Pt 3). In particular, regardless of whether or not the element of dishonesty is retained,

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they support the view that the physical elements of the new cartel offences should be defined separately from and more narrowly than the physical elements of the new civil penalty prohibitions.

A further remarkable and surprising feature of the Exposure Draft Bill, as elaborated in this part, is that the concept of a cartel provision is novel and far-reaching.22 This radical change in the law was not discussed in the Dawson Report and no discussion of or justification for this change has been given. A more obvious approach is to take the existing per se civil penalty prohibitions against price fixing and exclusionary provisions as the starting point for constructing new cartel offences. The existing per se civil penalty prohibitions:

By contrast, defining cartel offence in terms of price fixing, restriction of output, allocation of customers and bid-rigging offers no apparent advantage, whether in terms of scope, certainty and ease of application or avoidance of loopholes (indeed, the new concepts add uncertainty). Worse, conduct that is currently lawful will be unlawful under the new prohibitions.

5.2 Contract, arrangement or understanding

The new cartel offences and new civil penalty prohibitions retain the concept of CAU from s 45.

Proof of an arrangement or understanding has been problematic in s 45 cases.24 Recently, the evidentiary challenges have been highlighted by the approach taken to establishing the requisite "meeting of the minds" between alleged colluders. In particular, there has been judicial emphasis on the need to prove some form of a commitment or undertaking or at least some moral obligation by at least one of the participants in the arrangement.25 There may be some debate as to whether this in fact represents a change in the law (ie a stricter approach than in cases such as Trade Practices Commission v Email Ltd [1980] FCA 86; (1980) 43 FLR 383; 31 ALR 53).

Some, not least the ACCC, have expressed concern that satisfying the CAU requirement will be extremely difficult to the criminal standard, beyond a reasonable doubt.26 There is some substance in this concern. In its recent report on its inquiry into the petrol prices, the ACCC suggested a form of legislative amendment to deal with the issue, based on the view that it was Parliament's original intention that the "conscious or intentional creation of an 'expectation' regarding future conduct may be sufficient to create an 'understanding' for the purposes of s 45".27

The Exposure Draft Materials make no mention of this issue, and the government does not appear to have any plan to amend the definition of "contract, arrangement or understanding" at the present time. The reality nevertheless is that any attempt by the government to lessen the requirements to

22 As more fully criticised in the context of the cartel offences in Fisse, n 1, Pts 4 and 5.

23 The new concepts are wider in minor but controversial respects; see Pt 5.3.

24 See eg Pengilley W, "What Is Required to Prove A 'Contract, Arrangement or Understanding?'" (2006) 13(3) CCLJ 241;
Gray A, "Policing Price Fixing in Petroleum Markets" (2007) 35 ABLR 398.

25 Apco Service Stations Pry Ltd v ACCC (2005) 159 FCR 452; [2005] FCAFC 161; ACCC v Leahy Petroleum Pty Ltd (2007)
160 FCR 321; [2007] FCA 794.

26 See eg Corones S, "Can the ACCC's Leniency Policy Survive the Geelong Petrol Case?" (2007) 35 ABLR 293; Samuel G,
ACCC Press Release, Geelong Petrol Decision "Disappointing" (29 May 2007), http://www.accc.gov.au/content/index.phtml/ itemld/788504/fromltemld/776481 viewed 13 February 2008; Samuel G, ACCC Press Release, Full Federal Court Upholds
Apco Appeal against Price Fixing (17 August 2005), http://www.accc.gov.au/content/index.phtml/itemld/704748/fromltemld/ 620299 viewed 13 February 2008; See Luke Woodward's commentary on the original version of this article below at 242.

27 See ACCC, Petrol Prices and Australian Consumers - Report of the ACCC Inquiry into the Price of Unleaded Petrol (2007),
http://www.accc.gov.au/content/index.phtml/itemId/806216/fromItemId/3737 viewed 14 February 2008.

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establish collusion for the purposes of the new cartel offences would be met with stiff opposition. The Australian concept of a CAU is already much wider than some of its overseas counterparts. The concept of "agreement" under s 188 of the Enterprise Act 2002 (UK) in the United Kingdom is narrower than an "arrangement" or "understanding."29 Similarly, in the United States, the position remains essentially that the parties to an alleged concerted action must be proven to have had "a conscious commitment to a common scheme designed to achieve an unlawful objective".30 Certainly, if the ACCC proposal is to be entertained, it should be in the context only of the civil penalty prohibitions. Further relaxation of the requirements for proof of conspiracy in the criminal context is difficult to justify.

In any event, at this stage there is a good case for allowing judicial interpretation of the elements required to prove an "understanding" to continue to develop, particularly on the question of the extent to which inferences may be drawn from parallel conduct. It may well be that the concerns expressed by the ACCC and others are not realised to any significant degree outside of the specific challenges posed by proof of conspiracy in the petrol industry. Given the extent to which cartel cases have been settled by the ACCC in the past, there has been very little opportunity for the courts to explore these issues fully in contested proceedings.31 This may change with the introduction of a criminal regime and the greater motivation on the part of defendants to test ACCC allegations, given the consequences of admission, in borderline cases. That said, it should be recognised that, compared with civil cases, criminal prosecutions are likely to be rare.

5.3 Cartel provision

"Cartel provision" is defined in s 44ZZRD.

Pursuant to s 44ZZRD(1), a provision is a cartel provision if two conditions are satisfied in relation to the provision:

  1. the purpose/effect condition set out in subs (2);
  2. the competition condition set out in subs (3).

These conditions can be satisfied when the provision is considered with related provisions (s 44ZZRD(7)).

"Party" has an extended meaning such that if a body corporate is a party to a CAU, each related body corporate is taken also to be a party (s 44ZZRC).

5.3.1 Purpose/effect condition

Under s 44ZZRD(2), the purpose/effect condition is satisfied if the provision has the purpose, or has or is likely to have the effect, of directly or indirectly:

(a) price-fixing as defined in para (a);
(d) bid-rigging as defined in para (d).

The difficulties arising out of the retention of the concept under s 45 that the provision has the relevant purpose are referred to in Pt 7.3.

28 See eg the comments of Professor Baxt below at 249, cautioning against a "knee-jerk" reaction to law reform in this instance,
and generally. The comments were made in a commentary by Professor Baxt at a seminar, Criminalising Cartel Conduct: Issues
of Law and Policy (University of Melbourne, 25 February 2008).

29 See, in particular, the effect of s 188(3).

30 Monsanto Co v Spray-Rite Service Corp 456 US 752 (1984); Theatre Enterprises v Paramount Film Distributors Corp 346
US 537 (1954).

31 See eg Round D, Siegfried J and Baillie A, "Collusive Markets in Australia: An Assessment of Their Economic
Characteristics and Judicial Penalties" (1996) 24 ABLR 292; Round D, "An Empirical Analysis of Price Fixing Penalties in
Australia from 1974 to 1999: Have Australia's Corporate Colluders been Corralled?" (2000) 8 CCLJ 83.

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A provision is not to be taken not to have the requisite purpose, likely effect or effect because of the form or description of the provision or CAU (s 44ZZRD(8)).

5.3.1A Impact on existing per se prohibitions

Section 45A is to be repealed with the effect that the only per se prohibitions on price fixing under the Trade Practices Act are the prohibitions in the new cartel offences and the civil penalty prohibitions.

However, the per se prohibition on exclusionary provisions, as defined in s 4D, under ss 45(2)(a)(i) and 45(2)(b)(ii) remains.

The breadth of s 4D has been criticised heavily.32 In particular, concern has been expressed that it catches arrangements that:

The Dawson Report accepted these concerns, recommending that there be a defence that the exclusionary provision did not have the purpose, effect or likely effect of substantially lessening competition, and that the persons or classes of persons to which the exclusionary provision relates be restricted to a competitor or competitors (actual or potential) of the parties to the arrangement33 Despite accepting these recommendations initially,34 the government subsequently decided simply to provide a new joint venture defence,35 taking the view that any other concerns had been ameliorated by the High Court's interpretation of s 4D in decisions handed down after the Dawson Report.36

However, the difficulties identified in the Dawson Report with respect to s 4D have not been resolved and, if anything, concerns about the per se prohibition on exclusionary provisions are likely to be heightened by the fact that the CP definitions are, in several respects, broader in their scope than s 4D (see Pt 5.3.1C) and by the proposal to attach criminal penalties to breach of the prohibition (in circumstances in which dishonesty is present). In effect, the Exposure Draft Bill proposes to make criminal conduct that is currently lawful. Such a significant policy change demands explanation. None has been provided.

Furthermore, by retaining the current per se prohibition on exclusionary provisions, the Exposure Draft Bill creates a multi-layered system of provisions applicable to cartel conduct that is complicated and likely to add expense and time to litigation. Given these considerations, there is a good case for repealing the current per se prohibition on exclusionary provisions and tightening up the proposed new civil penalty prohibitions (particularly as they relate to output restriction and market division) so as to ensure that they only catch conduct that warrants the status of per se illegality.

5.3.1B Price-fixing

Under s 44ZZRD(2)(a) the concept of price-fixing is defined as:

(a) fixing, controlling or maintaining the price for, or a discount, allowance, rebate or credit in relation to: (i) goods or services supplied, or likely to be supplied, by any or all of the parties to the contract, arrangement or understanding; or

32 See eg Wylie I, "What is An Exclusionary Provision? Newspapers, Rugby League, Liquor and Beyond" (2007) 35 ABLR 33;
Pengilley W, Price Fixing and Exclusionary Provisions (Prospect 2001) Pts 8, 10; Pengilley, n 25.

33 Trade Practices Review Committee, n 4, p 131 (Recommendations 8.1 and 8.2).

34 Treasurer, Commonwealth Government Response to the Review of the Competition Provisions of the Trade Practices Act 1974
(2003), http://www.treasurer.gov.au/DisplayDocs.aspx?pageID=&doc=publications/TPAResponse.htm&min=phc viewed
14 February 2008.

35 Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth), s 76C.

36 See Explanatory Memorandum, Trade Practices Legislation Amendment Bill (No 1) 2006 (Cth), http://
www.parlinfoweb.aph.gov.au/piweb/browse.aspx?NodeID=2118 viewed 14 February 2008. For a detailed and persuasive
criticism of the Dawson Committee's proposals on s 4D, see ReidW, "Exclusionary Provisions - Dead, Alive or Living in
Mexico?" (Law Council of Australia, Trade Practices Committee Workshop, 2003 (copy on file with authors)).

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(ii) goods or services acquired, or likely to be acquired, by any or all of the parties to the contract,

arrangement or understanding; or (iii) goods or services re-supplied, or likely to be re-supplied, by persons or classes of persons to

whom those goods or services were supplied by any or all of the parties to the contract,

arrangement or understanding; or (iv) goods or services likely to be re-supplied by persons or classes of persons to whom those

goods or services are likely to be supplied by any or all of the parties to the contract,

arrangement or understanding.

("the new price-fixing definition").

"Likely" is defined as including a possibility that is not remote (s 44ZZRB).
Genuine price recommendations will not be caught (s 44ZZRD(5)). 5.3.1B1 How does the new definition compare with s 45A? There are differences between the new definition and the definition in s 45A:

This appears to be an attempt to avoid the difficulties that have arisen with similar concepts under s4D.

5.3.1B2 Is the new definition of price-fixing too broad?

The new price-fixing definition may be too broad, at least in connection with the new cartel offences, if not also the new civil penalty prohibition.

The new definition does not exclude situations where, as in the case brought by the ACCC against National Australia Bank Ltd in 2000 in the credit card interchange fee matter, A and B enter into a CAU for the supply of services in an upstream market where they do not compete with each other and a provision of the CAU has the likely effect of controlling the price of goods or services in a downstream market where they do compete (Federal Court of Australia, Statement of Claim, (No N948 of 2000)). Submissions were made to the Dawson Committee that this type of conduct should not be treated as an offence.39 Certainly, it is questionable whether the cartel offence should

37Apco Service Stations Pry Ltd v ACCC Commission (2005) 159 FCR 452; [2005] FCAFC 161.

38 See Criminal Code (Cth), s 11.1.

39 See Supplementary Submissions to Dawson Committee Released by the ACCC after FOI Application by Brent Fisse and
Lexpert Publications Pty Ltd (9 October 2007), http://www.brentfisse.com/images/ AcccsupplementarvsubmissionstoDawsonComrnittee2002.pdf viewed 14 February 2008. See also NicotraA and O'ReganJ,
"Dare To Deem - Does Section 45A Trade Practices Act Prohibit "Pro-Competitive" Price Fixing?" (2001) (copy on file with
authors); Tonking AI, "Competition at Risk? New Forms of Business Cooperation" (2002) 10 Competition & Consumer Law
Journal 169, Pts 10, 11.

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apply in such situations. However, the requirement of dishonesty does not address this question except perhaps in an oblique way that will not necessarily exclude such situations.40

The new definition does not exclude maximum price fixing by sellers. There is no cogent policy justification for so broad a per se prohibition, civil or criminal.41

No attempt has been made to clarify and limit the meaning of the words "fixing, controlling or maintaining" a price, or the word "effect" in the new price-fixing definition. For example, arguably there is a need to qualify the words "fixing, controlling or maintaining" given the sweeping proposition of Lindgren J in Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v CC (NSW) Pty Ltd (1999) 92 FCR 375; [1999] FCA 954 at [178] that degrees of control are irrelevant when determining if a provision has the effect of "controlling" a price.42 The idea that any degree of control is sufficient to amount to "controlling" a price is implausible and Lindgren J's interpretation does not reflect the dictionary meaning that to "control" is "to hold sway over, exercise power or authority over, to dominate or command."43

5.3.1'C Restricting outputs in the production and supply chain

Under s 44ZZRD(2)(b), the concept of output restriction is defined as: (b) preventing, restricting or limiting:

(i) the production, or likely production, of goods by any or all of the parties to the contract,

arrangement or understanding; or (ii) the capacity, or likely capacity, of any or all of the parties to the contract, arrangement or

understanding to supply services; or (iii) the supply, or likely supply, of goods or services to persons or classes of persons by any or all of the parties to the contract, arrangement or understanding;

("the new output restriction definition")

There are significant differences between the new output restriction definition and s 4D. Confusingly, in some respects the new definition is wider and in others, narrower. There is no explanation for these changes in the Exposure Draft Materials.

First, the new output restriction definition relates to restrictions on production (defined broadly in s 44ZZRB), capacity and supply, whereas s 4D is limited to supply.

Secondly, s 4D catches restrictions on acquisition whereas, curiously, these are not covered by the new output restriction definition.

Thirdly, whereas s 4D caught only arrangements that have an exclusionary purpose, the new output restriction definition covers also arrangements that have a restrictive effect. For the purposes of the new cartel offences, however, it is to be borne in mind that the default fault element of recklessness will apply in establishing the relevant effect (see Pt 7.1). That said, recklessness will not be particularly difficult to establish (see Pt 7.4). For the purposes of the new civil penalty prohibitions, it will not be necessary to show that the respondent was reckless in relation to the exclusionary effect.

Significantly, as a result of the inclusion of "effect" as an alternative to "purpose", the new CP definition (s 44ZZRD(b)(iii) especially) is wider than the current per se prohibition and thus will have even greater potential to catch conduct that is not substantially anti-competitive or may even be pro-competitive (particularly in cases in which the joint venture defence is not available). Furthermore, it will catch conduct that, under s 47 (the prohibition on exclusive dealing), would be

40 Contrast the approach taken ins 189 of the Enterprise Act 2002 (UK) (requiring that the competition condition be satisfied at
all levels of the supply, production or distribution chain to which the CAU and the cartel provision relate).

41 See Easterbrook FH, "Maximum Price Fixing" (1981) 48 U Chi L Rev 886.

42 See Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v Australian Medical Association Western Australia Branch Inc
[2003] FCA 686; (2003) 199 ALR 423, ATPR 41-195 at [195] (Carr J).

43 See Trade Practices Commission v Ansett Transport Industries (Operations) Pty Ltd [1978] FCA 21; (1978) 32 FLR 305; ATPR 40-071 at
17,715; Re Insurance Council of New Zealand (Inc) (1989) 2 NZBLC (Com) 99-522 at 104,482.

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subject to a substantial lessening of competition test. Yet there is no proposal for an overlap exemption (as under s 45(6)) to apply (see Pt 10.5). No justification for this major change in the law has been provided, and none is self-evident.

Fourthly, in an apparent attempt to avoid the difficulties that have arisen under s 4D with the concept of "particular classes of persons", s 44ZZRD(4) makes the identification of such persons immaterial. However, this arguably does not resolve the ongoing difficulty associated with the question whether the relevant persons have to be targeted by the offending provision.44 That said, unlike s 4D under which it is necessary to prove an exclusionary purpose, the new output restriction definition is satisfied by proof alternatively of an exclusionary effect or likely effect (this follows from s 44ZZRD(1)). In this way, the "targeting" issue can be avoided.

Finally, s 44ZZRD(6) makes it immaterial whether, for the purposes of the new output restriction definition, a supply, likely supply or production happens or is to happen or capacity or likely capacity exists or is to exist "in particular circumstances or on particular conditions". Thus, the new definition covers general restrictions on production or capacity, eg, without specification as to the circumstances or conditions of the restriction. Section 4D, by comparison, refers to preventing, restricting or limiting supply "in particular circumstances or on particular conditions" and is thus narrower in its scope. 5.3.1D Allocating customers, suppliers or territories

Under s 44ZZRD(2)(c) the concept of market division is defined as:

(c) allocating between any or all of the parties to the contract, arrangement or understanding:

(i) the persons or classes of persons who have acquired, or who are likely to acquire, goods or

services from any or all of the parties to the contract, arrangement or understanding; or (ii) the persons or classes of persons who have supplied, or who are likely to supply, goods or

services to any or all of the parties to the contract, arrangement or understanding; or (iii) the geographical areas in which goods or services are supplied, or likely to be supplied, by

any or all of the parties to the contract, arrangement or understanding; or (iv) the geographical areas in which goods or services are acquired, or likely to be acquired, by any or all of the parties to the contract, arrangement or understanding;

("the new market division definition").

The activities covered by this definition would have been covered by s 4D. On the one hand, the addition of geographical areas could be seen as extending the definition (s 4D being confined to allocation between persons). On the other hand, the practical effect of dividing a market on the basis of customers in Victoria being allocated to X and customers in New South Wales being allocated to Y, eg, would be the same as dividing a market on the basis of allocating Victoria to X and New South Wales to Y.

The new market division definition also goes further than s 4D in that it catches arrangements that have the effect or likely effect of allocating customers, etc whereas s 4D caught only arrangements with that purpose. Again, for the purposes of the new cartel offences, the default fault element of recklessness will apply in establishing the relevant effect, although again in this context it should recognised that the recklessness will not be particularly difficult to establish (see Pt 7.1, Pt 7.4). For the purposes of the new civil penalty prohibitions, it will not be necessary to show that the respondent was reckless in relation to the allocative effect.

As with the new output restriction, the effect limb of the purpose/effect condition in relation to market division will mean that conduct that is not substantially anti-competitive may fall within the definition of a cartel provision and thus attract civil penalties and possibly also criminal penalties. No justification for this major change in the law has been provided, and none is self-evident.

In addition, as discussed in relation to the new output restriction definition, the new provisions in ss 44ZZRD(4) and (6), relating to the immateriality of whether the identities of persons can be ascertained and whether supply happens or is to happen in particular circumstances or on particular conditions, appear to be an attempt to make market division easier to prove.

44News Ltd v South Sydney District Rugby League Football Club Ltd [2003] HCA 45; (2003) 215 CLR 563; 200 ALR 157; Rural Press Ltd v Australian Competition and Consumer Commission [2003] HCA 75; (2003) 216 CLR 53; 203 ALR 217.

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Issues may arise as to the meaning of "allocating" and how formal, explicit or structured the allocation has to be. Such issues are aggravated by the inclusion of "effect", and even more so an indirect effect, in the purpose/effect condition of the definition of a cartel provision. These aspects of the definition would appear to allow for a passive allocation to be caught by the new prohibition - that is, a division of customers or territories that is a mere by-product (as distinct from an intended outcome) of an otherwise efficient or pro-competitive arrangement.

5.3.1 E Bid rigging

Under s 44ZZRD(2)(d) the concept of bid rigging is defined as:

(d) ensuring that in the event of a request for bids in relation to the supply or acquisition of goods or services: (i) one or more parties to the contract, arrangement or understanding bid, but one or more other

parties do not; or (ii) two or more parties to the contract, arrangement or understanding bid, but at least two of them

do so on the basis that one of those bids is more likely to be successful than the others; or (iii) two or more parties to the contract, arrangement or understanding bid, but not all of those parties proceed with their bids until the suspension or flnalisation of the request for bids process; or (iv) two or more parties to the contract, arrangement or understanding bid and proceed with their bids, but at least two of them proceed with their bids on the basis that one of those bids is more likely to be successful than the others; or (v) two or more parties to the contract, arrangement or understanding bid, but a material component of at least one of those bids is worked out in accordance with the contract, arrangement or understanding.

("the new bid-rigging definition").

The activities covered by the new bid-rigging definition would have been covered by s 45A, and presumably would be caught by the new price-fixing definition given its reference to "controlling" of

45
price.

"Bid" includes "the taking, by a potential bidder, of a preliminary step in a bidding process" (s 44ZZRB).

Consortium bidding could easily be caught by the new bid rigging definition. Questions such as whether members of the consortium would have been independent bidders in the absence of the consortium arrangement and whether the arrangement prevents members from submitting a separate independent bid are likely to be highly relevant in this regard.

The new bid rigging definition does not exclude "rigging" notified to the person requesting the bids (cf s 188(6) of the Enterprise Act 2002 (UK)). This appears to be an oversight.

The definition of bid rigging does not require that the intended effect or likely effect must be to control a price or foreclose competitive conduct. For example, consider the scope of s 44ZZRD(2)(v). The purpose/effect condition required for a cartel provision is satisfied if the provision has the purpose, effect or likely effect of ensuring that in the event of a request for bids in relation to the supply or acquisition of goods or services:

Two or more parties to the contract, arrangement or understanding bid, but a material component of at least one of those bids is worked out in accordance with the contract, arrangement or understanding.

Assume that A and B, two of five competing suppliers and installers of desalination plants in Australia, are requested by the New South Wales government to bid for several new plants. A manufactures distillation units. B manufactures pumps. A wants to use B's technology for the bid and B wants to use A's technology. They discuss supply arrangements for the bid and agree to supply each other at a mutual discounted rate in order to improve each other's chance of winning the tender. The input cost of A's technology is a material component of B's bid. The input cost of B's technology is a material component of A's bid. Since the discounted rate applicable to A's technology and B's

See eg ACCC v CC (NSW) Pty Ltd (1999) 92 FCR 375; [1999] FCA 954.

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technology has been worked out in accordance with an arrangement between A and B, the mutual discount provision is caught by s 44ZZRD(2(v). There is no joint venture between A and B and, in any event, the cartel offence under s 44ZZRF is not subject to a joint venture defences (see Pt 10) Whether or not such conduct would be found to be "dishonest" by a jury is impossible to predict (see Pt 6).

5.3.2 Competition condition

Under s 44ZZRD(3) the competition condition is satisfied if:

... at least two of the parties to the contract, arrangement or understanding:

(a) are or are likely to be; or
(b) but for any contract, arrangement or understanding, would be or would be likely to be;

This condition corresponds with the requirement under the per se limbs of s 45 that at least two of the parties to the CAU be or would be, but for the CAU, in competition with each other and that the competition coincide with the goods and services that are the subject of the offending provision (see ss 45A(8); 4D(l)(a), (2)).

However, for the new cartel offences, arguably all the parties to the CAU should be required to be in competition with each other. The competition condition fails to capture a critical facet of serious cartel conduct, which is that the conduct is engaged in by competitors (or employees acting on behalf of competitors).

Nor should criminal liability apply to parties that are in vertical relationships with the competitor parties to the CAU. The restraints imposed by the CAU on these parties will fall within the scope of the exclusive dealing or resale price maintenance prohibitions or, if not, the civil penalty prohibitions (existing and/or new) on cartel conduct.

Note that there is no provision corresponding to s 45(3); however, this may be covered by s 44ZZRD(3).

5.3.3 Meaning of expressions in other provisions of the Trade Practices Act 1974
(Cth)

Section 44ZZRE provides that Div 1 is to be disregarded in determining the meaning of an expression in a provision of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) (other than a provision in Div 1, s 6(2)(c) or s 76(lA)(aa)). In the absence of an explanatory note, the intention of the drafters in relation to this section can only be speculated upon.

One explanation for s 44ZZRE is that some of the provisions in the new Div 1 of Pt IV proposed by the Exposure Draft Bill relate to criminal provisions and hence may be interpreted narrowly. The same wording is used in places in s 45(2) and s 4D that are unaffected by the Exposure Draft Bill. The drafters appear to want to leave open the possibility for the words in the existing civil penalty prohibitions under s 45(2) to be interpreted less restrictively than the same words used in connection with the new cartel offences. Of itself, this is understandable. However, it appears to overlook the requirement referred to in Pt 5.3.1 that, generally, where the same wording is used for the purposes of criminal and civil proscription, the same interpretation must be adopted in both contexts.

6. THE ELEMENT OF "INTENTION DISHONESTLY TO OBTAIN A BENEFIT"

6.1 Intention dishonestly to obtain a benefit as a prime element of the new cartel offences

The new cartel offences under ss 44ZZRF and 44ZZRRZG require an "intention dishonestly to obtain a benefit". This requirement is projected in the Discussion Paper as a prime element of the offences and a key point of differentiation between the cartel offences and the civil penalty prohibitions.

Under s 44ZZRB, "dishonest" means: (a) dishonest according to the standards of ordinary people; and

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(b) known by the defendant to be dishonest according to the standards of ordinary people.46

Under s 44ZZRHQ) the determination of dishonesty is a matter for the trier of fact.

Under s 44ZZRH(2) a corporation may be found guilty of an offence against s 44ZZRF or s 44ZZRG even if:

(a) obtaining the benefit is impossible;47 or

Under s 44ZZRH(3) a corporation cannot be found guilty of an offence against s 44ZZRF or s 4ZZRG if:

(a) all other parties to the contract, arrangement or understanding have been acquitted of such an offence; and
(b) a finding of guilt would be inconsistent with their acquittal.50

6.2 On what grounds is the requirement of dishonesty open to question?

Reliance on the requirement of an "intention dishonestly to obtain a benefit" to differentiate the new cartel offences from civil penalty prohibitions is open to question, on these grounds:51

46 This is based on the dishonesty test in R v Ghosh [1982] 2 All ER 68. Contrast the "ordinary decent people" formulation in Peters v The Queen (1998) 192 CLR 431; [1998] HCA 5 (Toohey and Gaudron JJ). The latter species is rumoured to be facing extinction in Australia.

"Contrast Criminal Code (Cth), s 11.5(3)(a) (a person may be found guilty of conspiracy to commit an offence even if "committing the offence" is impossible).
48 See the similar provision for conspiracy in Criminal Code (Cth), s 11.5(3)(c)(i).
49 See the similar provision for conspiracy in Criminal Code (Cth), s 11.5(4)(a).
50 See the similar provision for conspiracy in Criminal Code (Cth), s 11.5(4)(a).

31 For a detailed discussion, see Fisse, n 10. See also ACCC v Australian Abalone Pry Ltd [2007] FCA 1834 at [128]- [129]; Joshua J, "Norris v United States: A Stalking Horse for the Cartel Offence", Competition Law Insight (12 February 2008) p 11.

52 To borrow Ambrose Bierce's definition of deception, dishonesty is the soul of religion, the essence of commerce, and the bait
of courtship: The Devil's Dictionary (Dover Publications, 1958).

53 It is beyond the scope of this article to explore the possible complexity of the meaning of "benefit". Compare Steel A,
"Money for Nothing, Cheques for Free? The Meaning of Financial Advantage in Fraud Offences" [2007] MelbULawRw 8; (2007) 31 MULR 201.

54 See Office of Fair Trading, Proposed Criminalisation of Cartels in the UK, Report OFT 365 (2001); Department of Trade and
Industry White Paper, A World Class Competition Regime, Cm 5233 (2001); and the criticism in Fisse, n 10 at 252-253.

55 See Hatpin A, Definition in the Criminal Law (Hart Publishing, 2004) pp 150-166; Ashworth, n 8, pp 405-409; GriewEJ,
"Dishonesty: The Objections to Feely and Ghosh" [1985] Crim L Rev 341; Elliott DW, "Dishonesty in Theft: A Dispensable
Concept" [1982] Crim L Rev 395; Odgers, n 7, pp 33-36. The recent decision of the House of Lords in Norris v United States
[2008] UKHL 16 that simple price-fixing is not conspiracy to defraud compounds the ambiguity of "dishonesty" - ordinary
people might well believe that simple price-fixing is not dishonesty if such conduct does not amount to conspiracy to defraud at
common law.

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that even serious cartel conduct may not be regarded as "dishonest" by jurors.56 Another difficulty is the possibility of moral ambiguity about the wrongfulness as distinct from the legality of price-fixing, as in situations where the price-fixing has occurred during an economic downturn for the purpose of saving jobs.57 Christine Parker interviewed a sample of Australian business executives about their perceptions of the ACCC and its enforcement policy and practice. One interviewee was Robert Wilson, the managing director of Wilson Transformer Company, one of the transformer companies caught up in the transformer company cartel that led to substantial civil penalties against the companies and their senior executives.58 What he said when interviewed is an interesting cameo of the motivational complexity that can arise in cartels that, to the uninformed outsider, may seem blatant:59

Wilson Transformer Company, through Wilson, in fact, cooperated fully with the ACCC from the very day that the ACCC contacted him about the cartels. Yet Wilson had a very different view of the reasons for the breach than the ACCC. For Wilson, the motivations for doing something he knew to be illegal were complex and included patriotism and loyalty to his employees and a business that his father had started, as well as a rational calculation about the benefits versus the costs of doing so. He explained them in an interview:

The key reason for us to enter into those arrangements was not to make profits, but for survival and to retain jobs within Australia ... I am very emotionally committed to Australian manufacturing and keeping jobs here ... They [the distribution and power transformer cartels] were both driven by the need to ensure a reasonable base-load for the factories ... At the time I knew I was breaking the law. I knew all the basics of the TPA ... At that time we had gone from an employment high of 350 down to 190. I had been involved in retrenching people and that had involved a lot of pain ...

In that time fines were relatively small A$100,000. Fines that small were unquestionably palatable in the context.

• The requirement for dishonesty of "knowledge that the conduct was dishonest according to the standards of ordinary people" is a subjective test that will allow large and sophisticated corporations to deny liability and quite possibly obtain an acquittal on the basis of subjective beliefs about the morality of their conduct. One of many possibilities is that accused will argue that the price fixed with a competitor was a reasonable price and hence that the conduct was not known to be dishonest according to the standards or ordinary persons.60 Clearly such an argument is legally irrelevant under the definition of price-fixing in s 45A(1) of the Trade Practices Act and s 1 of the Sherman Act but would be relevant as a way of denying the element of dishonesty. In commenting on a previous version of this article,61 Heerey J has drawn attention to the jury direction that was upheld by the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in United States v Alston 974 F 2d 1206 at 1210 (1992):

Under the Sherman Act, price fixing is per se illegal. If you find there was a conspiracy to fix co-payment fees, it does not matter why the fees were fixed or whether they were too high or too low; reasonable or unreasonable; fair or unfair. It is not a defence to price fixing that the

56 Stephan A, Survey of Public Attitudes to Price-Fixing and Cartel Enforcement in Britain, CCP Working Paper 07-12 (2007),
http://www.papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=993407 viewed 14 February 2008 (only 60% of respondents in a
United Kingdom survey regarded price-fixing as dishonest); and see the discussion in Stephan A, "Lame Duck or Black
Mamba: Can the UK Cartel Offence Enhance Deterrence?", May 2008, Paper delivered at the 11th Competition Law Scholars
Forum, Strathclyde University, 11 April 2008 (copy on file with authors). See further Beaton-Wells, n 8; MacCullochA,
"Honesty, Morality and the Cartel Offence" (2007) 28 ECLR 353; Warin J, Burns D and Chesley J, "To Plead or Not to Plead?
Reviewing a Decade of Criminal Antitrust Trials" [2006] (July) The Antitrust Source 1 at 4.

57 Attorney-General (Cth) v Associated Northern Collieries (1911) 14 CLR 387; [1911] HCA 73 is one classic example.

38ACCC v ABB Transmission & Distribution Ltd (2001) ATPR 41-815; [2001] FCA 383; ACCC v ABB Transmission and Distribution Ltd (No 2) (2002) ATPR 41-872; [2002] FCA 559; ACCC v ABB Transmission and Distribution Ltd (2002) ATPR 41-871; [2002] FCA 558; ACCC v ABB Power Transmission Pty Ltd (2004) ATPR 42-011; [2004] FCA 819.

59 Parker CE, "The 'Compliance Trap': The Moral Message in Responsive Regulatory Enforcement" (2006) 40 Law & Soc Rev
591 at 607.

60 Under the Exposure Draft Bill, the requirement of dishonesty relates to the obtaining of a benefit; deception is insufficient.

61 See Heerey J's commentary on the original version of this article below at 248.

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defendants may have had good motives, or may have thought that what they were doing was legal, or that the conspiracy may have had some good results.

His Honour then emphasised that the position would be very different in the context of a cartel offence defined in terms of dishonesty:

The direction in Alston gives us a useful glimpse into the kind of issues that would inevitably arise in criminal trials for price fixing were a dishonesty element to be introduced. It is hard to argue with the proposition that a person is not dishonestly obtaining a gain if he or she thinks a price (albeit a fixed one) is reasonable and fair. Certainly one would expect defence counsel to put such a proposition to juries. What is a jury to take as reasonable or unreasonable or fair or unfair? Presumably the jury would have to be satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that the defendant did not actually believe that the prices were reasonable or fair and knew that "ordinary people" would not believe them to be reasonable or fair.

62 As confirmed by Stephan, n 56. See further Beaton-Wells, n 8; MacCulloch, n 56; Warin et al, n 56.

63 Recent cases illustrate the difficulties that can arise in complying with the dual criminality requirement under s 16(2)(a)(ii) of
the Extradition Act 1988 (Cth): Tervonen v Minister for Justice and Customs (No 2) [2007] FCA 1684; Williams v Minister for
Justice and Customs [2007] FCAFC 33. Contrast Riley v Commonwealth [1985] HCA 82; (1985) 159 CLR 1, which turned on earlier and
different extradition provisions. Contrast also Norris v United States [2008] UKHL 16, where the United States Department of
lustice failed in its attempt to rely on conspiracy to defraud to satisfy the dual criminal requirement under United Kingdom
extraction law. The Australian extradition laws remain under review: Attorney General's Department, A New Extradition
System: A Review of Australia's Extradition Laws and Practice (November 2005). The Exposure Draft Bill is not accompanied
by explanatory notes explaining the operation of the definition of the new cartel offences in the context of the Extradition Act
and Australia's extradition treaties and discussing whether or not it is believed that the definition of the new cartel offences may
give rise to problems of the kind illustrated by eg, Tervonen v Minister for Justice and Customs (No 2) [2007] FCA 1684;
Williams v Minister for Justice and Customs [2007] FCAFC 33.

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at the expense of those to whom they sell or that the benefit by a buying cartel must be made at the expense of those from whom they buy.64 For example, in the context of network arrangements (eg a national football code; a credit card network), pricing provisions are unlikely to be intended to obtain a gain from the persons with whom members of the network deal. It is much more likely that they are intended to enable the network better to compete against rival networks.65 Arguably, there should be a requirement of an intention to increase bargaining power at the expense of those with whom the cartel deals, not only for the new cartel offences but also for the new civil penalty prohibitions.

6.3 What justifications are advanced for including dishonesty as an element of the new cartel offences?

The Discussion Paper offers three justifications for including dishonesty as an element of the new cartel offences:

These attempted justifications lack persuasion. 6.3.1 Comparisons need to be properly conceived and articulated

Comparison with other offences under Commonwealth law is misguided and misleading unless the basis for comparison is properly conceived, articulated and then applied in a transparent and cogent way. The comparison should be based on the relevant subject matter of the offences instead of an inarticulate assumption that a cartel offence is somehow an offence of dishonesty or akin to a breach of directors' duties. The following questions need to be asked:

Some say that a cartel offence is a species of theft.66 This is true in a sense but the comparison does not capture the essence of a cartel offence. Price-fixing and other forms of serious cartel conduct are concerned most fundamentally with unjustified interference with competitive market forces.67 Although price-fixing is often referred to by the ACCC Chairman as "theft", this analogy is not one of judicial choice. Rather, in setting penalties in cartel cases, judges often encapsulate the "harm" caused by such conduct in terms that refer to the distortion of or interference with the competitive process.68 The interference with market forces may, but need not necessarily, result in benefits to cartellists or losses to their victims. The essence is interference with, or subversion of, the competitive process as

64 Compare the possible implication of the former Treasurer's Press Release of 2 February 2005, as discussed in Fisse, n 10 at
242-243.

65 For further examples, see Fisse, n 10 at 243.

66 Similarly, market manipulation and other offences might be described loosely as involving "fraud on a market", in the sense
relevant under United States securities law. However, fraud on a market is very different from dishonesty in the Ghosh sense: it
does not require that the conduct was dishonest according to the standards of ordinary people, nor that the defendant knew that
the conduct was dishonest according to those standards. See further CAMAC, Discussion Paper, Shareholder Claims Against
Insolvent Companies: Implications of the Sons of Gwalia Decision (Sept 2007) Ch 9.

61 See ACCC v CC (NSW) Pty Ltd (1999) 92 FCR 375; [1999 FCA 954 at [182]; United States v Container Corp of America [1969] USSC 10; 393 US 333 at 337 (1969); United States v Socony-Vacuum Oil Co Inc [1940] USSC 110; 310 US 150 at 224 fn 59 (1940); Re Insurance Council of New Zealand (Inc) (1989) 2 NZBLC (Com) 99-522 at 104,482.

68 See eg ACCC v McMahon Services Pty Ltd (ACN 008 274 020) (No 1) (2004) ATPR 42-022; [2004] FCA 1171 at [76]; ACCC v Leahy Petroleum (No 2) (2005) 215 ALR 281; [2005] FCA 254 at [15]; ACCC v Visy Holdings Pty Ltd No 3 (2007) ATPR 42-185; [2007] FCA 1617 at [306].

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distinct from acquisition of property or causing a financial or other loss. An intention to obtain a benefit does not go to the heart of the subject matter because the subversion of the competitive process is the core harm and that core harm is inflicted whether or not the subversion is intended to result in the obtaining of a benefit or the causing of a loss.

Dishonesty is also incongruent with the core harm addressed by a cartel offence. The concept of dishonesty relates, not to interference with or subversion of market forces, but to a breach of an obligation to act honestly in: (a) one's dealings with another's property or information; or (b) in the conduct of a public or corporate office that is subject to a fiduciary duty to act in good faith and not for one's own interests. From this perspective, requiring an "intention dishonestly to obtain a benefit" is not true to the subject matter of the proposed cartel offences; indeed, it is a category mistake. The category mistake would be more obvious if, true to the element of an "intention dishonestly to obtain a benefit", the new cartel offences were to be located in Pt 7.2 of the Criminal Code (Cth) (Theft and other property offences), Pt 7.3 of the Criminal Code (Cth) (Fraudulent conduct, or Pt 2D.1 of the Corporations Act (Duties and Powers).

The point made above is supported by comparing offences under Commonwealth law that are concerned with the subject matter of interference with, or subversion of, markets and other systems essential to the effective functioning of the economy or polity:

In the authors' view, it is misleading to suggest that the proposed cartel offences are more closely comparable to theft and offences relating to directors' duties than they are to offences that relate to interference with, or subversion or distortion of, market mechanisms or institutional systems. To treat

69 For insider trading, see Black A, "The Reform of Insider Trading Law in Australia" [1992] UNSWLawJl 10; (1992) 15 UNSWLJ 214. For market
manipulation, see Loke A, Common Origins, Different Destinies: Investors' Rights against Market Manipulation in the UK,
Australia and Singapore (2007) at http://www.users.austlii.edu.au/clta/docs/pdf/2007-cof-papers/loke.pdf. Note that market
manipulation and market rigging may be committed collusively by competitors in a way that is similar to price fixing. Consider
eg the alleged collusion between hedge funds to depress share prices by means of short selling, an allegation currently under
investigation by ASIC and the ASX: "ASX Probes Hedge Collusion", The Australian (15 February 2008).

70 A desperate advocate of dishonesty as an element of the new cartel offences might possibly contend that dishonesty should be
an element of insider trading and other offences of market abuse. However, the argument would require a sudden and spectacular
transmogrification: the offences in question are long-standing and there is no apparent move to transform them into offences
requiring dishonesty. For example, no such suggestion is mentioned in the extensive re-consideration of insider trading in
Corporations and Markets Advisory Committee, Insider Trading Report (2003). Moreover, given the notorious difficulty of
proving liability for such offences currently, adding a requirement of dishonesty would make the offences a complete dead letter.

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cartel offences as falling within the same category as offences of dishonesty is to confuse two very different subject matters. From this perspective, a requirement of an "intention dishonestly to obtain a benefit" is misguided. This is readily apparent from examples of price-fixing where the intention of the colluding competitors is not to obtain a benefit in any substantial sense but where there is nonetheless a serious interference with competitive market forces. Assume that: (a) competitors A and B fix the price at which they will acquire widgets from C; (b) their intention is to prevent C from making what they believe to be an unjustified margin; (c) if they paid C's higher asking price they could and would pass on the higher cost to their own customers without losing market share. In this example and, in the authors' view in all cases of price-fixing, criminal liability should not require an intention to obtain a benefit or cause a loss: the gravamen of a cartel offence is intentional interference with competitive market forces, not the extraneous motives or ulterior intentions of the colluding competitors. Distortion of market forces through price-fixing or other serious cartel conduct may coincide with an intention to obtain a benefit in most cases but it need not do so. Moreover, an intention to obtain a benefit in itself is innocuous - such an intention is genetically imprinted in the rational economic actor and is the widespread object of encouragement and admiration in a market economy.

The recent decision of the House of Lords in Norris v United States [2008] UKHL 1671 highlights the error of attempting to transform price-fixing into an offence of dishonest acquisition of property. The House of Lords squarely rejected the view that simple price-fixing is a conspiracy to defraud. In this case, the extradition request by the United States Department of Justice had to show that the price-fixing conduct alleged against Mr Norris in the United States would be an extraditable offence under United Kingdom law if the conduct had occurred in the United Kingdom. The requirement of dual criminality could not be met on the basis of the cartel offence under s 188(1) of the Enterprise Act (2002) (UK) because that offence was introduced in 2002 and did not exist at the time of the alleged price-fixing. The extradition request was framed on the basis that the alleged price fixing would amount to a conspiracy to defraud if the conduct had occurred in the United Kingdom. The Divisional Court upheld the request for extradition on the basis that a secret price-fixing agreement inherently involved dishonesty and amounted to a conspiracy to defraud at common law. The House of Lords overturned that decision on the ground that the conduct alleged in the indictment would not amount to a conspiracy to defraud at common law.72 It was held that conspiracy to defraud requires more than simply an agreement in secret to fix prices - there must be deception or misrepresentation in addition to any false impression created by a simple price-fixing agreement.73 Accordingly, cases of simple yet serious price fixing do not amount to a conspiracy to defraud under UK common law.

6.3.2 There is only one international precedent

The "international precedent" for making "dishonesty" an element of a cartel offence is limited to the United Kingdom. The United Kingdom Office of Fair Trading (OFT) has said that it has not experienced difficulty in prosecuting offenders for the dishonesty-based offence under the Enterprise Act 2002 (UK).74 However, that observation hardly justifies the inclusion of dishonesty as an element of a cartel offence given that:

71 See also R v GG pic [2008] UKHL 17.

72 The House of Lords disagreed with the view of conspiracy to defraud taken in Lever J and Pike J, "Cartel Agreements,
Criminal Conspiracy and the Statutory 'Cartel Offence'" (2005) 26 ECLR 90 at 164. See further Joshua J, "Dishonesty after
Norris: Is the Cartel Offence the Phantom Ship of Antitrust?", Competition Law Insight (8 April 2008) p 13; Joshua, n 51.

73 Conspiracy to defraud has further features that govern the scope of liability. First, conspiracy to defraud at common law
requires an intention to create a false impression and thereby to induce victims to act on the basis of that false impression -
dishonesty relates to the false impression, not the obtaining of a benefit. The same is true of the cartel offence under s 188(1) of
the Enterprise Act 2002 (UK). By contrast, the cartel offences in the Exposure Draft Bill would require an intention dishonestly
to obtain a benefit - dishonesty relates to the obtaining of a benefit as well as to the intended mode of acquisition of a benefit
(see eg R v Love (1989) 17 NSWLR 608). The same is true of conspiracy to defraud under s 135.4 of the Criminal Code (Cth).
Secondly, conspiracy to defraud under s 135.4 of the Criminal Code (Cth) is limited to situations where the intended victim is
a Commonwealth entity.

74 This observation was made at the recent ABA International Cartel Workshop, San Francisco, 31 January - 2 February 2008,
by the OFT spokesperson at the enforcer's roundtable session.

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In France, there are two cartel offences that require fraud,77 but jury trial does not apply to those offences. By contrast, dishonesty is not an element of cartel offences in the overwhelming majority of jurisdictions that have criminalised serious cartel conduct. Those jurisdictions include the United States, Canada, Japan and Korea.

The contention in the Discussion Paper that no distinction is made between criminal and civil liability in the definition of cartel conduct in s 1 of the Sherman Act 1890 (US) is literally correct but does not disclose the fact that the fault element required for criminal liability under s 1 is different from and more demanding than that sufficient for civil liability.78 Section 1 has been interpreted by the United States Supreme Court as requiring a more stringent fault element for the purposes of criminal liability. In United States v United States Gypsum Co, [1978] USSC 150; 438 US 422 at 438-443 (1978), the Supreme Court held that criminal liability under s 1 required proof of intention or knowledge of the probable consequences (in the case of price-fixing, knowledge of the probability that the arrangement would result in the fixing of prices).79

6.3.3 A statutory element of dishonesty is not required to deter and educate

There is no apparent substance in the suggestion in the Discussion Paper that the deterrent and educative value of the new cartel offences is contingent on including dishonesty as an element of the offence. Each of the relevant physical acts involved in the new cartel offences (eg price-fixing and market division) is inherently morally wrongful because they entail one or more of cheating, deception or stealing (in the fundamental moral rather than technical legal sense). Accordingly, there is no

75 The prosecutions arise from the marine hoses cartel. See further Bavasso A, Mansfield P and Tolley L, The UK Cartel
Offence: Are the First Prosecutions Round the Corner? (20 December 2007), http://www.allenovery.com/AOWEB/ Areas OfExpertise/Editorial.aspx?contentTvpeID=l&contentSubTvpeID=7944&itemID=40532&aofeID=
38891&prefLangID=410 viewed 14 February 2008.

76 See also R v GG pic [2008] UKHL 17.

77 Article L.420-6 of the Commercial Code imposes liability on a natural person who "fraudulently takes a personal and decisive
part in the conception, organisation or implementation of the practices referred to in Articles L.420-1 and L.420-2".
Article 313-6 of the Penal Code creates a bid-rigging offence: "In a public sale or tendering process, the rejection of a bid or
tender, or the restriction of bids or tenders, by gifts, promises, understandings or any other fraudulent means, is punished by six
months' imprisonment and a fine of €22,500."

78 A similar error is apparent in the statement in Norris v United States [2008] UKHL 16 at [4] that the offence under s 1 of the
Sherman Act is an offence of "strict liability".

19 See further American Bar Association, Criminal Antitrust Litigation Handbook (2nd ed, 2006) pp 301-303.

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obvious need to superimpose a requirement of dishonesty. Additionally, there are many ways in which the criminality of serious cartel conduct can and should be signalled.81 They include:

7. THE FAULT ELEMENTS OF THE NEW CARTEL OFFENCES 7.1 Outline of the fault elements of the new cartel offences

The new cartel offences under ss 44ZZRF and 44ZZRG have five main fault elements:

(1) the fault element in relation to: (a) the making of a contract or arrangement or the arriving at an understanding; and (b) the giving effect to a cartel provision;
(2) the fault element in relation to the purpose/effect condition of the cartel provision;
(3) the fault element in relation to the competition condition of the cartel provision;

The Exposure Draft Bill does not define fault elements (l)-(3) explicitly except to the extent that the wording "provision has the purpose" in s 44ZZRD(2) refers to a mental state as distinct from the objective purpose or a provision.

Under s 6AA(1) of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth), the default fault elements under the Criminal Code (Cth) will apply unless excluded. Under the Criminal Code (Cth), an offence consists of physical elements and fault elements. A physical element of an offence may be "conduct", "a result of conduct" or "a circumstance in which conduct, or a result of conduct, occurs". The default fault element for conduct is intention. The default fault element for a result of conduct is recklessness. The default fault element for a circumstance is recklessness.

Intention is defined by s 5.2(3) of the Criminal Code (Cth) as follows:

A person has intention with respect to a result if he or she means to bring it about or is aware that it will occur in the ordinary course of events.

The requirement of an intention dishonestly to obtain a benefit is an ulterior intention that, on one view, is not subject to the definition of intention in s 5.2(3) of the Criminal Code (Cth) and bears its dictionary meaning.83

Recklessness is defined in s 5.4(2) of the Criminal Code (Cth) with respect to a result as requiring that:

(a) the accused be aware of a substantial risk that the result will occur; and
(b) having regard to the circumstances known to him or her, it is unjustifiable to take the risk.

80 See Beaton-Wells, n 8 at 698-701.
81 See the cartel offences suggested in Fisse, n 1, Pt 3.1.
82 See further Odgers, n 7, pp 33-36.

83 Attorney-General's Department, The Commonwealth Criminal Code: A Guide for Practitioners (2002) p 53. For the opposing
view that the Code definition of intention applies more generally and to an ulterior intention of the kind relevant here, see
Odgers, n 7, pp 36-38.

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Recklessness is defined in s 5.4(1) of the Criminal Code (Cth) in relation to a circumstance as requiring that:

(a) the accused be aware of a substantial risk that the circumstance exists or will exist; and
(b) having regard to the circumstances known to him or her, it is unjustifiable to take that risk.

Making a contract or arrangement or arriving at an understanding, or giving effect to a provision, may be characterised as a conduct element rather than as a circumstance.84 If so, intention will be required as to that element.

The cartel offence under s 44ZZRF requires that the CAU "contain a cartel provision" (s 44ZZRF(l(b)). Presumably this element is a circumstance, and requires recklessness as defined in s 5.4(1) of the Criminal Code.

The "purpose of a provision" in the definition of the purpose/effect condition in s 44ZZRD(2) could be characterised as a specific fault element (ie requiring purpose in the sense of intention).85 However, if "purpose of a provision" is interpreted as meaning the objective purpose of a provision, this element could be characterised as a circumstance and recklessness would be the relevant fault element.

The effect element of the purpose/effect condition required for a cartel provision as defined in s 44ZZRD(2) appears to be a result of conduct. If so, recklessness is the relevant fault element in relation to that element.

The competition condition required for a cartel provision as defined in s 44ZZRD(3) appears to be a circumstance. If so, recklessness is the relevant fault element.

7.2 Undue complexity of the fault elements for the new cartel offences?

The combination of complex definition of the physical elements of the new cartel offences and the intricacy of the Criminal Code (Cth) specification of varying fault elements depending on whether the relevant physical element is to be characterised as conduct, a result of conduct or a circumstance is unwieldy and may prove difficult for trial judges to convey to juries effectively.86

7.3 Questionable use of "purpose of a provision" as a definitional element?

The wording "purpose of a provision" is likely to occasion much the same difficulty of interpretation and application as that now occasioned by the use of the same wording in ss 45 and 4D.

The wording was interpreted as requiring a common purpose in Carlton & United Breweries (NSW) Pty Ltd v Bond Brewing NSW Ltd (1987) ATPR 40-820 at [48,880]. By contrast, in ASX Operations Pty Ltd v Font Data Australia Pty Ltd (1990) 27 FCR 460 the Full Federal Court took the view that the purpose of a provision could be anti-competitive where only one of the alleged parties had a subjective anti-competitive purpose.87 By further contrast, in Seven Network Ltd v News Ltd [2007] FCA 1062 at [2402] ff, Sackville J adopted the interpretation that the relevant purpose must be shared by "each of the parties responsible for including" the relevant anti-competitive provision in an agreement as distinct from the parties to the alleged agreement. The interpretation adopted in Seven Network Ltd v News Ltd raises the difficulty of determining which parties are to be taken as being "responsible for including" the relevant anti-competitive provision in an agreement.

If the words "purpose of a provision" are taken to mean the purpose of the parties "responsible for including" the alleged cartel provision in a contract, arrangement or understanding, the relevant fault element in relation to this circumstance will be recklessness. This means that the prosecution must prove that the accused was aware of a substantial risk that those particular parties acted with the purpose of bringing about the results specified in s 44ZZRD(2).

84 R v Saengsai-Or (2004) 61 NSWLR; 147 A Crim R 172.

85 See Lee v The Queen (2007) 170 A Crim R 287; [2007] NSWCCA 71.

86 It is possible that some of the physical elements could be treated as one or more composite elements (compare R v
Saengsai-Or [2004] NSWCCA 108; (2004) 61 NSWLR 135; 147 A Crim R 172; R v Cao (2006) 65 NSWLR 552; [2006] NSWCCA 89); if so, perhaps
the fault elements could be specified more simply but query to what legitimate extent.

87 See the criticism in Robertson D, "The Primacy of Purpose in Competition Law - Pt 1" (2001) 9 CCLJ 4 at [71]-[72].

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It is far from apparent why the reconstruction of the words "purpose of a provision" in ASX Operations Pty Ltd v Pont Data Australia Pty Ltd and Seven Network Ltd v News Ltd should apply to the new cartel offences, especially given that these offences carry the possibility of a jail sentence.

In the context of civil penalty prohibitions, it is difficult to understand why the opportunity has not been taken in the Exposure Draft Bill to replace the wording "purpose of a provision" with a simpler concept such as a requirement that two or more parties acted with a common purpose.88

7.4 Is "recklessness" too far-reaching or too uncertain a fault element?

The definition of recklessness under the Criminal Code (Cth) requires an awareness of a substantial risk and taking an unjustified risk given the circumstances known to the defendant.89 The definition of the relevant degree of risk is not identical to the degree of risk required by s 44ZZRB in relation to the meaning of "likely" for the purposes of the definition of a cartel provision under s 44ZZRD ("likely" includes a risk that is "possible but not remote").

The degree of risk of which the accused must be aware for recklessness under the Criminal Code (Cth) is low. By contrast, in United States v United States Gypsum Co [1978] USSC 150; 438 US 422 (1978), the United States Supreme Court held that the offence under s 1 of the Sherman Act 1890 (US) required proof of intention or knowledge of the probable consequences (in the case of price-fixing, knowledge of the probability that the arrangement would result in the fixing of prices).

The unjustifiable risk element in recklessness under s 5.4(2) of the Criminal Code requires the jury to make a moral or value judgment about the conduct in issue.90 This opens the way for defendants charged with the cartel offences to deny liability on the basis that their conduct was socially or morally justifiable because, eg, the price fixed was a "reasonable price" or that market sharing was needed to save jobs during an economic downturn. The resulting uncertainty and difficulty of application are similar to the uncertainty and difficulty of applying the concept of dishonesty, as discussed in Pt 6.2.

7.5 Alternative possible approaches?

One alternative possible approach to the definition of the fault elements of the new cartel offences would be to require a common intention to; (a) enter into a CAU containing a cartel provision; and (b) achieve one or more of the objects specified as effects in the definition of a cartel provision under s 44ZZRD(2).91

Sections 188(1) and (2) of the Enterprise Act 2002 (UK) require an intention on the part of each and every accused to achieve the price-fixing, bid-rigging or other particular form of cartel conduct alleged. In Gerakiteys v The Queen [1984] HCA 8; (1983) 153 CLR 317 the High Court of Australia held that conspiracy at common law requires that all parties to a conspiracy have a mutually shared intention to achieve the object of the conspiracy.92

The main advantage of this suggested approach is that it would help to simplify directions to juries on the fault elements of the new cartel offences.

A requirement of a common purpose would also serve as one way of differentiating the cartel offences from civil penalty prohibitions.

88 Compare the fault element of conspiracy under the Criminal Code (Cth), s 11.5(2)(b), and the competition condition as
defined in s 44ZZRD(3) of the Exposure Draft Bill.

89 Criminal Code (Cth), s 5.4. For an incisive critique of the concept of recklessness in Australian criminal law, see
Leader-Elliott I, "Recklessness and the Moral Desiccation of the Australian Law of Murder", in Horder J (ed), Homicide Law in
Comparative Perspective (Hart Publishing, 2007).
90R v Saensai-Or [2004] NSWCCA 108; (2004) 61 NSWLR 135 at [70]; Odgers, n 7, pp 46-47.
91 See further Fisse, n 1, Pt 3.1 (copy on file with authors).

92 See further Fisse, Howard's Criminal Law (5th ed, Lawbook Co, 1990) pp 370-375.

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All the fault elements, including the default fault elements that apply by reason of the operation of the Criminal Code (Cth), should be stated explicitly in the definition of the new cartel offences.93

Account should be taken of the views expressed by the United States Supreme Court in United States v United States Gypsum Co [1978] USSC 150; 438 US 422 at 445-446 (1978) as to the suitability or otherwise of intention as the fault element of the offences under s 1 of the Sherman Act 1890 (US):

The business behavior which is likely to give rise to criminal antitrust charges is conscious behavior normally undertaken only after a full consideration of the desired results and a weighing of the costs, benefits, and risks. A requirement of proof not only of this knowledge of likely effects, but also of a conscious desire to bring them to fruition or to violate the law would seem, particularly in such a context, both unnecessarily cumulative and unduly burdensome. Where carefully planned and calculated conduct is being scrutinized in the context of a criminal prosecution, the perpetrator's knowledge of the anticipated consequences is a sufficient predicate for a finding of criminal intent.

However, these views of the United States Supreme Court do not mean that intention is unworkable as a fault element of a cartel offence in Australia. First, if "intention" is defined to mean that a person "has intention with respect to a result if he or she means to bring it about or is aware that it will occur in the ordinary course of events", as under s 5.2(3) of the Criminal Code (Cth), there is no need for proof of a "conscious desire to bring [a result such as price-fixing] to fruition". Secondly, the Supreme Court's reluctance to require an intention to bring about "a restraint of trade" is readily understandable in the context of s 1 of the Sherman Act given that such a fault element would be value-laden and ill-defined; no such value-laden definition is on the drawing board in Australia.94 Thirdly, there is no suggestion in Australia that a requirement of intention would enable an accused to deny liability on the basis of ignorance or mistake of law - see s 9.3 of the Criminal Code (Cth).

8. INDIVIDUAL LIABILITY FOR THE NEW CARTEL OFFENCES AS A PRINCIPAL OFFENDER

8.1 Elements of individual liability for the new cartel offences

By virtue of s 6 (as proposed to be amended) there will be certain limited circumstances in which the new cartel offences and civil penalty prohibitions under the new Div 1 of Pt IV will apply to persons other than corporations. Generally otherwise, the Schedule version of the cartel offences and civil penalty prohibitions will apply to a "person".

Accordingly, the physical elements required for individual liability as a principal offender are making a contract or arrangement, or arriving at an understanding, that contains a cartel provision, or giving effect to a cartel provision.

The fault elements required for liability for the new cartel offences are as discussed in Pt 7.

Section 84(3) imposes vicarious responsibility upon an individual in relation to a state of mind: (3) If, in:

(a) a prosecution for an offence against s 44ZZRF or s 44ZZRG in respect of conduct engaged in by a person other than a body corporate; or
(b) ...;

it is necessary to establish the state of mind of the person, it is sufficient to show that:

(c) an employee or agent of the person engaged in that conduct; and
(e) the employee or agent had that state of mind.

Section 84(4) imposes vicarious responsibility in relation to conduct.

However, under s 84(4A) an individual is not subject to jail where vicarious responsibility is imposed under s 84(3) or (4): (4A) If:

93 Consistently with the approach recommended in Australian Law Reform Commission, n 21, at [11.54].

94 See eg the offences of collusive market subversion suggested in Fisse, n 1, Pt 3.1 (copy on file with authors).

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(a) a person other than a body corporate is convicted of an offence; and

8.2 Will superior managers in corporations be able to avoid liability for the
new cartel offences as a result of the way in which individual liability as a
principal offender is defined?

Superior managers in a corporation may not make a contract or arrangement or arrive at an understanding or give effect to a cartel provision themselves. They may authorise or condone such conduct. However, ss 44ZZRF and 44ZZRG do not define liability in terms of authorising, permitting or allowing the making of a contract or arrangement, the arriving at an understanding or the giving effect to a cartel provision.

Superior managers in a corporation will not be employers or principals and hence will not be subject to vicarious responsibility under s 84(3) or (4). Liability will depend on secondary (accessorial) liability as an accomplice or person knowingly concerned in an offence. Liability as a secondary party will require knowledge of all the "essential matters" constituting the principal offence,95 including knowledge that the contract, arrangement or understanding will result in price-fixing, or another effect specified as a required effect in the definition of a cartel provision in s 44ZZRD(2). It is questionable why superior managers should be exposed to liability only on the basis of knowledge when the lower-level employees who engage in the conduct of making a contract or arrangement or arriving at an understanding can be held liable on the basis of recklessness as to that conduct resulting in price fixing or another effect defined in s 44ZZRD(2).

Another question is whether or not managerial or other employees will be able to escape liability as principal offenders on the basis that the only parties that are "in competition with each other" within the meaning of s 44ZZRD(3) are their corporate employers. This escape route seems open under the Exposure Draft Bill. Nonetheless, they will be subject to liability on the basic of secondary liability for an offence committed by their corporation (eg if they are knowingly concerned in the corporation's offence - s 79(1 )(c)).

8.3 Should individual employers or principals be subject to vicarious criminal
liability for the conduct and/or states of mind of their employees or
agents?

Section 84(3) and (4) imposes vicarious criminal responsibility but jail is excluded by s 84(4A) where vicarious responsibility is imposed. This approach is consistent with the imposition of vicarious criminal responsibility on individual persons in relation to offences relating to unfair practices under Pt VC of the Trade Practices Act (see also s 12GH of the Australian Securities and Investment Commission Act 2001 (Cth)) and offences under Ch 7 of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) (s 769A). Nonetheless, vicarious criminal responsibility is inconsistent with the general principle that criminal responsibility is personal not vicarious.96 The approach taken under the Exposure Draft Bill and the existing s 83(3)-(4) clashes with the view expressed in the recent report of the Corporations and Markets Advisory Committee that corporate officers should not be subject to criminal liability on a strict or automatic basis and that liability should require participation and fault as an accessory under the general principles of criminal responsibility for complicity.97

The departure from the general principle of criminal responsibility that responsibility is personal, not vicarious, is also inconsistent with the ideal of maintaining a clear and principled differentiation between criminal and civil prohibitions - see Pt 3.

95 Rural Press Ltd v ACCC [2003] HCA 75; (2003) 216 CLR 53; 203 ALR 217; Yorke v Lucas [1985] HCA 65; (1985) 158 CLR 661; 61 ALR 307.

96 Williams G, Criminal Law: The General Part (2nd ed, Stevens & Sons, 1961) Ch 7.

97 Corporations and Markets Advisory Committee, Report on Personal Liability for Corporate Fault (September 2006)
pp 33-36, http://www.camac.gov.au/CAMAC/camac.nsf/byHeadline/ Whats+NewPersonal+Liabilitv+for+corporate+fault+Report?openDocument viewed 13 February 2008.

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9. CORPORATE LIABILITY FOR THE NEW CARTEL OFFENCES AS A PRINCIPAL OFFENDER

9.1 Elements of corporate liability for the new cartel offences

The physical elements of the new cartel offences are making a contract or arrangement, or arriving at an understanding that contains a cartel provision, or giving effect to a cartel provision.

The fault elements are as described in Pt 7.

The fault elements are attributable to a corporation on the basis on vicarious responsibility under s 84(1), which provides: (1) If, in:

(a) a prosecution for an offence against s 44ZZRF or 44ZZRG in respect of conduct engaged in by a body corporate; or
(b) ...;

it is necessary to establish the state of mind of the body corporate, it is sufficient to show that:

(c) a director, employee or agent of the body corporate engaged in that conduct; and
(e) the director, employee or agent had that state of mind.

The physical elements are attributable vicariously to a corporation under s 84(2).

The Criminal Code (Cth) provisions on corporate criminal responsibility under Pt 2.5 of the Code do not apply: s 6AA(2) of the Exposure Draft Bill.

"Party" is given an extended meaning under s 44ZZRC:

For the purposes of this Division, if a body corporate is a party to a contract, arrangement or understanding (otherwise than because of this section), each body corporate related to that body corporate is taken to be a party to that contract, arrangement or understanding.

9.2 Why have the Criminal Code (Cth) provisions on corporate criminal
responsibility not been followed in relation to the fault elements of the new
cartel offences?

The main possible options for the attribution of responsibility to corporations for the new cartel offences are:

(1) vicarious responsibility under s 84(1) and (2) of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth);

Option (1), as adopted under the Exposure Draft Bill, has given the ACCC a low barrier to clear when seeking to establish liability for civil penalties and remedies in the past. However, vicarious liability is a form of strict liability and is inconsistent with the general principle that criminal responsibility is personal, not vicarious, and requires fault (see Pt 8.2.2).

Option (2) follows the general principle of corporate responsibility under s 12.3 of the Criminal Code (Cth) that seeks to reflect the concept of corporate blameworthiness by requiring fault that is corporate in nature rather than merely fault on the part of "a directing mind" under the principle in Tesco Supermarkets Ltd v Nattrass [1971] UKHL 1; [1972] AC 153. The Criminal Code (Cth) provisions depart from the Tesco principle in two main ways:

• The physical elements of an offence are attributable to a corporation on a much broader basis than under the directing mind principle. It is unnecessary to prove that a representative who is the directing mind of the corporation engaged in the relevant conduct. It is sufficient that the conduct is committed by an employee, agent or officer of a body corporate acting within the actual or apparent scope of her or his employment, or within her or his actual or apparent authority (s 12.2).

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The fault element of an offence is attributable to a corporation on a different basis than under the directing mind principle. Under s 12.3(1), if intention, knowledge or recklessness is a fault element in relation to a physical element of an offence, that fault element is attributable to a body corporate that expressly, tacitly or impliedly authorised or permitted the commission of the offence. Section 12.3(2) provides that this corporate fault element can be established by:

(a) proving that the body corporate's board of directors intentionally, knowingly or recklessly carried out the relevant conduct, or expressly, tacitly or impliedly authorised or permitted the commission of the offence; or
(b) proving that a high managerial agent of the body corporate intentionally, knowingly or recklessly engaged in the relevant conduct, or expressly, tacitly or impliedly authorised or permitted the commission of the offence (corporate responsibility on this basis does not apply if the body corporate proves that it "exercised due diligence to prevent the conduct, or the authorisation or permission"); or
(c) proving that a corporate culture existed within the body corporate that directed, encouraged, tolerated or led to non-compliance with the relevant provision; or
(d) proving that the body corporate failed to create and maintain a corporate culture that required compliance with the relevant provision.

The Criminal Code (Cth) provisions would raise a considerable barrier for the prosecution in the context of cartel conduct:

The prosecution would face much less of a hurdle under option (3). Under option (3), vicarious responsibility would be imposed on a corporation subject to a defence that the corporation took reasonable precautions and exercised due diligence to avoid the conduct. This is the pragmatic approach adopted in ss 44ZZO and 152EO of the Trade Practices Act and in provisions governing corporate criminal responsibility in numerous Acts of the Commonwealth of Australia.100

On the other hand, numerous Commonwealth statutes do apply the principles of corporate fault under Pt 2.5 of the Criminal Code (Cth) rather than merely providing for a defence of corporate reasonable precautions.

It may be objected that a defence of reasonable corporate precautions would be too lax. There are two main responses: (1) The criminal law is not simply a variant of, or quick and easy substitute for, civil penalty liability.

It is a distinctive and potent form of social control the distinctiveness and stigmatic potency of

98 Under s 12.3(6), "high managerial agent means an employee, agent or officer of the body corporate with duties of such responsibility that his or her conduct may fairly be assumed to represent the body corporate's policy". Contrast the avoidance of this concept in the statutory model set out in Fisse B, "The Attribution of Criminal Liability to Corporations" (1991) 13 Syd LR
277.

"See the useful critique in SmircichL, "Concepts of Culture and Organizational Analysis" (1983) 28 Administrative Science Quarterly 339.

100 As at 14 February 2008, the authors' research indicates that a defence of reasonable corporate precautions is available under over 40 Commonwealth statutes. See eg, Financial Transactions Reports Act 1988 (Cth), s 34; Privacy Act 1988 (Cth), s 99A; Life Insurance Act 1995 (Cth), s 250; Petroleum Excise (Prices) Act 1987 (Cth), s 11; Weapons of Mass Destruction (Prevention of Proliferation) Act 1995 (Cth), s 15.

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which depends on limited use and many long-accepted general principles and special rules, including the general principle that criminal liability requires personal fault.101 If the need to impose vicarious responsibility is compelling, the least drastic and appropriate solution is to rely on civil penalties.102 (2) The courts have been increasingly critical of attempts to mitigate penalty in civil penalty proceedings on the basis that the corporation had a compliance program. There are numerous examples where compliance programs have been examined sceptically and where it is unlikely in the extreme that the defendant could show that reasonable precautions had been taken.103

9.3 Why extend criminal liability to related corporations as parties to a contract, arrangement or understanding rather than on the basis of secondary liability under s 79?

The provision in s 44ZZRC that deems a related corporation to be a party to a contract, arrangement or understanding entered into by another related corporation is potentially far-reaching.

Unlike liability for being knowingly concerned in an offence under s 79(1 )(c), liability for a new cartel offence will not require proof that the accused related corporation was concerned in and had a "practical connection" with the offence. Nor will liability for the new cartel offence under s 44ZZRF require knowledge by the accused related corporation that a CAU entered into by a subsidiary contains a cartel provision:104 recklessness will be sufficient in relation to that circumstance and recklessness as defined in s 5.4(1) of the Criminal Code requires merely the accused be "aware of a substantial risk that the circumstance exists or will exist" and "having regard to the circumstances known to him or her, it is unjustifiable to take that risk".

10. EXEMPTIONS AND DEFENCES

10.1 Exemptions and defences under the Exposure Draft Bill

The Exposure Draft Bill provides for these exemptions:

The Exposure Draft Bill contains other changes relating to exemptions and defences:

101 See Ashworth, n 8, Chs 2-3.

102 See Australia, Minister for Justice and Customs, Guide to Framing Commonwealth Offences, Civil Penalties and
Enforcement Powers (February 2004) p 58.

103 See especially ACCC v Australian Safeway Stores Pty Ltd (No 4) (2006) ATPR 41-101 at [62]-[67]; ACCC v George Weston
Foods Ltd [2000] FCA 690; (2000) ATPR 41-763 at [48]; ACCC v Leahy Petroleum Pty Ltd (No 2) [2005] FCA 254; (2005) ATPR 42-051 at [12], [51]; ACCC v
Visy Industries Holdings Pty Ltd (No 3) (2007) ATPR 42-185; [2007] FCA 1617 at [319]. See also ASIC v Chemeq Ltd [2006)
FCA 936
.

1<M If criminal liability were to be limited to liability as a secondary party under s 79 of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth), a related corporation would be liable only if it had knowledge of the "essential matters" constituting the principal offence, as distinct from merely recklessness as to those matters. See Giorgianni v The Queen [1985] HCA 29; (1985) 156 CLR 473; Yorke v Lucas [1985] HCA 65; (1985) 158 CLR 661; Rural Press Ltd v ACCC [2003] HCA 75; (2003) 216 CLR 53; Fisse B, "Complicity in Regulatory Offences" [1968] MelbULawRw 3; (1968) 6 MULR 278.

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10.2 Why is there no joint venture defence to the new cartel offences?

Section 44ZZRO provides for a joint venture defence akin to (but not identical with) the joint venture defences under ss 76C and 76D. However, the s 44ZZRO defence applies only to the civil penalty prohibitions under ss 44ZZRJ and 44ZZRK - it does not apply to the new cartel offences under ss 44ZZRF and 44ZZRG.

This is a highly controversial feature of the Exposure Draft Bill.

First, the failure to include a joint venture defence parallel to that provided for in ss 76C and 76D is impossible to reconcile with the former Treasurer's Press Release where it is stated that:

Further amendments to the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) will flow from the Dawson Review recommendations relating to joint ventures and the report of the Intellectual Property and Competition Review Committee. These amendments may permit certain types of conduct where it does not substantially lessen competition.

Legitimate joint ventures and intellectual property arrangements will not be penalised under the cartel offence and will only be penalised under the revised per se civil prohibitions where they substantially lessen competition.105

Secondly, the rationale behind s 44ZZRO may be that legitimate joint ventures will not involve an intention dishonestly to obtain a benefit and hence will fall outside the scope of the new cartel offences. However, the concept of an intention dishonestly to obtain a benefit is ill-defined and its application will depend on whatever content juries happen to give to it. By contrast, the test of liability under a defence based on s 76C or s 76D is relatively well defined106 and far more conducive to promoting certainty in commercial arrangements.

Thirdly, the thinking behind s 44ZZRO may be that the competition test under the s 44ZZRO defence is unsuitable for determination by a jury. However, if the aim is to preclude jury consideration of the competition effects of joint ventures, that aim would be forlorn. As part of a denial that an accused acted with an intention dishonestly to obtain a benefit, defence counsel will introduce evidence of the reasons why an accused used a joint venture and why the use of that joint venture was believed by the accused to be pro-competitive. It may be noted that denial of an intention to dishonestly obtain a benefit does not impose a persuasive burden of proof on a accused - the prosecution must prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt. By contrast, the joint venture defence under s 44ZZRO imposes a persuasive burden on an accused to establish that the cartel provision did not have the purpose, effect or likely effect of substantially lessening competition in a market.

105 See Treasurer, Criminal Penalties for Serious Cartel Behaviour (Press Release, 2 February 2005), http://
www.treasurer.gov.au/DisplayDocs.aspx?doc=pressreleases/2005/004.htm&pageID=003&min=phc&Year=2005&DocType=0 viewed 14 February 2008.

106 The wording "for the purposes of a joint venture" in ss 76C and 76D is open to diverse possible interpretations; see Fisse B,
The Joint Venture Defences under Sections 76C and 76D of the Trade Practices Act (15 May 2008), http://www.brentfisse.com/ publications.html. viewed 4 August 2008.

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A joint venture defence should therefore apply to the cartel offences. The joint venture defences under ss 76C and 76D are defined in vague terms107 and, as recommended elsewhere, should be redefined for the purposes of both the cartel offences and the per se civil penalty prohibitions.108

10.3 Why is the joint venture defence under s 44ZZRO limited to
unincorporated joint ventures?

Section 44ZZRO provides:

(1) This section applies to a proceeding for a contravention of s 44ZZRJ or 44ZZRK in relation to a contract, arrangement or understanding containing a cartel provision.
(2) In the proceeding, it is a defence if the defendant proves that:

(b) the cartel provision is for the purposes of the joint venture; and

Contrast ss 76C and 76D, which apply respectively to an exclusionary provision and a price-fixing provision that is "for the purposes of a joint venture" (emphasis added). The defences under ss 76C and 76D apply in relation to incorporated joint ventures as defined in s 4J(a)(ii) as well as to unincorporated joint ventures as defined in s 4J(a)(i). The non-inclusion of incorporated joint ventures under the joint venture defence in s 44ZZRO is not explained and lacks any apparent justification.

10.4 Why are there no exemptions for collective acquisition and joint
advertising?

The exemptions under s 45A(4) for collective acquisition and joint advertising are deleted under the Exposure Draft Bill. No justification is given. None is apparent.

10.5 Why is there no exemption corresponding to that under s 45(6)?

The Exposure Draft Bill does not provide for any exemption corresponding to that under s 45(6).

In many vertical supply situations, A, a supplier, will compete downstream with B, a customer. Re-supply situations are covered by the definition of a cartel provision in s 44ZZRD(2) but there is no provision equivalent to s 45(6). No justification is given for this radical change in the law. None is apparent (see Pt 5.3.1C).

10.6 Why are there no exemptions corresponding to those under s 45(5)(7)?

The Exposure Draft Bill does not provide for any exemption corresponding to those under s 45(5) and (7). Again, no justification is given for this change and none is apparent.

11. THE PROPOSED ENFORCEMENT POLICY, AGENCY ROLES AND CRITERIA TO GUIDE INVESTIGATORY AND PROSECUTORIAL DECISION-MAKING

The Draft MOU sets out the policy for enforcement of the new cartel offences, describes the roles of and relationship between the ACCC and CDPP and identifies criteria to guide decisions to investigate, refer for prosecution and prosecute by these agencies. It also deals with the immunity policy (see Pt 13) and related criminal and civil proceedings (see Pt 16).

107 For example, "joint venture" needs to be defined. The definition proposed in Pengilley W, "Thirty Years of the Trade
Practices Act: Some Thematic Conclusions" (2004) 12 CCLJ 6 at [46]-[47] is commendable:

(i) A reference to a joint venture is a reference to an activity in trade or commerce carried on between two or more

parties whether carried on in partnership or by a body corporate formed by them; and (ii) the activity carried on is one in which there is substantial integration of the parties' production, management, distribution, finance or other resources, or a significant number of these resources with the objective of producing goods or services by way of a joint activity between them using in common the resources contributed by each of them.

108 See Fisse, n 106.

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11.1 Enforcement policy

The Draft MOU states at [1.2] that "criminal investigations and prosecutions will be targeted at serious cartel conduct and relatively minor conduct will ordinarily be pursued civilly" The criteria to be applied in relation to the decisions to investigate and prosecute flesh out, to some extent, what is meant by "serious" as opposed to "relatively mino.". These criteria, discussed below, relate primarily to the economic harmfulness or potential harmfulness of the conduct.

Thus, the policy in relation to enforcement of the cartel offences is evidently that these offences should be directed at cartels that have caused or have the potential to cause serious economic harm. There is a disconnect between this and the approach taken under the Exposure Draft Bill which seeks to differentiate between the criminal and civil prohibitions on the grounds of dishonesty, an indicator of culpability or even moral wrongfulness.109 That the Draft MOU itself does not mention dishonesty lends further support to the argument that this concept is unnecessary and problematic as a mechanism for differentiation (see Pt 6).

Putting dishonesty aside, the ACCC will need to develop its enforcement policy beyond the contents of the Draft MOU, making adjustments to the approach taken under an exclusively civil regime to reflect the addition of criminal sanctions to the regulatory mix. Indeed, an enforcement policy should be part of a broader integrated compliance strategy aimed at encouraging compliance with the Trade Practices Act by making full use of all available and appropriate means.110 In its recent Submission to the Productivity Commission Inquiry into Australia's consumer policy framework, the ACCC outlined its compliance strategy in relation to the consumer protection provisions of the Trade Practices Act.111 It is not clear to what extent its strategy (either currently or as proposed once criminalisation takes effect) differs in respect of the competition provisions.

There are few objective criteria against which to assess the ACCC s current enforcement policy in relation to cartels and its implications in light of the forthcoming criminal regime. One such criterion might be the number of cartel cases initiated by the ACCC in recent years. From a review of ACCC media releases announcing proceedings launched in cartel cases, it appears that only 13 such cases have been commenced in the last four years (2004-2007) (and it is unknown how many of these were initiated as a result of an immunity application).112 This figure is difficult to reconcile with statements by the ACCC Chairman in early 2005 that the ACCC then had "in excess of 20 to 30 more

109 See the discussion in Beaton-Wells, n 8.

110 Heads of Commonwealth Operational Law Enforcement Agencies, Overarching Principles for Selecting Cases for
Investigation and Administrative, Civil and Criminal Sanctions, http://www.ag.gov.au/www/agd/agd.nsf/Page/Fraudcontrol HeadsofCommonwealthOperationalLawEnforcementAgencies(HOCOLEA) viewed 14 February 2008. See also Australian Law
Reform Commission, n 21, p 31 (Recommendation 10.1). For recognition of the importance of an integrated compliance policy
by the Executive General Manager, Enforcement and Compliance Division of the ACCC, see Pearson M, "Criminalisation of
Cartels", Paper given at American Bar Association, International Cartels Workshop, San Francisco, February 2008.

111 Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, Submission to the Productivity Commission inquiry into Australia's
Consumer Policy Framework, (June 2007) pp 29-68, http://www.accc.gov.au/content/item.phtml?itemId=788437&nodeId= 9b211b532ebld5595f22c95bfd3a417d&fn=ACCC%submission%20to%20PC% viewed 12 May 1008.

112 (1) ACCC Institutes Against Commercial Air Conditioning Firms Over Alleged Attempted Price Fixing/Bid-Rigging, ACCC
Media Release, 21 December 2004, http://www.accc.gov.au/content/index.phtml/itemId/616050/fromItemId/2332 viewed
4 August 2008; (2) ACCC Institutes Against Garnet Firms Over Alleged Market Sharing Agreement, ACCC Media Release,
17 March 2005, http://www.accc.gov.au/content/index.phtml/itemId/665883/fromItemId/620299 viewed 4 August 2008;

(3) ACCC Begins Proceedings for Alleged Petrol Price-fix, ACCC Media Release, 26 May 2005, http://www.accc.gov.au/ content/index.phtml/itemId/685850 viewed 4 August 2008; (4) ACCC Alleges Timber Merchants' Price-fixing Cartel, ACCC Media Release, 18 August 2005, at http://www.accc.gov.au/content/index.phtml/itemld/704859 (in which no penalties were ordered: see Settlement of ACCC Action Against Timber Merchants, ACCC Media Release, 24 January 2007); (5) Proceedings Instituted Against Visy Group, Senior Executives for Alleged Cartel in the Corrugated Fibreboard Container Market, ACCC Media Release, 21 December 2005, http://www.accc.gov.au/content/index.phtml/itemId/719891 viewed 4 August 2008; (6) ACCC Alleges Price-fixing Cartel and Boycotts in Abalone Industry, ACCC Media Release, 12 December 2005, http://www.accc.gov.au/content/index.phtml/itemId/717403 viewed 4 August 2008; (7) ACCC Institutes Proceedings Against FCHEM (Aust) Limited, Osmose Australia Pty Ltd and Edward Mark Greenacre for Alleged Price-fix, ACCC Media Release, 2 August 2006, http://www.accc.gov.au/content/index.phtml/itemId/757471 viewed 4 August 2008; (8) ACCC Institutes Against Kokos, IAE, Nanuri and Others, ACCC Media Release, 3 November 2006, http://www.accc.gov.au/content/index.phtml/itemId/ 769565 viewed 4 August 2008; (9) ACCC Alleges Anti-competitive Conduct by Two Cardiothoracic Surgeons, ACCC Media

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investigations that are serious investigations into cartel behaviour"113 under way and with reports that the revision of the ACCC's immunity policy in the same year had generated a "flood" of immunity applications.114

Another criterion against which to assess ACCC enforcement policy is the level of penalties imposed, given that a large proportion of penalties are negotiated between the Commission and respondents and are then approved by the Court. An analysis of the penalties imposed in s 45 cases since 1994, depicted as a four-year rolling average, shows that in the last four years (2004-2007) there has been a decline in corporate penalty levels (see Annexure). The analysis shows, for example, that the mean corporate penalty (in 2007 dollars) was $3,558,016 for the four-year period 2000-2003, whereas it was $2,189,102 for the four-year period 2004-2007. The decline is more marked when the penalties in the recent Visy case, referred to below, are excluded. This would see the mean for the later period fall to $1,423,145. There has also been a significant decrease in the median corporate penalty, the median being a better indication of the distribution of penalties given that it is not as affected by extreme values in the sample. Thus, for the four-year period 2000-2003 the median corporate penalty (in 2007 dollars) was $2,400,612, whereas for 2004-2007, it was $325,276 ($225,000, excluding Visy).

In interpreting these results, it is necessary to bear in mind that the penalties imposed in any given period may not reflect current policies of the ACCC in relation to enforcement and also will not reflect cases in the pipeline (ie under investigation but proceedings not yet commenced, or proceedings commenced but not yet determined). Such caveats aside, the drop off in penalty levels in recent years does not sit comfortably with the tough talk of the current ACCC leadership in connection with "cracking cartels."115 The results in the Visy proceeding are a case in point. As has been argued elsewhere, albeit more than double the highest penalties previously imposed, there are still good reasons to regard the Visy penalties as too low.116 A total sum of $36 million was imposed for 37 contraventions, that is just under $1 million for each contravention - approximately 10% of the statutory maximum ($10 million), for what was described by Heerey J as "by far the most serious cartel case" in Australian trade practices history.117 The fact that the ACCC failed to negotiate a separate pecuniary penalty against Richard Pratt is also troubling in that it lacked meaningful precedent, in turn set a dangerous precedent and was flawed in law and as a matter of principle.118

The surprisingly low number of cases initiated (low, that is, relative to the number of cartel investigations reportedly undertaken) and the decline in penalty outcomes in recent years may have various explanations, each of which would have implications for enforcement of the criminal regime. One may be that the ACCC's high profile campaign against cartels has prompted colluders to become

Release, 7 February 2007, http://www.accc.gov.au/content/index.phtml/itemId/779960/fromItemId/2332 viewed 4 August 2008; (10) ACCC Alleges Attempted Price Fixing in Funeral Celebrants Market, ACCC Media Release, 29 March 2007, http://www.accc.gov.au/content/index.phtml/itemId/783782/fromItemId/2332 viewed 4 August 2008; (11) ACCC Institutes Legal Proceedings Against Stevedores and Senior Executives for Alleged Collusion, ACCC Media Release, 24 August 2007, http://www.accc.gov.au/content/index.phtml/itemId/796769 viewed 4 August 2008; (12) ACCC Institutes Against ANZ Bank Over Alleged Price Fixing Agreement, ACCC Media Release, 21 August 2007, http://www.accc.gov.au/content/index.phtml/ itemId/796379/fromItemId/776481 viewed 4 August 2008; (13) ACCC Institutes Proceedings Against Orthodontists in Northern Tasmania, ACCC Media Release, 14 September 2007, http://www.accc.gov.au/content/index.phtml/itemId/798555 viewed 4 August 2008 (in which no penalties were sought and none ordered: ACCC v Ranu Pry Ltd [2007] FCA 1777).

113 See eg "ACCC Backs Criminal Sanctions", AAP Bulletins (2 February 2005); also Speedy B, "Building Industry Next under ACCC Hammer", The Australian (31 May 2005), citing a reference by Samuel to 30 cartel investigations then under way

114Gluyas R, "Cartels Queue for Watchdog Immunity", The Australian (4 July 2006) p 22.

115 Samuel G, "Cracking Cartels: International and Australian Developments", Speech at ACCC Cracking Cartels Conference,
24 November 2004, at http://www.accc.gov.au viewed 13 February 2008. See also the comments in Samuel G, "The
Enforcement Priorities of the ACCC", Speech at Competition Law Conference, 12 November 2005, http://www.accc.gov.au/ content/index.phtml/itemId/714138 viewed 12 February 2008, in which the Chairman referred to the priority being given to
cartel detection and prosecution.

116 See Beaton-Wells C and Brydges N, "The Cardboard Box Cartel Case: Was All the Fuss Warranted?" (2008) 36 ABLR 1 at
10-11.

111 ACCC v Visy Industries Holdings Pty Ltd (No 3) (2007) ATPR 42-185; [2007] FCA 1617 at [320].

118 See Beaton-Wells, n 116 at 10-13.

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savvier in their efforts to conceal their collusion thereby hindering efforts at detection, investigation and prosecution. Another related explanation may be that the ACCC lacks the powers to fully investigate and/or litigate cartel cases through to the point of judgment. It may also be that the ACCC does not have the resources for this purpose, or perhaps has underestimated the level of resources required to fulfil the cartel-busting mission that it has set for itself. Alternatively, there may simply be a preference at senior levels of the ACCC for negotiated rather than litigated outcomes, and for settling for lower penalties rather than taking the risk of being forced into a fully contested trial.119

If there is substance in any of these suggested explanations, the implications for the ACCC's enforcement policy, powers and resources in the context of a criminal regime require careful consideration. In terms of enforcement policy, for example, it is important that the ACCC consider how its apparent preference for negotiated outcomes will fare in dealings with the CDPP given that this increasingly common feature of regulatory enforcement is inimical to the culture and practices of the CDPP120 The Draft MOU makes no reference of how negotiated settlements might intersect with referrals to the CDPP. The question of resources is canvassed in Pt 11.2, and powers in Pt 12.

11.2 Roles of and relationship between ACCC and CDPP

The Draft MOU aims to articulate and differentiate between the roles of the ACCC and CDPP in relation to enforcement of the new cartel offences. However, it also recognises that "close cooperation and consultation is required to achieve efficient and effective outcomes" (Draft MOU, [2.1]).

It is indicated that the CDPP will be responsible for:

While the ACCC will be responsible for:

[2.3]).

In terms of managing the relationship between the ACCC and the CDPP, three layers of liaison appear to be contemplated (Draft MOU, [8]):

It is not clear whether an officer from each of the ACCC and CDPP will be appointed to each case and at what point in the process of investigation, consultation and referral this will be done. However, it does appear that the "case-team" model adopted in the United Kingdom by the OFT (the regulator)

119 See eg Drummond M, "Fewer ACCC Court Cases Raises Concerns", Australian Financial Review (31 January 2008) p 10 quoting Graeme Samuel: "There's been a major cultural change in enforcements", in response to an overall decrease in the number of cases brought and an increase in the use of s 87B undertakings, particularly in the consumer protection area.

120For the CDPP's approach to plea negotiations (encompassed in the concept of charge bargaining), see Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions, Prosecution Policy of the Commonwealth (1992) pp 21-23 [5.12]-[5.18], http:// www.cdpp.gov.au/Publications/ProsecutionPolicy viewed 6 February 2008. More generally, see Australian Law Reform Commission, n 21, p 354 [9.55].

121 Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions, n 120.

122 The definition of "serious offence" in s 338 of the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 (Cth) is to be amended by adding para (ed)
to include the new cartel offences (see Sch 1, item 1 of the Exposure Draft Bill). See further Fisse B, "The Australian Cartel
Criminalisation Proposals: An Overview and Critique" (2007) 4(1) Competition Law Review 1.

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and the Serious Fraud Office (SFO) (the prosecuting agency),123 has been rejected in Australia. Rather, the preference seems to be to retain as much as possible the independence and distinctive roles of each agency while providing for consultation at early stages and then on an ongoing basis throughout the enforcement process. Whether this model proves effective remains to be seen.

The relationship between the CDPP and the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC), based on the same model, reportedly has had its difficulties.124 No doubt, a significant part of the challenge in managing such relationships arises from the different cultures, priorities and perspectives of the two organisations,125 as evidenced by their traditionally differing approaches to the issue of immunity (see Pt 13) and the appropriateness of negotiated outcomes,126 and from the lack of content-specific expertise in each other's domain (the ACCC in crime and the CDPP in competition law). The latter is particularly true of ACCC expertise in relation to criminal investigations (which will be critical in light of the criminal standard of proof: a major differentiator between the criminal and civil regimes (see Pt 3.2.1)).

Given this, it is predicted that the success of the future ACCC/CDPP relationship (on which the success of the new enforcement regime will rely) will depend on the co-development of detailed procedures for handling each stage in the process consistent with the broad terms of the Draft MOU and on training of staff in relation to these procedures (as to which, see Pt 11.2). The maturity and interpersonal skills with which individual relationships are handled and inevitable disagreements are resolved at each of the levels identified above will be crucial also.127

The roles proposed in the Draft MOU also have resourcing implications for the ACCC. This raises two questions. First, there is the question as to whether the ACCC will be given sufficient funding to properly resource its criminal enforcement and cartel branch.128 A funding package for the agencies involved in implementing the new criminal regime in Australia was announced in May 2006.129 The package included A$18.2 million over four years for legal expenses for the ACCC and A$7.2 million to support investigations and enforcement. It further included A$4.4 million over four years for the DPP for cartel prosecutions and A$3.9 million for the Federal Court to hear cartel trials. Leading practitioners have described these figures as inadequate to fund major cartel prosecutions against the powerful, often internationally supported, deep-pocketed interests behind serious cartel activity.130

123 Office of Fair Trading, Memorandum of Understanding between the Office of Fair Trading and the Director of the Serious
Fraud Office (2003), http://www.oft.gov.uk/shared oft/business leaflets/enterprise act/oft547.pdf viewed 14 February 2008.

124 As detailed in Wood P, "Prosecutorial Predicament", Australian Financial Review (1 June 2006) p 62. See also Australian
Law Reform Commission, n 21 at [9.37].

125 Australian Law Reform Commission, n 21 at [9.39].

126 As discussed in Beaton-Wells C, "Forks in the Road: Challenges Facing the ACCC's Immunity Policy for Cartel Conduct",
Paper presented at Competition Law Conference, 24 May 2008, Sydney (copy on file with authors). See also Australian Law
Reform Commission, n 21, Recommendations [9.16]-[9.17], describing how so few ACCC consumer protection cases have
gone to the CDPP because of the ACCC's preference for settling cases on the basis of s 87B undertakings, and the concern that
the CDPP has expressed about this.

127 Note in this regard the comments of Heerey J regarding the difficulties likely to arise in making decisions about which cases
to prosecute and his observations that such problems "cannot be solved in advance by memoranda of understanding, however
comprehensive". See Heerey J's commentary on the original version of this article below at 248.

128 The creation of this branch was referred to in Samuel, n 115, p 14.

129 The funding for the criminalisation proposal was described as "ongoing". See http://www.treasurer.gov.au/tsr/content/ pressreleases/2006/033,asp?pf+1 viewed 20 August 2007. The Budget papers for 2008-2009 did not earmark any funding
specifically for the administration of the new criminal regime. By contrast, there were specific allocations for costs associated
with monitoring of petrol and grocery pricing; see Budget Paper No 2, circulated 13 May 2008, http://www.budget.gov.au/2008- 09/content/bp2/html/index.htm viewed 23 May 2008.

130Editorial, "Funding to Fight Cartels 'Inadequate'", Australian Financial Review (Sydney, 11 May 2006), p 12. Even more recently, Professor Robert Baxt has called on the new government to ensure that the ACCC is properly funded to fulfil its responsibilities under the proposed criminal regime, and to ensure that the senior positions in the Commission, left vacant under the former government, are filled. See below at 249.

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Secondly, there is the question as to whether ACCC staff involved in criminal cartel investigations will have the necessary skills for this task. The ACCC has been said to be providing its staff with extensive training (including by the Australian Federal Police (AFP)) since the announcement was made in the Treasurer's Press Release in 2005, in readiness for the introduction of the criminal regime.131 Such training and other modes of staff support will be crucial to assist staff in developing criminal investigatory skills and in making the transition to working on cases where the people under investigation will be subject potentially to criminal sanctions.132 It is interesting to note in this regard that from April 2008 the Cartels Group of the United Kingdom OFT will take the lead in criminal investigations in consumer protection matters. Given that there are likely to be only a small number of criminal cartel cases each year, this is a deliberate move to provide the OFT cartel staff with an opportunity to develop criminal enforcement capacity and skills and to remain "match-fit".133

11.3 ACCC decision to investigate

The Draft MOU states the well-known fact that cartels are high on the ACCC's enforcement agenda (Draft MOU at [3.1]).134 This has been the case at least since the appointment of the current Chairman135 if not previously (bearing in mind that it was his predecessor who launched the campaign for criminalisation in 2001).136 What has changed is that with the introduction of criminal penalties, as indicated in the Draft MOU, in conducting any cartel investigation the ACCC now will have regard to whether the conduct "is such that it would warrant referral to the CDPP if evidence sufficient to found a prosecution were obtained" (Draft MOU at [3.3]).

This question presumably would be considered very early on in an investigation, given that the possibility of referral and, down the track, prosecution would influence the approach taken to the types and handling of evidence and methods of investigation (see Pt 12). Further, even if at this early stage, the case is not identified as potentially "criminal", the Draft MOU indicates that the question of referral will be kept under review as investigations proceed (Draft MOU at [3.4]).

It is one thing to say that the ACCC will look at every cartel investigation and consider whether it might be appropriate for referral. However, it is another to identify at what point or by what process or trigger an investigation may become a criminal investigation. The Draft MOU appears to gloss over the latter. One option to fix this is for the Draft MOU to state that, at the earliest possible point in a cartel investigation, the ACCC will form a view, perhaps upon what has been referred to in other contexts as a "quick look", as to whether the referral factors (listed in Draft MOU at [4.3], discussed below) are satisfied or likely to be satisfied in relation to the conduct under investigation. If so, the ACCC should then take a closer look and at this point also, consult the CDPP on whether the investigation should become a criminal investigation.137

The Treasurer's Press Release indicated that the ACCC would publish guidelines, in consultation with the CDPP, setting out the factors that will inform decisions as to whether or not to pursue a

131 "Bank Makes Batchelor its Man in Moscow", Australian Financial Review (2 June 2007) p 64; Samuel, n 115. 132As emphasised by Gyles J below at 241.

133 Williams S, Director of Cartels Group, Office of Fair Trading, Speaking Notes at IBC UK Competition Law Conference,
December 2007.

134 See eg Samuel G, "The ACCC Approach to the Detection, Investigation and Prosecution of Cartels", Speech delivered at
Economics Society of Australia Detection of Cartels Symposium 28 September 2005, http://www.accc.gov.au/content/ index.phtml/itemId/709298 viewed 14 February 2008; Samuel G, "Cracking Cartels", Speech delivered at Cracking Cartels
Conference, Sydney, 24 November 2004, http://www.accc.gov.au/content/index.phtml/itemld/607077 viewed 14 February 2008.

135 Samuel, n 115.

136Fels A, "Regulating", Paper presented at the Australian Law Reform Commission, Penalties: Policy, Principles and Practice in Government Regulation - Conference, Sydney, 9 June 2001, http://www.accc.gov.au/content/index.phtml/itemId/255481 viewed 12 February 2008. Note, however, that Fels in fact called for criminal sanctions for bid rigging as early as 1993: "TPC Push Against Collusive Tenderers", Australian Financial Review (7 October 1994) p 1.

137 Re the difficulties in making this decision, see Australian Law Reform Commission, n 21 at [9.11].

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criminal investigation.138 Presumably it is still proposed for this to be done.139 The ACCC's Submission to the Dawson Committee set out the types of matters that are likely to be included in such guidelines.140

11.4 ACCC referral to CDPP

According to the Draft MOU, the ACCC will consult the CDPP when considering referral of a matter to the CDPP and the CDPP will provide preliminary advice as to whether the matter should be pursued with a view to possible criminal proceedings (Draft MOU, [4.1]). The trigger for this consultation has been referred to above.

As an attempt to reflect the general approach that the ACCC will take to referral, Draft MOU at [4.2] is poorly worded and largely uninformative. It states that the factors that the ACCC will consider "are related to the ACCC's assessment of how such conduct can be best addressed to achieve general and specific compliance". The meaning of this is unclear. It may be an attempt to refer to a more general enforcement policy by the ACCC. As stated above, such a policy needs to be developed (or revised, as the case may be) and published. The Draft MOU could then sensibly indicate that referral decisions will be informed or guided by that policy.

The Draft MOU further states, as it should, that the ACCC will have regard also to the "factors to which the DPP has regard in considering whether to prosecute" [Draft MOU at 4.2]. These factors are enumerated in Draft MOU at [5.2]. The Draft MOU should add that the ACCC will have regard to the PPC.141 In reality, as previously stated, the challenge will lie in reconciling the differences in priorities and objectives in the ACCC's enforcement policy and the PPC.142

The specific considerations to which the ACCC will have regard in deciding whether to refer a matter to the CDPP are listed in [4.3] as whether:

The $1 million threshold consideration has the potential to be both under-inclusive and over-inclusive, depending on the size of the relevant market.143 Three options for addressing this concern are: • remove any threshold factors relating the value of affected commerce altogether (taking the

United States approach, eg, where the relevant criteria guiding decisions to pursue a criminal

investigation simply refer to the "volume of commerce affected" and the "geographic size of the

area affected", among others;144)

138 See Treasurer, n 105.

139 As was indicated, eg, in Samuel, n 115, p 28.

140 Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, ACCC Submission to the Review of the Trade Practices Act (2002)
p 52, http://www.accc.gov.au/content/index.phtml/itemld/303044 viewed 12 February 2008.

141 Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions, n 120.

142 Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions, n 120.

143Fisse, n 10 at 244-247. See also Clarke J, "Criminal Penalties for Contraventions of Part IV of the Trade Practices Act" [2005] DeakinLawRw 8; (2005) 10 Deakin LR 141.

144 United States Department of Justice, Antitrust Division Manual, http://www.usdoi.gov/atr/foia/divisionmanual/table of contents.htm viewed 6 February 2008; Beaton-Wells, n 8 at 692.

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Another, albeit related, question is, if a threshold test of harmfulness is to be retained, whether it should be made a jurisdictional element of the offence. For those wary of the reliability of prosecutorial discretion, it may be seen as preferable to leave it to the courts to determine whether criminal jurisdiction should be invoked based on an assessment of whether the cartel in question breaches a specified harm threshold.147 There is precedent for this - in the case of money laundering offences, for example.148 By comparison, there are those who argue that cartel conduct is "serious", by definition, and that "the proportionate response to criminal conduct is to apply a criminal penalty".149 It should follow, so the argument proceeds, that the degree of harm inflicted by the unlawful conduct is reflected in sentencing as distinct from a matter relied on for determining whether to pursue criminal prosecution in the first place. A further alternative is to ensure that a percentage of the volume of commerce affected is incorporated formally into the sentencing process, as it is in the United States and Europe.150

Under the Draft MOU, if the threshold criterion is met, it appears that any one of the three considerations listed in [4.3] may be sufficient to qualify the matter for referral. Two of these relate to the actual or potential harmfulness of the conduct (either by way of impact on the market as a whole or by way of causing detriment or loss to the public or one or more customers of the cartel participants). Loss to suppliers should also be included. While it is unrealistic and undesirable to require that these considerations be more specifically framed, the descriptors used ("longstanding", "significant impact", "significant detriment", etc) highlight the extent of the discretionary judgment involved in such decisions. Such judgments are unlikely to be subject to judicial review given the long-standing respect paid by courts to administrative decision-making in the realms of law enforcement and prosecution.151 That said, looking to the future, as a matter of good policy and administration, there should at least be some form of ex post assessment made of how the criteria have been applied in practice.152

The third relates to whether there is any evidence of recidivism by one or more the alleged participants. It is not clear why other culpability factors have been excluded. In an attachment to a second submission to the Dawson Committee by the ACCC, entitled Outline of Proposed

145 Fisse, n 10 at 246.
146 Beaton-Wells, n 8 at 692.
147 Fisse, n 10 at 245.

148 Under the Criminal Code (Cth), s 400.3, a definitional requirement of the money laundering offence is that the value of the
relevant money or property is $ 1 million or more.

149 Clarke, n 143 at 162.

150 For the sentencing practice in the United States, see United States Sentencing Commission Guidelines Manual (2005)
§2R1.1, which sets the base fine for corporations in respect of specific antitrust law offences (bid-rigging, price-fixing and
market allocation agreements) as "20% of the volume of affected commerce". For the sentencing practice of the European
Commission: see Guidelines on the Method of Setting Fines Imposed Pursuant to Art 23(2)(a) of Regulation No 1/2003 [2006]
OJ C 210/2.

151 See eg Commissioner of Police v Reid (1989) 16 NSWLR 453; 42 A Crim R 470; Oates v Attorney-General (Cth) (1998) 84
FCR 348; [1998] FCA 775; 102 A Crim R 353.

152 Kovacic W, "Using Ex Post Evaluations to Improve the Performance of Competition Policy Authorities" (2006) 31 J Corp L
503.

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Memorandum of Understanding between the Director of Public Prosecutions and the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, some such additional criteria were identified as follows:

It is not known why these or related factors were excluded from the Draft MOU that has been released. The ACCC almost certainly will have regard to such matters in deciding whether to refer a case to the CDPP and the Draft MOU should reflect this.154

11.5 CDPP decision to prosecute

The CDPP is responsible for the majority of prosecutions under federal criminal law. It does not carry out investigations. This is done by the AFP or other law enforcement agencies - in this case, the ACCC. The Draft MOU states that upon formal referral of a matter by the ACCC, the CDPP will, as soon as reasonably possible, advise the ACCC whether in accordance with the PPC155 a prosecution should be commenced (Draft MOU at [5.1]). A formal referral will have to comply with the Guidelines for Departments and Agencies on Submitting Briefs to the DPP or as otherwise agreed with the CDPP and the CDPP may request the ACCC to undertake further investigation (Draft MOU at [4.5]).

Decisions by the CDPP to initiate criminal proceedings are made in accordance with the PPC,156 which expressly states that the prosecution of suspected criminal offences should not be automatic (PPC at [2.1]) and that rather, the decision whether to prosecute is regarded as the most important step in the process (PPC at [2.2]). The criteria governing the decision to prosecute have been summarised by the ALRC as including:

maintaining the confidence of the community in the criminal justice system; fairness (but not weakness) and consistency (but not rigidity); the need to tailor general principles to individual cases; the effective use of finite resources;

the availability of admissible, substantial and reliable evidence;

whether there is a reasonable prospect of conviction and the likely strength of the prosecution's case in court; and

• the risk of prosecuting an innocent person.157

The PCC provides a detailed list of questions to be considered when evaluating the quality of the evidence (at [2.7]). It also lists the factors to be considered in determining whether the public interest requires a prosecution, and states that the factors should be applied and weighted according to the

Fisse in response to a request for access under the Freedom of Information Act 1982 (Cth). See further the list of factors identified as influencing the ACCC's choice of enforcement action in Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, Submission to the Productivity Commission Inquiry into Australia's Consumer Policy Framework (June 2007) p 43, at http://www.accc.gov.au/content/item.phtml ?itemId=788437&nodeId=9b211b532ebld5595f22c95bfd3a417d&fn= ACCC%submission%20to%20PC%, viewed 12 May 1008.
154 Beaton-Wells, n 8 at 688-689.
155 Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions, n 120.

156 Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions, n 120.

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particular circumstances of each case (PPC at [2.10]). Factors relevant to the public interest include:

The PPC also lists a number of factors which "must clearly not" influence a decision whether or not to prosecute (PPC at [2.13]).158

According to the PPC, the key consideration in deciding to initiate criminal proceedings is to ensure that the charge adequately reflects the nature and extent of the criminal conduct on the evidence, and will provide the court with an appropriate basis for sentencing (PPC at [2.18]).159 Ordinarily, the charge will be the most serious available, subject to issues such as available defences and the strength of the evidence (PPC at [2.19]). Other considerations influencing the choice of charges are that: (1) charges should not be laid to provide scope for subsequent charge-bargaining (PPC at [2.20]); and (2) charges should be laid under the provisions of a relevant specific Act (where applicable) rather than under the general provisions of the Crimes Act 1914 (Cth) (PPC at [2.21], eg the offence of conspiracy to defraud).160

In addition to the PPC,161 the Draft MOU requires the CDPP to have regard to three specific factors in deciding whether to prosecute under the new cartel offences (Draft MOU at [5.2]):

These factors are similar to, although not exactly the same as, the factors relevant to the ACCC's decision to refer. They are also not provided for in the alternative (as they are under the Draft MOU at [4.2]), suggesting that it is unlikely that the decision to prosecute will be based on any single factor. By and large these factors appear consistent with the general criteria listed under the PPC162 as well as the factors relevant to the public interest.

11.6 Gaps in the Draft MOU?

The Draft MOU is thin on detail in relation to several significant matters, eg, the approach to be taken to related criminal and civil proceedings and procedures for dealing with conflicts when they arise between ACCC and CDPP staff. These matters should be elaborated on either in the Draft MOU or in some other policy document and preferably one that is publicly available.

The Draft MOU also makes no reference to a number of matters that one would expect to find in such a document, in particular:

158 Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions, n 120.
159 Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions, n 120.
160 Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions, n 120.
161 Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions, n 120.
162 Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions, n 120.

163 See the discussion in Beaton-Wells, n 126.

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12. POWERS OF INVESTIGATION

The Exposure Draft Materials do not address critical questions relating to the powers of the ACCC to carry out criminal investigations under the new cartel offences.

The following powers will be relevant:

12.1 Existing investigatory powers - Availability to be clarified?

The Discussion Paper refers to the ACCC's existing powers under Pt XII and Pt XID of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) as relevant to investigation of the new cartel offences.

Under Pt XII the ACCC has the power to require persons to furnish information, produce documents and appear and give evidence before the Commission pursuant to s 155(1) of the Trade Practices Act. This power is available if the ACCC has "reason to believe that a person is capable of furnishing information, producing documents or giving evidence relating to a matter that constitutes or may constitute a contravention of this Act". The Exposure Draft Bill inserts a new definition of "contravention" into s 155(10), according to which "contravention, in relation to a law, includes an offence against ss 11.1, 11.4 or 11.5 of the Criminal Code (Cth) [a reference to the Code provisions for attempt, complicity and conspiracy] that relates to an offence against that law". Inexplicably, however, no amendment to s 155(1) is proposed to enable the powers conferred under that section to be used in relation to a matter that constitutes or may constitute an offence under, as distinct from a contravention of, the Trade Practices Act. Thus, as it stands and contrary to the intention expressed in the Discussion Paper, it appears that, strictly speaking, the powers under s 155 could not be used to investigate conduct that may constitute a cartel offence, but could be used to investigate an attempt, eg, to commit such an offence.166 It is unclear, however, whether this is likely to be of any practical significance given that under the Exposure Draft Bill the physical elements are the same for the cartel offences and the civil penalty prohibitions.

Before the Dawson Committee, the ACCC proposed that its s 155 powers be extended so as to be available even after legal proceedings have been commenced. The Committee rejected the proposal as impinging on existing court processes.167 Subsequently, however, it received qualified support from the Senate Economics Reference Committee in its 2004 small business report.168 On 1 May 2008 proposed amendments to the Trade Practices Act were announced that will enable the ACCC to exercise or continue to exercise its powers under s 155 in relation to a matter referred to in that section until (a) the Commission commences proceedings in relation to the matter (other than proceedings for an injunction, whether interim or final); or (b) the close of pleadings in relation to an application by

164 In light of Norris v United States [2008] UKHL 16; R v GG pic [2008] UKHL 17. Compare Lever and Pike, n 72 (broad
view of conspiracy to defraud rejected by the House of Lords in Norris). See further Joshua, n 51; Joshua, n 72, p 13.

165 See the discussion in Fisse, n 122 at 68-69.

166 There are instances in which a contravention of a section in the Act is stated to be an "offence": see, eg, ss 155(5A)-(6A).
However, the new cartel offences are not framed in this way.

167 Trade Practices Review Committee, n 4, pp 191-199.

168 Senate Economics Committee, Effectiveness of the Trade Practices Act 1974 in Protecting Small Business (2004) p 74,
Recommendation 15.

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the Commission for a final injunction in relation to the matter.169 Given the point made above regarding the scope of s 155(1), it appears that the proposed amendment will have no bearing (at least not directly) on criminal investigations or proceedings.

Pursuant to the recommendations of the Dawson Report, under amendments introduced in 2006,170 the ACCC has entry, search and seizure powers under Pt XID of the Trade Practices Act (modelled on Pt 1AA of the Crimes Act 1914 (Cth)). The ACCC may enter premises with the consent of the occupier or otherwise pursuant to a search warrant issued by a magistrate. Pursuant to s 154X(2) such a warrant may be issued where the magistrate is satisfied by information on oath or affirmation that there are reasonable grounds for suspecting that there is evidential material on the premises or there may be within the next 72 hours. Under such a warrant, the executing officer may enter the premises, search for and seize evidential material, make copies of such material, operate electronic equipment at the premises to determine the accessibility of such material and take equipment and material onto the premises for such purposes (s 154G(1)). The Exposure Draft Bill adds to this:

As in relation to s 155(1), the provisions in this Part should be amended to make clear that these powers are available for use in investigating whether there has been an offence committed under the new cartel offences. Currently, the Part is directed at the investigation of "contraventions" and the collection of "evidential material", defined as meaning "a document or other thing that may afford evidence relating to ... a contravention of this Act". That this does not extend to an offence under the Trade Practices Act is apparent from the distinction drawn between contraventions and offences under s 154G(1).171 That provision empowers an executing officer to seize other things that he or she finds while searching for the evidential material specified in the warrant and that he or she has reasonable grounds to believe to be evidence of an indictable offence under the Trade Practices Act and where he or she believes on reasonable grounds that it is necessary to seize such things in order to prevent their concealment, loss or destruction.

12.2 Availability of surveillance, access and interception powers?

As explained in the Discussion Paper, the criminalisation of serious cartel conduct opens up the possibility of new powers of investigation for the ACCC - specifically, powers relating to the use of surveillance devices which are dealt with under the Surveillance Devices Act 2004 (Cth) (SD Act), and powers relating to telecommunications which are dealt with under the Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act 1979 (Cth) (TIA Act).

Under the SD Act, warrants to use or retrieve surveillance devices may be issued by eligible judges or nominated AAT members to law enforcement officers in connection with investigation of relevant offences. "Surveillance devices" include listening, optical and tracking devices.172 A "relevant offence" includes an offence against the law of the Commonwealth punishable by term of imprisonment of three years or more.173 Thus, the new cartel offences, with their proposed maximum term of five years imprisonment, would be relevant offences. A law enforcement officer in this context

169 See the announcement at http://www.treasurer.gov.au/DisplayDocs. aspx?doc=pressreleases/2008/027.htm&pageID=
003&min=ceb&Year=&DocTvpe viewed 20 May 2008.
170 Trade Practices Legislation Amendment Act (No 1) 2006 (Cth).
171 See also the distinction between "contravention" and "offence" in the context of s 76B.
172 See definitions in the Surveillance Devices Act 2004 (Cth), s 6(1).

173 See para (a) in the definition of "relevant offence" under the Surveillance Devices Act 2004 (Cth), s 6(1).

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would be a member of the AFP,174 or possibly a member of the ACCC if appointed as a special member of the AFP for this purpose.175 The SD warrant authorises the use of a SD on specified premises or objects or in respect of conversations, activities or locations of specified persons or persons whose identities may be unknown, and the entry by force if necessary to premises to install, use, maintain or retrieve the device.176 Any information obtained from the use of a SD under a warrant may be used, recorded, communicated or published, or may be admitted into evidence, if it is necessary to do so for the purposes of the investigation of a relevant offence or the making of a decision whether or not to bring a prosecution of a relevant offence.177

The law as it currently stands would enable the ACCC to use, either itself or through the AFP, a SC warrant or TD authorisation for the purposes of investigating conduct under the new cartel offences or the civil penalty prohibitions (existing and new), but not a TS warrant.

A SC warrant:

Thus, under these provisions, the ACCC could obtain a SC warrant authorising it to obtain access to telephone conversations that have taken place in the past for the purposes of investigating conduct under the new cartel offences. The ACCC will be able to deal with information obtained under a SC

See para (a) in the definitions of "law enforcement agency" and "law enforcement agency" under the Surveillance Devices Act 2004 (Cth), s 6(1).

' See the Australian Federal Police Act 1979 (Cth), s 40E.

' See the Surveillance Devices Act 2004 (Cth), s 18.

' See the Surveillance Devices Act 2004 (Cth), s 44(5)(a)-(b).

i See generally the Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act 1979 (Cth), Ch 3.

' See generally the Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act 1979 (Cth), Ch 4.

' See generally the Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act 1979 (Cth), Ch 2.

' See the Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act 1979 (Cth), s 5 (definitions) and s 117.

1 See the Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act 1979 (Cth), s 5 (definition) and s 6DB.

' See the Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act 1979 (Cth), s 5 (definition of "enforcement agency") and s 110.

1 See the Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act 1979 (Cth), s 166(l)(d).

' See the Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act 1979 (Cth), s 5E(l)(b).

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warrant in various ways for the purposes of investigating such offences and will also be able to give such information in evidence in any proceeding.187

A TD authorisation:

Thus, under these provisions, the ACCC could authorise a telecommunications carrier to provide it with access to information or documents relating to telephone services and conversations (including information relating to the identities of the persons making or receiving calls, the locations of such persons, duration of calls, and the like) that have taken place or may take place in the future for the purposes of investigating conduct under the new cartel offences. The ACCC will then be able to disclose or use such information or documents provided disclosure or use is reasonably necessary for the enforcement of the criminal law or law imposing a pecuniary penalty.192 Presumably, "use" in this context includes use in evidence but there is no express provision to that effect.

A TS warrant:

The new cartel offences do not meet the threshold requirement under the definition of "serious offence" of being an offence punishable for a period or maximum period of at least seven years.195

Thus, as pointed out in the Discussion Paper, given the proposed maximum of five years imprisonment for the new cartel offences, phone tapping would not be an investigative tool available to the ACCC in investigating these offences. The Discussion Paper invites comment on whether the

See the Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act 1979 (Cth), s 139.

187 See the Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act 1979 (Cth), s 143; s 5 (definitions of "lawfully accessed
information"; "prescribed offence"); and s 5B (definition of "exempt proceeding").

188 See the Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act 1979 (Cth), s 177.

189 See the Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act 1979 (Cth), ss 178-179.

190 See the Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act 1979 (Cth), s 5 (definition of "authorised officer").

191 See the Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act 1979 (Cth), s 180.

192 See the Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act 1979 (Cth), s 143; s 5 (definitions of "lawfully accessed
information"; "prescribed offence"); and s 5B (definition of "exempt proceeding").

193 See the Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act 1979 (Cth), s 6.

194 See the Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act 1979 (Cth), s 46.

195 See the Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act 1979 (Cth), s 5D.

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TIA Act should be amended to extend telephone interception powers to the new cartel offences, and on whether the proposed term of five years is appropriate. The latter is addressed in Pt 17 and, as pointed out there, should be addressed separately from the question as to whether telephone interception powers should be available for criminal cartel investigations.

In relation to this question, the first issue is whether such powers are necessary for effective enforcement of the new cartel offences. That question cannot be answered without close examination of past and current investigatory practices of the ACCC to assess the extent to which telephone interception powers would enhance detection and prosecution of cartel behaviour. The experience of regulators in other jurisdictions that have attained or have considered attaining such powers should also be examined. In the time available such a study could not be undertaken for the purposes of this article. However, it is possible to make the following observations that are likely to be relevant to consideration of this issue.

The ACCC already has substantial investigatory powers under Pts XII and XID of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) (assuming these are to apply to the new cartel offences: see Pt 12.1) and under the TIA Act (specifically, access to recordings of past telephone conversations under a SC warrant and details, apart from the contents, of telephone conversations as they occur under a TD authorisation: see Pt 12.2). With the introduction of the new cartel offences, its powers will be increased under the SD Act. In particular, the ACCC will be able to obtain use of a series of surveillance devices to monitor conversations between "suspected" cartellists.

Cartel investigations generally rely on information provided by informants and with the assistance of such persons, using surveillance devices, the ACCC will be able to listen to and record conversations between the informant and others allegedly involved in criminal cartel conduct as they occur (albeit, not two-way telephone conversations as this requires an interception). Telephone interception powers would not mean that the ACCC has to rely less on informants given the probability that information from such persons regarding the alleged criminal activity would still be required to satisfy the information conditions for the issue of the warrant.

There are likely to be few cases in which the ACCC could satisfy the judge or nominated AAT member that a warrant should issue given the other methods of obtaining the same information available to the ACCC and given that the ACCC has to have shown that it has exhausted all such methods and that, without the warrant, interception of the communications would not otherwise be possible.196

The ACCC has not called for telephone interception powers, at least not publicly.

TS warrants are available for investigation of money laundering offences;197 in some cases, serious cartel conduct will constitute money laundering;198 and lawfully intercepted information (obtained under a TS warrant in connection with a money laundering investigation)199 may be given in evidence in an exempt proceeding200 which would include a proceeding by way of a prosecution for the new cartel offences.201

In the United States, the Department of Justice (DOJ) was only given telephone interception powers in 2006202 (although presumably the DOJ could previously be assisted by the FBI in this regard). The considerations that led to this conferral of powers and the ways in and extent to which

196 See the list of matters to which the judge or member has to have regard in the Telecommunications (Interception and Access)
Act 1979
(Cth), s 46(2).
197 See the Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act 1979 (Cth), s 5D(4).
198 Fisse, n 122 at 68-69.
199 See s 6E of the Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act 1979 (Cth).
200 See ss 74 and 5B of the Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act 1979 (Cth).
201 See s 5(d) (definition of "prescribed offence") of the Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act 1979 (Cth).

202 HammondS, "Recent Developments, Trends and Milestones in the Antitrust Division's Criminal Enforcement Program",
Speech before the ABA Section of Antitrust Law Cartel Enforcement Roundtable, 16 November 2007, http://www.usdoi.gov/ atr/public/speeches/227740.htm viewed 12 February 2008.

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they have been used in the United States to date should be examined. A similar inquiry should be made in relation to the experience in Canada where the Competition Bureau has been able to apply for judicial authorisation to intercept private communications without consent at least since 1999.203

In the United Kingdom the OFT has not been given telephone interception powers in connection with investigations relating to its cartel offence.204 Inquiries should be made as to why the United Kingdom regulator was not given these powers and whether, in the six years since its criminal regime was introduced, it has been hampered in its investigations of criminal cartel conduct without such powers.

Neither the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development nor the International Competition Network, both of which have examined best practices with respect to anti-cartel law enforcement, have recommended that regulators have telephone interception powers.205

TS warrants are not available currently for investigations of offences under the Corporations Law (given that the maximum term of imprisonment for such offences is five years).206

If telephone interception powers are not made available immediately upon the introduction of Australia's new cartel offences, there is no reason why the experience in carrying out investigations cannot be reviewed at some stage in the future to determine whether such powers in fact are required.

Having taken the above-mentioned factors and others into account in the context of the study referred to above, if the view is reached that the ACCC does require telephone interception powers, then the next question is whether the degree of necessity outweighs countervailing human rights and privacy considerations. These considerations raise challenging questions of public policy that are not addressed in this article.207

Of the submissions to Treasury on the Exposure Draft Bill that commented on the issue of telephone interception powers, commentators were split on the issue: five in support, four against and one calling for a detailed study of the issues involved.208

12.3 Powers of arrest and detention?

The Exposure Draft Materials do not provide any information relating to powers of arrest and detention in connection with the new cartel offences. Presumably, the ACCC will rely on the AFP for such purposes, although it is also possible that ACCC staff may be appointed as special members of the AFP to assist AFP members in carrying out such activities.209

Powers of arrest and detention and related powers by the AFP are governed by the Crimes Act 1914 (Cth) (see Pt 1AA, Div 4 and Pt 1C, in particular).

203 Competition Bureau, Interception of Private Communications and the Competition Act, Information Bulletin (1999), http://www.competitionbureau.gc.ca/epic/site/cb-bc.nsf/en/01220e.html viewed 12 February 2008.

2<M See ss 5-6 of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000 (UK). It is possible that the Commissioner of Police could apply for an interception warrant on behalf of the OFT or the SFO. However, it is questionable whether the criteria of which Secretary of State has to be satisfied before issuing such a warrant would be met in the case of a criminal cartel investigation.

205 See eg Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, Prosecuting Cartels Without Direct Evidence of
Agreement (2006), http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/19/49/37391162.pdf viewed 12 February 2008; International Competition
Network, Anti-Cartel Enforcement Manual (2006), Ch 3, http://www.internationalcompetitionnetwork.org/media/library/ conference 5th Capetown 2006/DigitalEvidenceGathering.pdf viewed 12 February 2008.

206 YJ^ may ke Qn j^g agemja; however, of a group involving ASIC, ACCC, AFP and the CDPP considering how and what
additional powers may be necessary to boost regulatory prosecutions in Australia: see "Bank Makes Batchelor Its Man in
Moscow", Australian Financial Review (2 June 2007) p 64.

207 See the analysis in Elliott I, "Listening Devices and the Participant Monitor: Controlling the Use of Electronic Surveillance
in Law Enforcement" (1982) 6 Crim LJ 327; Bronitt S and Stellios J, "Regulating Telecommunications Interception and Access
in the Twenty-First Century: Technological Evolution or Legal Revolution?" (2006) 24(4) Prometheus 413.

208 The submissions are available at http://www.treasury.gov.au/contentitem.asp?NavId=066&ContentID=1350 viewed 7 May
2008.

209 See the Australian Federal Police Act 1979 (Cth), s 40E.

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The ACCC no doubt has arrangements with the AFP in connection with the criminal offences under Pt VC relating to the consumer protection provisions of the Trade Practices Act. However, details regarding these arrangements are not publicly available.

12.4 Limitations on the use of powers of investigations - Privileges and immunities

12.4.1 Privileges against self-incrimination and exposure to penalty

The current position concerning the privileges against self-incrimination and self-exposure to penalty in relation to the ACCC's civil investigatory powers will continue to apply where the ACCC uses the same powers to investigate conduct under the new cartel offences. Under the relevant provisions of the Trade Practices Act these privileges have been abrogated so that persons are not excused from:

However, the Trade Practices Act does allow for use-immunity by stipulating that any such material provided by an individual in these contexts is not admissible in evidence against the individual in any criminal proceedings (which would include proceedings under the new cartel offences) other than in proceedings for an offence relating to a refusal or failure to comply with a s 155 notice or the offences relating to the provision of false or misleading information or obstruction of Commonwealth officials under the Criminal Code (Cth) (ss 155(7), 159(2), 154R(4)).

Consistent with the fact that the privileges against self-incrimination and exposure to penalty are not available to corporations,211 the use-immunity does not extend to corporations, so that material provided by a corporation in these contexts would be admissible in criminal proceedings (including proceedings under the new cartel offences) against the corporation.

Given the use immunity that applies to s 155 and Pt XID, it is not clear whether there will be powers pursuant to which the ACCC will be able to require an individual to attend and be interviewed and for the information and documents provided in the interview to be admissible as evidence in a subsequent criminal proceeding. As far as search and seizure are concerned, as previously mentioned, it is possible that the ACCC may rely on the AFP or may be able to act as special members of the AFP exercising powers under Pt 1AA of the Crimes Act 1914 (Cth) for these purposes.212 Information or documents obtained pursuant to the exercise of such powers would be admissible in criminal proceedings. However, they would be inadmissible in civil proceedings.213

The Trade Practices Act does not provide for derivative-use immunity, however, and this means that the ACCC is not prevented from using the information or documents gathered pursuant to its powers under s 155 and Pt XID to establish a chain of inquiry and from using evidence derived from that chain of inquiry against the individual in criminal proceedings.214

The Exposure Draft Bill also proposes a new s 86F which prevents a person from refusing to answer questions or produce documents in civil or criminal court proceedings or in accordance with requirements under the Trade Practices Act (eg in response to a s 155(1) notice) on the grounds that to do so "might tend to expose the person to a penalty by way of an order under s 86E", that being the

210 Note that ss 155(7) and 159 use the words "may tend" to incriminate whereas ss 154R(3) and 86F use "might tend". The test should be consistent in all three of these provisions.
21' Australian Law Reform Commission, n 21, p 350.
212 See s 3D(2) re the dual operation of Pt 1AA of the Crimes Act 1914 (Cth) and Pt XID of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth).
213 Williams v Keelty [2001] FCA 1301; (2001) 111 FCR 175; 184 ALR 411 at 456-458.

214 See Attorney-General's Department, n 83, p 87.

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section under which orders disqualifying persons from management of corporations may be made.
This amendment reflects the recent decision by the High Court that proceedings for disqualification
and banning orders are punitive, and so attract the privilege against exposure to penalty (Rich v ASIC
[2004] HCA 42; (2004) 220 CLR 129; 209 ALR 271), after a line of authority had maintained they were protective in
nature.

12.4.2 Legal professional privilege - Clarify scope of the protection?

The Dawson Report recommended, consistent with the High Court decision in Daniels Corp International Pty Ltd v ACCC [2002] HCA 49; (2002) 213 CLR 543; 192 ALR 561 that the Trade Practices Act be amended to provide expressly that s 155 does not override legal professional privilege. Section 155(7B) was subsequently inserted into the Trade Practices Act, providing that s 155 "does not require a person to produce a document that would disclose information that is the subject of legal professional privilege". This provision will apply regardless of whether the powers under s 155 are being used for civil or criminal investigations.

However, it should be amended to clarify that the privilege applies not only to the production of documents, but also to the furnishing of information and answering of questions pursuant to a s 155 notice.

Similarly, a corresponding provision should be inserted into Pt XID as to remove any doubt that the privilege applies also in relation to evidential material subject to a warrant under that Part (consistent with the position in relation to the search and seizure powers under the Crimes Act 1914).215

Federal investigatory bodies exercising powers under the SD Act and the TIA Act generally take the position that the powers in those Acts override client legal privilege, consistent with the decision in Carmody v MacKellar (1997) 76 FCR 115.216

On 13 February 2008 the ALRC released its report on client legal privilege and federal investigations.217 If adopted, its central recommendation in favour of general legislation covering the law and procedure governing client legal privilege claims in federal investigations and the contents of any such legislation will affect the exercise of powers by the AFP and ACCC in cartel investigations. Other aspects of the report, eg in relation to practice and procedure in making and resolving client privilege claims in federal investigations, are also worth examining in connection with the criminal cartel regime (as well as more generally in connection with the ACCC's current exercise of its powers under s 155 and Pt XID). It has not been possible to consider the report in detail for the purposes of this article.

12.5 Procedures relevant to criminal investigations?

The Exposure Draft Materials do not provide any information relating to the procedures that will govern investigations under the new criminal cartel regime. However, criminal investigations and proceedings involve stricter rules of procedure and evidence than civil investigations and proceedings. It follows that the methods employed in gathering, handling and adducing evidence are different in a criminal setting from in a civil setting. In criminal investigations, eg, there are rules that govern cautioning of persons under or potentially subject to arrest, rights to communicate with a relative or friend and to legal advice while under questioning, length of questioning, tape-recording of interviews, and the like.

The sources and nature of these rules vary depending on the arrest status of the person under investigation, the nature of the offence being investigated and the identity of the investigating officials. For federal offences, the principal sources of such rules are the general law, the Crimes Act 1914 (Cth) (Pt IC) and the Evidence Act 1995 (Cth) (see eg ss 138-139).

215Daniels Corp International Pty Ltd v ACCC [2002] HCA 49; (2002) 213 CLR 543; 192 ALR 561 at [27], [50]-[51].

216 Australian Law Reform Commission, Privilege in Perspective: Client Legal Privilege and Federal Investigations, Report
No 107, (13 February 2008) at http://www.austlii.edu.aU/cgi-bin/sinodisp/au/other/alrc/publications/reports/107/8.html?query= APrivilege%20in%20Perspective viewed 16 February 2008, pp 196-197 [5.25].

217 Australian Law Reform Commission, n 216.

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However, for the Schedule version of Pt IV (which will include the new cartel offences), rules under State and Territory legislation will apply.

The procedures involved in criminal investigations have significant implications for the ACCC's systems and staff. In 2005 the ACCC announced the establishment of a criminal enforcement and cartel branch that was said, in consultation with the CDPP and other regulators, to be re-designing its information gathering and management systems and training its staff to be ready for criminal investigations "from day one".218

12.6 Parallel criminal and civil investigations

Upon receipt of information about alleged cartel activity the ACCC often will not be in a position to know at the outset whether it should be investigated as a criminal or civil matter. Yet plainly this distinction will be material to the types of powers used and procedures followed in exercising the powers of investigation available to the ACCC. In practice, it may well be that the ACCC adopts the approach of the United Kingdom OFT in adhering to the criminal procedures relevant to investigations and evidence-gathering in relation to every investigation from the outset so as to allow for the use and admissibility of evidence gathered in any possible future criminal proceeding.219 However, pursuing every matter as potentially criminal also has resources and costs implications.

As was recognised in the ACCC's Submission to the Dawson Committee, it will be crucial that the ACCC consult with the CDPP at the earliest stage possible about the approach taken to the investigation of any matter that is potentially a criminal matter.220 The Draft MOU indicates that this consultation will be undertaken where the ACCC is considering referral to the CDPP (Draft MOU at [4.1]). However, even if informally, it may be necessary for consultation to take place prior to this stage, especially where assessments about referral cannot be made until a certain amount of investigation and evidence gathering has been undertaken.221

12.7 Offences relating to the powers of investigation and administration of
justice

It is an offence not to comply with or to knowingly provide false or misleading information in compliance with a notice under s 155(1) (s 155(5)), punishable by a fine not exceeding 20 penalty units or imprisonment for 12 months (s 155(6A)). It is also an offence to fail to comply with a requirement of an officer executing a warrant under Pt XID to answer questions or produce evidential material, punishable by a fine not exceeding 30 penalty units or imprisonment for 12 months (s 154R(2)).

In addition, with the introduction of the new cartel offences, Pt III of the Crimes Act 1914 (Cth), establishing offences relating to the administration of justice, will apply. Such offences include fabricating evidence, destroying evidence, intimidating witnesses, conspiracy to defeat justice and attempting to defeat justice. These offences attract penalties of up to five years imprisonment.

12.8 Guidelines?

The ACCC should develop guidelines on the powers of investigation that will apply under the new criminal regime, explaining what powers will be available, who will exercise them and under what conditions, what procedures will be followed in exercising such powers, what privileges and immunities will apply, how parallel criminal and civil investigations will be handled and what offences relating to investigations and proceedings exist. See eg the guidance that has been published on such

218 Samuel, n 115, p 14.

219 Office of Fair Trading, Powers for Investigating Criminal Cartels, Guidance Note (January 2004) http://www.oft.gov.uk/ advice_and_resources/publications/guidance/enterprise_act/oft515 viewed 12 February 2008.

220 Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, n 140, p 53.

221 Samuel, n 115, p 29: "the ACCC will liaise with the DPP as soon as it appears that a matter may warrant criminal prosecution
and will take advice on what evidence will be required and how an investigation may best be managed to gather that evidence",
http://www.accc.gov.au/content/item.phtml ?itemld=714138&nodeld=91536bfe27f21efae80881c64ffcfd73&fn=20051112.pdf
viewed 12 February 2008

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matters by the United Kingdom OFT. In accordance with its usual practice, the ACCC should first publish draft guidelines or a discussion paper for comment. It will need also to revise its current guidelines on the operation of s 155 of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth).223

13. IMMUNITY

There is information relevant to immunity under the new criminal regime in the Draft MOU, the ACCC's existing Immunity Policy for Cartel Conduct224 and the CDPP's immunity policy as set out in the PPC.225

13.1 The draft MOU

Immunity is dealt with in s 7 of the Draft MOU, which provides as follows.

The Draft MOU has to be read in conjunction with the ACCC's immunity policy and the CDPP's immunity policy in their current form (given that there are no public proposals for their amendment).

13.2 The ACCC immunity policy

Under the Draft MOU decisions by the ACCC to grant immunity from civil proceedings or recommend to the CDPP that immunity from criminal proceedings be granted are to be made in accordance with its published immunity policy in relation to cartel conduct.

The ACCC published its Immunity Policy for Cartel Conduct in August 2005 (following an extensive review of its 2003 Leniency Policy for Cartel Conduct).227 The policy is to be read in conjunction with its Interpretation Guidelines.228 In summary, under that policy, the ACCC will grant immunity if:
• the applicant applies for immunity under the policy and satisfies the following conditions:

- the applicant is or was a party to a cartel;

222 Office of Fair Trading, n 219.

223 See ACCC, Section 155 of the Trade Practices Act: A Guide to the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission's
Power to Obtain Information, Documents and Evidence under Section 155 of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (March 2008)
http://www.accc.gov.au/content/index.phtml/itemId/263816 viewed 9 August 2008.

224 Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, ACCC Immunity Policy for Cartel Conduct, (August 2005); Australian
Competition and Consumer Commission, ACCC Immunity Policy for Cartel Conduct Interpretation Guidelines (2005)
http://www.accc.gov.au/content/index.phtml/itemld/708758/fromltemld/716990 viewed 6 February 2008.

225 Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions, n 120.

226 It is difficult to imagine a scenario in which an applicant would apply for only civil or only criminal immunity.

227 Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, Review of the ACCC's Leniency Policy for Cartel Conduct, Discussion
Paper (2005), p 4, http://www.accc.gov.au/content/item.phtml ?itemld=566510&nodeld=
a280cf4f0d5d9e53b6eld0b6427ef39f&fn=Leniency%20Discussion%20Paper.pdf, viewed 25 April 2008.

228 Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, n 224.

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- admits that its conduct may breach the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth);
- is the first to apply for immunity in respect of the cartel;
- has not coerced others to participate in the cartel and was not the clear leader of the cartel; and
- has ceased involvement or indicates to the ACCC that it will cease involvement;
- in the case of a corporate applicant, its admissions are truly a corporate act and not simply the isolated confessions of certain representatives;

The policy provides for corporate immunity, derivative immunity (to cover employees and officers of a corporation with corporate immunity) and individual immunity. It also has provisions relating to the placement of markers; affirmative amnesty; oral applications; use of information provided in the application process and other related matters.

In practice, the ACCC is prepared to grant immunity under its policy at the early stages of an investigation and even before an investigation into the cartel that is the subject of the immunity application has begun. It regards the immunity policy as one of, if not the, most important tools at its disposal in detecting and prosecuting cartel conduct.229

13.3 The CDPP immunity policy

Under the Draft MOU the decision to grant immunity from criminal proceedings is to lie with the CDPP in accordance with the PPC.230 The CDPP has the power to grant such immunity, by way of an undertaking not to prosecute, under s 9(6D) of the Director of Public Prosecutions Act 1983 (Cth).231

Under the PPC, such an undertaking will only be given provided the following two conditions are met (PPC at [5.5]):

(a) the evidence that the accomplice can give is considered necessary to secure the conviction of the defendant, and that evidence is not available from other sources; and
(b) the accomplice can reasonably be regarded as significantly less culpable than the defendant.

Assuming these two conditions are met, the "central issue" that the CDPP will consider under the PPC in deciding whether to give an undertaking is whether "it is in the overall interests of justice that the opportunity to prosecute the accomplice in respect of his or her own involvement in the crime in question should be foregone in order to secure that person's testimony in the prosecution of another" (PPC at [5.6]). In making this assessment, the CDPP takes account of the following matters:

(a) the degree of involvement of the accomplice in the criminal activity in question compared with that of the defendant;
(b) the strength of the prosecution evidence against the defendant without the evidence it is expected the accomplice can give and, if some charge or charges could be established against the defendant without the accomplice's evidence, the extent to which those charges would reflect the defendant's criminality;
(c) the extent to which the prosecution's evidence is likely to be strengthened if the accomplice testifies - apart from taking into account such matters as the availability of corroborative evidence and the weight that the arbiter of fact is likely to give to the accomplice's testimony, it will also be necessary to consider the likely effect on the prosecution case if the accomplice does not come up to proof:
(d) the likelihood of the weakness in the prosecution case being strengthened other than by relying on the evidence the accomplice can give (eg the likelihood of further investigations disclosing sufficient independent evidence to remedy the weakness);

229 See eg Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, n 227; Samuel G, "Cracking Cartels", (2004) speech at Cracking
Cartels Conference, n 126.

230 Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions, n 120.

231 It also has the power under s 9(6) to undertake that answers given in evidence in proceedings will not be admissible in
evidence against the person, other than in proceedings in respect of the falsity of evidence given by the person.

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(e) whether there is or is likely to be sufficient admissible evidence to substantiate charges against the accomplice, and whether it would be in the public interest that the accomplice be prosecuted but for his or her preparedness to testify for the prosecution if given an undertaking under the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth); and
(f) whether, if the accomplice were to be prosecuted and then testify, there is a real basis for believing that his or her personal safety would be at risk while serving any term of imprisonment.

These provisions in the PPC focus very much on accomplices. However, it is to be borne in mind that cartel activity will involve joint principals as well as accomplices.

More fundamentally, the provisions set out above indicate that the CDPP has maximum discretion in making determinations about immunity (contrary to the statement in the draft MOU that both "the DPP and ACCC recognise that maximisation of certainty and minimisation of discretion as far as reasonably possible are crucial to the effective operation of immunity policies for cartel conduct" ([Draft MOU at 7.1]). Immunity is not automatic upon satisfaction of the conditions set out in the Prosecution Policy.232 Rather, once those threshold criteria are met, the CDPP then undertakes an assessment of what the "overall interests of justice" require in the circumstances of the case (having regard to what appears to be a non-exhaustive list in the Prosecution Policy).233 The way in which the factors identified as relevant to this assessment are formulated reflect the extent of the CDPP's discretion in making determinations about immunity. Thus, eg the CDPP considers whether the accomplice (immunity applicant) "can reasonably be regarded as significantly less culpable than the defendant" and "the degree of involvement of the accomplice in the criminal activity in question compared with that of the defendant".234 This to be compared with the far more narrowly prescribed ACCC condition that the applicant "has not coerced others to participate in the cartel and was not the clear leader of the cartel".235

As crucially, the practice of the CDPP is to make decisions about immunity at the conclusion of an investigation236 and the PPC makes it clear that undertakings under s 9(6D) will only be given "as a last resort" (PPC at [5.4]).237 The latter reflects the basic prosecutorial philosophy that persons of equal or greater complicity should not escape prosecution while others of equal or lesser complicity are charged. The Prosecution Policy also does not prescribe a formal application process and hence does not deal with questions such as the ability to make an oral application and the confidentiality of information provided in support of an application. It sets out the factors to which the DPP will have regard but does not impose any obligations on the applicant, such as full and frank disclosure and cooperation, and nor does it make provision for revocation.

13.4 How are the differences between the ACCC and the CDPP immunity policies to be dealt with?

There are significant differences and inconsistencies between the approach to immunity by the CDPP and the approach by the ACCC, both in terms of the stage, at and the conditions under which, immunity will be granted. While these differences stem from a fundamental cultural difference between the ACCC as a regulatory agency and the CDPP as a law enforcement agency, the effectiveness of the immunity program in relation to anti-cartel law enforcement depends on these differences in approach to immunity being addressed and the two policies being made as certain and consistent as possible.238

232 Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions, n 120 at [5.5].
233 Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions, n 120 at [5.6].
234 Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions, n 120 at [5.5]-[5.6].
235 Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, n 224, p 1 [4(iv)].
236 See Treasurer, n 105.
237 Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions, n 120.

238 See International Competition Network, Anti-Cartel Enforcement Manual, Ch 2 at [2.6.7] (April 2006) http://
www.internationalcompetitionnetwork.org/media/library/conference 5th Capetown 2006/
FINALFormattedChapter2-modres.pdf viewed 6 February 2008; also the statement by Samuel G that "both agencies [referring

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Various different models for resolving such issues present themselves from overseas experience (in particular, from the United Kingdom, Canada and Ireland). These models were referred to briefly in the Dawson Report.239 The Committee considered that the pros and cons in relation to each of these models and the difficulties in relation to the handling of immunity should be examined in detail and resolved before criminal sanctions are introduced.240

Presumably these issues were considered by the Working Party and recommendations made. However, the Working Party's Report has not been published.

The Treasurer's Press Release indicated that the PPC would be amended to enable immunity to be granted at an early stage in an investigation.241 The Treasurer's Press Release further appeared to indicate that, on the recommendation of the ACCC, immunity from criminal proceedings would be granted where the applicant satisfied the following conditions:

The Exposure Draft Materials make no mention of any proposal to amend the PPC to reflect such a significant change in approach by the CDPP - both as to the timing of a grant of immunity and the conditions under which it will be granted.243 Assuming such a proposal is still contemplated, it is difficult to understand why it was not foreshadowed in the Exposure Draft Materials.244 If amendment of the PPC along the lines indicated in the Treasurer's Press Release is proving too difficult (for whatever reason), an alternative approach would be to make the ACCC and CDPP joint decision-makers in relation to criminal immunity, applying the ACCC s Immunity Policy.245 However, given the differences in cultures previously referred to, there must be substantial doubt as to whether such an approach in fact would engender the level of certainty and speed of response required for the policy to be attractive to prospective applicants.

13.5 Should the relationship between immunity and referral be clarified?

The Draft MOU indicates that the ACCC will consult the CDPP in relation to the management of and decisions on applications for civil immunity where the matter also concerns criminal investigation and prosecution. The practical effect of this seems to be that the ACCC will not make a decision on civil immunity until it has made a decision on whether or not to pursue the matter as a criminal investigation and possibly also, on whether or not it should be referred to the CDPP for prosecution, and in any event not until it has consulted with the CDPP.

to the ACCC and CDPP] understand that if this certainty cannot be delivered the Immunity Policy will be compromised" in his speech, "The Enforcement Priorities of the ACCC", n 115, p 29.

239 Trade Practices Review Committee, n 4, p 159.

240 Trade Practices Review Committee, n 4, p 163. For a more detailed discussion of the United Kingdom and Canadian models,
see Beaton-Wells, n 137.

241 See Treasurer, n 105.

242 Note that these largely reflect the conditions under the ACCC's current immunity policy with some slight modifications
which reflect the outcome of the review undertaken in 2004.

243 Pearson, n 110, in which Pearson confirmed that there will be a change in the PPC to enable immunity to be granted up front,
but otherwise went no further than saying that "alignment between immunity in civil and criminal matters will be aimed for".

244 For speculation as to why, see Beaton-Wells, n 126.

245 As suggested in the submissions of the Trade Practices Committee of the Law Council of Australia and the Business Council
of Australia: see Law Council of Australia, Trade Practices Committee of the Business Law Section, Submission to the Treasury
on the Criminalisation of Cartels, 5 March 2008, at [204]-[208], http: //www, treasury, go v. au/documents/13 50/PDF/LCA Trade
Practices Committee.pdf viewed 1 May 2008; Business Council of Australia, Criminal Penalties for Serious Cartel Conduct -
Draft Legislation (7 March 2008) p 14, at http://www.treasury.gov.au/documents/1350/PDF/Business Council Australia.pdf
viewed 1 May 2008.

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Equally, it is evident that the ACCC will only make decisions about whether to recommend criminal immunity to the CDPP once it has considered the question of referral. If the ACCC decides not to refer the matter, then it will make a recommendation to the CDPP based on an assessment as to whether the applicant meets the criteria set out in the ACCC's immunity policy. However, if it decides to refer a matter for criminal prosecution to the CDPP, then it appears that no possibility of an ACCC recommendation of immunity arises.

The inevitable effect of this proposed system is that ACCC decisions relating to civil immunity and now also recommendations on criminal immunity may not be able to be made quickly and will be bound up with assessments related to referral to the CDPP, the outcomes of which are in many cases likely to be uncertain and difficult to predict.

Furthermore in terms of outcomes, ACCC decisions regarding immunity, civil and criminal, will depend upon the referral decision. This creates the following anomalies and uncertainties:

The points raised illustrate the need for the proposed immunity system to be elaborated in greater detail in the Draft MOU, for both the CDPP and ACCC immunity policies to be amended, for guidelines to be published and, under such guidelines, for worked examples to be provided to assist practitioners and parties in understanding how the system is likely to work in practice.246 Otherwise, the attributes of transparency, certainty and predictability, so critical to the effectiveness of an immunity program, are likely to be sorely lacking under the new criminal regime.247

246 Cf the inexplicable response of ACCC Chairman Graeme Samuel to the concerns raised about the proposed immunity
arrangements, describing the issue as a "furphy", as cited in Sexton E, "To Catch a Cartel", Sydney Morning Herald (21 March
2008)p 35.

247 Submissions to Treasury on the EDM were unanimous in support of this view: see the comments in American Bar
Association Section of Antitrust Law and Section of International Law, Comments of the American Bar Association Section of
Antitrust Law and Section of International Law In Response to the Commonwealth Government of Australia's Request for
Public Comment on the Draft Legislation Providing Criminal Penalties for Serious Cartel Conduct (February 2008) p 17,
http://www.treasury.gov.au/documents/1350/PDF/American Bar Association.pdf viewed 25 April 2008; Beaton-Wells C and
Fisse B, Submission: The Exposure Draft Bill, Draft ACCC-DPP MOU and Discussion Paper Introducing Criminal Penalties
for Serious Cartel Conduct in Australia (7 March 2008) p 89 [13.4], http://www.treasury.gov.au/documents/1350/PDF/Dr Caron Beaton-Wells and Mr Brent Fisse.pdf viewed 25 April 2008; Dawson B, Submission on Trade Practices Amendment
(Cartel Conduct and Other Measures) Bill 2008 - Exposure Draft (7 March 2008) p 23 [6.2], http://www.treasury.gov.au/ documents/1350/PDF/Blake Dawson.pdf viewed 25 April 2008; Business Council of Australia, Criminal Penalties for Serious
Cartel Conduct - Draft Legislation (7 March 2008) p 14, http://www.treasurv.gov.au/documents/1350/PDF/Business Council
Australia.pdf viewed 25 April 2008; Utz C, Submission to the Treasury: Exposure Draft - Trade Practices Amendment (Cartel

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13.6 Should the ACCC's immunity policy be amended?

As stated above, once the legislation has been passed, the ACCC will need to revise its current immunity policy to reflect the amendments.248 Presumably, in keeping with its past practice, the ACCC will release a draft of the revised policy for comment.

At the very least the policy should be revised to explain the different procedures and timing of decisions with respect to applications for civil and criminal immunity and to explain the role of the CDPP and interaction between that agency and the ACCC, in particular. It will also need to be revised to reflect the new provisions under the "protected cartel information" scheme (see Pt 14) as these provisions will have a bearing on the position taken by the ACCC on the use of information provided to it by immunity applicants.249

More substantively, notwithstanding the significant revisions to the policy in 2004, the ACCC should take the opportunity presented by these developments to re-assess whether the policy reflects international best practice, including considering what may be learnt from other jurisdictions with dual civil/criminal systems and separate regulatory and prosecutorial agencies,250 as well as the latest economic thinking on the most effective design and operation of immunity programs.251 In the course of this re-appraisal, some of the issues that should be examined include:

Conduct and Other Measures) Bill 2008 (7 March 2008) pp 7-8 [38], http://www.treasury.gov.au/documents/1350/PDF/ Clayton_Utz.pdf viewed 25 April 2008; Consumer Action Law Centre, Discussion Paper: Criminal Penalties for Serious Cartel Conduct (29 February 2008) p 7, http://www.treasury.gov.au/documents/1350/PDF/Consumer Action Law Centre.pdf viewed 1 May 2008; Law Council of Australia, Trade Practices Committee of the Business Law Section, Submission to the Treasury on the Criminalisation of Cartels (5 March 2008) p 58 [198]-[200], http: //www, treasury, go v. au/documents/13 50/PDF/LCA Trade Practices Committee.pdf viewed 1 May 2008.

248 The ACCC, Immunity Policy Interpretation Guidelines (2005) at [17], http://www.accc.gov.au/content/index.phtml/itemId/ 708758 viewed 14 February 2008, refers to the government's announcement of its intent to introduce criminal sanctions and
states: "The ACCC will amend its immunity policy and these guidelines as necessary when this occurs."

249 See ACCC, Immunity Policy Interpretation Guidelines (2005) at [2.6], http://www.usdoi.gov/atr/public/guidelines/0091.htm.

250 See eg Canadian Competition Bureau Information Bulletin, Immunity Program under the Competition Act, October 2007;
United Kingdom Office of Fair Trading (OFT), Leniency and No-action, OFT's Draft Final Guidance on the Handling of
Applications, November 2006.

251 See eg Leslie C, "Antitrust Amnesty, Game Theory and Cartel Stability" (2006) 31 J Corp L 453; Spagnolo G, Leniency and
Whistleblowers in Antitrust, Discussion Paper Series, No. 5794, Centre for Economic Policy Research (August 2006)
http://www.cepr.org/pubs/dps/DP5764.aspm viewed 23 April 2008; Leliefield D and Motchenkova M, To Protect in Order to
Serve: Adverse Effects of Leniency Programs in View of Industry Asymmetry, TILEC Discussion Paper DP 2007-007 (February
2007), http://www.papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm7abstract id=963110 viewed 23 May 2008.

252 See eg the recent decision by the Canadian Competition Bureau to adopt a "single-agreement process" in relation to its
immunity policy, at http://www.competitionbureau.gc.ca/epic/site/cb-bc.nsf/en/02480e.html viewed 23 May 2008.

253 Leslie, n 251 at 478. See also the discussion in American Bar Association, Comments of the American Bar Association
Section of Antitrust Law in Response to the Canadian Competition Bureau Request for Public Comments Regarding Immunity
Program Review (May 2006) pp 9-13, http://www.abanet.org/antitrust/at-comments/2006/05-06/canadian-leniency.shtml viewed
23 May 2008.

254 Leslie, n 251 at 481.

255 See Law Council of Australia, Trade Practices Committee of the Business Law Section, Submission on the Criminalisation
of Cartels (5 March 2008), http://www.treasury.gov.au/contentitem.asp?NavId=066&ContentID=1350 viewed 7 May 2008.

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14. ACCESS TO INFORMATION HELD BY THE ACCC: THE "PROTECTED CARTEL

INFORMATION" SCHEME

The Exposure Draft Bill invests substantial discretion in the ACCC with respect to providing access to documents and information in its possession, while at the same time it significantly limits the capacity of others to obtain access to such documents or information through legal processes. This is the effect of the scheme set out in ss 157, 157B, 157C and 157D. Central to the scheme is the concept of "protected cartel information" (PCI).

14.1 The definition of PCI

PCI is defined as information that was given to the ACCC in confidence and relates to a breach, or possible breach, of the new cartel offence provisions or the new civil penalty prohibitions.258

It is not clear why information that relates to a breach or possible breach of the s 45 provisions is not included in the scheme.

Interpretational difficulties in relation to this definition immediately suggest themselves - most obviously potential difficulties in determining:

14.2 Relevant factors determining disclosure of PCI

The scheme provides an exhaustive list of factors that will be relevant in determining when PCI is disclosed (divulged or communicated)259 ("the relevant factors"). That list is as follows:260

256 See Professor Baxt's commentary below at 249. See also the comments made on behalf of the Canadian Competition Bureau
on the paperless process in its recent review of its immunity policy: Denyse MacKenzie, Senior Deputy Commissioner,
Criminal Matters Branch, Competition Bureau, "The Bureau's Immunity Program: Fine Tuning or Overhaul", Paper presented
at the Canadian Bar Association Annual Conference, 28-29 September 2006, Quebec, p 14 (copy on file with author).

257 These possibilities were decided against in the ACCC's 2005 review of the former leniency policy: see Australian
Competition and Consumer Commission, Review of the Leniency Policy for Cartel Conduct, Position Paper (26 August 2005)
pp 15-16 http://www.accc.gov.au/content/item.phtml?itemld=725616&nodeld=3alfaa8ecle755f25adef02560676bf5&fn= Leniencv%20position%20paper.pdf viewed 7 May 2008. However, it would be timely to review those decisions in light of the
extent to which amnesty plus and penalty plus are hailed as crucial in maximising the impact of an immunity policy: see eg
Spratling G and Arp DJ, "International Cartel Enforcement and Leniency Programs: A Global Perspective", Paper presented at
International Competition Network Workshop on Leniency Programs (November 2004) pp 7-8, http://www.accc.gov.au/content/ item.phtml?itemId=566510&nodeId=6ae65db34138257c64b61193b00f923a&fn=Session%202%20-%20Gary%20Spratling.pdf
viewed 8 May 2008.
258 See Exposure Draft Bill, ss 157B(7), 157C(7).
259 See Exposure Draft Bill, s 157B(7).
260 See Exposure Draft Bill, ss 157(1B), 157B(5), 157C(5).

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cartel information in the future. Depending on the context, additional factors apply.

As is evident from this list, the PCI scheme appears to be aimed primarily at restricting access by third parties to information provided to the ACCC by persons in compliance with s 155 notices or in connection with penalty negotiations; by foreign regulators in connection with the investigation of serious cartel conduct on an international scale; and by informants, including in connection with applications for immunity. The ACCC has a history of resisting attempts by third parties to obtain access to such information. However, there are increasing indications that such documents may be accessible under statutory or court-approved compulsory processes - eg under subpoena, freedom of information legislation, discovery rules and O 46 of the Federal Court Rules - and limits on the extent to which the ACCC may rely on various privileges (eg without prejudice privilege; public interest privilege; legal professional privilege) to resist access.261

14.3 Contexts in which the PCI scheme applies

There are three contexts in which the scheme applies:

The effect of these provisions appears to be as follows:

- the ACCC may produce a document containing PCI or disclose PCI to a court or tribunal, subject to having regard to the relevant factors (s 157B(4));264

261 See BaxtB, Cracking Cartels: International and Australian Developments: International Cooperation (2004), http://
www.accc.gov.au/content/index.phtml/itemId/566510/fromItemId/3765 viewed 12 February 2008, and the cases referred to
therein. Also, more recently, see Cadbury Schweppes Pry Ltd v Amcor Ltd [2008] FCA 88, and note in particular the comments
of Gordon J at [46]-[47]. This decision is under appeal. Generally, by virtue of s 155AAA, the ACCC is prohibited from
disclosure of information given to it in confidence or obtained under Pt XID or s 155 and relating to a matter under Pt IV unless
required or permitted to do so under the Act or a law of the Commonwealth.

262 As listed in Exposure Draft Bill, s 157(1B) (see Pt 14.2) and including also in this context: the legitimate interests of the
corporation or person making the request (e) and such other matters (if any) as the Commission considers relevant (f). Consider
the likely interpretation of "legitimate interests" in (e) - presumably this consideration would extend first and foremost to the
relevance of the information in question to the respondent's capacity to test or refute the ACCC's allegations. Consider the
extent to which (f) broadens the power?

263 Exposure Draft Bill, s 157(2).

264 As listed in Exposure Draft Bill, s 157B(4) (see Pt 14.2) refers to Pt 14.2 of our article but including also in this context: in
the case of production or disclosure to a court - the interests of administration of justice; and in the case of production or
disclosure to a tribunal - the interests of securing the effective performance of the tribunal's functions (s 157B(5)(e)-(f)).
Furthermore, the ACCC must not have regard to any other matters. The latter appears a tokenistic attempt to confine the ACCC's
discretion.

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but the ACCC is not to be required to produce such a document or disclose such

information except with the leave of the court or tribunal,265 and in granting such leave, subject to the court or tribunal having regard to the relevant factors (s 157B(1));266

- and if a document is produced or information is produced or disclosed in either way, it is
not to be produced or disclosed in other proceedings except where the ACCC has exercised
its power under s 157B(4) or a court or tribunal has given leave under s 157B(1) in relation
to the other proceedings.267
• Under s 157C:

- the ACCC may, on the application of a person, provide a copy of a document containing PCI, to the person where the person is a party in the proceeding or is considering instituting proceedings and the proceedings have not yet been instituted (ss 157C(3)-(4)),268 subject to having regard to the relevant factors;269
- but the ACCC is not to be required to make discovery (however described) to the person in either circumstance270 (and there is no provision for leave by a court akin to the provision under s 157B(1));
- and if a document is so produced, it must not be adduced in other proceedings before the same court or another court or a tribunal except where the ACCC has exercised the power under ss 157C(3)-(4), or in accordance with leave granted under s 157B(1) in relation to the other proceedings, or as a result of an exercise of power under s 157B(4) in relation to the other proceedings.

The drafting of these provisions leaves much to be desired. For example, it is not clear whether s 157B means that a party must first obtain leave of the court or tribunal to serve a notice to produce or subpoena,271 or if after service, once the ACCC objects to production, "leave" must be obtained to compel production.272 The concept of giving leave in the latter context seems incongruous. Arguably, in such circumstances the court would be ordering the Commission to make production.273 Further, if it is intended that the party seeking access obtain leave first to serve the notice or subpoena, it is difficult to see how this could be done ex parte given that in any leave application neither the applicant nor the court will know whether information held by the Commission is classified as PCI until the ACCC makes the claim.274 If leave must be sought to serve the notice or subpoena and such leave is refused with the court having applied the relevant factors, then it appears highly unlikely that the Commission would exercise its power to provide access voluntarily, applying those same factors.275

14.4 The impact of the PCI scheme

The PCI scheme has significant implications in that it limits the capacity of defendants or respondents to obtain documents or information from the ACCC that would assist in testing or refuting the

265 Exposure Draft Bill, 157B(1).

266 As listed in Exposure Draft Bill, s 157B(2) (see Pt 14.2) but including also in this context: in the case of production or
disclosure to a court - the interests of administration of justice; and in the case of production or disclosure to a tribunal - the
interests of securing the effective performance of the tribunal's functions (s 157B(2)(e)-(f)).

267 See Exposure Draft Bill, s 157B(3) and 157B(6).

of justice (e).

Exposure Draft (4 March 2008) p 4 [26], http://www.treasurv.gov.au/documents/1350/PDF/Maurice_Blackburn_Pty_Ltd.pdf viewed 25 April 2008.
273 Beaton-Wells and Fisse, n 247.
274 Maurice Blackburn Pty Ltd, n 272.

275 Maurice Blackburn Pty Ltd, n 272.

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ACCC's allegations, and also the capacity of private litigants to obtain information relevant to mounting a damages claim (to the extent that any s 83 findings of fact are insufficient for this purpose).

Clearly the list of relevant factors represents an attempt in each context to balance competing interests:

In apparent recognition of the potentially significant impact of this scheme on the conduct of proceedings and the rights of persons facing allegations under the new cartel offence or civil penalty prohibitions, s 157D represents an attempt to preserve certain powers of the court - in particular, the power to deal with abuses of process276 and the power to stay a proceeding on the ground that the refusal by the court to require the ACCC to produce or disclose PCI would have a substantial adverse effect on the defendant's right to a fair hearing (in a criminal proceeding)277 or on the hearing (in a civil proceeding).278

These safeguards are directed at protecting the rights or interests of persons facing allegations under the legislation and in respect of whom, by reason of the new provisions, access to information is denied. However, arguably, there needs to be further consideration of the interests of persons whose information is disclosed to third parties under the scheme. Under s 157B there presumably will be an opportunity for such persons to make submissions to the court deciding whether to give leave to compel the ACCC to disclose such information. Under s 157C, where there is no provision made for a court to give leave, there is a good argument that, as matter of procedural fairness, the ACCC should be required to invite such submissions and take account of them before deciding whether to voluntarily disclose information.

Furthermore, it has been argued that the proposed scheme does little, if anything, to accommodate the interests of private claimants. In particular, criticism has been levelled at s 157C on the grounds that it inappropriately constrains the factors to be taken into account by the ACCC in making decisions about access and, in any event, is weighted against disclosure because the list of relevant factors does not include the interests of the person seeking it, the purpose for which access is sought or the relevance and probative value of the information in achieving that purpose.279 Thus, so it is argued,

276 See Exposure Draft Bill, s 157D(1) but note that this power is only preserved to the extent that there is nothing in ss 157B
and 157C that expressly or implicitly provides otherwise.

277 See Exposure Draft Bill, s 157D(2).

278 See Exposure Draft Bill, s 157D(2). Factors that a court must consider in ordering a stay of a civil proceeding are set out in
s 157D(4).

279 Maurice Blackburn Pty Ltd, n 272. Section 157(lB)(e) which includes "the legitimate interests of the corporation which, or
the person who, made the request under subsection (1)" in the list of relevant factors to be taken into account by the ACCC in
deciding whether to refuse to comply with a request for PCI by a respondent to a civil proceeding where the PCI relates to or
tends to establish the case of the respondent. It is incongruous that this or a similar factor has been omitted from the lists of
relevant factors in connection with ss 157B and 157C.

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the scheme effectively seeks to redefine the way in which public interest immunity privilege is applied and to do so in a manner that favours the ACCC and cartel offenders over the interests of cartel victims.280

Putting aside such safeguards as are proposed (however limited), whether in practice a proper balance between the various competing interests affected by the PCI scheme is reached will depend in large part on the way in which the ACCC exercises its substantial discretion in connection with the voluntary release of information and on the approach taken by the court in determining whether information should be released in cases in which the ACCC decides not to do so voluntarily. The operation of the scheme should be reviewed in due course (no later than two years after its enactment) to enable such matters to be assessed.

14.5 Worked examples

Given the complexity of these new provisions, it would assist practitioners and others if the ACCC provided worked examples of how the PCI scheme would operate in various scenarios. Two examples are provided below.

EXAMPLE 1

EXAMPLE 2

280 Maurice Blackburn Pty Ltd, n 272. Maurice Blackburn made additional criticisms, including that the decision-making process under s 157C will lack transparency, that there is no precedent for the proposed approach in schemes applied by other regulators in Australia, that it is inconsistent with the approach taken to third party disclosure by competition regulators in other jurisdictions, that it is against the public interest in ensuring cartel victims are compensated and that it is contrary to the growing international trend towards recognition of the important role of private litigation in antitrust enforcement. As to the latter, in particular, see the discussion in Beaton-Wells, n 126.

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15. JURY TRIALS

15.1 The new cartel offences are indictable offences triable by a jury

The new cartel offences are indictable offences (ss 44ZZRRF(3) and 44ZZRG(4)).

Under s 80 of the Australian Constitution, trial by jury will be required where a prosecution for a cartel offence is brought in the Federal Court.281 Section 80 requires unanimous verdicts and does not allow an accused to elect trial by judge alone.282

Mechanisms for jury trial in the Federal Court need to be put in place. The Exposure Draft Bill foreshadows the later enactment of the Federal Court of Australia Amendment (Criminal Jurisdiction) Act 2008 (see s 163(6) of the Exposure Draft Bill). It is not clear why this Bill was not released as part of the Exposure Draft Materials. Suitable facilities and administrative systems will also be needed.283

The new cartel offences are included in the Schedule version of Pt IV of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth). Under the Competition Policy Reform Acts in the States and Territories (see eg ss 24-25 of the Competition Policy Reform (NSW) Act 1995 (NSW)), a Competition Code offence under the Schedule version of Pt IV is to be treated as if a Commonwealth offence. Accordingly, it appears that s 80 of the Australian Constitution will apply to the new cartel offences in the Competition Code.

It also appears that the new cartel offences under Pt IV (as distinct from those in the Competition Code) will be triable in States and Territories under s 68 of the Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth) and s 163 of the Exposure Draft Bill. Under s 68(2) of the Judiciary Act, trials conducted on that jurisdictional basis will be subject to s 80.

There is considerable divergence in approach under State and Territory laws relating to the trial of indictable offences as to the permissibility of majority verdicts and the right of an accused to elect trial by judge alone:

281 See generally Chesterman M, "Criminal Trial Juries in Australia: From Penal Colonies to a Federal Democracy" (1999) 62
Law & Contemporary Problems 69.

282 Brown v The Queen [1986] HCA 11; (1986) 160 CLR 171; 64 ALR 161. But note Brownlee v The Queen (2001) 207 CLR 278 (s 80 taken
not to require a verdict by 12 persons where two jurors have been discharged).

283 Black M, "The Introduction of Juries to the Federal Court of Australia" (2007) 90 Reform 14.

284 Jury Act 1977 (NSW), s 55F; Juries Act 2000 (Vic), s 46; Juries Act 1927 (SA), s 57; Juries Act 2003 (Tas), s 43; Juries Act
1957 (WA), s 41; Criminal Code (NT), s 368.

285 Criminal Procedure Act 1986 (NSW), s 132; Supreme Court Act 1933 (ACT), s 68B; Juries Act 1927 (SA), s 7; Criminal
Code (WA), s 651A. See further Hidden P, "Trial by Judge Alone in New South Wales" (1997) 9 Judicial Officers Bulletin 41;
Willis J, "Trial by Judge Alone" (1998) 7 JJA 144.

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observed in 1999:

The recent history of juries in Australia reveals an interesting clash between the endeavours of state and territory governments to reduce the costs associated with jury trial by various means - for example, relegating more and more cases to summary trial by magistrates, allowing for trial on indictment by judges sitting alone, and introducing majority verdicts - and the determination of the High Court of Australia, in its decisions on s 80 of the Australian Constitution, to reassert the traditional values and features of jury trial. While the scope of the High Court's efforts is circumscribed - it can only affect the trial of commonwealth offences and it appears committed to retaining its long-standing literal interpretation of the section, robbing it of much of its potential force - the Court's judgments do operate as strong reminders of the reasons why jury trial travelled from England to Australia in the first place.286

15.2 Should the new cartel offences be tried only in the Federal Court?

The fact that the new cartel offences will be triable in State and Territory Supreme Courts possibly may come as a surprise.287 The Treasurer's Press Release did not give any hint that there would be trials under State and Territory laws. Nor was that prospect entertained in the Dawson Report (at 153). The Working Party Report may canvas the issue but that Report is not publicly available. The Budget Papers in 2006 stated:

In addition, the Government will provide $3.9 million over four years to enable the Federal Court to hear trials relating to serious cartel conduct offences under proposed amendments to the Trade Practices Act 1974. This includes $1.4 million in capital funding in 2006-07 for accomodation fit-out.288

It may be argued that all trials for the new cartel offences should be in the Federal Court, for these main reasons:

[N]o reason, as far as I am aware, has been advanced for departing from the policy by which, since the introduction of the Trade Practices Act, exclusive jurisdiction has been conferred on the Federal Court in competition law matters. If appeals are to go to the Full Court of the Federal Court there seems little point in having the trials in State and Territory Supreme Courts, already over-burdened with criminal work. If appeals are to go to State and Territory Courts of Appeals there will be the potential for conflicting decisions at intermediate appellate level.

State and Territory Supreme Courts have extensive experience with criminal jury trials and to that extent are well placed to try cartel offences. However, experience with criminal jury trials also resides in members of the Federal Court, as Black CJ has explained:291

It may not be widely appreciated that many of the Federal Court's judges have had extensive experience in criminal law and procedure, through practice as trial and appellate advocates when at the Bar and as judges hearing criminal trials and appeals on other courts. Five present members of the Court conducted criminal trials when they were formerly members of State Supreme Courts, one was a member of a Court of Appeal with extensive criminal work and another was the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions. Many of the judges hold secondary commissions as members of courts with trial and

whether judges and juries use similar fact-finding processes see WayeV, "Judicial Fact-Finding: Trial by Judge Alone in Serious Criminal Cases" [2003] MelbULawRw 16; (2003) 27 MULR 423.

287

288 Australia, Treasury, n 287.

289 See also Australian Law Reform Commission, Same Time, Same Crime: Sentencing of Federal Offenders (Report No 103,
2006), Recommendation 18-2 ("[e]xpand the original jurisdiction of the Federal Court of Australia to hear and determine
proceedings in relation to nominated federal offences whose subject matter is closely allied to the existing civil jurisdiction of
the Court, in areas such as taxation, trade practices and corporations").

290 Heerey J's commentary on the original version of this article below at 248.

291 Black, n 283 at 16, 74.

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appellate criminal jurisdiction: the Supreme Court of the Australian Capital Territory, the Supreme Court of Norfolk Island and the Supreme Courts of Vanuatu, Tonga and Fiji. This depth and mix of experience has informed the work of the Criminal Practice Committee as the Federal Court moves towards another chapter in its history as a court created under Ch III of the Constitution.

16. CONCURRENT CIVIL AND CRIMINAL PROCEEDINGS

The existence of criminal and civil liability for substantially the same conduct raises issues concerned with multiple proceedings, the prospect of double punishment, choice of investigatory powers and procedures, use of information and evidence in different proceedings and the threat of criminal prosecution for improper purposes.292 Similar issues arise in and are often litigated in the context of concurrent civil and criminal proceedings for breaches of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth).293

These issues are dealt with largely by amendments to s 76B under the Exposure Draft Bill. As indicated by its heading, s 76B aims to set out "What happens if substantially the same conduct is a contravention of Pt IV ... and an offence".

The provisions in s 76B are consistent with the recommendations of the ALRC in its 2002 Report in relation to multiple proceedings and multiple penalties.294 As a preliminary point, however, it is relevant to note the ALRC's warning that, given the issues raised by parallel criminal and civil penalties, the legislative scheme should distinguish clearly between the offence and the contravention, and clearly state the physical elements and the fault elements for each.295 Accordingly, the default fault elements under the Criminal Code (Cth) (ie, intention; recklessness) that apply to ss 44ZZRF and 44ZZRG should be expressly stated, thereby clearly distinguishing the cartel offences from the civil penalty prohibitions.

16.1 Bars and stays on proceedings

Section 76B deals with parallel or sequential criminal and civil penalty proceedings and the risk of double jeopardy, in the present context as follows:

"Pecuniary penalty order" means an order under s 76 for the payment of a pecuniary penalty (s 76B(1)). Hence the provisions under s 76B do not apply to proceedings for other civil orders (eg under ss 80, 86C, 86D, 86E). Thus, eg, once a criminal conviction has been obtained against a person in relation to conduct caught by the new cartel offences, the ACCC may still bring proceedings seeking a disqualification order under s 86E in respect of the same conduct.

These provisions do not limit the commencement of private enforcement actions.

16.2 Limits on use of information and evidence

Evidence of information given or documents produced by an individual is not admissible in criminal proceedings against the individual if the individual gave the information or produced the documents in proceedings for a pecuniary penalty order against the individual (whether or not the order was made): s 76B(5).

The exception to this is in a criminal proceeding in respect of the falsity of the evidence given by the individual in the proceedings for the pecuniary penalty order.

292 Trade Practices Review Committee, n 4, pp 156-157.
293 See eg Rich v ASIC (2004) 220 CLR 129; [2004] HCA 42; ASIC v Rich [2005] NSWSC 62.
294 Australian Law Reform Commission, n 21, Ch 11, p 422.
295 Australian Law Reform Commission, n 21 at [11.54], p 405.

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Again, this bar on the use of evidence in subsequent criminal proceedings does not apply in respect of evidence adduced in a civil proceeding for an order other than a pecuniary penalty order.

The protection under s 76B(5) also does not extend to information given or documents produced by a corporation. This is apparently intended to be consistent with the fact that the privilege against self-incrimination is not available to corporations. However, it may produce some anomalies. For example, if the ACCC has commenced s 76 proceedings against a company and its executives and there has been discovery or statements filed, and subsequently criminal proceedings are brought thereby staying the civil proceeding, then by virtue of s 76B(5) the evidence adduced by the corporate respondents in that proceeding would be admissible in the subsequent criminal proceeding but the evidence adduced by the individual respondents would not. Questions might arise also as to admissibility of evidence in a subsequent criminal proceeding by an individual in an earlier civil proceeding where the individual on her or his own behalf, as well as on behalf of the corporate respondent of which he or she is an employee, gave the evidence. If s 76B(5) reflects a concern to prevent evidence in civil proceedings from being used in criminal proceedings owing, eg, to the lesser standard of proof and more relaxed rules of evidence in the former, then it is difficult to understand why the concern should apply only to the evidence of individuals and not to the evidence of corporations.

16.3 Scope of s 76B - Too narrow?

The provisions in s 76B apply where an offence is constituted by conduct that is "substantially the same" as conduct constituting a contravention of Pt IV. In criminal law, "conduct" relates to the physical elements of an offence (see Pt 7). In this context, the physical elements of the new cartel offences under ss 44ZZRF and 44ZZRG and the new civil penalty prohibitions under ss 44ZZRJ and 44ZZRK are the same. However, it is unclear whether the physical elements of the new cartel offences and the physical elements under the existing civil prohibition in s 45 are "substantially the same" for the purposes of s 76B. If not, the ramifications are potentially far-reaching - eg, the protections against double jeopardy in s 76B(2) and the limits on the use of information and evidence under s 76B(5) would not apply.

16.4 Guidelines required?

The Draft MOU is extremely brief on the question of concurrent criminal and civil proceedings, stating simply that "the DPP and ACCC acknowledge that some matters may warrant both criminal and civil proceedings" (at [6.1]) and that they will ensure that "such matters are managed in an integrated fashion, including so that civil investigations or proceedings conducted by the ACCC do not adversely affect criminal investigation or prosecution" (at [6.2]). Experience from the corporate law area shows that, in practice, the challenges for evidence-gathering and handling in the context of a dual criminal/civil enforcement regime can be significant indeed296 and that consequently the success of the working relationship between the ACCC and CDPP in relation to such matters will be critical.

In accordance with the ALRC's recommendation,297 and as part of the enforcement policy and guidelines referred to in Pt 11 above, the ACCC should develop and publish guidelines in relation to concurrent criminal and civil proceedings that addressed issues such as choice of proceedings, use of investigatory powers and limits on the use of evidence. It should also make it clear that the threat of criminal investigation or prosecution will not be used as a threat, impliedly or expressly, for the purposes of securing evidence or settlement in another proceeding. There is already a statement to that effect in the PPC.298

See eg ASIC v Rich [2005] NSWSC 62; (2005) 52 ACSR 374; ASIC v Rich [2004] NSWSC 1089. Australian Law Reform Commission, n 21, Recommendation 11.5, p 423. Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions, n 120.

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17. MAXIMUM PENALTIES

17.1 Penalties for the new cartel offences

For corporations, penalties for the offences under ss 44ZZRF and 44ZZRG are set out in subs (2) of those sections

(2) An offence against subsection (1) is punishable on conviction by a fine not exceeding the greater of the following:

(a) $10,000,000;
(b) if the court can determine the total value of the benefits that

(i) have been obtained by one or more persons; and (ii) are reasonably attributable to the commission of the offence; 3 times that total value;

(c) if the court cannot determine the total value of those benefits - 10% of the corporation's
annual turnover during the 12 month period ending at the end of the month in which the
corporation committed, or began committing, the offence.

The same penalties that apply to corporations are applicable to bodies corporate (other than corporations) (see s 79(1AA).

For individuals who attempt to contravene or are involved in (ie aid, induce, are knowingly concerned in, conspire with others in) a contravention of a cartel offence provision (defined as ss 44ZZRF and 44ZZRG: s 79(7)), the penalties are a term of imprisonment not exceeding five years or a fine not exceeding 2,000 penalty units (ie $220,000) or both (see s 79).299

By virtue of s 44ZZRI, where a prosecution has been brought for an offence under ss 44ZZRF and 44ZZRG, the court may still make related civil orders (ie orders under s 80, s 86C, 86D, 86E, 87) in relation to the offence.

17.2 Is the maximum corporate fine too low?

Currently the proposed maximum corporate fine is the same for the new cartel offences and contravention of the new civil penalty prohibitions, albeit higher than for contravention of the s 45 provisions (see Pt 17). The maximum penalty is one of the key differentiators between criminal and civil prohibitions (see Pt 3) and on this basis might be seen as too low. On one view the maximum fine should be higher than the maximum civil penalty so as to signify that breach of the prohibition is an offence, as distinct from a civil contravention. One option to achieve this would be to increase the maxima where the only sentence is a fine but to retain the present maxima for cases where the court imposes a probation order, a publicity order or a community service order in addition to a fine.300

That said, with the 2006 amendments,301 the proposed maximum fine is not out of step with international standards, Australia having joined a growing number of countries using a value-based/ turnover approach to the calculation of fines for cartel conduct.302 On the other hand the $10 million component of the maximum could be seen as too low, as compared, eg with $100 million in the United States.

299 Under s 4AA(1) of the Crimes Act 1914 (Cth), a penalty unit is $110.

300 For a discussion of non-monetary sanctions against corporations, see New South Wales Law Reform Commission,
Sentencing Corporate Offenders, Report 102 (2003). For a fundamental critique of fine-fixated economic analyses of sanctions
against corporations, see Byrne J and Hoffman S, "Efficient Corporate Harm: A Chicago Metaphysic" in Fisse B and French P
(eds), Corrigible Corporations and Unruly Law (Trinity University Press, 1985) p 101.

301 Trade Practices Legislation Amendment Act (No 1) 2006 (Cth).

302 Others include New Zealand, the United States, the United Kingdom, the European Union, Switzerland, France and
Germany: ACCC, ACCC Submission to the Review of the Trade Practices Act (2002) p 57, http://www.accc.gov.au/content/ index.phtml/itemId/303044 viewed 12 February 2008.

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Furthermore, in assessing the appropriateness of the fine, the other effects of a criminal prosecution and conviction for corporations should not be underestimated (eg the stigma of a criminal conviction, damage to reputation and to relationships with employees, shareholders, customers, suppliers).303

17.3 Is the maximum individual fine too low?

The proposed maximum fine appears to be too low.

First, it is less than half the maximum pecuniary penalty of $500,000 for contravention of the new and existing civil penalty prohibitions for cartel conduct, and breaches of other provisions under Pt IV. This undermines the government and ACCC position that the conduct to which the offence provisions will apply is more serious than any other cartel or anti-competitive conduct dealt with by the Trade Practices Act.

Secondly, the government has offered no explanation for setting the fine so low. One explanation is that criminal conviction also attracts other adverse consequences for individuals, including the social stigma of being branded a criminal and being excluded or disqualified from certain activities.304 However, such an explanation does not explain why, in cases where jail is not considered by a court to be an appropriate sentence, the maximum fine should be lower than the maximum civil penalty for the same or very similar conduct.305

Thirdly, it is true that the proposed maximum of $220,000 is consistent with maxima for offences under the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth). The Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) provides for fines between $13,200 and $220,000 for breach of its criminal provisions (insider trading is the only offence to attract the maximum of $220,000). However, these maxima are very low and need to be reviewed.306 By contrast, following amendments in 2001, the maximum penalty for each of the consumer protection offences in Pt VC of the Trade Practices Act is $1,100,000, (with the exception of s 75AZH (misleading conduct to which the Industrial Property Convention applies, for which the maximum penalty is $220,000).

Fourthly, $220,000 is extremely low by international standards. In the United States the maximum individual penalty is $1 million307 and in the United Kingdom it is unlimited.308

Finally, the maximum should be set bearing in mind that traditionally Australian judges have imposed penalties for cartel conduct that fall significantly below the statutory maxima,309 and bearing in mind also the High Court's direction that "careful attention [be paid] to maximum penalties":

travel to a range of countries and may be deported from Australia if not an Australian citizen.

305 Fisse, n 122 at 66-67.

306 On 23 February 2006 the then Minister for Justice and Customs announced a whole-of-government review of criminal
penalties in Commonwealth legislation. This review is referred to in the discussion paper released by Treasury in connection
with its Review of Sanctions in Corporate Law (2007), http://www.treasurv.gov.au/contentitem.asp?NavId=059&ContentID= 1182 viewed 14 February 2008. With the change in government, the status of either review is unclear.

307 Antitrust Criminal Penalty Enhancement and Reform Act (2004) 15 USC 1.

308 Enterprise Act 2002 (UK), s 190.

309 See eg Round, Siegfried and Baillie, n 31; Round, n 31; Beaton-Wells C, "Criminalising Cartels: Australia's Slow
Conversion" (2008) 31 (2) World Competition Law and Economics Review 205 at 227-231.

310 Markarian v The Queen [2005] HCA 25; (2005) 215 ALR 213 at [31] (Gleeson CJ, Gummow, Hayne and Callinan JJ).

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17.4 Is the maximum jail term too low?

One significant consequence of setting the maximum jail sentence at five years is that telephone interception warrants will not be automatically available under the SD Act (see Pt 12). However, questions as to the appropriate maximum jail sentence and the availability of telephone interception powers need to be clearly separated. As a matter of principle, the former should be resolved first, based on considerations such as the adequacy of the proposed maximum to reflect the seriousness of the offence and its consistency with other comparable offences.311 If based on such considerations, the view is that the appropriate maximum jail sentence is seven years, then it so happens that that will mean also that telephone interception powers will be available.312 However, if the view rather is that the appropriate maximum is five years, then the question arises as to whether telephone interception powers should be made available in connection with investigation of the new cartel offences by amendment of the TIA Act.

On balance, the proposed maximum of five years is supportable on the criterion of adequacy to deter and punish a worst case offence. It is difficult to make such assessments in the absence of any empirical evidence of the deterrent and other effects of jail sentences on this type of conduct.313 However, an instinctive response to the proposal is that the threat of a maximum five-year jail term (with all of the other adverse consequences of a criminal conviction) will be sufficient to serve the deterrent and educative functions intended by the criminalisation of serious cartel conduct.

On the criterion of consistency, however, five years falls short of the maximum jail term for comparable offences under the Criminal Code (Cth) - eg theft, obtaining property by deception and conspiracy to defraud a Commonwealth entity, each attracts a maximum jail term of 10 years.314 Money laundering offences (of particular relevance given that such offences may apply to dealings in proceeds resulting from the commission of the new cartel offences) attract penalties of up to 25 years, where the value of the money involved is $1,000,000 or more.315 Emphasising the importance of maximising consistency between penalties for offences of similar kinds, the Guide to Framing Commonwealth Offences, Civil Penalties and Enforcement Powers (2004) issued by the Minister for Justice and Customs states that "where an offence is in some way comparable to an offence in the Criminal Code (Cth), the penalty under the Criminal Code (Cth) should generally be adopted". It was on the basis of considering the range of comparable penalties under the Criminal Code (Cth), that the ACCC proposed a maximum custodial sentence of seven years for the new cartel offences in its submission to the Dawson Committee.316

Notwithstanding the importance of consistency in principle, it should also be borne in mind that the comparable offences under the Criminal Code (Cth) are long-standing established offences with respect to which there is likely to be consensus as to the criminality of the relevant conduct. The same cannot be said confidently of serious cartel conduct.317 Furthermore, for comparable offences under the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) - market rigging, market manipulation and insider trading - a five-year maximum applies.318 It is also relevant that, in terms of international standards for cartel

311 See Attorney-General's Department, n 83, p 35.

312 Given that the new cartel offences will qualify as "serious offences" for the purposes of s 46 of the Telecommunications
(Interception and Access) Act 1979
(Cth) (for the definition of "serious offence", see s 5D of the Telecommunications
[Interception and Access) Act 1979 (Cth)).

313 See the analysis in Parker C and Nielsen V, How Much Does It Hurt? How Australian Businesses Think About the Costs and
Gains of Compliance with the Trade Practices Act University of Melbourne Legal Studies Research Paper No 310 (2007),
http://www.ssrn.com/abstract=1085054 viewed 14 February 2008.
314 See Criminal Code (Cth), ss 131.1, 134.1 141.1.
315 See Criminal Code (Cth), s 400.3.
316 Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, n 140, p 34.
317 See the analysis in Beaton-Wells, n 8; Stephan, n 56.

318 Corporations Act 2001 (Cth), ss 1041A-C; s 1043A.

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offences, the proposed maximum jail term is "middle-of-the-range",319 there being countries such as the United States and Mexico with a 10-year maximum; countries such as the United Kingdom, Canada and Ireland at the same level with five years; and others below that, with maximum terms of three years (Japan) or four years (France).

It will be possible in the future to revisit the maximum jail term after there has been some experience with actual cases under the new cartel offences. It may be noted that in the United States, where the maximum jail term is 10 years, the average jail term is less than three years.320

17.5 Cartel offences, new civil penalty prohibitions and s 45 prohibitions -Should the maximum monetary penalty for corporations be different?

Section 76(1 )(a) will be amended so that it applies to contraventions of any of the provisions of Pt IV (by implication, including the new civil penalty prohibitions), "other than ss 44ZZRF and 44ZZRG" (ie the new cartel offence provisions).

For corporations, the maximum pecuniary penalty for contravention of the s 45 provisions, as stipulated in s 76(lA)(b), remains the same - as amended in 2006, reflecting the recommendations made in the Dawson Report.321

For corporations, the same maximum pecuniary penalty is proposed for the new cartel offences, as set out in ss 44ZZRF(2) and 44ZZRG(2), and for contravention of the new civil penalty prohibitions, as set out in s 76(lA)(aa). The penalty formulation in these provisions is similar to the maximum pecuniary penalty for contravention of the s 45 provisions, as stipulated in s 76(lA)(b), but with certain subtle differences. The differences are discernible by comparing s 76(lA)(aa)(ii) and s 76(lA)(b)(ii).

The effects of the differences between these two provisions appear to be that for the new civil penalty prohibitions (and the new cartel offences), the court can calculate the maximum by summing the benefits obtained by all or any of the participants in the cartel and "obtaining" of a benefit includes obtaining it for another person or inducing a third person to do something that results in another person obtaining it (s 44ZZRG). By contrast, for the s 45 provisions, the maximum is to be calculated by reference only to the value of the benefit obtained by the body corporate (or any of its related body corporate) that contravened the provision. This difference is controversial. It is not clear why the more extensive approach to penalty assessment should apply to the new cartel offences and new civil penalty prohibitions but not the existing civil penalty prohibitions in s 45.

The effect of s 76(3) and (4) is that where conduct contravenes the civil penalty prohibitions and the s 45 prohibitions, a person is not liable to more than one pecuniary penalty under s 76 in respect of the same conduct, but for the purposes of calculating that penalty the maximum will be the highest of the limits set in s 76(lA)(aa) and (b).

319 Clarke, n 143 at 165.

320 See Barnett T, Spring 2007 Update for the United States Department of Justice Antitrust Division, under the heading
Increased Emphasis on Jail Sentences for Individuals, http://www.usdoi.gov/atr/public/222725.htm viewed 14 February 2008,
observing that the average jail sentence imposed for price fixing conspiracies is 27.3 months.

321 Trade Practices Legislation Amendment Act (No 1) 2006 (Cth).

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17.6 Is s 77 A to be extended?

Section 77A currently prohibits indemnification by a body corporate of an officer in respect of a civil liability incurred under the Act and any legal costs incurred in proceedings in which the liability is imposed. This section should be amended to prohibit indemnification in respect of criminal fines and legal costs incurred in defending a prosecution.

17.7 Time limits

There is no time limit for commencing a prosecution under the new cartel offences. This is consistent with the general position that time limits do not apply to indictable offences322 (cf s 79(6) applying a three-year time limit to prosecutions for offences against Pt VC, such offences being summary offences).323

For proceedings under the new civil penalty prohibitions, the time limit of six years currently applicable to any proceeding brought under s 76 will apply (see s 77).

17.8 Retrospectivity

The new cartel offence and civil penalty prohibition relating to making a CAU (ss 444ZZRFQ); 44ZZRJQ)) will apply only to CAUs made after the commencement of the amending legislation.

Significantly, however, the new cartel offence and civil penalty prohibition relating to giving effect to a cartel provision (ss 444ZZRGQ), 44ZZRKQ)) will apply to CAUs made before the commencement of the amending legislation (ss 444ZZRG(3), 44ZZRK(2).

17.9 Sentencing guidelines?

The Exposure Draft Materials make no mention of sentencing under the new cartel offences. Sentencing, including the matters to which courts must have regard when passing sentence, will be governed by Pt IB of the Crimes Act 1914 (Cth). In 2006 the ALRC called for extensive reforms in relation to the sentencing of federal offenders.324 If adopted, these reforms would affect sentencing under the new cartel offences. In other jurisdictions there are sentencing guidelines that relate to sentencing for serious cartel conduct and other antitrust offences.325 A study should be undertaken into whether similar guidelines would be of value in connection with sentencing under the new cartel offences.326

18. CONCLUSION

The Exposure Draft Materials raise many issues of law and policy, as canvassed in this article and as summarised in Pt 1. The future is unclear. The possible options for Treasury and the Minister include: (1) proceeding with the Exposure Draft Bill and Draft MOU with minor amendments so as to save the appearance of public submissions having been taken into account;

322 The new cartel offences will be indictable offences: ss 44ZZRF(3), 44ZZRG(3).

323 See s 4H(b) of the Crimes Act 1914 (Cth).

324 Australian Law Reform Commission, n 289. While there appears to be general in-principle support by the new government
for federal sentencing reform, the ALRC's recommendations have yet to be implemented: see the statement on the ALRC's
website, at http://www.alrc.gov.au/inquiries/title/alrcl03/index.html and the comments of the Minister for Home Affairs in a
speech given to the Sentencing Conference 2008 (9 February 2008) at [33]-[34], http://www.ministerhomeaffairs.gov.au/www/ ministers/ministerdebus.nsf/Page/Speeches 2008 9February2008-SentencingConference2008 viewed 8 May 2008. The official
government response at the time of the report is on file with the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions: see
http://www.cdpp.gov.au/AboutUs/FileLists/200607-200612.aspx viewed 8 May 2008 and does not appear readily available for
public viewing.

325 See eg United States Sentencing Commission, Guidelines Manual (2005) §2R,. http://www.ussc.gov/guidelin.htm viewed
12 February 2008; European Commission, Guidelines on the Method of Setting Fines Imposed Pursuant to Article 23(2)(a) of
Regulation No 1/2003 [2006] OJ C 210/2, http://www.eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri= CELEX:52006XC0901(01):EN:NOT viewed 12 February 2008.

326 See the call for such guidelines in connection with criminal penalties for serious cartel conduct in Baxt, n 28;
Justice Finkelstein, "Criminalising Hard-Core Cartels: Competition Law Enters the "Moral Universe"", Paper delivered at
Cracking Cartels: International and Australian Developments Conference, Sydney, 25 November 2004 (copy on file with
authors).

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(2) proceeding with the Exposure Draft Bill and Draft MOU with amendments that address what are
arguably the most important problems by:

(a) removing the concept of dishonesty from the definition of the new cartel offences (see Pt 6);

while at the same time urging the ACCC and CDPP to ensure that upon the enactment of the legislation, they are ready to release guidelines (including worked examples) that explain the practical operation of the new regime (in the areas referred to in this paper and as summarised in Pt 1);

(3) requiring Treasury to publish the submissions made to it on the Exposure Draft Materials and to
publish a discussion paper that:

(a) reviews in detail the submissions made on the Exposure Draft Materials and the reasons for adopting or not adopting the main points made in those submissions;
(b) sets out the nature of and reasons for any specific changes to the Exposure Draft Bill and Draft MOU proposed by Treasury; and
(c) is accompanied by an opinion from a senior counsel experienced in Pt IV matters as to the analytical integrity of the information set out in (a) and (b) above and the practicality of any proposals or recommendations made in (a) and (b);

(4) refer the Exposure Draft Materials to the Australian Law Reform Commission for fuller
consultation and re-assessment.

Option (1) is unattractive, partly because the problems raised by the Exposure Draft Bill and Draft MOU will not evaporate and, unless rectified, are likely to result in a steady flow of objections from the business sector and ultimately may undermine the enforcement and deterrent impact of the criminal regime.

Option (2) is a pragmatic possible response that would avoid delay and tackle what may be seen as the most serious issues, while at the same time providing the legal profession and business community with reassurance that guidance will be forthcoming in the near future as to the intended practical operation of the regime.327

Option (3) would be consistent with Treasury's published approach to community consultation328 and would be much more comprehensive and effective than Option (2). However, it should not delay work on production of the guidelines referred to in Option (2).

Option (4), while desirable in terms of independence, extent of consultation and thoroughness, would delay the criminalisation of serious cartel conduct considerably. The government seems unlikely to break, and indeed should be encouraged to keep, its election promise to introduce cartel offences in its first year in office.

327 See eg the re-definition of cartel offences suggested in Fisse, n 1, Pt 3.1.

328 See http://www.treasury.gov.au/content/consultation.asp?ContentID=808&titl=Community%20Consultation viewed 14 Feb
ruary 2008.

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ANNEXURE

Four Year Rolling Average of Corporate Penalties in Australian Cartel Cases



No. of penalties in 4 year period
Median (07 dollars)
Mean (07 dollars)
1994-97
25
655,259
2,024,682
1995-98
26
659,110
2,089,338
1996-99
23
589,733
903,442
1997-00
20
744,172
1,199,414
1998-01
19
1,531,707
2,975,135
1999-02
22
1,707,759
3,016,901
2000-03
20
2,400,612
3,558,016
2001-04
29
646,274
2,890,496
2002-05
34
865,264
2,137,658
2003-06
29
787,582
2,255,206
2004-07 Ex-Visy
47 46
325,276 225,000
2,189,102 1,423,145


















































































4 Year Rolling Average Corporate Penalties in Australian Cartel Cases

$3,500,000 -$3,000,000 -$2,500,000 -$2,000,000 -$1,500,000 -$1,000,000 -$500,000 -



- 45
- 40
35
30
- 25
- 20
15
- 10
5




























'



















































~l"

1097 1998 1999 2000 2001 2(
302 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007


Mean (07 dollars)
Median (07 dollars)
Number of penalties in 4 year period
Source: DrC Beaton-Wells, The University of Melbourne, based on 1994-2007 Federal Court of Australia Decisions
■ 1




















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4 Year Rolling Average Corporate Penalties in Australian Cartel Cases (excluding Visy Case 2007)

$3,500,000 -$3,000,000 -$2,500,000 -$2,000,000 -$1,500,000 -$1,000,000 -$500,000 -



- 45
- 40
- 35
- 30
- 25
- 20
- 15
- 10
- 5



































































1


1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007


i i Mean (07 dollars) i i Median (07 dollars)
Number of penalties in 4 year period




Source: Dr C Beaton-Wells, The University Melbourne, based on 1994-2007 Federal Court of Australia Decisions
of

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