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This is a Bill, not an Act. For current law, see the Acts databases.


CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION BILL 2005

                     Western Australia


      Criminal Investigation Bill 2005

                       CONTENTS


       Part 1 -- Preliminary
1.     Short title                                            2
2.     Commencement                                           2
3.     Interpretation                                         2
4.     "Reasonably suspects", meaning of                      6
5.     "Thing relevant to an offence", meaning of             6
6.     Other written laws, this Act's relationship with       7
7.     Common law, this Act's relationship with               7
8.     Police officer's powers as an individual not
       affected                                               8
9.     Public officers may be authorised to exercise
       powers                                                 8
10.    Officers' duty to identify themselves                  9
11.    Delegation by officers                                 9
12.    Warrants and orders, applying for                      9
13.    Detained people to be taken to be in lawful custody   11
       Part 2 -- Ancillary provisions about
            exercising powers
14.    When powers may be exercised                          12
15.    Assistance to exercise powers                         12
16.    Force, use of when exercising powers                  13
17.    Animals, use of by officers exercising powers         13
18.    Roadblocks, use of to stop vehicles                   13
19.    Stopping vehicles, powers in connection with          15
20.    Power to enter includes power to enter some other
       places                                                15
21.    Forensic examination of thing relevant to an
       offence                                               16


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Criminal Investigation Bill 2005



Contents



      22.      Gender of a person, ascertaining                       17
      23.      Consent to search etc., presumption against and
               withdrawal of                                          17
               Part 3 -- Citizens' powers
      24.      Prevention of offences and violence                    18
      25.      Citizen's arrest                                       19
      26.      Person in command of vehicle, powers of                20
               Part 4 -- Miscellaneous official
                    powers and duties
      27.      Suspects and others may be ordered to move on          22
      28.      Persons accompanying officers to be informed of
               rights                                                 23
               Part 5 -- Entering and searching
                    places and vehicles
               Division 1 -- General
      29.      Places with 2 or more occupiers, interpretation        24
      30.      Entry and search with occupier's consent               24
      31.      Occupier's rights                                      24
               Division 2 -- Powers without a search warrant
      32.      Warrant not required                                   26
      33.      Public open area, search powers in                     26
      34.      Public place, entry to keep order in                   27
      35.      Place or vehicle, entry of to prevent violence         27
      36.      Place or vehicle, entry of to attend to dead or
               seriously injured person                               28
      37.      Place or vehicle, entry of to investigate serious
               event                                                  28
      38.      Vehicle, searches of to prevent offences etc.          29
      39.      Vehicle, search of for things relevant to offence      29
      40.      Place, entry of to establish protected forensic area
               for serious offence                                    30
               Division 3 -- Powers with a search warrant
      41.      Search warrant, application for                        31
      42.      Search warrant, issue of                               32
      43.      Search warrant, effect of                              33
      44.      Search warrant, ancillary powers under                 35


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45.   Search warrant, execution of                             38
      Division 4 -- Protected forensic areas
46.   Protected forensic area, establishment of                38
47.   Protected forensic area, powers in relation to           39
48.   Protected forensic area, continuance of                  41
49.   Protected forensic area, review of need for              43
      Part 6 -- Obtaining business records
50.   Interpretation                                           45
51.   Application of this Part                                 45
52.   Order to produce, application for                        45
53.   Order to produce, issue of                               46
54.   Order to produce, service of                             47
55.   Order to produce, effect of                              47
56.   Produced records, powers in respect of                   47
      Part 7 -- Gaining access to data
           controlled by suspects
57.   Interpretation                                           49
58.   Data access order, application for                       49
59.   Data access order, issue of                              50
60.   Data access order, service of                            51
61.   Data access order, effect of                             51
      Part 8 -- Searching people
      Division 1 -- Preliminary
62.   Interpretation                                           52
63.   "Basic search", meaning of                               52
64.   "Strip search", meaning of                               52
65.   Searches, ancillary powers for                           53
66.   How searches must be done                                53
      Division 2 -- General powers to search people
67.   Warrant not required                                     54
68.   Searching people for evidence or contraband              54
69.   People in public places, search of for security
      purposes                                                 55
      Division 3 -- How searches must be done
70.   Basic search or strip search, rules for doing            57
71.   Basic search, additional rules for doing                 58


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Criminal Investigation Bill 2005



Contents



      72.      Strip search, additional rules for doing            58
               Part 9 -- Forensic procedures on
                    people
               Division 1 -- Preliminary
      73.      Interpretation                                      60
      74.      Non-intimate forensic procedure, meaning of and
               powers for                                          63
      75.      Intimate forensic procedure, meaning of and
               powers for                                          64
      76.      Internal forensic procedure, meaning of and
               powers for                                          65
      77.      Forensic procedures, purpose of                     65
      78.      How forensic procedures must be done                66
               Division 2 -- Forensic procedures on volunteers
      79.      Interpretation                                      66
      80.      Volunteer for a forensic procedure to be informed   66
      81.      When forensic procedure may be done on
               volunteer                                           68
               Division 3 -- Forensic procedures on deceased
                      people
      82.      Forensic procedures on deceased people              68
               Division 4 -- Forensic procedures on victims
                      and witnesses
      83.      Request to adult to undergo forensic procedure      69
      84.      Request for protected person to undergo forensic
               procedure                                           71
      85.      Request and giving of information to be recorded    72
      86.      Forensic procedure, when it may be done             72
      87.      Consent may be withdrawn                            74
      88.      Officer may apply for FP warrant (involved
               person)                                             74
      89.      FP warrant (involved person), application for       75
      90.      FP warrant (involved person), issue and effect of   76
               Division 5 -- Forensic procedures on suspects
      91.      Request to adult to undergo forensic procedure      79
      92.      Request for protected person to undergo forensic
               procedure                                           80
      93.      Request and giving of information to be recorded    81

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                                                            Contents



94.    Forensic procedure, when it may be done                 81
95.    Consent may be withdrawn                                83
96.    Application for approval or FP warrant (suspect)        83
97.    Non-intimate forensic procedure on adult,
       application for approval to do                          84
98.    Non-intimate search of adult, senior officer may
       approve                                                 85
99.    FP warrant (suspect), application for                   86
100.   FP warrant (suspect), issue and effect of               88
       Division 6 -- How forensic procedures must be
             done
101.   General requirements                                    90
102.   Gender of people doing forensic procedures              91
103.   Who may do a forensic procedure                         92
104.   Samples etc., how to be taken                           94
       Division 7 -- Dealing with things found during
             a forensic procedure
105.   Things found by chance during a forensic
       procedure                                               95
106.   Things found may be seized etc.                         95
       Division 8 -- Admissibility of certain evidence
107.   Evidence of refusal of consent etc.                     96
108.   Evidence of how procedure was done                      96
       Part 10 -- Provisions about searches
            and forensic procedures on
            people
109.   Interpretation                                          97
110.   Body searches and forensic procedures may be
       repeated                                                97
111.   People not obliged to do searches etc.                  97
112.   Forensic information, use and destruction of            98
113.   Legal protection for people carrying out searches
       etc.                                                    98
       Part 11 -- Interviewing suspects
114.   Interpretation                                         100
115.   Interviews, conduct of                                 100



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Criminal Investigation Bill 2005



Contents



      116.     Recorded interview to be made available to the
               suspect                                                101
      117.     Admission in serious case inadmissible unless
               recorded                                               101
      118.     Recording admitted as evidence, jury may play          102
      119.     Recordings of interviews, possession etc. restricted   103
      120.     Recorded interview, broadcast prohibited               105
      121.     Recordings, court may give directions as to supply
               etc.                                                   105
      122.     Recordings to be retained by the police and CCC        105
      123.     Recordings may be played for teaching purposes         106
               Part 12 -- Arrest and related matters
               Division 1 -- Preliminary
      124.     Interpretation                                         107
      125.     Proceedings by summons etc. not prevented              107
               Division 2 -- Arrest without an arrest warrant
      126.     Arrest warrant not required                            108
      127.     Arrest power for offences                              108
               Division 3 -- Ancillary powers to making an
                      arrest
      128.     Warrant not required                                   109
      129.     Occupier's rights if a place is entered                109
      130.     Powers exercisable on a search under this Division     109
      131.     Places may be entered and vehicles may be
               stopped                                                109
      132.     Places and vehicles of certain arrested suspects
               may be searched for evidence                           110
      133.     Escapees, additional powers to aid recapture           113
               Division 4 -- Searches of people in custody for
                      security purposes
      134.     Certain people in custody may be searched              114
               Division 5 -- Dealing with arrested people
      135.     Young Offenders Act 1994 not affected                  117
      136.     Arrested people, rights of                             117
      137.     Arrested suspects, rights of                           117
      138.     Arrested suspects, detention of                        119
      139.     Detention period for arrested suspects                 119



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                                                             Contents



140.   Reasonable period of detention, factors
       determining                                             122
141.   Arrested suspects, charging and releasing               124
142.   Other arrested people, dealing with                     126
       Division 6 -- Miscellaneous
143.   Possession of warrant at time of arrest not
       necessary                                               127
       Part 13 -- Seizing things and related
            matters
144.   Application                                             128
145.   Things relevant to an offence, grounds for seizing      128
146.   Seizing things, ancillary powers                        128
147.   Records relevant to an offence                          129
148.   Records, powers to facilitate seizing                   130
149.   Seized things, list to be supplied on request           131
150.   Privileged material, procedure on seizure of            131
151.   Criminal and Found Property Disposal Act 2005
       applies                                                 133
       Part 14 -- Miscellaneous
152.   Order by officer, offence to not obey                   134
153.   Evidence obtained improperly                            134
154.   Inadmissible evidence, court may allow admission        135
155.   Regulations                                             136
156.   Review of Act                                           136
       Defined Terms




                                                              page vii
                           Western Australia


                     LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY

                        (Proforma amendments)


            Criminal Investigation Bill 2005


                               A Bill for


An Act to provide powers for the investigation of offences and for
related matters.



The Parliament of Western Australia enacts as follows:




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     Part 1           Preliminary

     s. 1



                              Part 1 -- Preliminary
     1.         Short title
                This is the Criminal Investigation Act 2005.

     2.         Commencement
 5        (1)   This Act comes into operation on a day fixed by proclamation.
          (2)   Different days may be fixed under subsection (1) for different
                provisions.

     3.         Interpretation
          (1)   In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears --
10              "area associated with a dwelling" means --
                     (a) if the dwelling is one of 2 or more dwellings in one
                           building, the parts of the building and any area
                           around the building that the occupiers of the
                           dwellings use exclusively but in common with each
15                         other; or
                     (b) otherwise, the area around the dwelling that is used
                           exclusively by the occupier, such as a driveway,
                           garden or yard;
                "arrest warrant" means a warrant issued under another written
20                   law for the arrest of a person;
                "basic search" of a person, means a search that complies with
                     section 63;
                "disturb" includes to damage, destroy, interfere with and
                     remove;
25              "DPP" means the Director of Public Prosecutions appointed
                     under the Director of Public Prosecutions Act 1991;
                "dwelling" means a place or a part of a place that is ordinarily
                     used for human habitation and it does not matter that it is
                     from time to time uninhabited;


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                                                                  s. 3



     "forensic examination", in relation to a thing, has a meaning
          affected by section 21;
     "forensic procedure" has the meaning given to that term by
          section 73;
 5   "frisk search" a person, means to quickly and methodically run
          the hands over the outside of the person's clothing;
     "impression" includes a cast;
     "lawyer" has the meaning given to "certificated practitioner"
          by the Legal Practice Act 2003 section 3;
10   "mobile home" means a vehicle --
          (a) that is ordinarily used for human habitation; and
          (b) that is permanently or semi-permanently stationary in
                a single location;
     "occupier" of a place, includes any person who appears to have
15        the control or management of the place;
     "offence" means any offence under a written law;
     "officer" means a police officer or a public officer or both, as
          the case requires;
     "official details" --
20        (a) of a police officer -- means the officer's surname
                and rank and, if the officer's official details are
                required to be stated on a document, the officer's
                registered number;
          (b) of a public officer -- means the officer's full name
25              and official title;
     "photograph" includes a digital image and a moving visual
          record;
     "place" means any land, building, structure, tent or mobile
          home or a part of any land, building, structure, tent or
30        mobile home;
     "police officer" means a person appointed under the Police
          Act 1892 Part I to be a member of the Police Force of
          Western Australia;

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     Criminal Investigation Bill 2005
     Part 1           Preliminary

     s. 3



              "prescribed" means prescribed by regulations made under this
                  Act;
              "private parts" of a person, means the person's genital area,
                  anal area, buttocks and, in the case of --
 5                (a) a female; or
                  (b) a male undergoing a reassignment procedure, as that
                        term is defined in the Gender Reassignment Act 2000
                        section 3,
                  breasts;
10            "protected forensic area" means a protected forensic area
                  established in accordance with section 46;
              "public officer" means a person, other than a police officer,
                  appointed under a written law to an office that is prescribed
                  under section 9(1);
15            "public open area" means --
                  (a) an area that is part of a road open to and used by the
                        public; or
                  (b) an area of land --
                           (i) to which the public has access, whether on
20                               payment or not; and
                          (ii) on which there is no building, structure, tent
                                 or mobile home,
                        and it does not matter if the area is the whole or a part
                        of a surveyed lot or of an unsurveyed piece of land,
25                      or, if the area is part of such a lot, there is a building,
                        structure, tent or mobile home on some other part;
              Example: under paragraph (b), an area of bush in a national park is a public
              open area but a building in the park is not.
              "public place" includes --
30                (a) a place to which the public, or any section of the
                        public, has or is permitted to have access, whether on
                        payment or not;



     page 4
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                                           Preliminary           Part 1

                                                                   s. 3



         (b)     a place to which the public has access with the
                 express or implied approval of, or without
                 interference from, the occupier of the place; and
          (c) a school, university or other place of education, other
 5               than a part of it to which neither students nor the
                 public usually has access;
     "reasonably suspects" has the meaning given by section 4;
     "record" means any record of information, irrespective of how
          the information is recorded or stored or able to be
10        recovered and includes --
          (a) any thing from which images, sounds or writings can
                 be reproduced, with or without the aid of anything
                 else; and
          (b) any thing on which information is recorded or stored,
15               whether electronically, magnetically, mechanically or
                 by some other means;
     "remote communication" means any way of communicating at
          a distance including by telephone, fax, email and radio;
     "search warrant" means a search warrant issued under Part 5
20        Division 3;
     "senior police officer" means a police officer who is, or is
          acting as, an inspector or an officer of a rank more senior
          than an inspector;
     "statutory penalty" for an offence, means the penalty specified
25        by a written law for the offence;
     "strip search" of a person, means a search that complies with
          section 64;
     "thing relevant to an offence" has the meaning given to that
          term by section 5;
30   "vehicle" means --
          (a) any thing capable of transporting people or things by
                 air, road, rail or water, irrespective of whether the



                                                                page 5
     Criminal Investigation Bill 2005
     Part 1           Preliminary

     s. 4



                          thing is permanently or semi-permanently stationary,
                          other than a mobile home; or
                   (b) a mobile home that is reasonably suspected not to be
                          permanently or semi-permanently stationary in a
 5                        single location,
                   and it does not matter how the thing or mobile home is
                   moved or propelled;
                "WA Police" means the Police Force of Western Australia
                   provided for by the Police Act 1892.
10        (2)   Examples in this Act are provided to assist understanding and
                do not form part of the Act.

     4.         "Reasonably suspects", meaning of
                For the purposes of this Act, a person reasonably suspects
                something at a relevant time if he or she personally has grounds
15              at the time for suspecting the thing and those grounds (even if
                they are subsequently found to be false or non-existent), when
                judged objectively, are reasonable.

     5.         "Thing relevant to an offence", meaning of
          (1)   For the purposes of this Act, a thing is a thing relevant to an
20              offence if it is reasonably suspected that --
                  (a)   the thing has been, is being, or is intended to be used for
                        the purpose of committing an offence;
                 (b)    the thing has been obtained by the commission of an
                        offence;
25                (c)   an offence has been, is being, or may be committed in
                        respect of the thing;
                 (d)    the thing is or may afford --
                           (i) evidence relevant to proving the commission of
                                an offence or who committed an offence; or
30                        (ii) evidence that tends to rebut an alibi.



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                                                                                         s. 6



          (2)   For the purposes of this Act, a thing relevant to an offence may
                be material or non-material, animate (other than human) or
                inanimate.
                Example: the distance between 2 things or the visibility from a window are
 5              non-material things.

     6.         Other written laws, this Act's relationship with
          (1)   Unless the contrary intention appears in this Act or another
                written law --
                 (a) this Act does not affect the operation of any other
10                      written law; and
                 (b) the powers conferred by this Act on a person are in
                        addition to and do not derogate from any powers
                        conferred on the person by any other written law.
          (2)   Without limiting subsection (1)(a), this Act does not affect the
15              operation of --
                  (a)    The Criminal Code, particularly Chapter XXVI of it; or
                  (b)    the Coroners Act 1996 section 32.
          (3)   If a provision in this Act is inconsistent with a provision in
                another Act, the provision in the other Act prevails.

20   7.         Common law, this Act's relationship with
          (1)   Subject to this section, a police officer has the powers, duties
                and responsibilities that a constable has under the common law.
          (2)   If this Act confers a power, duty or responsibility on a police
                officer that the officer also has by reason of subsection (1), the
25              power must be exercised and the duty or responsibility must be
                performed in accordance with this Act.
          (3)   If there is an inconsistency between a provision of this Act and
                a power, duty or responsibility that a police officer has by
                reason of subsection (1), the provision of this Act prevails.



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     Criminal Investigation Bill 2005
     Part 1           Preliminary

     s. 8



     8.         Police officer's powers as an individual not affected
                Unless this Act provides otherwise, it does not affect any power
                that a police officer may lawfully exercise in common with any
                other citizen.

 5   9.         Public officers may be authorised to exercise powers
          (1)   For the purposes of this Act and in particular the definition of
                "public officer" in section 3(1), another Act or the regulations
                made under this Act may prescribe --
                  (a) an office to which people are appointed under a written
10                      law for a public purpose; and
                  (b) in respect of that office, some or all of the powers in this
                        Act that a holder of that office may exercise, being
                        powers that this Act expressly provides may be
                        exercised by a public officer.
15        (2)   A public officer may only exercise a power in this Act in
                relation to an offence if --
                  (a) this Act provides that the power may be exercised by a
                        public officer;
                  (b) the office held by the public officer has been prescribed
20                      under subsection (1)(a);
                  (c) the power is one that the officer may exercise by virtue
                        of regulations made under subsection (1)(b); and
                  (d) the offence is one that the officer, by virtue of being
                        such an officer, is authorised to investigate or prosecute.
25        (3)   If a public officer, under subsection (2), exercises a power in
                this Act, any enactment that protects the officer or the State
                from liability for the officer's acts or omissions is to be taken to
                operate as if those acts and omissions included the officer's acts
                and omissions when exercising the power.




     page 8
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                                                         Preliminary           Part 1

                                                                                 s. 10



     10.         Officers' duty to identify themselves
           (1)   If this Act requires an officer to identify himself or herself to a
                 person the officer must --
                   (a) if the officer is a police officer --
 5                          (i) give the person the officer's official details; and
                           (ii) if the officer is not in uniform, show the person
                                 evidence that the officer is a police officer;
                   (b) if the officer is a public officer --
                            (i) give the person the officer's official details; and
10                         (ii) show the person evidence that the officer is a
                                 public officer.
           (2)   If an officer cannot comply with subsection (1)(a)(ii) or (b)(ii)
                 immediately, the officer must comply with it as soon as
                 practicable.

15   11.         Delegation by officers
           (1)   An officer may delegate the performance of a function of the
                 officer under this Act, other than this power of delegation, to
                 another officer.
           (2)   If an officer delegates the performance of a duty imposed on the
20               officer by this Act to another officer, he or she must ensure that
                 the other officer performs the duty.

     12.         Warrants and orders, applying for
           (1)   In this section --
                 "judicial officer" means a JP or a magistrate, as the case
25                    requires.
           (2)   A reference in this section to making an application includes a
                 reference to giving information in support of the application.
           (3)   This section applies to and in respect of an application to a
                 judicial officer for a warrant or order if another section of this
30               Act requires the application to be made under this section.

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     Criminal Investigation Bill 2005
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     s. 12



        (4)    The application must be made in person before the judicial
               officer unless --
                 (a) the warrant or order is needed urgently; and
                 (b) the applicant reasonably suspects that a judicial officer
 5                     is not available within a reasonable distance of the
                       applicant,
               in which case --
                 (c) it may be made to a judicial officer by remote
                      communication; and
10               (d) the judicial officer must not grant it unless satisfied
                      about the matters in paragraphs (a) and (b).
        (5)    The application must be made in writing unless --
                (a) the application is made by remote communication; and
                (b) it is not practicable to send the judicial officer written
15                    material,
               in which case --
                 (c) it may be made orally; and
                 (d) the judicial officer must make a written record of the
                      application and any information given in support of it.
20      (6)    The application must be made on oath unless --
                (a) the application is made by remote communication; and
                (b) it is not practicable for the judicial officer to administer
                      an oath to the applicant,
               in which case --
25               (c) it may be made in an unsworn form; and
                 (d) if the judicial officer issues a warrant or order, the
                      applicant must as soon as practicable send the judicial
                      officer an affidavit verifying the application and any
                      information given in support of it.



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                                                       Preliminary           Part 1

                                                                              s. 13



           (7)   If on an application made by remote communication a judicial
                 officer issues a warrant or order, the judicial officer must, if
                 practicable, send a copy of the original warrant or order to the
                 applicant by remote communication, but otherwise --
 5                 (a) the judicial officer must give the applicant by remote
                          communication any information that must be set out in
                          the warrant or order;
                   (b) the applicant must complete a form of a warrant or order
                          with the information received and give the judicial
10                        officer a copy of the form as soon as practicable after
                          doing so; and
                   (c) the judicial officer must attach the copy of the form to
                          the original warrant or order and any affidavit received
                          from the applicant and make them available for
15                        collection by the applicant.
           (8)   The copy of the original warrant or order sent, or the form of the
                 warrant or order completed, as the case may be, under
                 subsection (7) has the same force and effect as the original
                 warrant or order.

20   13.         Detained people to be taken to be in lawful custody
                 A person who is detained under this Act when he or she is not
                 under arrest is to be taken to be in lawful custody.




                                                                           page 11
     Criminal Investigation Bill 2005
     Part 2           Ancillary provisions about exercising powers

     s. 14



     Part 2 -- Ancillary provisions about exercising powers
     14.         When powers may be exercised
                 The powers in this Act may be exercised at any time of the day
                 or night, unless it is expressly provided otherwise.

 5   15.         Assistance to exercise powers
           (1)   A person who may exercise a power in this Act may authorise
                 as many other persons to assist in exercising the power as are
                 reasonably necessary in the circumstances.
           (2)   A person so authorised may exercise the power or assist the
10               other to exercise the power, as the case requires.
           (3)   Whether requested to do so or not, a person may assist another
                 person to exercise a power in this Act if the person reasonably
                 suspects that the other person --
                   (a) is lawfully entitled to exercise the power; and
15                 (b) needs assistance for the purpose of doing so.
           (4)   A person who under this section is authorised by another to
                 exercise a power, or is assisting another to exercise a power,
                 must obey any lawful and reasonable directions of the other
                 person when exercising or assisting to exercise the power.
20         (5)   If a person, acting under this section, exercises a power in this
                 Act having been authorised by another to do so, or assists
                 another to exercise a power in this Act, any enactment that
                 protects the person or the State from liability for the person's
                 acts or omissions is to be taken to operate as if those acts or
25               omissions included the person's acts or omissions when acting
                 under this section.




     page 12
                                                      Criminal Investigation Bill 2005
                         Ancillary provisions about exercising powers           Part 2

                                                                                s. 16



     16.         Force, use of when exercising powers
           (1)   When exercising a power in this Act, a person may use any
                 force against any person or thing that it is reasonably necessary
                 to use in the circumstances --
 5                 (a) to exercise the power; and
                   (b) to overcome any resistance to exercising the power that
                         is offered, or that the person exercising the power
                         reasonably suspects will be offered, by any person.
           (2)   If under subsection (1) a person uses force, the force may be
10               such as causes damage to the property of another person.
           (3)   Any use of force under subsection (1) against a person is subject
                 to The Criminal Code Chapter XXVI.

     17.         Animals, use of by officers exercising powers
           (1)   An officer who is exercising a power in this Act, or using force
15               under section 16, may use an animal to assist if --
                   (a) the animal has been trained for the purposes for which it
                        is used; and
                   (b) use of the animal is reasonably necessary in the
                        circumstances.
20         (2)   Subject to section 16(2) and (3), an officer who uses an animal
                 to assist with exercising a power in this Act must take all
                 reasonable measures to ensure the animal does not injure any
                 person or damage any property.

     18.         Roadblocks, use of to stop vehicles
25         (1)   In this section --
                 "road" has the meaning given to that term by the Road Traffic
                      Act 1974 section 5(1);
                 "vehicle" has the meaning given to that term by the Road
                      Traffic Act 1974 section 5(1).



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     s. 18



        (2)    If a senior police officer reasonably suspects --
                 (a) that it is necessary to exercise a power in another section
                        of this Act to stop a vehicle;
                 (b) that the vehicle is on a road; and
 5               (c) that a roadblock is necessary to facilitate the exercise of
                        that power,
               the officer --
                 (d) may set up a roadblock on the road for the purpose of
                       stopping the vehicle; or
10               (e) may authorise another police officer to set up a
                       roadblock on the road for the purpose of stopping any
                       vehicle specified in the authorisation.
        (3)    A senior police officer's authorisation under
               subsection (2)(e) --
15               (a) may be applied for and given by remote communication;
                 (b) must specify the power referred to in subsection (2)(a)
                       in relation to which the roadblock is necessary and why
                       it is necessary to exercise it;
                 (c) must specify whether the authorisation relates to all
20                     vehicles or to a specified class of vehicles; and
                 (d) has effect for 6 hours, or any lesser period specified by
                       the officer, after it is given, but may be renewed.
        (4)    A senior police officer who under subsection (2) gives an
               authorisation must make a written record of it, the date and time
25             it was given, and the reasons for giving it.
        (5)    If a police officer who is not a senior police officer reasonably
               suspects --
                 (a) the matters in subsection (2)(a), (b) and (c); and
                 (b) that the seriousness and urgency of the circumstances
30                      warrant doing so without a senior police officer's
                        authorisation,


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                                                                                 s. 19



                 the police officer may set up a roadblock on the road for no
                 more than 3 hours for the purpose of stopping the vehicle.
           (6)   A police officer who acts under subsection (5) must notify a
                 senior police officer as soon as practicable after doing so and
 5               request the officer's authorisation for any further use of a
                 roadblock.
           (7)   Subject to the terms of any authorisation given under
                 subsection (2), a police officer who under this section sets up a
                 roadblock may stop vehicles at the roadblock.

10   19.         Stopping vehicles, powers in connection with
           (1)   If under this Act an officer may stop a vehicle, whether or not at
                 a roadblock set up under section 18, the officer may use any
                 means that are reasonably necessary in the circumstances to do
                 so, including means that hinder or obstruct the passage of other
15               vehicles.
           (2)   Subsection (1) does not authorise the use of means that are
                 intended or are likely to cause death or grievous bodily harm to
                 any person, whether or not in a vehicle.
           (3)   An officer who under this Act stops a vehicle in order to
20               exercise a power in this Act in respect of the vehicle --
                   (a) may detain the vehicle for a reasonable period in order
                         to exercise the power; and
                   (b) may move the vehicle to a place suitable to exercise the
                         power.

25   20.         Power to enter includes power to enter some other places
           (1)   This section applies if under this Act an officer may enter a
                 place, with or without a search warrant.
           (2)   If the place is one of 2 or more premises in one building, then,
                 in order to enter the place, the officer may enter, but not search,
30               any part of the building that the occupiers of the premises use
                 exclusively but in common with each other.

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           (3)   If subsection (2) does not apply and the officer reasonably
                 suspects that in order to enter the place it is necessary to enter
                 another place, the officer may enter, but not search, the other
                 place.
 5         (4)   Section 31 applies to and in respect of the entry of the other
                 place under subsection (3).

     21.         Forensic examination of thing relevant to an offence
           (1)   If under this Act a person may do a forensic examination on a
                 thing relevant to an offence or a sample of such a thing, the
10               person may do any or all of the following --
                   (a) examine or operate it;
                   (b) photograph, measure or otherwise make a record of it;
                   (c) take an impression of it;
                   (d) take samples of or from it;
15                 (e) do tests on it, or on any sample taken under
                         paragraph (d), for forensic purposes.
           (2)   If it is reasonably necessary to do so in order to exercise a
                 power in subsection (1), the thing may be dismantled, damaged
                 or destroyed.
20         (3)   A power in subsection (1) must not be exercised in relation to a
                 thing that may contain information that is privileged, as that
                 term is defined in section 150, until under that section --
                   (a) a decision is made that the information is not privileged;
                         or
25                 (b) orders have been made to enable the power to be
                         exercised.




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                                                                                s. 22



     22.         Gender of a person, ascertaining
                 If it is necessary to ascertain the gender of a person before
                 exercising a power in this Act on the person and the gender of
                 the person is uncertain to the officer authorised to exercise the
 5               power --
                   (a)   the officer must ask the person to indicate whether a
                         male or a female should exercise the power on the
                         person and must act in accordance with the answer; and
                  (b)    in the absence of an answer, the person must be treated
10                       as if of the gender that the person outwardly appears to
                         the officer to be.

     23.         Consent to search etc., presumption against and withdrawal
                 of
           (1)   If a person who is requested under this Act to consent to --
15                 (a) a search of a place that he or she occupies;
                   (b) undergoing a basic search or a strip search; or
                   (c) undergoing a forensic procedure,
                 does not reply, or consents but resists the carrying out of the
                 search or procedure, he or she is to be taken to have not
20               consented.
           (2)   A person who consents to a search or procedure referred to in
                 subsection (1) may withdraw his or her consent at any time
                 before the search or procedure is completed by informing an
                 officer or person who is doing it.




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     Part 3           Citizens' powers

     s. 24



                           Part 3 -- Citizens' powers
     24.         Prevention of offences and violence
           (1)   It is lawful for any person (the "citizen") to use any force that is
                 reasonably necessary in the circumstances to prevent --
 5                  (a) the continuance of an act being done by a person in his
                          or her presence --
                             (i) that involves the use of violence against a
                                  person;
                            (ii) that the citizen reasonably suspects will cause a
10                                person to use violence against another person; or
                           (iii) that the citizen reasonably suspects will cause a
                                  person to fear violence will be used by a person
                                  against another person;
                   (b) an act by a person that the citizen reasonably suspects is
15                        just about to be done in his or her presence that is
                          likely --
                             (i) to involve the use of violence against a person;
                            (ii) to cause a person to use violence against another
                                  person; or
20                         (iii) to cause a person to fear violence will be used by
                                  a person against another person;
                    (c) any other breach of the peace by a person;
                   (d) the commission of an offence; or
                    (e) the doing of any act that the citizen reasonably suspects
25                        will be done in the course of committing an offence.
           (2)   Subsection (1) does not authorise the entry of any place or
                 vehicle.
           (3)   If a person reasonably suspects that the unlawful killing of a
                 person is occurring in a place or vehicle, the person, without a
30               warrant, may enter it in order to prevent the unlawful killing.



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                                                                               s. 25



     25.         Citizen's arrest
           (1)   In this section --
                 "arrestable offence" means an offence the statutory penalty for
                      which is or includes imprisonment.
 5         (2)   Any person may arrest another person (the "suspect") if he or
                 she reasonably suspects that the suspect has committed or is
                 committing an arrestable offence.
           (3)   Any person may arrest another person (the "suspect") who is
                 doing or about to do an act that the person is entitled to prevent
10               under section 24(1)(a), (b) or (c).
           (4)   A person is not entitled, by reason only of subsection (2) or (3),
                 to enter a place or vehicle where the person suspects the suspect
                 is.
           (5)   A person who arrests a suspect under subsection (2) or (3) must
15               as soon as practicable --
                   (a) arrange for a police officer to attend; or
                   (b) take the suspect and any thing relevant to the offence to
                        a police officer.
           (6)   For the purpose of complying with subsection (5), a person may
20               detain the suspect until the police officer attends or until the
                 suspect is taken to a police officer.
           (7)   When a police officer attends or the suspect is taken to a police
                 officer --
                   (a) the officer may take over the arrest and detention of the
25                       suspect if, under section 127 or an arrest warrant, the
                         officer is authorised to arrest the suspect; but
                   (b) if the officer does not take over the arrest and detention
                         of the suspect, the suspect ceases to be under arrest.




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     26.         Person in command of vehicle, powers of
           (1)   In this section --
                 "endangering offence" on a vehicle, means an offence that, if
                      committed on board the vehicle, may endanger the safety
 5                    of any person on board the vehicle.
           (2)   If the person in charge of a vehicle reasonably suspects that a
                 person who is on or about to board the vehicle (the
                 "passenger") is carrying a thing that may be used to commit an
                 endangering offence on the vehicle or to damage the vehicle, the
10               person in charge --
                   (a) may ask the passenger to consent to a frisk search by or
                         on behalf of the person in charge; and
                   (b) if the passenger refuses to consent, may --
                            (i) if the passenger is on board, remove him or her
15                               from the vehicle or, if it not safe to do so,
                                 restrain or confine him or her until it is safe to do
                                 so; or
                           (ii) if the passenger is about to board, prevent him or
                                 her from boarding.
20         (3)   If on a request made under subsection (2)(a) a passenger
                 consents to a frisk search --
                   (a) the person doing the search may seize any thing the
                          person reasonably suspects may be used to commit an
                          endangering offence on the vehicle or to damage the
25                        vehicle; and
                   (b) if any such thing is seized, it must be kept in safe
                          custody and returned to the passenger when he or she
                          leaves the vehicle or given to a police officer.
           (4)   If it is reasonably necessary to do so in order --
30                 (a) to prevent danger to the safety of a vehicle or of any
                           person on board it; or



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                                              Citizens' powers          Part 3

                                                                          s. 26



            (b)    to prevent an offence being committed on board a
                   vehicle,
           the person in charge of the vehicle may remove a person who is
           on board from the vehicle or, if it not safe to do so, restrain or
 5         confine him or her until it is safe to do so.
     (5)   If the person in charge of a vehicle reasonably suspects that a
           person on board (the "suspect") has committed or is
           committing an offence on board, he or she may --
             (a) arrest the suspect; and
10           (b) detain the suspect until he or she can be taken to a police
                   officer.
     (6)   If under subsection (5)(a) the suspect is arrested, section 25(5),
           (6) and (7) apply.




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     Part 4           Miscellaneous official powers and duties

     s. 27



           Part 4 -- Miscellaneous official powers and duties
     27.         Suspects and others may be ordered to move on
           (1)   A police officer may order a person who is in a public place, or
                 in a vehicle used for public transport, to leave it, or a part of it
 5               specified by the officer, if the officer reasonably suspects that
                 the person --
                   (a) is doing an act --
                            (i) that involves the use of violence against a
                                 person;
10                         (ii) that will cause a person to use violence against
                                 another person; or
                          (iii) that will cause a person to fear violence will be
                                 used by a person against another person;
                   (b) is just about to do an act that is likely to --
15                          (i) involve the use of violence against a person;
                           (ii) cause a person to use violence against another
                                 person; or
                          (iii) cause a person to fear violence will be used by a
                                 person against another person;
20                 (c) is committing any other breach of the peace;
                   (d) is hindering, obstructing or preventing any lawful
                         activity that is being, or is about to be, carried out by
                         another person;
                   (e) intends to commit an offence; or
25                  (f) has just committed or is committing an offence.
           (2)   A police officer giving an order under subsection (1) may in
                 addition do either or both of the following --
                   (a) order the person to go beyond a reasonable distance
                         from the place, or the part of the place, set by the
30                       officer;



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                                                                                s. 28



                  (b)    order the person to obey the order or orders for a period
                         set by the officer; but the period must not be longer than
                         24 hours.
           (3)   For the purpose of giving an order under this section to a person
 5               whose personal details (as that term is defined in the Criminal
                 Investigation (Identifying People) Act 2002 section 16) are
                 unknown to the officer, a police officer may request the person
                 to give the officer any or all of the person's personal details.
           (4)   If a request is made under subsection (3), the Criminal
10               Investigation (Identifying People) Act 2002 section 16 applies to
                 and in relation to the request in the same way as it applies to a
                 request made under subsection (2) of that section.
           (5)   Any order given under this section must be in writing in a form
                 approved by the Commissioner of Police.
15         (6)   This section does not prevent a police officer from charging a
                 person with an offence without having exercised a power in this
                 section.

     28.         Persons accompanying officers to be informed of rights
           (1)   An officer who requests a person who is not in lawful custody
20               to accompany the officer or another officer for the purposes of
                 assisting in the investigation of an offence must inform the
                 person and be satisfied that the person understands --
                   (a) that he or she is not under arrest;
                   (b) that he or she does not have to accompany the officer
25                       concerned; and
                   (c) that if he or she accompanies the officer concerned, he
                         or she is free to leave at any time unless he or she is then
                         under arrest.
           (2)   Subsection (1) does not apply to or in respect of a person to
30               whom a requirement has been made by a member of the Police
                 Force under the Road Traffic Act 1974 section 66.


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     Criminal Investigation Bill 2005
     Part 5           Entering and searching places and vehicles
     Division 1       General
     s. 29



      Part 5 -- Entering and searching places and vehicles
                                Division 1 -- General
     29.         Places with 2 or more occupiers, interpretation
                 If under this Part any information must be given to, or consent
 5               may be obtained from, or any thing must be done in respect of,
                 the occupier of a place, then in a case where a place has 2 or
                 more occupiers, it is sufficient to give the information to, or
                 obtain consent from, or do the thing in respect of, any one of the
                 occupiers.

10   30.         Entry and search with occupier's consent
           (1)   This Part does not prevent an officer, with the informed consent
                 of the occupier of a place, from exercising without a search
                 warrant any of the powers that could be exercised under a
                 search warrant in respect of the place.
15         (2)   For the purposes of this Part, an occupier gives informed
                 consent to an officer if the occupier consents after being
                 informed by the officer --
                   (a) of the powers that the officer wants to exercise in
                         respect of the place;
20                 (b) of the reason why the officer wants to exercise those
                         powers; and
                   (c) that the occupier can refuse to consent to the officer
                         doing so.

     31.         Occupier's rights
25         (1)   This section applies to and in respect of the entry of a place
                 where the entry is to be made under section 20(3), this Part or
                 Part 12 Division 3.
           (2)   If the occupier of a place is present when it is proposed to enter
                 the place, an officer must, before any officer enters the place --
30                 (a) identify himself or herself to the occupier;

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                                                      General       Division 1
                                                                           s. 31



            (b)    inform the occupier that it is intended to enter the place;
            (c)    if the place is to be entered under a search warrant, give
                   the occupier a copy of the warrant;
            (d)    if the place is to be entered under some other statutory
 5                 authority, inform the occupier of the reason, and the
                   statutory authority, for the entry; and
             (e)   give the occupier an opportunity to give informed
                   consent to the place being entered,
           unless the officer reasonably suspects that to do so will
10         endanger any person, including the officer, or jeopardise the
           purpose of the proposed entry or the effectiveness of any search
           of the place.
     (3)   If subsection (2) is not complied with before a place is entered,
           then as soon as practicable after the place is entered an officer
15         must --
             (a) identify himself or herself to the occupier;
             (b) if the entry was under a search warrant, give the
                   occupier a copy of the warrant; and
             (c) if the entry was under some other statutory authority,
20                 inform the occupier of the reason, and the statutory
                   authority, for the entry.
     (4)   If the occupier of a place is present in the place when it is being
           searched, an officer doing the search must not prevent the
           occupier, or a person nominated by the occupier, from
25         observing the search, unless --
             (a) the officer reasonably suspects that the occupier or
                   person might be endangered if he or she were to observe
                   the search;
             (b) the occupier or person obstructs the search; or
30           (c) it is impracticable for the occupier or person to observe
                   the search.



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     Criminal Investigation Bill 2005
     Part 5           Entering and searching places and vehicles
     Division 2       Powers without a search warrant
     s. 32



           (5)   If a place that is entered by one or more officers is unoccupied,
                 the officer in charge must leave the following in a prominent
                 position in the place before leaving the place --
                   (a) a notice stating --
 5                           (i) the officer's official details; and
                            (ii) that the place has been entered;
                   (b) if the entry was under a search warrant, a copy of the
                          warrant completed in accordance with section 45(2); and
                   (c) if the entry was under some other statutory authority, the
10                        reason, and the statutory authority, for the entry.
           (6)   The copy of a search warrant given under subsection (2)(c)
                 or (3)(b) or left under subsection (5)(b) may omit the name of
                 the judicial officer who issued it.
                 Division 2 -- Powers without a search warrant
15   32.         Warrant not required
                 The powers in this Division may be exercised without a search
                 warrant.

     33.         Public open area, search powers in
           (1)   If an officer reasonably suspects --
20                 (a) that a thing relevant to an offence; or
                   (b) that a person against whom an offence may have been,
                         or may be being, committed,
                 is in a public open area, then, subject to this section, the officer
                 may exercise in the area any of the powers that could be
25               exercised under a search warrant if it were issued in respect of
                 the area for the purposes of searching it for the thing or person.
           (2)   An officer exercising such a power must not damage or destroy
                 any thing in the public open area, or dig up the ground, or seize
                 any thing that is attached to the land, without the informed
30               consent of the person who has the control or management of the
                 area.

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                                    Powers without a search warrant       Division 2
                                                                                 s. 34



           (3)   Subsection (2) does not prevent the seizing of any plant that it is
                 unlawful to possess.
           (4)   This section does not prevent an officer from applying for a
                 search warrant for a place that is a public open area.

 5   34.         Public place, entry to keep order in
                 A police officer may enter and remain in a public place where
                 members of the public are present for the purpose of ensuring
                 that peace and good order are maintained at the place.

     35.         Place or vehicle, entry of to prevent violence
10         (1)   A police officer who reasonably suspects that any of the
                 following is occurring or is just about to occur in a place or
                 vehicle may enter the place, or may stop and enter the vehicle,
                 in order to prevent it --
                   (a) an act by a person --
15                          (i) that involves or is likely to involve the use of
                                 violence against a person;
                           (ii) that is likely to cause a person to use violence
                                 against another person; or
                          (iii) that is likely to cause a person to fear violence
20                               will be used by a person against another person;
                   (b) any other breach of the peace by a person;
                   (c) an act by a person that will or is likely to kill a person or
                         cause serious injury to a person; or
                   (d) an act by a person that will or is likely to cause serious
25                       and unlawful damage to property.
           (2)   If a police officer who enters a place or vehicle under
                 subsection (1) finds a thing relevant to an offence, whether or
                 not the offence arises out of the circumstances that caused the
                 officer to enter the place or vehicle, the officer --
30                 (a) may, subject to section 145, seize the thing; and


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     Division 2       Powers without a search warrant
     s. 36



                  (b)    whether or not the officer seizes the thing, may do a
                         forensic examination on it.

     36.         Place or vehicle, entry of to attend to dead or seriously
                 injured person
 5               If an officer reasonably suspects that there is in a place or
                 vehicle a person who has died or who is so ill or injured as to be
                 likely to die or suffer permanent injury to his or her health
                 unless the officer enters the place or vehicle, the officer may
                 enter the place, or stop and enter the vehicle, in order to
10               ascertain the facts and if necessary attend to the person.

     37.         Place or vehicle, entry of to investigate serious event
           (1)   In this section --
                 "serious event" means a fire, an explosion, or the presence of
                      any article, substance or gas, that is likely to endanger the
15                    safety of people or cause serious damage to property.
           (2)   If a police officer reasonably suspects that there is or has been a
                 serious event in a place, the officer may enter the place.
           (3)   If a police officer reasonably suspects that there is or has been a
                 serious event in a vehicle, the officer may stop and enter the
20               vehicle.
           (4)   A police officer may only exercise the powers in subsection (2)
                 or (3) if and for so long as the officer reasonably suspects that it
                 is necessary to do so as a matter of urgency in order --
                   (a) to ensure there is no danger to people or property; or
25                 (b) to establish whether the serious event is connected to an
                          offence and to decide, under section 39 or 40 (as the
                          case requires), whether or not to establish a protected
                          forensic area at the place.




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                                    Powers without a search warrant       Division 2
                                                                                 s. 38



     38.         Vehicle, searches of to prevent offences etc.
                 If a police officer reasonably suspects that it is necessary to do
                 so for one or more of these purposes --
                   (a) to prevent a vehicle from being used --
 5                           (i) in the commission of an offence;
                            (ii) to aid or facilitate the commission of an offence;
                           (iii) to provide the means for an offender to leave the
                                  place of the commission of an offence; or
                           (iv) by an offender to avoid, or attempt to avoid,
10                                being arrested for an offence;
                  (b)   to prevent damage to a vehicle;
                  (c)   to protect the safety of people who may board or be on
                        board or who may be near a vehicle;
                  (d)   to ensure peace and good order on a vehicle,
15               the officer --
                   (e) may stop, enter and search or inspect the vehicle; and
                   (f) may take any reasonably necessary action.

     39.         Vehicle, search of for things relevant to offence
           (1)   If an officer reasonably suspects --
20                 (a) that a vehicle is carrying a thing relevant to an offence;
                   (b) that a vehicle is a thing relevant to an offence;
                   (c) that a vehicle is carrying a person against whom an
                         offence may have been, or may be being, committed; or
                   (d) that an offence has been, is being, or is about to be,
25                       committed in a vehicle,
                 the officer --
                   (e) may stop, enter and search the vehicle;
                   (f) may, under section 46, establish a protected forensic
                         area around or in the vehicle;


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     Part 5           Entering and searching places and vehicles
     Division 2       Powers without a search warrant
     s. 40



                  (g)   may, subject to section 145, seize any thing relevant to
                        the offence; and
                  (h)   may take any action that is reasonably necessary to stop
                        any offence that is being, or prevent any offence that
 5                      may be, committed against a person in the vehicle.
           (2)   If an officer doing a search under this section finds a thing
                 relevant to an offence other than the offence giving rise to the
                 search, the officer may, subject to section 145, seize it.
           (3)   If an officer doing a search under this section finds a thing that
10               may be seized under this section, then whether or not the officer
                 seizes it, the officer may do a forensic examination on it.
           (4)   The powers in subsection (1) may be exercised by an officer in
                 the area associated with a dwelling but only if the officer
                 reasonably suspects that --
15                 (a) the person in charge of the vehicle does not reside in the
                         dwelling; and
                   (b) the vehicle is not in that area with the express or implied
                         permission of a person who does reside in the dwelling.

     40.         Place, entry of to establish protected forensic area for
20               serious offence
           (1)   In this section --
                 "serious offence" means an offence the statutory penalty for
                      which is or includes imprisonment for 5 years or more or
                      life.
25         (2)   If a police officer reasonably suspects --
                   (a) that a serious offence has been or is being committed in
                          a place; or
                   (b) that there is in a place a thing relevant to a serious
                          offence,
30               the officer may enter the place and, under section 46, establish a
                 protected forensic area there.

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                          Entering and searching places and vehicles           Part 5
                                       Powers with a search warrant       Division 3
                                                                                 s. 41



           (3)   A police officer may only exercise the power in subsection (2)
                 in a public open area if the officer reasonably suspects that it is
                 necessary to do so --
                   (a) to prevent a thing relevant to the serious offence that is
 5                       or may be in the area from being concealed or disturbed
                         until the area has been properly inspected or examined;
                         or
                   (b) to protect the safety of any person who is in or may
                         enter the area.
10         (4)   A police officer may only exercise the power in subsection (2)
                 in a place that is not a public open area if the officer reasonably
                 suspects that in the time it would take to get a search warrant --
                   (a) a thing relevant to the serious offence that is or may be
                         in the place is likely to be concealed or disturbed; or
15                 (b) the safety of a person who is in or may enter the place is
                         likely to be endangered.

                   Division 3 -- Powers with a search warrant
     41.         Search warrant, application for
           (1)   Only a police officer or a public officer may apply for a search
20               warrant.
           (2)   An application for a search warrant must be made to a JP in
                 accordance with section 12.
           (3)   An application for a search warrant must --
                  (a) state the applicant's full name and official details;
25                (b) state the offence that is suspected to have been
                        committed, or that is suspected may be committed, and
                        in relation to which a search warrant is wanted;
                  (c) state the grounds on which the applicant suspects that
                        the offence has been or may be committed;
30                (d) describe the place that it is desired to enter and search;


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     Division 3       Powers with a search warrant
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                   (e)   if it is desired to search the place for a thing relevant to
                         the offence -- describe the thing or the class of thing;
                   (f)   if it is desired to search the place for a person -- name
                         or describe the person;
 5                (g)    state the grounds on which the applicant suspects one or
                         more of the following --
                            (i) that the thing or class of thing is a thing relevant
                                   to the offence and that it is in the place;
                           (ii) that a person against whom an offence may have
10                                 been, or may be being, committed is in the place;
                  (h)    state, to the best of the applicant's knowledge, whether
                         an application for a search warrant for the same place
                         has been made to any other JP within the previous
                         72 hours and if so whether a warrant was issued or not;
15                       and
                   (i)   include any other information that is prescribed.

     42.         Search warrant, issue of
           (1)   On an application made under section 41, a JP may issue a
                 search warrant for a place if satisfied that, in respect of each of
20               the matters in section 41(3) that the applicant suspects, there are
                 reasonable grounds for the applicant to have that suspicion.
           (2)   A search warrant must contain this information --
                  (a) the applicant's full name and official details;
                  (b) the suspected offence to which it relates;
25                (c) the place that may be entered and searched under the
                        warrant;
                  (d) if a thing or class of thing is the object of the search -- a
                        description of the thing or the class of thing;
                  (e) if a person is the object of the search -- the name or a
30                      description of the person;
                   (f) the period, not exceeding 30 days, during which it may
                        be executed;

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                  (g)    the name of the JP who issued it; and
                  (h)    the date and time when it was issued.
           (3)   A search warrant must be in the prescribed form.
           (4)   If a JP refuses to issue a search warrant, the JP must record on
 5               the application the fact of, the date and time of, and the reasons
                 for, the refusal.

     43.         Search warrant, effect of
           (1)   In this section --
                 "target place", in relation to a search warrant, means the place
10                    described in the warrant that may be entered and searched
                      under it;
                 "target thing", in relation to a search warrant, means the thing
                      or class of thing described in the warrant that is the object
                      of the search.
15         (2)   A search warrant has effect according to its contents and this
                 section.
           (3)   A search warrant comes into force when it is issued by a JP.
           (4)   A search warrant may only be executed after it comes into force
                 and before the end of the period during which it may be
20               executed, despite subsection (11).
           (5)   A search warrant may be executed --
                  (a) if a police officer applied for it, by any police officer;
                  (b) if a public officer applied for it, by any public officer
                        whose functions are the same as the applicant's, or by a
25                      police officer.
           (6)   A search warrant must be executed between 6 a.m. and 9 p.m.
                 unless the officer executing it reasonably suspects that if it were,
                 the safety of any person, including the officer, may be
                 endangered or the effectiveness of the proposed search may be
30               jeopardised.


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     Division 3       Powers with a search warrant
     s. 43



        (7)    A search warrant authorises entry to the target place for a
               reasonable period for the purpose of executing the warrant.
        (8)    A search warrant authorises the officer executing it to exercise
               any or all of these primary powers --
 5               (a) to enter the target place;
                 (b) if it authorises a search for a target thing --
                          (i) to search the target place for the target thing;
                         (ii) to do a basic search or a strip search of a person
                               who is in the target place when the warrant is
10                             being executed for the target thing; and
                        (iii) subject to section 145, to seize the target thing;
                 (c) if it authorises a search for a person --
                          (i) to search the target place for the person; and
                         (ii) to take any action that is reasonably necessary to
15                             stop any offence that is being, or prevent any
                               offence that may be, committed against the
                               person.
        (9)    If an officer doing a search under a search warrant finds a thing
               which is not a target thing but which is a thing relevant to an
20             offence (including the offence to which the warrant relates), the
               officer may, subject to section 145, seize it.
       (10)    If an officer doing a search under a search warrant finds a target
               thing or a thing that may be seized under subsection (9), then
               whether or not the officer seizes it, the officer may do a forensic
25             examination on it.
       (11)    Subject to subsection (4), a search warrant ceases to be in force
               when --
                (a) if the target thing is found --
                         (i) the thing is seized; or
30                      (ii) a forensic examination on the thing that it is
                              reasonably necessary to do in the target place is
                              completed;

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                                                                                 s. 44



                  (b)    if a thing which is not the target thing but which can be
                         seized under this Act is found when executing the
                         warrant --
                            (i) the thing is seized; or
 5                         (ii) a forensic examination on the thing that it is
                                  reasonably necessary to do in the target place is
                                  completed;
                   (c)   if the person to be searched for is found -- any offence
                         that is being or that may be committed against the
10                       person is stopped or prevented; or
                  (d)    if the target thing or the person to be searched for is not
                         found, the search is completed,
                 whichever happens last.
      (12)       This section does not prevent the exercise of the powers in
15               Part 8 Division 2 on a person who is in the target place.

     44.         Search warrant, ancillary powers under
           (1)   In this section --
                 "senior officer" means --
                      (a) in relation to a police officer -- a police officer who
20                           is, or is acting as, a sergeant or an officer of a rank
                             more senior than a sergeant;
                      (b) in relation to a public officer -- a public officer
                             prescribed as a senior officer in relation to that
                             officer;
25               "target place" has the meaning given to it by section 43;
                 "target thing" has the meaning given to it by section 43.




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     Division 3       Powers with a search warrant
     s. 44



        (2)    A search warrant also authorises the officer executing it to
               exercise any or all of these ancillary powers --
                 (a) subject to subsection (3), to enter but not to search a
                       place near the target place if the officer reasonably
 5                     suspects it is necessary to do so in order to --
                          (i) prevent a target thing from being concealed or
                              disturbed;
                         (ii) prevent a person from fleeing the target place; or
                        (iii) protect the safety of any person, including the
10                            officer, who is in or near the target place;
                (b)   to take into and use in the target place any equipment or
                      facilities that are reasonably necessary in order to
                      exercise any power under the warrant;
                (c)   to photograph or otherwise make a record of a target
15                    thing that is in the target place;
                (d)   to make reasonable use of any equipment, facilities or
                      services in the target place in order to exercise any
                      power under the warrant and for that purpose --
                         (i) to operate the equipment or facilities;
20                      (ii) to order an occupier of the target place to do
                               anything that is reasonable and necessary to
                               facilitate that use;
                (e)   if the target thing is a record --
                         (i) to operate any device or equipment in the place
25                             that is needed to gain access to, recover, or make
                               a reproduction of, the record;
                        (ii) if the officer reasonably suspects that an occupier
                               of the target place knows how to gain access to
                               or operate any such device or equipment -- to
30                             order the occupier to provide any information or
                               assistance that is reasonable and necessary to
                               enable the officer to gain access to, recover, or
                               make a reproduction of, the record;


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                                 Powers with a search warrant       Division 3
                                                                           s. 44



             (f)   if the officer reasonably suspects it is necessary to do so
                   in order to prevent --
                      (i) the target thing from being concealed or
                           disturbed; or
 5                   (ii) a person in the place against whom an offence
                           may have been, or may be being, committed
                           from being endangered,
                   to establish a protected forensic area under section 46 in
                   the target place;
10          (g)    if the officer reasonably suspects it is necessary to do so
                   to protect the safety of any person, including the officer,
                   who is in the target place when the warrant is being
                   executed --
                      (i) to order a person to leave the place or its vicinity;
15                   (ii) to order a person not to enter the place or its
                           vicinity;
                    (iii) to detain a person who is in the place;
                    (iv) to do a basic search or a strip search of a person
                           who is in the place for any weapon or other thing
20                         that could endanger a person;
                     (v) to seize and retain any such thing,
                   while the warrant is being executed.
     (3)   The powers in subsection (2)(a) must not be exercised by an
           officer unless the officer has written approval to do so from a
25         senior officer who is not involved in the investigation to which
           the search warrant relates.
     (4)   A senior officer who gives such an approval must make a
           written record of it and --
            (a) the place to be entered;
30          (b) the other officer's grounds for suspecting that it is
                   necessary to enter the place;



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     Division 4       Protected forensic areas
     s. 45



                  (c)    the date and time when it was given; and
                  (d)    the reasons for giving it.
           (5)   A senior officer's approval under this section may be applied
                 for and given by remote communication.
 5         (6)   This section does not prevent the exercise of the powers in
                 Part 8 Division 2 on a person who is in the target place.

     45.         Search warrant, execution of
           (1)   The officer in charge of executing a search warrant must
                 comply with section 31.
10         (2)   On completing the execution of a search warrant the officer in
                 charge of executing it must record the following matters on it --
                   (a) the officer's official details;
                   (b) the date and time when the warrant was executed; and
                   (c) any other matter that is prescribed.
15         (3)   Part 13 applies to and in respect of the seizure of any thing
                 under a search warrant.

                        Division 4 -- Protected forensic areas
     46.         Protected forensic area, establishment of
           (1)   This section applies if another section in this Act authorises an
20               officer to establish a protected forensic area under this section.
           (2)   In order to establish the protected forensic area, the officer must
                 take reasonable steps to notify people of the existence and
                 boundaries of the area.
           (3)   The area of the protected forensic area must not be greater than
25               is reasonably necessary for the purposes for which it is
                 established.
           (4)   The boundaries of the protected forensic area may be altered at
                 any time.


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                                           Protected forensic areas      Division 4
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           (5)   While a protected forensic area is established, the officer who
                 established the area, or another officer involved in the
                 investigation, must remain at the area.
           (6)   An officer must disestablish the protected forensic area when
 5               the purposes for which it was established cease to exist.
           (7)   More than one protected forensic area may be established in
                 respect of any one offence or suspected offence or in a place or
                 vehicle.

     47.         Protected forensic area, powers in relation to
10         (1)   In this section --
                 "authorised", in relation to a protected forensic area, means
                     authorised by the officer in charge of the investigation at
                     the protected forensic area;
                 "senior officer" means --
15                   (a) in relation to a police officer -- a police officer who
                           is, or is acting as, a sergeant or an officer of a rank
                           more senior than a sergeant;
                     (b) in relation to a public officer -- a public officer
                           prescribed as a senior officer in relation to that
20                         officer.
           (2)   While a protected forensic area is established, an officer at the
                 area may take reasonable measures, including giving orders --
                   (a) to prevent a thing relevant to the offence to which the
                        area relates from being concealed or disturbed;
25                 (b) to protect the safety of any person who is in or may
                        enter the area;
                   (c) to secure the area against unauthorised disturbance;
                   (d) to prevent an unauthorised person, animal or vehicle
                        from disturbing the area;
30                 (e) to restrict entry to the area to people, animals, and
                        vehicles, that are authorised;


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     Division 4       Protected forensic areas
     s. 47



                 (f)   to remove an unauthorised person, animal or vehicle
                       from the area;
                (g)    if the area is established in or around a vehicle, to
                       prevent the vehicle from being moved.
 5      (3)    After a protected forensic area is established at a place that is
               not a public open area and before --
                 (a) the occupier of the place gives informed consent to the
                       establishment of the protected forensic area; or
                (b) a search warrant is issued for the place,
10             an officer involved in the investigation of the offence to which
               the area relates may, with the prior approval of a senior officer
               who is not involved in the investigation, exercise any power in
               the area that could be exercised under a search warrant if it had
               been issued for the area.
15      (4)    A senior officer must not give such an approval for the exercise
               of a power unless satisfied that --
                 (a) a thing relevant to the offence to which the area relates
                      is likely to be concealed or disturbed; or
                 (b) the safety of a person who is in the area is likely to be
20                    endangered,
               if the power is not exercised before --
                  (c) the occupier of the place gives informed consent to the
                        establishment of the protected forensic area; or
                 (d) a search warrant is issued for the place.
25      (5)    A senior officer who gives such an approval must make a
               written record of it and --
                (a) the power to be exercised;
                (b) the place where the power is to be exercised;
                (c) the date and time when it was given; and
30              (d) the reasons for giving it.



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           (6)   A senior officer's approval under this section may be applied
                 for and given by remote communication.
           (7)   An unauthorised person who, without reasonable excuse, enters
                 a protected forensic area commits an offence.
 5               Penalty: a fine of $12 000 and imprisonment for 12 months.
           (8)   An unauthorised person who, without reasonable excuse,
                 disturbs any thing in a protected forensic area commits an
                 offence.
                 Penalty: a fine of $12 000 and imprisonment for 12 months.

10   48.         Protected forensic area, continuance of
           (1)   If a protected forensic area is established under section 44(2)(f)
                 under a search warrant, then, subject to any order made under
                 section 49, it may continue in existence until the warrant ceases
                 to be in force.
15         (2)   If a protected forensic area is established --
                   (a) in a public open area; and
                   (b) not under section 44(2)(f) under a search warrant,
                 then, subject to any order made under section 49, it may
                 continue in existence until the purposes for which it was
20               established cease to exist.
           (3)   If --
                   (a)   a protected forensic area is established in a place;
                   (b)   the place is not a public open area;
                   (c)   the protected forensic area is not established under
25                       section 44(2)(f) under a search warrant; and
                  (d)    the occupier has given informed consent to the entry and
                         search of the place and to the establishment of the
                         protected forensic area,




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     Part 5           Entering and searching places and vehicles
     Division 4       Protected forensic areas
     s. 48



               then, subject to any order made under section 49, the protected
               forensic area may continue in existence --
                 (e) until the purposes for which it was established cease to
                       exist; or
 5               (f) until it is disestablished under subsection (4),
               whichever happens first.
        (4)    If --
                 (a)   a protected forensic area is established at a place;
                 (b)   the place is not a public open area;
10               (c)   the protected forensic area is not established under
                       section 44(2)(f) under a search warrant; and
                (d)    the occupier withdraws consent to the entry and search
                       of the place and to the establishment of the protected
                       forensic area,
15             then --
                 (e) if an application for a search warrant is not made within
                      6 hours after the withdrawal of consent, the protected
                      forensic area is to be taken to be disestablished 6 hours
                      after the withdrawal;
20               (f) if such an application is made within 6 hours after the
                      withdrawal of consent but is refused, the protected
                      forensic area is to be taken to be disestablished when the
                      application is refused,
               and evidence of any thing relevant to an offence that is found in
25             the area after the withdrawal is not admissible in proceedings in
               a court unless the court decides otherwise under section 154.
        (5)    If --
                 (a)   a protected forensic area is established at a place;
                 (b)   the place is not a public open area;
30               (c)   the protected forensic area is not established under
                       section 44(2)(f) under a search warrant; and

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                         Entering and searching places and vehicles           Part 5
                                           Protected forensic areas      Division 4
                                                                                s. 49



                  (d)   the occupier does not consent to the entry and search of
                        the place and to the establishment of the protected
                        forensic area,
                 then --
 5                 (e) if an application for a search warrant is not made within
                        6 hours after the protected forensic area is established,
                        the area is to be taken to be disestablished 6 hours after
                        it is established;
                   (f) if such an application is made within 6 hours after the
10                      protected forensic area is established but is refused, the
                        area is to be taken to be disestablished when the
                        application is refused,
                 and evidence of any thing relevant to an offence that is found in
                 the area is not admissible in proceedings in a court unless the
15               court decides otherwise under section 154.
           (6)   Subsections (2) to (5) do not --
                  (a) prevent an application for or the issue of a search
                        warrant for a place; or
                  (b) if a search warrant is issued, affect the operation of
20                      section 44(2)(f) and subsection (1).

     49.         Protected forensic area, review of need for
           (1)   A person who is aggrieved by the fact that a protected forensic
                 area is established (the "aggrieved person") may apply to the
                 Magistrates Court to review the grounds for the continued
25               establishment of the area.
           (2)   The application must be made in accordance with rules of court.
           (3)   On an application made under subsection (1) an officer involved
                 in the investigation of the offence to which the protected
                 forensic area relates (the "investigating officer") and the
30               aggrieved person are entitled to be heard.



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     Division 4       Protected forensic areas
     s. 49



        (4)    On such an application the investigating officer may apply to
               the court for an order that information given to the court that is
               relevant to the continued establishment of the area not be
               disclosed to the aggrieved person.
 5      (5)    An application under subsection (4) may be made without
               notice to the aggrieved person and may be heard and decided in
               private and in the absence of the person.
        (6)    On an application made under subsection (4), the court must not
               make an order restricting the disclosure of information unless
10             satisfied the disclosure might prejudice the safety of any person
               or the investigation of an offence to which the protected
               forensic area relates.
        (7)    On an application made under subsection (1) the court may
               make any orders it thinks fit including --
15              (a) an order as to the period for which the protected forensic
                      area may continue to be established;
                (b) an order to mitigate any inconvenience caused by the
                      protected forensic area;
                (c) if the court is satisfied that the protected forensic area
20                    should not continue, an order that it be disestablished.
        (8)    Proceedings under this section may be conducted by remote
               communication.




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                                                    Criminal Investigation Bill 2005
                                         Obtaining business records           Part 6

                                                                               s. 50



                    Part 6 -- Obtaining business records
     50.         Interpretation
                 In this Part --
                 "business" means any business, including a business of a
 5                    governmental body or instrumentality or of a local
                      government, or any occupation, trade or calling;
                 "business record" means a record prepared or used in the
                      ordinary course of a business for the purpose of recording
                      any matter relating to the business;
10               "order to produce" means an order issued under section 53.

     51.         Application of this Part
           (1)   An order to produce must not be issued under this Part to a
                 person in relation to a business record that relates or may relate
                 to an offence that the person is suspected of having committed.
15         (2)   This Part does not prevent an officer from applying for a search
                 warrant in respect of a business record, whether before or after
                 the issue of an order to produce.

     52.         Order to produce, application for
           (1)   Only a police officer or a public officer may apply for an order
20               to produce a business record.
           (2)   An application for an order to produce must be made to a JP in
                 accordance with section 12.
           (3)   An application for an order to produce must --
                  (a) state the applicant's full name and official details;
25                (b) state the offence that is suspected to have been
                        committed and in relation to which the order is wanted;
                  (c) state the grounds on which the applicant suspects that
                        the offence has been committed;



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     Part 6           Obtaining business records

     s. 53



                  (d)    state the name of the person to whom the order wanted
                         will apply;
                   (e)   state that the person is not suspected of having
                         committed the offence;
 5                 (f)   describe with reasonable particularity the business
                         record or class of business record that the applicant
                         wants the person to produce;
                  (g)    state the grounds on which the applicant suspects that
                         the business record or class of business record is a thing
10                       relevant to the offence;
                  (h)    state whether the original or a copy of the business
                         record or class of business record is required;
                   (i)   state whether a paper, electronic or other version of the
                         business record or class of business record is required;
15                       and
                   (j)   include any other information that is prescribed.

     53.         Order to produce, issue of
           (1)   On an application made under section 52, a JP may issue an
                 order to produce a business record if satisfied that, in respect of
20               each of the matters in section 52(3) that the applicant suspects,
                 there are reasonable grounds for the applicant to have that
                 suspicion.
           (2)   An order to produce must contain this information --
                  (a) the applicant's full name and official details;
25                (b) the name of the person to whom the order applies;
                  (c) a reasonably particular description of the business
                        record or class of business record to be produced by the
                        person;
                  (d) an order that the person produce the record or records;
30                (e) whether the original or a copy of the record or records is
                        required;


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                                                                               s. 54



                   (f)   whether a paper, electronic or other version of the record
                         or records is required;
                  (g)    the place where the record or records are to be produced;
                  (h)    the date on or before which the order must be obeyed,
 5                       which must allow a reasonable period for the person to
                         obey the order;
                   (i)   the name of the JP who issued it;
                   (j)   the date and time when it was issued.
           (3)   An order to produce must be in the prescribed form.
10         (4)   If a JP refuses to issue an order to produce, the JP must record
                 on the application the fact of, the date and time of, and the
                 reasons for, the refusal.

     54.         Order to produce, service of
           (1)   An order to produce must be served on the person to whom it
15               applies as soon as practicable after it is issued.
           (2)   An order to produce may be served by personal service or by
                 post or, with the consent of the person to be served, by email or
                 fax.

     55.         Order to produce, effect of
20         (1)   An order to produce has effect according to its contents and this
                 section.
           (2)   A person who is served with an order to produce and who,
                 without reasonable excuse, does not obey it commits an offence.
                 Penalty: a fine of $12 000 and imprisonment for 12 months.

25   56.         Produced records, powers in respect of
           (1)   An officer to whom a business record is produced under an
                 order to produce may retain it for a reasonable time in order to
                 decide whether it is a thing relevant to an offence.



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    s. 56



       (2)    If a business record produced to an officer under an order to
              produce is a thing relevant to an offence, the officer --
                (a) may, subject to section 145, seize it; and
                (b) whether or not the officer seizes it, may do a forensic
5                     examination on it.
       (3)    Sections 147 and 149 to 151 apply to and in respect of a record
              that is seized after being produced under an order to produce.




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                                                    Criminal Investigation Bill 2005
                       Gaining access to data controlled by suspects          Part 7

                                                                               s. 57



     Part 7 -- Gaining access to data controlled by suspects
     57.         Interpretation
                 In this Part --
                 "data" includes any record, any computer program, and any
 5                    part of a computer program, in a digital, electronic or
                      magnetic form;
                 "data access order" means an order issued under section 59;
                 "data storage device" means a thing that contains or is
                      designed to contain data and it does not matter --
10                    (a) if the thing is a fixed or removable part of another
                             thing;
                      (b) if the data it contains can be used or retrieved by the
                             thing itself or not; or
                      (c) if the thing is separate from, but the data it contains
15                           can be used or retrieved by, another thing;
                 "serious offence" means an offence the statutory penalty for
                      which is or includes imprisonment for 5 years or more or
                      life.

     58.         Data access order, application for
20         (1)   Only a police officer or a public officer may apply for a data
                 access order.
           (2)   An application for a data access order must be made to a
                 magistrate in accordance with section 12.
           (3)   An application for a data access order must --
25                (a) state the applicant's full name and official details;
                  (b) state the serious offence that is suspected to have been
                        committed and in relation to which the order is wanted;
                  (c) state the grounds on which the applicant suspects that
                        the offence has been committed;



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     s. 59



                  (d)    describe with reasonable particularity the data storage
                         device to which the applicant wants access (the "target
                         device");
                  (e)    explain how the applicant has possession of or access to
 5                       the target device;
                   (f)   state the grounds on which the applicant suspects that
                         any data the target device may contain is or may be a
                         thing relevant to the serious offence;
                  (g)    state the name of the person to whom the order wanted
10                       will apply (the "target person");
                  (h)    state the grounds on which the applicant suspects that
                         the target person has committed the serious offence;
                   (i)   state the grounds on which the applicant suspects that
                         the target person has knowledge relevant to gaining
15                       access to any data the target device may contain; and
                   (j)   include any other information that is prescribed.

     59.         Data access order, issue of
           (1)   On an application made under section 58, a magistrate may
                 issue a data access order if satisfied --
20                 (a) that the applicant has lawful possession of or lawful
                         access to the target device;
                   (b) that, in respect of each of the matters in section 58(3)
                         that the applicant suspects, other than paragraph (i),
                         there are reasonable grounds for the applicant to have
25                       that suspicion; and
                   (c) that the target person has knowledge relevant to gaining
                         access to any data the target device may contain.
           (2)   A data access order must contain this information --
                  (a) the applicant's full name and official details;
30                (b)    the name of the person to whom the order applies;
                  (c)    a description of the data storage device to which the
                         order relates;

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                                                                                 s. 60



                  (d)     an order that the person provide information or
                          assistance that is reasonable and necessary to allow the
                          applicant to do any or all of the following --
                             (i) to gain access to any data the device may
 5                                contain;
                            (ii) to copy any such data to another data storage
                                  device;
                           (iii) to reproduce any such data on paper;
                  (e)     the date on or before which the order must be obeyed;
10                 (f)    the name of the magistrate who issued it;
                  (g)     the date and time when it was issued.
           (3)   A data access order must be in the prescribed form.
           (4)   If a magistrate refuses to issue a data access order, he or she
                 must record on the application the fact of, the date and time of,
15               and the reasons for, the refusal.

     60.         Data access order, service of
                 A data access order must be served personally on the person to
                 whom it applies as soon as practicable after it is issued.

     61.         Data access order, effect of
20         (1)   A data access order has effect according to its contents.
           (2)   A person who is served with a data access order and who,
                 without reasonable excuse (the onus of proving which is on the
                 person), does not obey it commits a crime.
                 Penalty: imprisonment for 5 years.
25               Summary conviction penalty: a fine of $24 000 and
                     imprisonment for 2 years.
           (3)   It is not a defence to a charge of an offence under subsection (2)
                 that information required to be given under the data access order
                 would or may have incriminated the accused.


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     Division 1       Preliminary
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                           Part 8 -- Searching people
                              Division 1 -- Preliminary
     62.         Interpretation
                 A term used in this Part has the meaning given to it by
 5               section 73 which applies with any necessary changes.

     63.         "Basic search", meaning of
           (1)   A person who is authorised by this Act to do a basic search of a
                 person may do any or all of the following --
                   (a) scan the person with an electronic or mechanical device,
10                      whether hand held or not, to detect any thing;
                   (b) remove the person's headwear, gloves, footwear or outer
                        clothing (such as a coat or jacket), but not his or her
                        inner clothing or underwear, in order to facilitate a frisk
                        search;
15                 (c) frisk search the person;
                   (d) search any article removed under paragraph (b).
           (2)   A person who is authorised by this Act to do a basic search of a
                 person is not, unless authorised to do so under Part 9, authorised
                 to also do a forensic procedure on the person being searched.

20   64.         "Strip search", meaning of
           (1)   An officer who is authorised by this Act to do a strip search of a
                 person may do any or all of the following --
                   (a) remove any article that the person is wearing including
                        any article covering his or her private parts;
25                 (b) search any article removed under paragraph (a);
                   (c) search the person's external parts, including his or her
                        private parts;
                   (d) search the person's mouth but not any other orifice.


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           (2)   An officer who is authorised by this Act to do a strip search of a
                 person is not, unless authorised to do so under Part 9, authorised
                 to also do a forensic procedure on the person being searched.

     65.         Searches, ancillary powers for
 5         (1)   This section operates if a person (the "searcher") is authorised
                 by this Act to do a basic search or a strip search of a person.
           (2)   In the case of a basic search or a strip search, the searcher may
                 do any or all of the following for the purposes of doing the
                 search --
10                 (a) stop and detain the person for a reasonable period;
                   (b) search any thing being carried by or under the
                         immediate control of the person;
                   (c)   order the person to remove any thing that might injure
                         the searcher when doing the search from any article that
15                       the person is wearing;
                  (d)    order the person to do anything reasonable to facilitate
                         the exercise by the searcher of any power in this section,
                         or in section 63 or 64, as the case requires.
           (3)   In the case of a basic search, the searcher may also photograph
20               part or all of the search while it is being done.
           (4)   In the case of a strip search, the searcher may also --
                   (a) order the person to accompany the searcher to a place
                         where the search can be done in accordance with
                         section 72(3);
25                 (b) photograph any thing that may be lawfully seized in the
                         position it is found on the person's body.

     66.         How searches must be done
                 A basic search or a strip search that under this Act may be done
                 on a person must be done in accordance with Division 3.




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     Division 2       General powers to search people
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                  Division 2 -- General powers to search people
     67.         Warrant not required
                 The powers in this Division may be exercised without a warrant.

     68.         Searching people for evidence or contraband
 5         (1)   If a police officer reasonably suspects that a person has in his or
                 her possession or under his or her control --
                   (a) any thing relevant to an offence;
                   (b) any thing that has been stolen or otherwise unlawfully
                          obtained; or
10                 (c) any thing the possession of which by the person at that
                          time and place is unlawful,
                 the police officer --
                   (d) may do a basic search or a strip search of the person;
                   (e) may, subject to section 145, seize any thing described in
15                       paragraph (a), (b) or (c) that the officer finds, whether or
                         not it is a thing that the officer suspected was in the
                         possession or under the control of the person; and
                    (f) whether or not the officer seizes the thing, may do a
                         forensic examination on it.
20         (2)   For the purposes of exercising the powers in subsection (1), the
                 officer may enter any place where the person to be searched is
                 reasonably suspected by the officer to be and search it for the
                 person, but may not enter --
                   (a) a dwelling; or
25                 (b) the area associated with a dwelling, unless the officer
                         reasonably suspects that the person --
                            (i) is in that area;
                           (ii) does not reside in the dwelling; and




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                                     General powers to search people      Division 2
                                                                                 s. 69



                          (iii)   does not have the express or implied permission
                                  of a person who does reside in the dwelling to be
                                  in that area.
           (3)   For the purposes of exercising the powers in subsection (1), the
 5               officer may stop and enter a vehicle in which the person to be
                 searched is reasonably suspected by the officer to be and search
                 it for the person.
           (4)   The powers in subsection (3) may be exercised by an officer in
                 the area associated with a dwelling but only if the officer
10               reasonably suspects that --
                   (a)   the person in charge of the vehicle does not reside in the
                         dwelling; and
                  (b)    the vehicle is not in that area with the express or implied
                         permission of a person who does reside in the dwelling.
15         (5)   A power in this section to search a place or vehicle is limited to
                 searching the place or vehicle for the person to be searched.

     69.         People in public places, search of for security purposes
           (1)   The powers in this section may be exercised in a public place by
                 a police officer --
20                 (a) if the place is prescribed;
                   (b) if the place is the subject of a written declaration made
                         under subsection (2); or
                   (c) if the officer reasonably suspects that it is necessary to
                         exercise the powers for the purposes of safeguarding the
25                       place or people who are in or may enter the place.
           (2)   If a senior police officer is of the opinion that it is necessary to
                 do so to safeguard a particular public place or people who are in
                 or may enter the place, the officer may declare the place to be
                 one where the powers in this section may be exercised by a
30               police officer.




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     Division 2       General powers to search people
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        (3)    A senior police officer who makes such a declaration must
               make a written record of it and --
                (a) the public place to which it applies;
                (b) the date and time it was made;
 5              (c) the period for which it will be in force, which must not
                      be more than 48 hours; and
                (d) the reasons for making it.
        (4)    If the powers in this section may be exercised in a public place
               by a police officer, the officer --
10               (a) having informed a person who is about to enter the place
                       that entry will be refused unless the person consents --
                          (i) to undergoing a basic search; and
                         (ii) if the person is in charge of a vehicle, to a search
                               of the vehicle,
15                     may order the person not to enter the place if the person
                       does not consent; or
                 (b) having informed a person who is in the place that he or
                       she will be ordered to leave the place unless the person
                       consents --
20                        (i) to undergoing a basic search; and
                         (ii) if the person is in charge of a vehicle, to a search
                               of the vehicle,
                       may order the person to leave the place if the person
                       does not consent.
25      (5)    If a person does not obey an order given by a police officer
               under subsection (4), the officer may physically enforce the
               order.
        (6)    If a person who is about to enter or is in a public place consents
               to undergoing a basic search by a police officer, the officer --
30               (a) may do a basic search for the purpose of searching for
                        any thing that the officer reasonably suspects does or


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                                        How searches must be done       Division 3
                                                                               s. 70



                         may endanger the place or people who are in or may
                         enter it; and
                  (b)    may seize any such thing found.
           (7)   A thing so seized from a person must be made available to be
 5               collected by the person when or as soon as practicable after he
                 or she leaves the place, unless it may be lawfully seized and
                 retained under another provision of this Act or under another
                 written law.
           (8)   The Criminal and Found Property Disposal Act 2005 applies to
10               and in relation to a thing so seized that is made available to but
                 not collected by the person.
           (9)   If a police officer doing a search under this section finds a thing
                 which is not a thing referred to in subsection (6) but which is a
                 thing relevant to an offence, the officer --
15                 (a) may, subject to section 145, seize it; and
                   (b) whether or not the officer seizes it, may do a forensic
                          examination on it.

                     Division 3 -- How searches must be done
     70.         Basic search or strip search, rules for doing
20         (1)   This section operates if a person (the "searcher") is authorised
                 by this Act to do a basic search or a strip search of a person.
           (2)   Before the searcher does a basic search or a strip search of the
                 person the searcher must, if reasonably practicable --
                   (a) identify himself or herself to the person;
25                 (b) inform the person of the reason for the search;
                   (c) request the person to consent to the search; and
                   (d) if the person does not consent to the search or withdraws
                         his or her consent, inform the person that it is an offence
                         to obstruct the searcher doing the search.



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     Division 3       How searches must be done
     s. 71



           (3)   If a basic search or a strip search is done of a person --
                   (a) it must be done as quickly as is reasonably practicable;
                   (b) it must not be any more intrusive than is reasonably
                          necessary in the circumstances;
 5                 (c) the searcher, if he or she proposes to remove any article
                          that the person is wearing, must tell the person why it is
                          considered necessary to do so;
                   (d) the person must be allowed to dress as soon as it is
                          finished;
10                 (e) the person must be provided with a reasonably adequate
                          replacement for any article of clothing or footwear
                          seized if, due to the seizure, the person is left without
                          adequate clothing or footwear in the circumstances; and
                    (f) the person must not be questioned while it is being done
15                        about any offence that he or she is suspected of having
                          committed.

     71.         Basic search, additional rules for doing
           (1)   This section is in addition to section 70 and operates if a person
                 (the "searcher") is authorised by this Act to do a basic search
20               of a person.
           (2)   The searcher must, if practicable, be a person of the same
                 gender as the person being searched, unless the searcher is a
                 doctor or a nurse.

     72.         Strip search, additional rules for doing
25         (1)   This section is in addition to section 70 and operates if a person
                 (the "searcher") is authorised by this Act to do a strip search of
                 a person.
           (2)   Unless the strip search is being done under section 134, it must
                 not be done unless the searcher reasonably suspects that a strip
30               search is necessary in the circumstances.



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                                                                         s. 72



     (3)   If the strip search involves removing any article that the person
           is wearing or searching the person's private parts --
              (a) the searcher must be the same gender as the person
                    being searched, unless the searcher is a doctor or a
 5                  nurse;
             (b) any person present while it is done must, if practicable,
                    be of the same gender as the person being searched;
              (c) it must be done in circumstances affording reasonable
                    privacy to the person;
10           (d) it must not involve the removal of more articles being
                    worn by the person than is reasonably necessary for
                    doing it;
              (e) it must not involve more visual inspection than is
                    reasonably necessary for doing it;
15            (f) the number of people present while it is done (excluding
                    a person who is present under paragraph (g), must not be
                    more than is reasonably necessary to ensure it is done
                    effectively and to ensure the safety of all present; and
             (g) if the person is a protected person, it must, if practicable,
20                  be done in the presence of a responsible person or some
                    other person who can provide the protected person with
                    support and represent his or her interests.




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     Division 1       Preliminary
     s. 73



               Part 9 -- Forensic procedures on people
                           Division 1 -- Preliminary
     73.       Interpretation
               In this Part, unless the contrary intention appears --
 5             "adult" means a person who has reached 18 years of age and in
                    respect of whom there are no reasonable grounds to suspect
                    that he or she is an incapable person;
               "child" means a person who is under 18 years of age and in
                    respect of whom there are no reasonable grounds to suspect
10                  that he or she is an incapable person;
               "dentist" means an individual who is registered under the
                    Dental Act 1939;
               "doctor" means an individual who is a medical practitioner, as
                    that term is defined in the Medical Act 1894;
15             "forensic procedure" means --
                    (a) a non-intimate forensic procedure;
                    (b) an intimate forensic procedure; or
                    (c) an internal forensic procedure;
               "FP warrant (involved person)" means a warrant issued under
20                  section 90;
               "FP warrant (suspect)" means a warrant issued under
                    section 100;
               "identifying particular" has the meaning given to that term by
                    the Criminal Investigation (Identifying People) Act 2002
25                  section 11(1);
               "incapable person" means a person of any age --
                    (a) who is unable by reason of a mental disability (which
                           term includes intellectual disability, a psychiatric
                           condition, an acquired brain injury and dementia) to
30                         understand the general nature and effect of, and the


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                reason for and the consequences of undergoing, a
                forensic procedure; or
          (b) who is unconscious or otherwise unable to
                understand a request made or information given
 5              under this Act or to communicate whether or not he
                or she consents to undergoing a forensic procedure;
     "internal forensic procedure" on a person, means a procedure
          that complies with section 76(1);
     "intimate forensic procedure" on a person, means a procedure
10        that complies with section 75(1);
     "involved person" in connection with an offence, means a
          person who is not a suspect for the offence but who is
          reasonably suspected to have been the victim of or to have
          witnessed the commission of the offence;
15   "non-intimate forensic procedure" on a person, means a
          procedure that complies with section 74(1);
     "nurse" means an individual who is registered under the Nurses
          Act 1992 Part 3;
     "protected person" means a person who is a child or an
20        incapable person;
     "Public Advocate" has the meaning given to that term by the
          Guardianship and Administration Act 1990;
     "qualified person", in relation to a forensic procedure, means a
          person who is qualified under the regulations to do the
25        procedure;
     "relevant thing", in relation to a forensic procedure, means a
          thing referred to in section 77(1) a search for which, or for
          evidence of which, is the purpose of the procedure;
     "responsible person", in relation to a child, means --
30        (a) a parent of the child;
          (b) a guardian of the child;




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                   (c)  another person who has responsibility for the
                        day-to-day care of the child; or
                   (d) if no person mentioned in another paragraph of this
                        definition is available -- a person, or a person in a
 5                      class of persons, prescribed;
               "responsible person", in relation to an incapable person,
                   means --
                   (a) the spouse or de facto partner of the incapable
                        person;
10                 (b) a parent of the incapable person;
                   (c)   if the incapable person is under 18 years of age -- a
                         guardian of the incapable person;
                   (d) if the incapable person has reached 18 years of age --
                         a guardian of the incapable person appointed under
15                       the Guardianship and Administration Act 1990 or the
                         Public Advocate;
                   (e) another person who has responsibility for the
                         day-to-day care of the incapable person; or
                    (f) if no person mentioned in another paragraph of this
20                       definition is available -- a person, or a person in a
                         class of persons, prescribed;
               "suspect" for an offence, means a person who is reasonably
                   suspected of having committed the offence and it does not
                   matter whether or not the person --
25                 (a) is under arrest for the offence;
                   (b) has been charged with the offence; or
                   (c) having been charged with the offence, has been
                         granted bail.




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     74.         Non-intimate forensic procedure, meaning of and powers
                 for
           (1)   A person who is authorised under this Act to do a non-intimate
                 forensic procedure on a person may do any or all of the
 5               following --
                  (a)    take a swab, or use other means, to detect a relevant
                         thing on the external parts of the person's body, other
                         than his or her private parts;
                  (b)    remove a relevant thing attached physically to those
10                       external parts;
                  (c)    take a sample of a relevant thing on those external parts;
                  (d)    take an impression of a relevant thing on those external
                         parts;
                  (e)    take a sample of a relevant thing from under a nail of the
15                       person;
                   (f)   remove a relevant thing from, or take a sample of a
                         relevant thing in, the person's mouth.
           (2)   A person who is authorised under this Act to do a non-intimate
                 forensic procedure on a person may in addition do any or all of
20               the following --
                   (a) remove any article that the person is wearing, other than
                         any article covering his or her private parts;
                   (b) search any article removed under paragraph (a);
                   (c) search the person's external parts, other than his or her
25                       external private parts;
                   (d) search the person's mouth but not any other orifice;
                   (e) photograph any relevant thing in the position it is found
                         on the external parts of the person's body, or in the
                         person's mouth.
30         (3)   A power under this Act to do a non-intimate forensic procedure
                 on a person does not include a power to do an intimate forensic
                 procedure or an internal forensic procedure on the person.


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     75.         Intimate forensic procedure, meaning of and powers for
           (1)   A person who is authorised under this Act to do an intimate
                 forensic procedure on a person may do any or all of the
                 following --
 5                 (a) take a swab, or use other means, to detect a relevant
                         thing on the person's external private parts;
                   (b) remove a relevant thing attached physically to those
                         external private parts;
                   (c) take a sample of a relevant thing on those external
10                       private parts;
                   (d) take an impression of a relevant thing on those external
                         private parts;
                   (e) take a sample of blood from the person.
           (2)   A person who is authorised under this Act to do an intimate
15               forensic procedure on a person may in addition do any or all of
                 the following --
                   (a) remove any article that the person is wearing, including
                         any article covering his or her private parts;
                   (b) search any article removed under paragraph (a);
20                 (c) search the person's external parts, including his or her
                         external private parts;
                   (d) photograph any relevant thing in the position it is found
                         on the person's external private parts;
                   (e) do a non-intimate forensic procedure on the person.
25         (3)   A power under this Act to do an intimate forensic procedure on
                 a person does not include a power to do an internal forensic
                 procedure on the person.




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     76.         Internal forensic procedure, meaning of and powers for
           (1)   A person who is authorised under this Act to do an internal
                 forensic procedure on a person may do any or all of the
                 following --
 5                 (a) search the person's internal parts for a relevant thing
                         using x-rays, ultrasound or similar means;
                   (b) search the person's orifices, other than the mouth, for a
                         relevant thing;
                   (c) take a swab, or use other means, to detect a relevant
10                       thing in those orifices;
                   (d) remove a relevant thing from, or take a sample of a
                         relevant thing in, any such orifice.
           (2)   A person who is authorised under this Act to do an internal
                 forensic procedure on a person may in addition do any or all of
15               the following --
                   (a) remove any article that the person is wearing, including
                         any article covering his or her private parts;
                   (b) search any article removed under paragraph (a);
                   (c) search the person's external parts, including his or her
20                       external private parts;
                   (d) photograph any relevant thing in the position it is found
                         in the person's internal parts or orifices;
                   (e) do a non-intimate forensic procedure on the person;
                    (f) do an intimate forensic procedure on the person.

25   77.         Forensic procedures, purpose of
           (1)   Subject to any authorisation given under section 82, a forensic
                 procedure must not be done under this Part on a person except
                 for the purpose of searching for a thing or evidence of a thing --
                   (a) that is relevant to an offence that is reasonably suspected
30                       to have been committed; and



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     Division 2       Forensic procedures on volunteers
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                  (b)    the existence or absence of which on or in the body of
                         the person is relevant to the investigation of the offence.
           (2)   A forensic procedure must not be done under this Part on a
                 person for the purpose of obtaining an identifying particular of
 5               the person.
           (3)   If as a result of a forensic procedure done under this Part on a
                 person a blood sample, buccal swab, or any other thing, that
                 could be used to obtain an identifying particular of the person is
                 taken or seized, it must not be used to obtain the identifying
10               particular unless authority to do so exists or is obtained under
                 the Criminal Investigation (Identifying People) Act 2002.

     78.         How forensic procedures must be done
                 A forensic procedure that under this Part may be done on a
                 person must be done in accordance with Division 6.

15               Division 2 -- Forensic procedures on volunteers
     79.         Interpretation
                 In this Division --
                 "volunteer" means a person who is --
                      (a) an adult to whom section 80(1)(a) applies;
20                    (b) a child to whom section 80(1)(b) or (c) applies; or
                      (c) an incapable person to whom section 80(1)(c)
                            applies.

     80.         Volunteer for a forensic procedure to be informed
           (1)   If --
25                 (a)   in the case of a person who is an adult, the person is
                         willing to undergo a forensic procedure for a purpose
                         permitted by section 77 and advises an officer
                         accordingly;



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                           Forensic procedures on volunteers     Division 2
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            (b)   in the case of a protected person who is a child who has
                  reached 10 years of age --
                     (i) the child is willing to undergo a forensic
                          procedure for a purpose permitted by section 77;
 5                  (ii) a responsible person wants the child to undergo
                          the procedure; and
                   (iii) both advise an officer accordingly;
            (c)   in the case of a protected person who is a child under
                  10 years of age or an incapable person, a responsible
10                person wants the protected person to undergo a forensic
                  procedure for a purpose permitted by section 77 and
                  advises an officer accordingly,
           the officer must inform each person whose consent is required
           under section 81(1) in accordance with subsection (2).
15   (2)   The volunteer or the responsible person or both, as the case
           requires, must be informed of these matters --
             (a) the purpose, permitted by section 77, of the forensic
                   procedure and what relevant thing is sought;
             (b) how the procedure will be carried out;
20           (c) that information derived from the procedure may be
                   compared with or put in a database;
             (d) that the procedure may provide evidence that could be
                   used in court against the volunteer;
             (e) that the volunteer cannot be compelled to undergo the
25                 procedure;
              (f) that he or she may get legal advice before deciding
                   whether or not to consent to the procedure;
             (g) that, if he or she consents to the procedure, he or she
                   may withdraw consent at any time before the procedure
30                 has been completed; and
             (h) any matter prescribed.
     (3)   The information in subsection (2) may be provided in writing.

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           (4)   Any consent given by a person who has been informed under
                 subsection (2) must be recorded in writing and signed by the
                 person in the presence of an officer.
           (5)   A copy of the person's signed form must be given to the person.

 5   81.         When forensic procedure may be done on volunteer
           (1)   A forensic procedure may only be done on a volunteer if
                 section 80 is complied with and --
                   (a) in the case of an adult -- he or she consents to
                         undergoing the forensic procedure;
10                 (b) in the case of a protected person who is a child who has
                         reached 10 years of age --
                            (i) the child consents to undergoing the forensic
                                 procedure; and
                           (ii) the responsible person consents to the child
15                               undergoing the procedure;
                   (c) in the case of a protected person who is a child under
                         10 years of age or an incapable person -- the
                         responsible person consents to the protected person
                         undergoing the procedure.
20         (2)   If before a forensic procedure is completed on a volunteer --
                  (a)   the volunteer objects to or resists the carrying out of the
                        procedure; or
                  (b)   any consent required under subsection (1) is withdrawn,
                 the procedure must not be completed.

25           Division 3 -- Forensic procedures on deceased people
     82.         Forensic procedures on deceased people
           (1)   The State Coroner may authorise the doing of forensic
                 procedures on deceased people, whether or not their deaths are
                 reportable deaths (as that term is defined in the Coroners
30               Act 1996 section 3), for or in connection with purposes

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                 permitted by section 77(1) or any other purpose stated in the
                 authorisation.
           (2)   An authorisation given under subsection (1) may apply --
                  (a) generally to all deceased people or forensic procedures;
 5                (b) to a specific class of deceased people or forensic
                        procedures;
                  (c) conditionally or unconditionally.
           (3)   A coroner, on his or her own initiative or on the application of a
                 person with a proper interest, may --
10                 (a) authorise a person to do a forensic procedure on a
                        deceased person for or in connection with a purpose
                        permitted by section 77(1) or any other purpose; and
                   (b) make any orders necessary to enable the procedure to be
                        done, including orders relating to the temporary custody
15                      of the body of the deceased person.
           (4)   An authorisation given under this section must be in writing.
           (5)   An authorisation given under this section cannot authorise a
                 forensic procedure on a deceased person for the purpose of
                 obtaining an identifying particular of the person.

20     Division 4 -- Forensic procedures on victims and witnesses
     83.         Request to adult to undergo forensic procedure
           (1)   In this section --
                 "involved person" means an involved person who is an adult.
           (2)   If an officer reasonably suspects --
25                 (a) that an offence has been committed; and




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                (b)   that it is necessary to do a forensic procedure for a
                      purpose permitted by section 77 on an involved person
                      in connection with the offence,
               the officer may request the person to consent to undergoing a
 5             non-intimate forensic procedure, an intimate forensic procedure
               or an internal forensic procedure, as the case requires.
        (3)    An officer who requests an involved person to consent to
               undergoing a forensic procedure must at the time inform the
               person of these matters --
10               (a) the offence that is suspected to have been committed
                      and to which the procedure relates;
                 (b) the purpose, permitted by section 77, of the forensic
                      procedure and what relevant thing is sought;
                 (c) how the procedure will be done;
15               (d) that information derived from the procedure may be
                      compared with or put in a database;
                 (e) that if the person should become a suspect for the
                      offence, evidence provided by the procedure could be
                      used in a court against the person;
20                (f) that the person may consent or refuse to consent to the
                      procedure;
                 (g) that, if the person consents to the procedure, the person
                      may withdraw consent at any time before the procedure
                      has been completed;
25               (h) that if the person does not consent or withdraws
                      consent --
                         (i) an application may be made for authority to do
                              the procedure without the person's consent; and
                        (ii) if authority is given, the procedure may be done
30                            without the person's consent.




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     84.         Request for protected person to undergo forensic procedure
           (1)   In this section --
                 "involved person" means an involved person who is a
                      protected person.
 5         (2)   If an officer reasonably suspects --
                  (a)    that an offence has been committed; and
                  (b)    that it is necessary to do a forensic procedure for a
                         purpose permitted by section 77 on an involved person
                         in connection with the offence,
10               the officer may request --
                   (c) if the involved person is a child who has reached
                         10 years of age -- both the child and a responsible
                         person;
                   (d) if the involved person is a child under 10 years of age or
15                       an incapable person -- a responsible person,
                 to consent to a non-intimate forensic procedure, an intimate
                 forensic procedure, or an internal forensic procedure, being
                 done on the involved person, as the case requires.
           (3)   An officer who makes a request to a person under subsection (2)
20               must at the time inform the person of these matters --
                  (a)    the offence that is suspected to have been committed
                         and to which the procedure relates;
                  (b)    the purpose, permitted by section 77, of the forensic
                         procedure and what relevant thing is sought;
25                (c)    how the procedure will be done;
                  (d)    that information derived from the procedure may be
                         compared with or put in a database;
                  (e)    that if the involved person should become a suspect for
                         the offence, evidence provided by the procedure could
30                       be used in a court against the involved person;



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                   (f)   that the person may consent or refuse to consent to the
                         procedure being done on the involved person;
                  (g)    that, if the person consents to the procedure, he or she
                         may withdraw consent at any time before the procedure
 5                       has been completed; and
                  (h)    that if the person does not consent or withdraws
                         consent --
                            (i) an application may be made for authority to do
                                  the procedure without the person's consent; and
10                         (ii) if authority is given, the procedure may be done
                                  without the person's consent.

     85.         Request and giving of information to be recorded
           (1)   An officer who makes a request to a person under section 83
                 or 84 must make a record of the request, of the information
15               given under the section and of the person's responses (if any).
           (2)   The record must be an audiovisual recording or in writing.

     86.         Forensic procedure, when it may be done
           (1)   If under section 83 an involved person who is an adult is
                 requested to consent to undergoing a forensic procedure and is
20               informed under that section and he or she consents to
                 undergoing the procedure, then the procedure may be done on
                 him or her.
           (2)   If under section 84 a person is requested to consent to a forensic
                 procedure being done on an involved person who is a protected
25               person and the person is informed under that section, then the
                 procedure may be done on him or her if --
                   (a) in the case of a child who has reached 10 years of age --
                            (i) the child consents to undergoing the forensic
                                procedure; and
30                         (ii) the responsible person consents to the child
                                undergoing the procedure;


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            (b)    in the case of a child under 10 years of age or an
                   incapable person -- the responsible person consents to
                   the protected person undergoing the procedure.
     (3)   If, in the case of an involved person who is an adult --
 5            (a) the involved person, having been --
                       (i) requested under section 83 to consent to
                            undergoing a forensic procedure; and
                      (ii) informed under that section,
                    does not consent or withdraws consent; or
10           (b) for any reason the involved person is not requested
                    under section 83 to consent to undergoing a forensic
                    procedure,
           the procedure may only be done on the involved person if a
           magistrate issues an FP warrant (involved person) that
15         authorises it.
     (4)   If, in the case of an involved person who is a protected
           person --
              (a) a person, having been --
                       (i) requested under section 84 to consent to a
20                          forensic procedure being done on the involved
                            person; and
                      (ii) informed under that section,
                    does not consent or withdraws consent; or
             (b) for any reason a person is not requested under section 84
25                  to consent to a forensic procedure being done on the
                    involved person,
           the procedure may only be done on the involved person if a
           magistrate issues an FP warrant (involved person) that
           authorises it.




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     87.         Consent may be withdrawn
           (1)   This section applies to and in respect of an involved person if a
                 forensic procedure may be done on the involved person under
                 section 86(1) or (2).
 5         (2)   An involved person who is an adult and who has consented to
                 undergoing the forensic procedure may withdraw his or her
                 consent at any time before the procedure has been completed.
           (3)   A person who has consented to a forensic procedure being done
                 on an involved person who is a protected person may withdraw
10               his or her consent at any time before the procedure on the
                 involved person has been completed.
           (4)   If consent is withdrawn under this section, section 86(3) or (4)
                 applies, as the case requires.

     88.         Officer may apply for FP warrant (involved person)
15         (1)   Whether or not a request has been made under section 83 for
                 consent to do a forensic procedure on an involved person who is
                 an adult, an officer may apply for an FP warrant (involved
                 person) to do a forensic procedure on the involved person.
           (2)   Whether or not a request has been made under section 84 for
20               consent to do a forensic procedure on an involved person who is
                 a protected person, an officer may apply for an FP warrant
                 (involved person) to do a forensic procedure on the involved
                 person.
           (3)   If an officer reasonably suspects that in the time it will take --
25                 (a) to apply for an FP warrant (involved person); and
                   (b) for the application to be decided,
                 the relevant thing to be searched for may be disturbed or lost,
                 the officer may, without a warrant --
                   (c) arrest the involved person;
30                 (d) detain the person for a reasonable time to allow for the
                         application to be made and decided; and

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                  (e)    while the person is so detained, take reasonable
                         measures to prevent the thing or evidence of it from
                         being disturbed or lost.

     89.         FP warrant (involved person), application for
 5         (1)   Only an officer may apply for an FP warrant (involved person).
           (2)   An application for an FP warrant (involved person) must be
                 made in accordance with section 12 to a magistrate.
           (3)   An application for an FP warrant (involved person) must --
                  (a) state the applicant's full name and official details;
10                (b) name the involved person in respect of whom the
                        warrant is wanted;
                  (c) if the involved person is a protected person, state why
                        the involved person is a protected person;
                  (d) state the offence in respect of which the involved person
15                      is suspected to have been an involved person;
                  (e) state the grounds on which the applicant suspects that
                        the person is an involved person in respect of the
                        offence;
                   (f) specify for which of the following the warrant is
20                      wanted --
                           (i) a non-intimate forensic procedure;
                          (ii) an intimate forensic procedure;
                         (iii) an internal forensic procedure;
                  (g) if the warrant is wanted for an internal forensic
25                      procedure, state what kind of internal forensic procedure
                        is proposed to be done on the involved person;
                  (h) state the purpose, permitted by section 77, of the
                        forensic procedure and describe what thing or evidence
                        will be sought during the procedure;




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                   (i)   state the grounds on which the applicant suspects that
                         the thing or evidence sought is a relevant thing; and
                   (j)   include any other information that is prescribed.
           (4)   If an application for an FP warrant (involved person) is made in
 5               respect of an involved person in a case where a request has not
                 been made under section 83 or 84, the application must also
                 state the applicant's grounds for suspecting any or all of the
                 following --
                   (a) that the investigation of the offence concerned would be
10                       prejudiced if a request were made under section 83
                         or 84, as the case requires;
                   (b) that it is not reasonably practicable to obtain the consent
                         or consents to do the procedure on the involved person;
                   (c) in the case of an involved person who is a protected
15                       person, that the responsible person or any associate of
                         the person is a suspect in relation to an offence and the
                         procedure will afford evidence of whether or not the
                         responsible person or the associate committed the
                         offence.
20         (5)   If an application for an FP warrant (involved person) relates to
                 an involved person who is a child, the application must also
                 state whether the applicant suspects that the child --
                   (a) is sufficiently mature and capable of understanding the
                         general nature and effect of, and the reason for and the
25                       consequences of, undergoing the procedure; and
                   (b) is willing to undergo the procedure,
                 and the grounds for suspecting those matters.

     90.         FP warrant (involved person), issue and effect of
           (1)   On an application made under section 89, a magistrate may
30               issue an FP warrant (involved person) if satisfied --
                   (a) that in respect of each of the matters in section 89(3)
                         and, if the case requires, section 89(4), on which the

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                   applicant is required to have a suspicion, there are
                   reasonable grounds for the applicant to have that
                   suspicion; and
            (b)    that the interests of justice justify doing the procedure
 5                 described in the application.
     (2)   In deciding whether to make and, if so, the terms of an FP
           warrant (involved person), the magistrate must take into account
           the seriousness of the offence in respect of which the involved
           person is suspected to have been a victim or witness.
10   (3)   In deciding whether to make and, if so, the terms of an FP
           warrant (involved person) in respect of a protected person, the
           magistrate must take into account --
             (a) in the case of a child -- the maturity of the child and his
                   or her capacity to make decisions and whether he or she
15                 is willing to undergo the procedure, to the extent that
                   those matters can be determined by the magistrate; and
             (b) the best interests of the protected person.
     (4)   For the purposes of this section, a magistrate may inform
           himself or herself in any way he or she thinks fit.
20   (5)   In the case of an application for an FP warrant (involved person)
           in respect of an incapable person, the magistrate may, on his or
           her own initiative --
             (a) give a copy of the application to the Public Advocate;
             (b) seek information or submissions from the Public
25                 Advocate;
             (c) if the warrant is issued, give a copy of it to the Public
                   Advocate,
           and may use remote communication to do so.
     (6)   An FP warrant (involved person) must contain this
30         information --
             (a) the applicant's full name and official details;


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                (b)    the name of the involved person to whom it relates;
                (c)    the offence to which it relates;
                (d)    whether it relates to --
                          (i) a non-intimate forensic procedure;
 5                       (ii) an intimate forensic procedure; or
                        (iii) an internal forensic procedure;
                (e)    if it relates to an internal forensic procedure, the kind of
                       internal forensic procedure that is proposed to be done
                       on the involved person;
10               (f)   the relevant thing to be searched for during the forensic
                       procedure;
                (g)    the period, not exceeding 14 days, during which it may
                       be executed;
                (h)    the name of the magistrate who issued it; and
15               (i)   the date and time when it was issued.
        (7)    An FP warrant (involved person) authorises --
                (a) an officer authorised by subsection (8) --
                       (i) to arrest the involved person to whom it relates;
                             and
20                    (ii) to detain him or her for a reasonable period in
                             order to do the procedure specified in it;
                     and
                (b) if applicable, the doing of the procedure on the involved
                     person without the consent or consents referred to in
25                   section 86(1) or (2).
        (8)    The powers in subsection (7)(a) may be exercised by --
                (a) if a police officer applied for the warrant, any police
                     officer;
                (b) if a public officer applied for the warrant, the applicant
30                   or any public officer who has the same functions as the
                     applicant, or any police officer.

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           (9)   An FP warrant (involved person) that relates to an internal
                 forensic procedure only authorises the kind of internal forensic
                 procedure specified in the warrant but this subsection does not
                 affect the operation of section 76(2).

 5                Division 5 -- Forensic procedures on suspects
     91.         Request to adult to undergo forensic procedure
           (1)   In this section --
                 "suspect" means a suspect who is an adult.
           (2)   If an officer reasonably suspects --
10                 (a) that an offence has been committed; and
                   (b) that it is necessary to do a forensic procedure for a
                         purpose permitted by section 77 on a suspect for the
                         offence,
                 the officer may request the suspect to consent to undergoing a
15               non-intimate forensic procedure, an intimate forensic procedure
                 or an internal forensic procedure, as the case requires.
           (3)   An officer who requests a suspect to consent to a forensic
                 procedure must at the time inform the suspect of these
                 matters --
20                 (a) the offence that the suspect is suspected of having
                        committed and to which the procedure relates;
                   (b) the purpose, permitted by section 77, of the forensic
                        procedure and what relevant thing is sought;
                   (c) how the procedure will be done;
25                 (d) that information derived from the procedure may be
                        compared with or put in a database;
                   (e) that the procedure may provide evidence that could be
                        used in a court against the suspect;
                    (f) that the suspect may consent or refuse to consent to the
30                      procedure;


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                  (g)   that if the suspect consents to the procedure, the suspect
                        may withdraw consent at any time before the procedure
                        has been completed; and
                  (h)   that if the suspect does not consent --
 5                         (i) an application may be made for authority to do
                                 the procedure without the suspect's consent; and
                          (ii) if authority is given, the procedure may be done
                                 without the suspect's consent.

     92.         Request for protected person to undergo forensic procedure
10         (1)   In this section --
                 "suspect" means a suspect who is a protected person.
           (2)   If an officer reasonably suspects --
                   (a) that an offence has been committed; and
                   (b) that it is necessary to do a forensic procedure for a
15                       purpose permitted by section 77 on a suspect for the
                         offence,
                 the officer may request --
                   (c) if the suspect is a child who has reached 10 years of
                         age -- both the child and a responsible person;
20                 (d) if the suspect is a child under 10 years of age or an
                         incapable person -- a responsible person,
                 to consent to a non-intimate forensic procedure, an intimate
                 forensic procedure or an internal forensic procedure, as the case
                 requires, being done on the suspect.
25         (3)   An officer who makes a request under subsection (2) must at the
                 time inform the person of these matters --
                   (a) the offence that the suspect is suspected of having
                         committed and to which the procedure relates;




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                  (b)    the purpose, permitted by section 77, of the forensic
                         procedure and what relevant thing is sought;
                  (c)    how the procedure will be done;
                  (d)    that information derived from the procedure may be
 5                       compared with or put in a database;
                   (e)   that the procedure may provide evidence that could be
                         used in a court against the suspect;
                   (f)   that the person may consent or refuse to consent to the
                         forensic procedure being done on the suspect;
10                (g)    that if the person consents to the procedure, he or she
                         may withdraw consent at any time before the procedure
                         has been completed; and
                  (h)    that if the person does not consent or withdraws
                         consent --
15                          (i) an application may be made for authority to do
                                  the procedure without the person's consent; and
                           (ii) if authority is given, the procedure may be done
                                  without the person's consent.

     93.         Request and giving of information to be recorded
20         (1)   An officer who makes a request to a person under section 91
                 or 92 must make a record of the request, of the information
                 given under the section and of the person's responses (if any).
           (2)   The record must be an audiovisual recording or in writing.

     94.         Forensic procedure, when it may be done
25         (1)   If under section 91 a suspect who is an adult is requested to
                 consent to undergoing a forensic procedure and is informed
                 under that section and he or she consents to undergoing the
                 procedure, then the procedure may be done on him or her.
           (2)   If under section 92 a person is requested to consent to a forensic
30               procedure being done on a suspect who is a protected person


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               and the person is informed under that section, then the
               procedure may be done on him or her if --
                 (a) in the case of a child who has reached 10 years of age --
                          (i) the child consents to undergoing the forensic
 5                            procedure; and
                         (ii) the responsible person consents to the child
                              undergoing the procedure;
                 (b) in the case of a child under 10 years of age or an
                       incapable person -- the responsible person consents to
10                     the protected person undergoing the procedure.
        (3)    If, in the case of a suspect who is an adult --
                  (a) the suspect, having been --
                           (i) requested under section 91 to consent to
                                undergoing a forensic procedure; and
15                        (ii) informed under that section,
                        does not consent or withdraws consent; or
                 (b) for any reason the suspect is not requested under
                        section 91 to consent to undergoing a forensic
                        procedure,
20             the procedure may only be done on the suspect if --
                (c)   in the case of a non-intimate forensic procedure --
                      approval for it is given under section 98; or
                (d)   in the case of an intimate forensic procedure or an
                      internal forensic procedure -- a JP issues an FP warrant
25                    (suspect) that authorises it.
        (4)    If, in the case of a suspect who is a protected person --
                  (a) a person, having been --
                           (i) requested under section 92 to consent to a
                                forensic procedure being done on the suspect;
30                              and



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                           (ii) informed under that section,
                         does not consent or withdraws consent; or
                  (b)    for any reason a person is not requested under section 92
                         to consent to a forensic procedure being done on the
 5                       suspect,
                 the procedure may only be done on the suspect if a magistrate
                 issues an FP warrant (suspect) that authorises it.

     95.         Consent may be withdrawn
           (1)   This section applies to and in respect of a suspect if a forensic
10               procedure may be done on the suspect under section 94(1)
                 or (2).
           (2)   A suspect who is an adult and who has consented to undergoing
                 the forensic procedure may withdraw his or her consent at any
                 time before the procedure has been completed.
15         (3)   A person who has consented to a forensic procedure being done
                 on a suspect who is a protected person may withdraw his or her
                 consent at any time before the procedure on the suspect has
                 been completed.
           (4)   If consent is withdrawn under this section, section 94(3) or (4)
20               applies, as the case requires.

     96.         Application for approval or FP warrant (suspect)
           (1)   Whether or not a request has been made under section 91 for
                 consent to do a forensic procedure on a suspect who is an adult,
                 an officer may apply --
25                 (a) under section 97 for approval to do a non-intimate
                         forensic procedure on the suspect; or
                   (b) under section 99 for an FP warrant (suspect) to do an
                         intimate forensic procedure or an internal forensic
                         procedure on the suspect.




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           (2)   Whether or not a request has been made under section 92 for
                 consent to do a forensic procedure on a suspect who is a
                 protected person, an officer may apply under section 99 for an
                 FP warrant (suspect) to do a forensic procedure on the suspect.
 5         (3)   If a police officer reasonably suspects that in the time it will
                 take --
                   (a) to apply under section 97 for approval or to apply under
                          section 99 for an FP warrant (suspect); and
                   (b) for the application to be decided,
10               the relevant thing to be searched for may be disturbed or lost,
                 the officer may, without a warrant --
                   (c) arrest the suspect;
                   (d) detain the suspect for a reasonable time to allow for the
                         application to be made and decided; and
15                 (e) while the suspect is so detained, take reasonable
                         measures to prevent the thing or evidence of it from
                         being disturbed or lost.

     97.         Non-intimate forensic procedure on adult, application for
                 approval to do
20         (1)   In this section and section 98 --
                 "senior officer" means --
                     (a) if an application is being made under this section by a
                           police officer -- a police officer who is, or is acting
                           as, a sergeant or an officer of a rank more senior than
25                         a sergeant;
                     (b) if an application is being made under this section by a
                           public officer -- a public officer prescribed as a
                           senior officer in relation to that officer;
                 "suspect" means a suspect who is an adult.
30         (2)   An application for an approval under this section to do a
                 non-intimate forensic procedure on a suspect must be made to


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                 another officer who is a senior officer and not involved in the
                 investigation of the offence to which the proposed procedure
                 relates.
           (3)   The approval may be applied for and given by remote
 5               communication.
           (4)   The application must --
                  (a) if practicable be in writing;
                  (b) state the applicant's full name and official details;
                  (c) name the suspect to whom it relates;
10                (d) state the offence that the suspect is suspected of having
                        committed;
                  (e) state the grounds for suspecting that the suspect has
                        committed the offence;
                   (f) state the purpose, permitted by section 77, of the
15                      non-intimate forensic procedure and describe what thing
                        or evidence will be sought during the procedure;
                  (g) state the grounds on which the applicant suspects that
                        the thing or evidence sought is a relevant thing;
                  (h) if the suspect has not been requested under section 91 to
20                      consent to undergoing a forensic procedure, state the
                        reasons why the request has not been made; and
                   (i) include any other information that is prescribed.

     98.         Non-intimate search of adult, senior officer may approve
           (1)   On an application made under section 97, a senior officer may
25               approve a non-intimate forensic procedure being done on a
                 suspect without the suspect's consent if satisfied --
                   (a) that the suspect is an adult;
                   (b) that --
                          (i) the suspect has been informed in accordance
30                              with section 91; or



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                          (ii)   there are good reasons why the suspect has not
                                 been requested under section 91 to consent to
                                 undergoing a forensic procedure;
                  (c)   that in respect of each of the matters in section 97(4)
 5                      about which the applicant is required to have a
                        suspicion, there are reasonable grounds for the applicant
                        to have that suspicion; and
                  (d)   that the interests of justice justify doing the procedure.
           (2)   In deciding whether to approve a non-intimate forensic
10               procedure being done on a suspect without the suspect's
                 consent, a senior officer must take into account the seriousness
                 of the offence that the suspect is suspected to have committed.
           (3)   A senior officer who gives such an approval must make a
                 written record of it and --
15                (a) the suspect to whom it relates;
                  (b) the non-intimate procedure that is approved;
                  (c) the date and time when the approval was given; and
                  (d) the reasons for giving it.
           (4)   An approval given under this section authorises --
20                (a) a police officer --
                          (i) to arrest the suspect to whom it relates; and
                         (ii) to detain him or her for a reasonable period in
                               order to do the non-intimate forensic procedure
                               approved;
25                      and
                  (b) the doing of the non-intimate forensic procedure on the
                        suspect without his or her consent.

     99.         FP warrant (suspect), application for
           (1)   Only an officer may apply for an FP warrant (suspect).



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     (2)   An application for an FP warrant (suspect) must be made in
           accordance with section 12 --
             (a) to a JP if the application is in respect of an adult;
             (b) to a magistrate if the application is in respect of a
 5                protected person.
     (3)   An application for an FP warrant (suspect) must --
            (a) state the applicant's full name and official details;
            (b) name the suspect in respect of whom the warrant is
                  wanted;
10          (c) state whether the suspect is a protected person and, if he
                  or she is, why the suspect is a protected person;
            (d) state the offence that the suspect is suspected of having
                  committed;
            (e) state the grounds for suspecting that the suspect has
15                committed the offence;
             (f) if the warrant will relate to a suspect who is an adult,
                  specify for which one of the following the warrant is
                  wanted --
                     (i) an intimate forensic procedure;
20                  (ii) an internal forensic procedure;
            (g) if the warrant will relate to a suspect who is a protected
                  person, specify for which one of the following the
                  warrant is wanted --
                     (i) a non-intimate forensic procedure;
25                  (ii) an intimate forensic procedure;
                   (iii) an internal forensic procedure;
            (h) if the warrant is wanted for an internal forensic
                  procedure, state what kind of internal forensic procedure
                  is proposed to be done on the suspect;
30           (i) state the purpose, permitted by section 77, of the
                  forensic procedure and describe what thing or evidence
                  will be sought during the procedure;

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                 (j)   state the grounds on which the applicant suspects that
                       the thing or evidence sought is a relevant thing; and
                (k)    include any other information that is prescribed.

     100.      FP warrant (suspect), issue and effect of
 5      (1)    On an application made under section 99, a JP or a magistrate,
               as the case requires, may issue an FP warrant (suspect) if
               satisfied --
                 (a) that in respect of each of the matters in section 99(3) on
                        which the applicant is required to have a suspicion, there
10                      are reasonable grounds for the applicant to have that
                        suspicion; and
                 (b) that the interests of justice justify doing the procedure
                        described in the application.
        (2)    In deciding whether to issue an FP warrant (suspect) a JP or a
15             magistrate, as the case requires, must take into account the
               seriousness of the offence that the suspect is suspected to have
               committed.
        (3)    For the purposes of this section, a JP or magistrate may inform
               himself or herself in any way he or she thinks fit.
20      (4)    In the case of an application for an FP warrant (suspect) in
               respect of an incapable person, the magistrate may, on his or her
               own initiative --
                 (a) give a copy of the application to the Public Advocate;
                 (b) seek information or submissions from the Public
25                     Advocate; or
                 (c) if the warrant is issued, give a copy of it to the Public
                       Advocate,
               and may use remote communication to do so.
        (5)    An FP warrant (suspect) must contain this information --
30              (a) the applicant's full name and official details;
                (b) the name of the suspect to whom it relates;

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            (c)    the offence to which it relates;
            (d)    whether it relates to --
                      (i) a non-intimate forensic procedure;
                     (ii) an intimate forensic procedure; or
 5                  (iii) an internal forensic procedure;
            (e)    if it relates to an internal forensic procedure, the kind of
                   internal forensic procedure that may be done on the
                   suspect;
             (f)   the relevant thing to be searched for during the forensic
10                 procedure;
            (g)    the period, not exceeding 14 days, during which the
                   warrant may be executed;
            (h)    the name of the JP or magistrate who issued it;
             (i)   the date and time when it was issued.
15   (6)   An FP warrant (suspect) must be in the prescribed form.
     (7)   An FP warrant (suspect) authorises --
            (a) an officer authorised by subsection (8) --
                   (i) to arrest the suspect to whom it relates; and
                  (ii) to detain him or her for a reasonable period in
20                       order to do the forensic procedure specified in it;
                   and
            (b)    the doing of the forensic procedure on the suspect
                   without the consent or consents referred to in
                   section 94(1) or (2).
25   (8)   The powers in subsection (7)(a) may be exercised by --
            (a) if a police officer applied for the warrant, any police
                 officer;
            (b) if a public officer applied for the warrant, the applicant
                 or any public officer who has the same functions as the
30               applicant, or any police officer.


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        (9)    An FP warrant (suspect) that relates to an internal forensic
               procedure only authorises the kind of internal forensic
               procedure specified in the warrant but this subsection does not
               affect the operation of section 76(2).

 5            Division 6 -- How forensic procedures must be done
     101.      General requirements
        (1)    Before doing a forensic procedure on a person the officer who is
               responsible for doing it must --
                 (a) identify himself or herself to the person;
10               (b) inform the person of how the procedure will be done;
                      and
                 (c) if it is being done without the person's consent, tell the
                      person that it is an offence to obstruct the doing of it.
        (2)    If a forensic procedure is to be done on a person --
15               (a) it must be done as quickly as is reasonably practicable;
                 (b) it must not be any more intrusive than is reasonably
                        necessary in the circumstances;
                 (c) the person must be allowed to dress as soon as the
                        procedure is finished;
20               (d) the person must be provided with a reasonably adequate
                        replacement for any article of clothing or footwear
                        seized if, due to the seizure, the person is left without
                        adequate clothing or footwear in the circumstances;
                 (e) the number of people present while the procedure is
25                      done (excluding a person who is present under
                        subsection (4)) must not be more than is reasonably
                        necessary to ensure it is done effectively and to ensure
                        the safety of all present; and
                  (f) the person must not be questioned while the procedure is
30                      being done about any offence that he or she is suspected
                        of having committed.


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       (3)   If an intimate forensic procedure or an internal forensic
             procedure is to be done on a person --
               (a) it must be done in circumstances giving reasonable
                      privacy to the person; and
 5             (b) it must not involve the removal of more clothing than is
                      necessary for doing it.
       (4)   If a forensic procedure is to be done on a protected person the
             officer who is responsible for doing it must arrange for the
             protected person to have near him or her while the procedure is
10           done a responsible person or another person who can provide
             him or her with support and represent his or her interests.
       (5)   If this Part requires a power to be exercised in relation to a
             person by a person with specific qualifications, the officer
             authorised to exercise the power may authorise a person with
15           those qualifications to exercise the power.
       (6)   A person so authorised may exercise the power.

     102.    Gender of people doing forensic procedures
       (1)   A person who does a non-intimate forensic procedure on a
             person may be of either gender.
20     (2)   A person who does an intimate forensic procedure or an internal
             forensic procedure on a person must be of the same gender as
             that person unless the person who does it is --
               (a) a dentist, doctor or nurse; or
               (b) if the intimate forensic procedure being done on that
25                   person is the taking of a sample of that person's
                     blood -- a qualified person.
       (3)   A person who is present while an intimate forensic procedure or
             an internal forensic procedure is done on another person
             (excluding a person who is present under section 101(4)) must,
30           if practicable, be of the same gender as the person on whom the
             procedure is done.


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     Division 6       How forensic procedures must be done
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        (4)    Subsection (3) does not apply if the intimate identifying
               procedure is the taking of a sample of the person's blood.
        (5)    If this Part requires a power to be exercised in relation to a
               person by a person of the same gender as the person, the officer
 5             authorised to exercise the power may authorise a person of that
               gender to exercise the power.
        (6)    A person so authorised may exercise the power.

     103.      Who may do a forensic procedure
        (1)    When a non-intimate forensic procedure is being done on a
10             person, a power in the Table to this subsection may only be
               exercised by a person specified opposite the power in the Table.
                                        Table
                  Power                                 Who may exercise it
               1. Removing any article that the         Person of either gender
                  person is wearing, other than any
                  article covering his or her private
                  parts
               2. Searching any article removed         Person of either gender
               3. Swabbing or using other means to      Doctor, nurse or qualified
                  detect a relevant thing on the        person
                  external parts of the person's
                  body, other than his or her private
                  parts
               4. Removing a relevant thing             Doctor, nurse or qualified
                  attached physically to those          person
                  external parts
               5. Taking a sample of a relevant         Doctor, nurse or qualified
                  thing on those external parts         person
               6. Taking an impression of a             Qualified person
                  relevant thing on those external
                  parts
               7. Taking a sample of a relevant         Doctor, nurse or qualified
                  thing from under the nail of the      person
                  person



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             Power                              Who may exercise it
          8. Removing a relevant thing from,    Dentist, nurse or qualified
             or taking a sample of a relevant   person
             thing in, the person's mouth
    (2)   When an intimate forensic procedure is being done on a person,
          a power in the Table to this subsection may only be exercised
          by a person specified opposite the power in the Table.
                                  Table
             Power                              Who may exercise it
          1. Removing any article that the      Person of the same gender
             person is wearing                  as the person
          2. Searching any article removed      Person of either gender
          3. Swabbing or using other means to   Doctor, nurse or qualified
             detect a relevant thing on the     person
             person's external private parts
          4. Removing a relevant thing          Doctor, nurse or qualified
             attached physically to those       person
             external private parts
          5. Taking a sample of a relevant      Doctor, nurse or qualified
             thing on those external private    person
             parts
          6. Taking an impression of a          Qualified person
             relevant thing on those external
             private parts
          7. Taking a sample of blood from      Doctor, nurse or qualified
             the person                         person
5   (3)   When an internal forensic procedure is being done on a person,
          a power in the Table to this subsection may only be exercised
          by a person specified opposite the power in the Table.
                                  Table
             Power                              Who may exercise it
          1. Removing any article that the      Person of the same gender
             person is wearing                  as the person
          2. Searching any article removed      Person of either gender



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     Division 6       How forensic procedures must be done
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                  Power                                Who may exercise it
               3. Searching the person's internal      Doctor or qualified person
                  parts for a relevant thing using
                  x-rays, ultrasound or similar
                  means
               4. Searching the person's orifices,     Doctor
                  other than the mouth, for a
                  relevant thing
               5. Swabbing or using other means to     Doctor or qualified person
                  detect the presence of a relevant
                  thing in those orifices
               6. Removing a relevant thing from,      Doctor
                  or taking a sample of a relevant
                  thing in, any such orifice

     104.      Samples etc., how to be taken
        (1)    If during a forensic procedure done under this Part --
                 (a) a relevant thing is removed, or a sample of a relevant
                       thing is taken, from on or in a person's body; or
 5               (b) an impression (including a dental impression) is taken of
                       a relevant thing on or in a person's body,
               it must be done by the least painful method that is known or
               available to the person doing the procedure.
        (2)    If --
10               (a)   a relevant thing on a person's body is attached to the
                       person's hair; and
                (b)    under this Part it is permissible to seize the thing itself
                       or a sample of it,
               then, if practicable, the hair to which the thing is attached must
15             not be uprooted but instead may be cut and taken from the
               person together with the thing or a sample of it.
        (3)    If under this Part it is permissible to search a person's external
               parts for a relevant thing the person's hair may be combed for
               the thing or a sample of it.


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       (4)   The regulations may --
              (a) prohibit or regulate methods by which samples,
                    photographs or impressions are taken or procedures are
                    done under this Part;
 5            (b) prescribe the equipment to be used for taking samples,
                    photographs or impressions or doing procedures under
                    this Part.

             Division 7 -- Dealing with things found during a
                           forensic procedure
10   105.    Things found by chance during a forensic procedure
             If in the course of doing a forensic procedure under this Part a
             person finds a thing a search for which is not the object of the
             procedure but which a police officer reasonably suspects is
             relevant to the offence to which the forensic procedure relates or
15           to another offence, the person may remove the thing or take a
             sample of it.

     106.    Things found may be seized etc.
             If under this Part a forensic procedure is done on a person
             and --
20             (a) the thing, a search for which was the object of the
                     procedure, is removed, or a sample of it is taken, from
                     the person; or
               (b) under section 105, a thing is removed, or a sample of it
                     is taken, from the person,
25           then --
               (c) the thing or sample may, subject to section 145, be
                    seized;
               (d) whether or not it is seized, a forensic examination may
                    be done on it.




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     Division 8       Admissibility of certain evidence
     s. 107



                Division 8 -- Admissibility of certain evidence
     107.      Evidence of refusal of consent etc.
        (1)    Evidence that an adult, or a child who has reached 10 years of
               age, refused to or did not or withdrew consent to undergoing a
 5             forensic procedure is not admissible in proceedings against the
               adult or child except --
                 (a) in proceedings against him or her for an offence alleged
                       to have been committed while the procedure was being
                       done on him or her; or
10               (b) to establish or rebut an allegation that an officer
                       investigating the commission of an offence acted
                       contrary to law in doing the investigation.
        (2)    Evidence that a responsible person refused to or did not or
               withdrew consent to a forensic procedure being done on a
15             protected person is not admissible in proceedings against the
               responsible person, or the protected person, except --
                 (a) in proceedings against him or her for an offence alleged
                       to have been committed while the forensic procedure
                       was being done on the protected person; or
20               (b) to establish or rebut an allegation that an officer
                       investigating the commission of an offence acted
                       contrary to law in doing the investigation.
     108.      Evidence of how procedure was done
               Evidence of how a forensic procedure was done is admissible in
25             proceedings in court against a person --
                 (a) to establish or rebut an allegation that unreasonable
                      force was used to do the procedure;
                 (b) in connection with deciding the admissibility of a
                      confession or other evidence adverse to the person
30                    where the person alleges it was induced or obtained by
                      the use of unreasonable force;
                 (c) to establish or rebut an allegation that the procedure was
                      not done in accordance with this Part.

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                                                                          s. 109



        Part 10 -- Provisions about searches and forensic
                     procedures on people
     109.    Interpretation
             In this Part --
 5           "body search" means a basic search or a strip search.

     110.    Body searches and forensic procedures may be repeated
       (1)   In relation to any one investigation, a person may, subject to the
             relevant provisions of this Act --
               (a) be requested on more than one occasion to undergo a
10                    body search or forensic procedure;
               (b) be required to undergo more than one body search;
               (c) be required to undergo more than one forensic
                      procedure.
       (2)   Without limiting subsection (1) a person may, subject to the
15           relevant provisions of this Act, be requested to undergo the
             same body search or forensic procedure on more than one
             occasion.

     111.    People not obliged to do searches etc.
             Nothing in Part 8 or 9 requires a person --
20            (a) to do or to assist in doing a body search or a forensic
                    procedure on a person;
              (b) to remove a thing from a person's body;
              (c) to take a sample of a thing on or in a person's body; or
              (d) to take a photograph or impression of any thing on or in
25                  a person's body.




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     s. 112



     112.      Forensic information, use and destruction of
        (1)    In this section --
               "forensic database" has the meaning given to that term by the
                    Criminal Investigation (Identifying People) Act 2002
 5                  section 61;
               "forensic information" means --
                    (a) a photograph or other record created while doing a
                           body search or forensic procedure on a person;
                    (b) any thing removed from a person as a result of doing
10                         a body search or a forensic procedure on the person;
                    (c) any sample or impression taken while doing a
                           forensic procedure on a person; or
                    (d) any information derived from such a thing, sample or
                           impression.
15      (2)    Any forensic information obtained under Part 8 or 9 may be --
                (a)   compared with information in a forensic database; or
                (b)   put in a forensic database.
        (3)    Subject to section 151, any forensic information obtained under
               Part 8 or 9 must not be destroyed except with the approval of
20             the Commissioner of Police.
               Penalty: a fine of $12 000 and imprisonment for 12 months.

     113.      Legal protection for people carrying out searches etc.
        (1)    This section does not apply to a person to whom the Police
               Act 1892 section 137 applies.
25      (2)    In this section a reference to the doing of anything includes a
               reference to an omission to do anything.
        (3)    An action in tort does not lie against a person for anything that
               the person has done, in good faith, in the exercise or purported
               exercise of a power in Part 8 or 9.



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                                                                     s. 113



  (4)   The protection given by this section applies even though the
        thing done as described in subsection (3) may have been
        capable of being done whether or not this Act had been enacted.




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                      Part 11 -- Interviewing suspects
     114.       Interpretation
                In this Part --
                "CCC" means the Corruption and Crime Commission
 5                   established under the Corruption and Crime Commission
                     Act 2003;
                "CCC officer" has the meaning given to the term "officer of
                     the Commission" by the Corruption and Crime
                     Commission Act 2003 section 3;
10              "interview" means an interview with a suspect by a police
                     officer or a CCC officer or any part of such an interview;
                "ombudsman officer" means --
                     (a) the Parliamentary Commissioner for Administrative
                            Investigations appointed under the Parliamentary
15                          Commissioner Act 1971;
                     (b) the Acting Commissioner or the Deputy
                            Commissioner appointed under that Act; or
                     (c) an officer appointed under section 9(1) of that Act;
                "Parliamentary Inspector" has the meaning given to that term
20                   by the Corruption and Crime Commission Act 2003
                     section 3;
                "suspect" means a person suspected of having committed an
                     offence, whether or not he or she has been charged with the
                     offence.

25   115.       Interviews, conduct of
        (1)     An interview may be conducted by remote communication.
        (2)     An interpreter, if needed for an interview, may participate by
                remote communication.




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                                                                            s. 116



     116.    Recorded interview to be made available to the suspect
       (1)   If an audiovisual recording is made of an interview and the
             suspect is charged with an offence to which the interview
             relates, a copy of the recording must be made available to the
 5           suspect or the suspect's lawyer within 14 days after the suspect
             is so charged or, if that is not practicable, as soon as practicable
             after that period.
       (2)   No person is entitled to a transcript of an audiovisual recording
             of an interview, or any part of such a recording.
10     (3)   A court must not order that such a transcript be made unless
             satisfied that --
               (a) words spoken in the interview cannot be understood
                      satisfactorily; and
               (b) it is practicable to prepare such a transcript.
15     (4)   Subsections (2) and (3) do not prevent a person from making a
             transcript of an audiovisual recording of an interview and
             supplying a copy of it to any person.

     117.    Admission in serious case inadmissible unless recorded
       (1)   In this section --
20           "admission" means an admission made by a suspect to a police
                  officer or a CCC officer, whether the admission is by
                  spoken words or by acts or otherwise;
             "adult" means a person who has reached 18 years of age;
             "child" means a person who is under 18 years of age;
25           "reasonable excuse", for the absence of an audiovisual
                  recording of an admission, includes --
                  (a) the admission was made when it was not practicable
                         to make an audiovisual recording of it;
                  (b) equipment to make an audiovisual recording of the
30                       admission could not be obtained while it was
                         reasonable to detain the suspect;

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     s. 118



                     (c)   the suspect did not consent to an audiovisual
                           recording being made of the admission;
                     (d)   the equipment used to make an audiovisual recording
                           of the admission malfunctioned.
 5      (2)     This section applies in respect of a suspect who is --
                 (a) a child charged with an indictable offence, irrespective
                        of whether, if an adult were charged with it, it could be
                        dealt with by a court of summary jurisdiction; or
                 (b) an adult charged with an indictable offence that cannot
10                      be dealt with by a court of summary jurisdiction.
        (3)     On the trial of the suspect for the offence, evidence of any
                admission by the suspect is not admissible unless --
                  (a) the evidence is an audiovisual recording of the
                       admission; or
15                (b) in the absence of an audiovisual recording of the
                       admission --
                          (i) the prosecution proves, on the balance of
                                probabilities, that there is a reasonable excuse for
                                the absence; or
20                       (ii) the court decides otherwise under section 154.
        (4)     Subsection (3) does not apply to an admission by a person made
                before there were reasonable grounds to suspect that he or she
                had committed the offence.

     118.       Recording admitted as evidence, jury may play
25              If an audiovisual recording of an interview is admitted as
                evidence in a trial, the jury is entitled to play the recording
                during its deliberations.




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                                                                           s. 119



     119.    Recordings of interviews, possession etc. restricted
       (1)   In this section --
             "authorised person" means any of the following, acting in the
                  course of duty --
 5                (a) a police officer;
                  (b) a person authorised for the purposes of this Part by
                         the Commissioner of Police;
                  (c) the DPP or a person acting under the authority of the
                         DPP;
10                (d) a lawyer acting for or representing the State;
                 (e)    a CCC officer;
                  (f)   the Parliamentary Inspector;
                 (g)    an ombudsman officer;
                 (h)    a court or a person acting at the direction of a court;
15                (i)   a coroner or a person acting at the direction of a
                        coroner;
                  (j)   a person prescribed to be an authorised person.
       (2)   A person who is in possession of an audiovisual recording of an
             interview commits an offence unless the person --
20             (a) is an authorised person;
               (b) is the suspect or the suspect's lawyer;
               (c) has possession of the recording in a sealed package as
                     part of his or her duties as a person engaged by a person
                     referred to in paragraph (a) or (b) to transport it; or
25             (d) was served with the recording under the Criminal
                     Procedure Act 2004 section 35, 42, 61 or 95.
       (3)   A person who plays an audiovisual recording of an interview to
             another person commits an offence except when --
               (a) the recording is played for purposes connected with the
30                  prosecution or defence of, or legal proceedings relating
                    to, a charge to which the interview relates;

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                 (b)   the recording is played for purposes connected with
                       proceedings before a coroner;
                 (c)   the recording is played for purposes connected with
                       proceedings under the Police Act 1892 to remove a
 5                     member, as that term is defined in section 33K of that
                       Act;
                 (d)   the recording is played under a direction of a court; or
                 (e)   the recording is played under section 123.
        (4)     Subsection (3) does not apply to any of the following when
10              acting in the course of duty --
                  (a) a police officer;
                  (b) a CCC officer;
                  (c) the Parliamentary Inspector;
                  (d) an ombudsman officer.
15      (5)     A person who supplies, or offers to supply, an audiovisual
                recording of an interview to another who is not --
                  (a) an authorised person;
                  (b) the suspect or the suspect's lawyer;
                  (c) a person engaged by a person referred to in
20                     paragraph (a) or (b) to transport it; or
                  (d) a person who is required to be served with it under the
                       Criminal Procedure Act 2004 section 35, 42, 61 or 95,
                commits an offence unless the person is acting under a direction
                given under section 121.
25      (6)     A person, other than an authorised person, who copies any part
                of an audiovisual recording of an interview, or who permits
                another person to make a copy of any part of such a recording,
                commits an offence unless the person is acting under a direction
                given under section 121.




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                                                                          s. 120



       (7)   An authorised person who erases an audiovisual recording of an
             interview commits an offence, except when the person is acting
             under --
               (a) a direction given under section 121; or
 5             (b) an authorisation given under section 122(3).
       (8)   A person who commits an offence under this section is liable to
             a fine of $5 000.

     120.    Recorded interview, broadcast prohibited
             A person must not broadcast an audiovisual recording of an
10           interview or any part of such a recording unless the broadcast is
             made under a direction of a court given under section 121.
             Penalty:
                  (a) for an individual, a fine of $12 000 and imprisonment
                       for 12 months;
15                (b) for a body corporate, a fine of $100 000.

     121.    Recordings, court may give directions as to supply etc.
             The Supreme Court or, if the accused person is or was
             committed to the District Court, the District Court, may give
             directions (with or without conditions) as to the supply,
20           copying, editing, erasure, playing, or broadcast of an
             audiovisual recording of an interview.

     122.    Recordings to be retained by the police and CCC
       (1)   If an audiovisual recording is made of an interview, the
             Commissioner of Police or the CCC, as the case requires, must
25           keep the recording or a copy of it in safe custody for at least 5
             years.
       (2)   If the Supreme Court is satisfied there is good cause to keep an
             audiovisual recording of an interview for more than 5 years, it
             may order the Commissioner of Police or the CCC to keep the
30           recording for an additional period set by the Court.


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        (3)     The Commissioner of Police or the CCC, in writing, may
                authorise a person to erase audiovisual recordings of interviews
                in accordance with this section.

     123.       Recordings may be played for teaching purposes
 5      (1)     In this section --
                "prescribed person" means --
                    (a) a police officer or police trainee;
                    (b) a CCC officer;
                    (c) a lawyer or a person training to become a lawyer; or
10                  (d) a person prescribed for the purposes of this section.
        (2)     An audiovisual recording of an interview may be played to a
                prescribed person for the purposes of instruction if --
                 (a)   the suspect has been convicted of a charge to which the
                       interview relates;
15               (b)   all legal proceedings in relation to the subject matter of
                       the interview have been concluded; and
                 (c)   all reasonable measures are taken to prevent the
                       identification of the suspect from the recording when it
                       is played.




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                                                     Preliminary     Division 1
                                                                          s. 124



               Part 12 -- Arrest and related matters
                          Division 1 -- Preliminary
     124.    Interpretation
       (1)   In this Part --
 5           "unconditionally", in relation to the release of a person, means
                  released without being required to enter into, or without
                  having entered into, a bail undertaking under the Bail
                  Act 1982.
       (2)   For the purposes of this Part, a person who is under arrest ceases
10           to be under arrest --
               (a) if the person was arrested under an arrest warrant --
                     when the person is delivered into the custody of the
                     relevant court;
               (b) if the person is arrested under section 127 --
15                      (i) when the person is released, whether on bail or
                             unconditionally; or
                       (ii) if the person is not released, when the person is
                             delivered into the custody of a court;
               (c) if at the time of being arrested the person was at large
20                   having escaped from lawful custody -- when the person
                     is returned to that lawful custody; or
               (d) in any event -- if the person escapes from lawful
                     custody.

     125.    Proceedings by summons etc. not prevented
25           This Part does not prevent a person from being charged with an
             offence without having been first arrested for it.




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     Division 2       Arrest without an arrest warrant
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                Division 2 -- Arrest without an arrest warrant
     126.       Arrest warrant not required
                The powers in this Division may be exercised without an arrest
                warrant.

 5   127.       Arrest power for offences
        (1)     In this section --
                "serious offence" means --
                     (a) an offence the statutory penalty for which is or
                            includes imprisonment for 5 years or more or life; or
10                   (b) an offence prescribed by the regulations.
        (2)     A police officer or a public officer may arrest a person for a
                serious offence if the officer reasonably suspects that the person
                has committed, is committing, or is just about to commit, the
                offence.
15      (3)     A police officer or a public officer may arrest a person for an
                offence that is not a serious offence if the officer reasonably
                suspects --
                  (a) that the person has committed, is committing, or is just
                       about to commit, the offence; and
20                (b) that if the person is not arrested --
                           (i) it will not be possible, in accordance with law, to
                                obtain and verify the person's name and other
                                personal details;
                          (ii) the person will continue or repeat the offence;
25                       (iii) the person will commit another offence;
                         (iv) the person will endanger another person's safety
                                or property;
                          (v) the person will interfere with witnesses or
                                otherwise obstruct the course of justice;



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                              Ancillary powers to making an arrest      Division 3
                                                                             s. 128



                      (vi)    the person will conceal or disturb a thing relevant
                              to the offence; or
                      (vii)   the person's safety will be endangered.

             Division 3 -- Ancillary powers to making an arrest
 5   128.     Warrant not required
              The powers in this Division may be exercised without a warrant.

     129.     Occupier's rights if a place is entered
              Section 31 applies to and in respect of the entry of a place under
              this Division.

10   130.     Powers exercisable on a search under this Division
              An officer who is authorised under this Division to enter and
              search a place may, for the purpose of doing so, exercise any of
              the ancillary powers in section 44.

     131.     Places may be entered and vehicles may be stopped
15     (1)    In this section --
              "arrestable person" means a person who may be arrested --
                   (a) under a warrant issued under Part 9;
                   (b) under section 88(3) or 96(3);
                   (c) under an approval given under section 98;
20                 (d) under section 127;
                   (e) under an arrest warrant;
                    (f) under a warrant issued under the Criminal
                          Investigation (Identifying People) Act 2002; or
                   (g) under the Criminal Investigation (Extra-territorial
25                        Offences) Act 1987.




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     Division 3       Ancillary powers to making an arrest
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        (2)     For the purposes of arresting an arrestable person a police
                officer or a public officer --
                  (a) may enter a place where the officer reasonably suspects
                        the person is and search it for the person; and
 5                (b) may stop and enter a vehicle in which the officer
                        reasonably suspects the person is and search it for the
                        person.
        (3)     If the officer reasonably suspects that an arrestable person is in a
                building that consists of 2 or more dwellings then the power in
10              subsection (2)(a) is limited to entering and searching --
                  (a)   the parts of the building that the occupiers of the
                        dwellings use in common with each other; and
                 (b)    any individual dwelling where the police officer
                        reasonably suspects the person is.
15      (4)     The power in this section to search is limited to searching for
                the arrestable person.
        (5)     If an officer doing a search under this section finds a thing
                relevant to an offence, the officer --
                  (a) may, subject to section 145, seize it; and
20                (b) whether or not the officer seizes it, may do a forensic
                        examination on it.

     132.       Places and vehicles of certain arrested suspects may be
                searched for evidence
        (1)     In this section --
25              "senior officer" means --
                     (a) in relation to a police officer -- a police officer who
                            is, or is acting as, a sergeant or an officer of a rank
                            more senior than a sergeant;
                     (b) in relation to a public officer -- a public officer
30                          prescribed as a senior officer in relation to that
                            officer;


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           "serious offence" means an offence the statutory penalty for
                which is or includes imprisonment for 5 years or more or
                life.
     (2)   If a person is under arrest for a serious offence, a police officer
 5         or a public officer --
             (a) may enter the place in which the person was when he or
                    she was arrested or from which the person fled
                    immediately before being arrested;
             (b) may stop and enter any vehicle in which the person was
10                  when he or she was arrested or from which the person
                    fled immediately before being arrested; and
             (c) may stop and enter any vehicle that the person controls
                    or manages, whether or not he or she was arrested in that
                    vehicle,
15         and search it for --
            (d)   any thing relevant to the serious offence; or
            (e)   any person against whom the serious offence was
                  committed.
     (3)   If a person is under arrest for a serious offence then, subject to
20         subsection (4), a police officer or a public officer may enter a
           place that the person occupies, controls or manages, not being a
           place referred to in subsection (2)(a), and search it for --
             (a) any thing relevant to the serious offence;
             (b) any thing relevant to an offence that is connected with,
25                  or of the same character as, the serious offence; or
             (c) any person against whom the serious offence, or an
                    offence that is connected with, or of the same character
                    as, the serious offence, was committed.




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     Division 3       Ancillary powers to making an arrest
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        (4)     The powers in subsection (3) must not be exercised by an
                officer unless --
                  (a) the officer reasonably suspects that the place contains a
                        thing or person referred to in subsection (3)(a), (b)
 5                      or (c); and
                  (b) the officer has written approval to do so from a senior
                        officer who is not involved in the investigation of the
                        serious offence.
        (5)     A senior officer who gives such an approval must make a
10              written record of it and --
                 (a)   the place to be entered and searched;
                 (b)   the thing suspected to be in the place;
                 (c)   the other officer's grounds for suspecting that the place
                       contains a thing or person referred to in
15                     subsection (3)(a), (b) or (c);
                 (d)   the date and time when it was given; and
                 (e)   the reasons for giving it.
        (6)     The powers in subsections (2) and (3) cease when the person is
                charged with an offence or is released from arrest, whichever
20              happens first.
        (7)     If an officer doing a search under subsection (2) or (3) finds a
                thing relevant to an offence, whether the serious offence or
                another offence, the officer --
                  (a) may, subject to section 145, seize the thing; and
25                (b) whether or not the officer seizes the thing, may do a
                        forensic examination on it.
        (8)     A senior officer's approval under this section may be applied
                for and given by remote communication.




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     133.    Escapees, additional powers to aid recapture
       (1)   In this section --
             "escapee" means a person who has escaped from lawful
                  custody or detention.
 5     (2)   The powers in this section are in addition to those in
             sections 130 to 132.
       (3)   While an escapee is at large, a police officer may enter and
             search any place where the police officer reasonably suspects --
               (a) the escapee has been since his or her escape; or
10             (b) the escapee is likely to go while at large.
       (4)   The power in subsection (3) is limited to searching for --
              (a) evidence of the escapee's whereabouts; and
              (b) any thing relevant to --
                      (i) an offence under The Criminal Code section 146
15                         committed by the escapee;
                     (ii) an offence under The Criminal Code section 144,
                           145, 147, 148 or 149 that is reasonably suspected
                           has been, is being or may be committed in
                           relation to the escapee's escape; or
20                  (iii) an indictable offence that is reasonably suspected
                           to have been committed by the escapee while at
                           large.
       (5)   If an officer doing a search under this section finds a thing
             relevant to an offence, whether or not an offence referred to in
25           subsection (4), the officer --
               (a) may, subject to section 145, seize it; and
               (b) whether or not the officer seizes it, may do a forensic
                     examination on it.




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     Division 4       Searches of people in custody for security purposes
     s. 134



            Division 4 -- Searches of people in custody for security
                                  purposes
     134.       Certain people in custody may be searched
        (1)     In this section --
 5              "authorised officer" means --
                     (a) in relation to a person who is in the custody of a
                            police officer -- any police officer;
                     (b) in relation to a person who is in the custody of a
                            public officer -- any public officer who has the same
10                          functions as that public officer;
                "security risk item" means any thing --
                     (a) that could be used to endanger the person in
                            possession of the thing or any other person;
                     (b) that could be used to assist a person to escape from
15                          lawful custody; or
                     (c) that could adversely affect the security, good order or
                            management of a place where a person is being kept
                            in custody.
        (2)     A person is in custody for the purposes of this section if --
20               (a) the person is under arrest, whether under this Act or
                       under another written law, or is otherwise in the lawful
                       custody of an officer; or
                 (b) the person, having been required to do so by a member
                       of the Police Force acting under the Road Traffic
25                     Act 1974 section 66, is accompanying such a member to,
                       or is waiting at, a police station or other place.
        (3)     A person is not in custody for the purposes of this section if --
                 (a) the person is in custody because he or she is a child in
                       the CEO's care, as that term is defined by the Children
30                     and Community Services Act 2004 section 30, and not
                       for any other reason; or


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            Searches of people in custody for security purposes     Division 4
                                                                         s. 134



            (b)   the person is a person in custody, as that term is defined
                  by the Court Security and Custodial Services Act 1999
                  section 3, and under that Act the CEO (as that term is
                  defined in that Act) is responsible for the person's
 5                security, control, safety, care and welfare.
     (4)   If a person is in custody, an authorised officer may search the
           person for a security risk item.
     (5)   For the purpose of searching a person under subsection (4) an
           authorised officer may, as often as is reasonably necessary --
10           (a) subject to Part 8 Division 3, do a basic search or a strip
                   search of the person;
             (b) if authorised to do so under Part 9 Division 5, do an
                   internal forensic procedure on the person in accordance
                   with Part 9 Division 6.
15   (6)   If an authorised officer, exercising a power in subsection (4) on
           a person, finds a thing that the officer reasonably suspects is a
           security risk item, then --
             (a) if the item is not attached physically to the person -- the
                   officer may seize it;
20           (b) if the item is attached physically to the person, but not to
                   his or her private parts, or is in the person's mouth --
                   the officer may remove it but in doing so must comply
                   with Part 9 Division 6 as if doing a non-intimate
                   forensic procedure on the person;
25           (c) if the item is attached physically to the person's private
                   parts -- the officer must not remove it except by means
                   of an intimate forensic procedure authorised and
                   conducted in accordance with Part 9;
             (d) if the item is in an orifice (other than the mouth) of the
30                 person, the officer must not remove it except by means
                   of an internal forensic procedure authorised and
                   conducted in accordance with Part 9.



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        (7)     For the purposes of subsections (5)(b) and (6)(c) and (d), Part 9,
                with any necessary changes, applies as if --
                 (a) a security risk item were a thing that is relevant to an
                        offence; and
 5               (b) searching for and removing a security risk item were a
                        purpose permitted by section 77.
        (8)     If an authorised officer, exercising a power in subsection (4) on
                a person, finds a thing that is not a security risk item but that is a
                thing relevant to an offence, then --
10                (a) if the thing is not attached physically to the person, the
                        officer may seize it; but
                  (b) in any other case, the officer must not remove the thing,
                        or take a sample or impression of it, or take a swab or
                        use other means to detect it, except by means of a
15                      forensic procedure authorised and conducted in
                        accordance with Part 9.
        (9)     If under subsection (6) a security risk item is removed, it may be
                seized.
       (10)     If under this section an authorised officer seizes a security risk
20              item from a person, the officer must make it available for
                collection by the person when he or she is released from
                custody, unless it may be lawfully seized and retained under
                another provision of this Act or under another written law.
       (11)     The Criminal and Found Property Disposal Act 2005 applies to
25              and in relation to a thing so seized that is made available to but
                not collected by the person.
       (12)     If under subsection (8) an authorised officer removes a thing
                that is not a security risk item but that is a thing relevant to an
                offence from a person, the officer --
30                 (a) may, subject to section 145, seize the thing; and
                  (b) whether or not the officer seizes it, may do a forensic
                         examination on it.


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                                                                          s. 135



                Division 5 -- Dealing with arrested people
     135.    Young Offenders Act 1994 not affected
             This Division is in addition to and does not affect the operation
             of the Young Offenders Act 1994 and in particular section 20
 5           and Part 4 of that Act.

     136.    Arrested people, rights of
       (1)   In this section --
             "officer" means a police officer, a public officer, or any person
                  who holds an office with power to arrest people.
10     (2)   This section applies to a person who has been arrested by an
             officer, no matter under what authority or written law.
       (3)   The arrested person is entitled --
              (a) to any necessary medical treatment;
              (b) to a reasonable degree of privacy from the mass media;
15            (c) to a reasonable opportunity to communicate or to
                    attempt to communicate with a relative or friend to
                    inform that person of his or her whereabouts; and
              (d) if he or she is for any reason unable to understand or
                    communicate in spoken English sufficiently, to be
20                  assisted in doing so by an interpreter or other qualified
                    person.

     137.    Arrested suspects, rights of
       (1)   In this section --
             "arrested suspect" means a person who is under arrest having
25                been arrested --
                  (a) under section 127, under an arrest warrant, or under
                         another written law, on suspicion of having
                         committed an offence; or



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                       (b)under the Criminal Investigation (Extra-territorial
                          Offences) Act 1987;
                "officer" means a police officer, a public officer, or any person
                     who holds an office with power to arrest people.
 5      (2)     In addition to the rights in section 136 an arrested suspect is
                entitled --
                  (a) to be informed of the offence for which he or she has
                        been arrested and any other offences that he or she is
                        suspected of having committed;
10                (b) to be cautioned before being interviewed as a suspect;
                  (c) to a reasonable opportunity to communicate or to
                        attempt to communicate with a lawyer;
                  (d) if he or she is for any reason unable to understand or
                        communicate in spoken English sufficiently, not to be
15                      interviewed until the services of an interpreter or other
                        qualified person are available.
        (3)     The officer in charge of the investigation must, as soon as
                practicable after the arrest of an arrested suspect --
                  (a) inform the suspect of his or her rights under
20                      section 136(3)(c) and subsection (2)(c); and
                 (b)         afford the suspect his or her other rights under
                             section 136 and subsection (2).
        (4)     An officer may refuse an arrested suspect his or her right to
                communicate or to attempt to communicate with a person if the
25              officer reasonably suspects that the communication would result
                in --
                  (a) an accomplice taking steps to avoid being charged;
                  (b) evidence being concealed, disturbed or fabricated; or
                  (c) a person's safety being endangered.




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     138.    Arrested suspects, detention of
       (1)   In this section --
             "arrested suspect" means a person who is under arrest having
                  been arrested under section 127, or under another written
 5                law, on suspicion of having committed an offence but who
                  has not been arrested under an arrest warrant.
       (2)   A police officer or a public officer may detain an arrested
             suspect after the suspect is arrested for the purposes of --
               (a) doing a search under section 132 or 134;
10             (b) investigating any offence suspected of having been
                     committed by the suspect;
               (c) interviewing the suspect in relation to any offence that
                     the suspect is suspected to have committed; and
               (d) deciding whether or not to charge the suspect with an
15                   offence.
       (3)   An arrested suspect who is detained under subsection (2) must
             be detained in the company of an officer and not in a lock-up or
             other place of confinement, unless the circumstances make it
             impracticable to do so.
20     (4)   The detention of an arrested suspect must be in accordance with
             section 139.
       (5)   The detention of an arrested suspect in contravention of
             section 139 is not unlawful if it occurs due to circumstances that
             are not reasonably foreseeable.

25   139.    Detention period for arrested suspects
       (1)   In this section --
             "arrested suspect" has the meaning given to that term by
                  section 138;
             "senior officer" means --
30                (a) in the case of an arrested suspect who has been
                         arrested by a police officer -- a police officer who is,

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                             or is acting as, a sergeant or an officer of a rank more
                             senior than a sergeant;
                       (b) in the case of an arrested suspect who has been
                             arrested by a public officer -- another public officer
 5                           prescribed as a senior officer in relation to that
                             officer,
                       who is not involved in the investigation of any offence that
                       the suspect is suspected of having committed.
        (2)     For the purposes of this section, the detention of an arrested
10              suspect is justified if the detention --
                 (a)      is for a purpose referred to in section 138(2); and
                 (b)      is for a period that is reasonable having regard to the
                          factors in section 140.
        (3)     Subject to subsection (2), the detention of an arrested suspect --
15               (a) must not exceed 6 hours from the arrest of the suspect
                       unless a further period has been authorised under
                       subsection (4)(b); and
                 (b) must not exceed any further period authorised under
                       subsection (4)(b) unless one or more further periods
20                     have been authorised under subsection (6)(b).
        (4)     At any time during the 6 hours immediately following a
                suspect's arrest on suspicion of having committed an offence --
                  (a) an officer involved in investigating the offence may
                       apply to a senior officer for an authorisation under
25                     paragraph (b); and
                  (b) on such an application, the senior officer may authorise
                       the detention of the suspect for a further period of not
                       more than 6 hours if the officer is satisfied that detention
                       of the suspect for the further period is justified.




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     (5)   If under subsection (4)(b) a senior officer authorises the
           detention of an arrested suspect for a further period --
             (a) the senior officer must make a written record of the
                   authorisation and --
 5                    (i) the name or a description of the arrested suspect
                          to whom it relates;
                     (ii) the further period authorised;
                    (iii) the date and time of the authorisation; and
                    (iv) the reasons for the authorisation;
10           (b) if practicable the senior officer must give the applicant a
                   copy of the written record;
             (c) the further period commences at the end of the 6 hours
                   immediately following the suspect's arrest; and
             (d) no senior officer can give another authorisation under
15                 subsection (4)(b).
     (6)   At any time during a further period authorised under
           subsection (4)(b) or this subsection --
             (a) an officer involved in investigating the offence
                   concerned, with the prior written approval of a senior
20                 officer, may apply to a magistrate for an authorisation
                   under paragraph (b); and
             (b) on such an application, a magistrate may authorise the
                   detention of the suspect for a further period of not more
                   than 8 hours if the magistrate is satisfied that detention
25                 of the suspect for the further period is justified.
     (7)   If under subsection (6)(b) a magistrate authorises the detention
           of an arrested suspect for a further period --
             (a) the magistrate must make a written record of the
                   authorisation and --
30                   (i) the name or a description of the arrested suspect
                           to whom it relates;



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     Division 5       Dealing with arrested people
     s. 140



                          (ii) the further period authorised; and
                         (iii) the date and time of the authorisation;
                 (b)    if practicable the magistrate must give the applicant a
                        copy of the written record; and
 5                (c)   the further period commences --
                           (i) at the end of the further period authorised under
                                subsection (4)(b); or
                          (ii) if a further period has previously been authorised
                                under subsection (6)(b), at the end of that further
10                              period.
        (8)     An application may be made, and an authorisation may be
                given, under subsection (6) on more than one occasion.
        (9)     An application may be made, and an authorisation may be
                given, under this section by remote communication.

15   140.       Reasonable period of detention, factors determining
                The factors to be taken into account under section 139 are --
                 (a) the number and complexity of the offences to be
                       investigated;
                 (b) the time needed by police officers with knowledge of or
20                     responsibility for the investigation to travel to attend to
                       the matters in section 138(2);
                 (c) the time needed to interview potential witnesses,
                       whether before, during or after any interview with the
                       suspect;
25               (d) the time needed to interview any other people who are
                       suspected of being involved in an offence suspected of
                       having been committed by the suspect;
                 (e) the time needed to transport the suspect from the place
                       where he or she was arrested to a place where
30                     appropriate facilities are available to conduct an
                       interview or any other investigation;


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                                                                 s. 140



     (f)    the time needed by a police officer to assess relevant
            material or to take any other steps to prepare to
            interview the suspect;
     (g)    the time needed to afford the suspect his or her rights in
 5          sections 136 and 137;
     (h)    the time needed to allow the suspect to receive medical
            treatment, to rest or to receive refreshment;
      (i)   the time needed to obtain the use of facilities to make an
            audiovisual recording of an interview with the suspect;
10    (j)   any delay in making such a recording caused by
            technical matters beyond the control of the person
            interviewing the suspect;
     (k)    any period when it is not reasonable to interview or
            conduct other investigations with the suspect because
15          the suspect is intoxicated, ill or incapacitated;
      (l)   the time needed to visit any place connected with the
            offence;
     (m)    the time needed to complete any of the matters, or any
            matter reasonably connected with the matters, in
20          section 138(2);
     (n)    the time needed to complete any identifying procedure
            under the Criminal Investigation (Identifying People)
            Act 2002 Part 6;
     (o)    the time needed to complete any search of the suspect
25          under Part 8;
     (p)    the time needed to complete any forensic procedure on
            the suspect under Part 9;
     (q)    the time needed to complete any test that may be
            conducted on the suspect under a written law;
30   (r)    the time needed to arrange and conduct an identification
            parade;
     (s)    the time needed to comply with this Act or any other
            written law.


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     Division 5       Dealing with arrested people
     s. 141



     141.       Arrested suspects, charging and releasing
        (1)     In this section --
                "arrested suspect" has the meaning given to that term by
                     section 138;
 5              "officer" means a police officer, a public officer, or any person
                     who holds an office with power to arrest people;
                "serious offence" means an indictable offence the statutory
                     penalty for which is or includes imprisonment for 5 years
                     or more or life.
10      (2)     For the purposes of this section, not releasing a suspect
                unconditionally is justified if the officer who has custody of the
                suspect reasonably suspects that if the suspect were released
                unconditionally --
                  (a) the suspect would --
15                         (i) commit another offence;
                          (ii) continue or repeat the offence for which he or
                               she is under arrest;
                         (iii) endanger another person's safety or property;
                         (iv) interfere with witnesses or otherwise obstruct the
20                             course of justice, whether in relation to the
                               suspect or any other person;
                        or
                  (b) the suspect's safety would be endangered.
        (3)     If it is decided not to charge an arrested suspect with an offence,
25              then whether or not the suspect --
                  (a) is cautioned in relation to an offence; or
                  (b) is issued an infringement notice in relation to an offence,
                the officer who has custody of the suspect must release the
                suspect unconditionally.
30      (4)     If it is decided to charge an arrested suspect with a simple
                offence, then, subject to subsection (8), the officer who has

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           custody of the suspect must release the suspect unconditionally
           unless --
             (a) the officer reasonably suspects that the presence of the
                  suspect when the charge is first dealt with by a court is
 5                likely to be necessary for any reason or for sentencing
                  purposes; or
             (b) not releasing the suspect unconditionally is justified
                  under subsection (2),
           in which case the officer may detain the suspect in custody
10         subject to subsection (7).
     (5)   If it is decided to charge an arrested suspect with an indictable
           offence that is not a serious offence, then, subject to
           subsection (8), the officer who has custody of the suspect must
           release the suspect unconditionally unless --
15           (a) the officer reasonably suspects that if, under the
                     Criminal Procedure Act 2004, the suspect were served
                     with a summons in relation to the charge and released
                     unconditionally the suspect would not obey the
                     summons; or
20           (b) not releasing the suspect unconditionally is justified
                     under subsection (2),
           in which case the officer may detain the suspect in custody
           subject to subsection (7).
     (6)   If it is decided to charge an arrested suspect with a serious
25         offence, the officer who has custody of the suspect may detain
           the suspect in custody subject to subsection (7).
     (7)   If it is decided to charge an arrested suspect with an offence and
           the suspect is not released unconditionally, the officer who has
           custody of the suspect --
30           (a) must ensure the suspect is charged as soon as practicable
                     and is dealt with --
                       (i) under the Bail Act 1982 section 6; or


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     Division 5       Dealing with arrested people
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                         (ii) under the Mental Health Act 1996 section 196;
                        and
                 (b)    may detain the suspect in a lock up or other place of
                        confinement until that happens, subject to
 5                      subsection (8).
        (8)     If it is decided to charge an arrested suspect with an offence, the
                suspect may be detained in custody before being released
                unconditionally, or being dealt with under subsection (7), for a
                reasonable period that is to be determined having regard to these
10              factors --
                  (a)   the time needed to complete any identifying procedure
                        under the Criminal Investigation (Identifying People)
                        Act 2002 Part 7;
                 (b)    the time needed to complete any forensic procedure on
15                      the suspect under Part 9;
                  (c)   if it is decided not to release the suspect unconditionally,
                        the time needed to comply with --
                           (i) the Bail Act 1982 and in particular section 6 of
                                  that Act;
20                        (ii) the Mental Health Act 1996 section 196; or
                         (iii) any other written law.
        (9)     This section does not prevent a police officer from exercising a
                power in section 27 in relation to an arrested suspect before
                releasing him or her unconditionally.

25   142.       Other arrested people, dealing with
        (1)     A person who is arrested under any process or warrant must be
                dealt with according to the process or warrant.
        (2)     Subsection (1) does not prevent this Part from applying to a
                person referred to in that subsection if he or she is reasonably
30              suspected to have committed an offence that is unrelated to the
                process or warrant.


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                                                Miscellaneous      Division 6
                                                                        s. 143



                       Division 6 -- Miscellaneous
    143.    Possession of warrant at time of arrest not necessary
      (1)   If a police officer reasonably suspects that a warrant has been
            issued for the arrest or imprisonment of a person, the officer
5           may arrest the person even though the officer does not have the
            warrant at the time.
      (2)   Subsection (1) does not limit the operation of The Criminal
            Code section 231.




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     Part 13          Seizing things and related matters

     s. 144



              Part 13 -- Seizing things and related matters
     144.       Application
                This Part applies to and in respect of the seizing under this Act
                of a thing that is relevant to an offence.

 5   145.       Things relevant to an offence, grounds for seizing
                If this Act provides that an officer may seize a thing that is
                relevant to an offence the officer may do so only if the officer
                reasonably suspects one or more of the following --
                  (a) that the thing is property that has been stolen or
10                       otherwise unlawfully obtained;
                  (b) that the thing may be seized under another written law;
                  (c) that possession of the thing at that time and place by the
                         person in possession of it is unlawful;
                  (d) that the thing may be forfeited to the State or the Crown;
15                (e) that it is necessary to seize the thing for one or more of
                         the following purposes --
                            (i) to prevent it from being concealed, disturbed or
                                 lost;
                           (ii) to preserve its evidentiary value;
20                        (iii) to do a forensic examination on it;
                          (iv) to prevent it from being used in the commission
                                 of another offence.

     146.       Seizing things, ancillary powers
        (1)     If it is not practicable or convenient to move a thing that may be
25              seized, an officer may seize the thing by attaching a notice of
                seizure in the prescribed form to the thing.
        (2)     If it is not practicable or convenient to move a thing that has
                been seized, an officer may do whatever is reasonably necessary
                to secure the thing in the place where it is.


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                                                                                     s. 147



       (3)   If a power in subsection (1) or (2) is exercised, the officer must,
             if practicable, give written notice of the fact that the thing has
             been seized to the person in possession of the thing and the
             occupier of the place where the thing is.
 5     (4)   If under subsection (2) a thing is secured in a place without the
             consent of the occupier of the place, it may only be secured in
             the place for a reasonable period.
       (5)   An occupier of a place who is aggrieved by the fact that a thing
             that has been seized is secured in the place may apply to the
10           Magistrates Court to review the matter.
       (6)   The application must be made in accordance with rules of court.
       (7)   On an application made under subsection (5) an officer involved
             in the investigation of the offence to which the seized thing
             relates (the "investigating officer") and the occupier are
15           entitled to be heard.
       (8)   On an application made under subsection (5) the court may
             make any orders it thinks fit including --
              (a) an order as to the period for which the seized thing may
                    remain in the place;
20            (b) an order to mitigate any inconvenience caused by the
                    continued presence of the seized thing in the place;
              (c) if the court is satisfied that the seized thing should not
                    remain in the place, an order that it be removed.
       (9)   Court proceedings under this section may be conducted by
25           remote communication.

     147.    Records relevant to an offence
       (1)   If a record may be seized, the officer authorised to seize it may,
             if practicable, reproduce the record, whether or not in the same
             form, and instead seize the reproduction.
30           Example: a record on a computer could be reproduced by printing it out on
             paper or copying it on to a disc and the paper or disc could then be seized.



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        (2)     If a record is seized, the officer authorised to seize it may copy
                or take extracts from the record.
        (3)     If a record is seized and a person --
                  (a) who appears entitled to possession of the record; and
 5                (b) who does not already have a copy of the record,
                so requests, the officer in charge of the investigation must --
                  (c) if it is reasonably practicable to do so, give a copy of the
                       record to the person as soon as practicable after it is
                       seized; or
10                (d) unless the officer reasonably suspects that doing so will
                       jeopardise the evidentiary value of the record, allow the
                       person to inspect the record and to make and keep a
                       copy of it,
                unless it would be an offence for the person to possess the copy.

15   148.       Records, powers to facilitate seizing
        (1)     If a record may be seized, any device or equipment needed to
                gain access to, recover, or reproduce, the information in the
                record is to be taken as also being relevant to the offence to
                which the record is relevant and, subject to section 145, may
20              also be seized.
        (2)     For the purpose of seizing a record or exercising a power in
                section 147(1) or (2), an officer --
                  (a) may operate any device or equipment, whether seized
                        under subsection (1) or not, that is needed to gain access
25                      to, recover, or make a reproduction of, the record and
                        that is possessed by the person from whom the record
                        may be seized;
                  (b) if he or she reasonably suspects that --
                          (i) the person from whom the record may be seized;
30                               or



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                                                                          s. 149



                      (ii)  an employee (whether under a contract of service
                            or a contract for services) of that person,
                     knows how to gain access to or operate any such device
                     or equipment -- may order the person or employee to
 5                   provide any information or assistance that is reasonable
                     and necessary to enable the officer to seize the record or
                     exercise the power.

     149.    Seized things, list to be supplied on request
       (1)   If an officer seizes any thing --
10             (a) the person who had custody or control of the thing
                     before it was seized; or
               (b) the occupier of the place where it was seized,
             may ask the officer for a list of what was seized.
       (2)   The officer must comply with the request within a reasonable
15           time after it is made.
       (3)   If it is not reasonably practicable to list all the things seized
             because they are too numerous, the list may give a general
             description of the things seized that contains as much detail as is
             reasonably practicable.
20     (4)   This section does not apply in respect of a record if under
             section 147 a copy of the record was seized or was given to the
             person making the request.

     150.    Privileged material, procedure on seizure of
       (1)   In this section --
25           "court" means the Magistrates Court;
             "privileged" means privileged because of either or both --
                  (a) legal professional privilege;
                  (b) public interest privilege.




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        (2)     If a record is seized or, under an order to produce a business
                record issued under section 53, a business record is produced
                and --
                  (a) a person entitled to possession of the record claims that
 5                      all or some of the information in it is privileged; or
                  (b) the officer seizing the record or to whom it is produced
                        reasonably suspects that all or some of the information
                        in it is privileged,
                the record must be dealt with in accordance with this section.
10      (3)     The record must be secured in a manner --
                 (a) that prevents it from being concealed, disturbed or lost;
                 (b) that preserves its evidentiary value; and
                 (c) that prevents access to the information in it by any
                       person who would not be entitled to access to the
15                     information if it were privileged.
        (4)     The officer in charge of the investigation must apply to the court
                to decide whether the information is privileged and must deliver
                the record into the custody of the court.
        (5)     The application must be made in accordance with rules of court
20              and must be served on the person entitled to possession of the
                record or, if the identity or whereabouts of the person is
                unknown, on any person directed by the court to be served.
        (6)     The application may, if the court thinks fit, be heard in private.
        (7)     The applicant and any person entitled to possession of the
25              record are entitled to be heard on the application.
        (8)     For the purpose of deciding the application the court may have
                access to all of the information in the record.
        (9)     If the court decides that all of the information is not privileged,
                the court must make the record available to be collected by the
30              applicant.



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                                                                           s. 151



      (10)   If the court decides that all of the information is privileged, the
             court must make the record available to be collected by the
             person from whom it was seized.
      (11)   If the court decides that some of the information is privileged,
 5           the court must make orders to enable the applicant to have
             access to the information in the record that is not privileged.
      (12)   If --
               (a)   the court decides that all or some of the information is
                     privileged; and
10            (b)    the applicant has applied to be permitted to do a forensic
                     examination on the record,
             the court must make orders that enable the forensic examination
             to be done on the record and to ensure that any information in it
             that is privileged remains privileged.
15    (13)   After making a decision, the court may make any orders it
             thinks fit --
               (a) as to costs;
               (b) as to securing the record, or suspending the operation of
                     any orders made under this section, until an appeal
20                   against the determination is commenced and dealt with.
      (14)   Proceedings under this section are part of the court's criminal
             jurisdiction.
      (15)   Subject to the Criminal Appeals Act 2004 Part 2, an appeal lies
             against a decision made by the court under this section.

25   151.    Criminal and Found Property Disposal Act 2005 applies
       (1)   If under this Act any thing is seized, the Criminal and Found
             Property Disposal Act 2005 applies to and in relation to it.
       (2)   Subsection (1) does not apply to a sample taken or seized under
             Part 9.



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     Part 14          Miscellaneous

     s. 152



                           Part 14 -- Miscellaneous
     152.       Order by officer, offence to not obey
        (1)     A person who, without reasonable excuse, does not comply with
                an order given by an officer under this Act commits an offence.
 5              Penalty: a fine of $12 000 and imprisonment for 12 months.
        (2)     It is not a defence to a charge of an offence under subsection (1)
                that information required to be given under the order would or
                may have incriminated the accused.

     153.       Evidence obtained improperly
10      (1)     In this section --
                "authorisation" includes a warrant and an order.
        (2)     If in the purported exercise of a power conferred by this Act or
                by an authorisation issued or purportedly issued under this
                Act --
15                (a) a thing relevant to an offence is seized or obtained; and
                  (b) a requirement of this Act in relation to exercising the
                         power or issuing the authorisation, including a
                         requirement that arises before or after the exercise of the
                         power or the issue of the authorisation, is contravened,
20              any evidence derived from the thing referred to in paragraph (a)
                or from the exercise of the power is not admissible in any
                criminal proceedings against a person in a court unless --
                  (c) the person does not object to the admission of the
                       evidence;
25                (d) the court decides otherwise under section 154; or




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                                                                          s. 154



               (e)   if the power exercised was exercised in relation to a
                     protected person (as that term is defined in section 73),
                     the court is of the opinion that the contravention arose
                     out of a mistaken but reasonable belief as to whether the
 5                   person was a protected person.

     154.    Inadmissible evidence, court may allow admission
       (1)   This section applies if under another section a court may make a
             decision under this section in relation to evidence that is not
             admissible in proceedings in the court.
10     (2)   The court may nevertheless decide to admit the evidence if it is
             satisfied that the desirability of admitting the evidence
             outweighs the undesirability of admitting the evidence.
       (3)   In making a decision under subsection (2) the court must take
             into account --
15             (a) any objection to the evidence being admitted by the
                     person against whom the evidence may be given;
               (b) the seriousness of the offence in respect of which the
                     evidence is relevant;
               (c) the seriousness of any contravention of this Act in
20                   obtaining the evidence;
               (d) whether any contravention of this Act in obtaining the
                     evidence --
                       (i) was intentional or reckless; or
                      (ii) arose from an honest and reasonable mistake of
25                          fact;
               (e) the probative value of the evidence;
                (f) any other matter the court thinks fit.
       (4)   The probative value of the evidence does not by itself justify its
             admission.




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     s. 155



     155.       Regulations
        (1)     The Governor may make regulations prescribing all matters that
                are required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed, or are
                necessary or convenient to be prescribed for giving effect to the
 5              purposes of this Act.
        (2)     Without limiting subsection (1) regulations may --
                 (a) provide for the procedure to be followed in and in
                      relation to doing a forensic examination on a thing;
                 (b) adopt, either wholly or in part or with modifications, any
10                    code, standard, or rule, that does not by itself have
                      legislative effect in this State;
                 (c) create offences with statutory penalties not exceeding
                      $5 000.
        (3)     If the regulations adopt a code, standard or rule, it is adopted as
15              in force from time to time unless the regulations specify that a
                particular text is adopted.

     156.       Review of Act
        (1)     The Minister must carry out a review of the operation and
                effectiveness of this Act as soon as practicable after the expiry
20              of 5 years from its commencement.
        (2)     The Minister must prepare a report based on the review and, as
                soon as is practicable after the report is prepared, must cause the
                report to be laid before each House of Parliament.




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                                                                  Miscellaneous          Part 14

                                                                                              Defined Terms



                                      Defined Terms
      [This is a list of terms defined and the provisions where they are defined.
                             The list is not part of the law.]
Defined Term                                                                                          Provision(s)
admission.................................................................................................117(1)
adult................................................................................................... 73, 117(1)
aggrieved person ........................................................................................49(1)
area associated with a dwelling.................................................................... 3(1)
arrest warrant .............................................................................................. 3(1)
arrestable offence .......................................................................................25(1)
arrestable person.......................................................................................131(1)
arrested suspect ................................................................137(1), 138(1), 141(1)
authorisation ............................................................................................153(1)
authorised ..................................................................................................47(1)
authorised officer .....................................................................................134(1)
authorised person .....................................................................................119(1)
basic search................................................................................................. 3(1)
Basic search ................................................................................................... 63
body search .................................................................................................. 109
business ......................................................................................................... 50
business record............................................................................................... 50
CCC............................................................................................................. 114
CCC officer.................................................................................................. 114
child................................................................................................... 73, 117(1)
citizen ........................................................................................................24(1)
court ........................................................................................................150(1)
data ................................................................................................................ 57
data access order ............................................................................................ 57
data storage device ......................................................................................... 57
dentist ............................................................................................................ 73
disturb......................................................................................................... 3(1)
doctor............................................................................................................. 73
DPP ............................................................................................................ 3(1)
dwelling...................................................................................................... 3(1)
endangering offence ...................................................................................26(1)
escapee.....................................................................................................133(1)
forensic database ......................................................................................112(1)
forensic examination ................................................................................... 3(1)
forensic information .................................................................................112(1)
forensic procedure ..................................................................................3(1), 73
FP warrant (involved person).......................................................................... 73
FP warrant (suspect)....................................................................................... 73
frisk search.................................................................................................. 3(1)


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Criminal Investigation Bill 2005
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Defined Terms



      identifying particular ...................................................................................... 73
      impression................................................................................................... 3(1)
      incapable person............................................................................................. 73
      internal forensic procedure ............................................................................. 73
      interview ...................................................................................................... 114
      intimate forensic procedure............................................................................. 73
      investigating officer........................................................................49(3), 146(7)
      involved person ..........................................................................73, 83(1), 84(1)
      judicial officer ............................................................................................12(1)
      lawyer ......................................................................................................... 3(1)
      mobile home ............................................................................................... 3(1)
      non-intimate forensic procedure...................................................................... 73
      nurse .............................................................................................................. 73
      occupier ...................................................................................................... 3(1)
      offence ........................................................................................................ 3(1)
      officer ..................................................................... 3(1), 136(1), 137(1), 141(1)
      official details.............................................................................................. 3(1)
      ombudsman officer....................................................................................... 114
      order to produce ............................................................................................. 50
      Parliamentary Inspector ................................................................................ 114
      passenger ...................................................................................................26(2)
      photograph .................................................................................................. 3(1)
      place ........................................................................................................... 3(1)
      place of public entertainment ......................................................................34(1)
      police officer ............................................................................................... 3(1)
      prescribed.................................................................................................... 3(1)
      prescribed person .....................................................................................123(1)
      private parts ................................................................................................ 3(1)
      privileged.................................................................................................150(1)
      protected forensic area................................................................................. 3(1)
      protected person ............................................................................................. 73
      Public Advocate ............................................................................................. 73
      public officer............................................................................................... 3(1)
      public open area .......................................................................................... 3(1)
      public place................................................................................................. 3(1)
      qualified person.............................................................................................. 73
      reasonable excuse.....................................................................................117(1)
      reasonably suspects ..................................................................................... 3(1)
      Reasonably suspects ......................................................................................... 4
      record.......................................................................................................... 3(1)
      relevant thing ................................................................................................. 73
      remote communication ................................................................................ 3(1)
      responsible person .......................................................................................... 73
      road............................................................................................................18(1)
      search warrant ............................................................................................. 3(1)

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                                                                                            Defined Terms



searcher....................................................................... 65(1), 70(1), 71(1), 72(1)
security risk item ......................................................................................134(1)
senior officer ............................................................. 44(1), 47(1), 97(1), 132(1)
senior police officer..................................................................................... 3(1)
serious event ..............................................................................................37(1)
serious offence ................................................. 40(1), 57, 127(1), 132(1), 141(1)
statutory penalty.......................................................................................... 3(1)
strip search.................................................................................................. 3(1)
Strip search .................................................................................................... 64
suspect .......................................25(2), 25(3), 26(5), 73, 91(1), 92(1), 97(1), 114
target device...............................................................................................58(3)
target person...............................................................................................58(3)
target place...................................................................................... 43(1), 44(1)
target thing...................................................................................... 43(1), 44(1)
thing relevant to an offence.......................................................................... 3(1)
Thing relevant to an offence ............................................................................. 5
unconditionally.........................................................................................124(1)
vehicle .............................................................................................. 3(1), 18(1)
volunteer ........................................................................................................ 79
WA Police................................................................................................... 3(1)




 


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