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This is a Bill, not an Act. For current law, see the Acts databases.
2002
The Parliament of
the
Commonwealth of
Australia
HOUSE OF
REPRESENTATIVES
Presented and read a first
time
Crimes
Legislation Amendment (People Smuggling, Firearms Trafficking and Other
Measures) Bill 2002
No. ,
2002
(Justice and
Customs)
A Bill for an Act to amend various
Acts relating to law and justice, and for related purposes
Contents
Criminal Code Act
1995 3
Criminal Code Act
1995 11
Crimes Act
1914 14
Crimes (Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances) Act
1990 14
Criminal Code Act
1995 14
Financial Transaction Reports Act
1988 17
International Transfer of Prisoners Act
1997 18
A Bill for an Act to amend various Acts relating to law
and justice, and for related purposes
The Parliament of Australia enacts:
This Act may be cited as the Crimes Legislation Amendment (People
Smuggling, Firearms Trafficking and Other Measures) Act 2002.
(1) Each provision of this Act specified in column 1 of the table
commences, or is taken to have commenced, on the day or at the time specified in
column 2 of the table.
|
Commencement information |
||
|---|---|---|
|
Column 1 |
Column 2 |
Column 3 |
|
Provision(s) |
Commencement |
Date/Details |
|
1. Sections 1 to 4 and anything in this Act not elsewhere covered by
this table |
The day on which this Act receives the Royal Assent |
|
|
2. Schedules 1 and 2 |
The 28th day after the day on which this Act receives the Royal
Assent |
|
|
3. Schedule 3, items 1 to 22 |
The 28th day after the day on which this Act receives the Royal
Assent |
|
|
4. Schedule 3, item 23 |
At the same time as sections 3 to 338 of the Proceeds of Crime Act
2002 commence |
|
|
5. Schedule 3, items 24 to 26 |
The 28th day after the day on which this Act receives the Royal
Assent |
|
Note: This table relates only to the provisions of this Act
as originally passed by the Parliament and assented to. It will not be expanded
to deal with provisions inserted in this Act after assent.
(2) Column 3 of the table is for additional information that is not part
of this Act. This information may be included in any published version of this
Act.
Each Act that is specified in a Schedule to this Act is amended or
repealed as set out in the applicable items in the Schedule concerned, and any
other item in a Schedule to this Act has effect according to its
terms.
The amendments made by items 1, 2 and 3 of Schedule 3 apply to
any sentence imposed after the commencement of those items, whether or not the
offence concerned was committed before that commencement.
1 The Schedule (at the end of Chapter 4 of
the Criminal Code)
Add:
(1) A person (the first person) is guilty of an offence
if:
(a) the first person organises or facilitates the entry of another person
(the other person) into a foreign country (whether or not via
Australia); and
(b) the entry of the other person into the foreign country does not comply
with the requirements under that country’s law for entry into the country;
and
(c) the other person is not a citizen or permanent resident of the foreign
country; and
(d) the first person organises or facilitates the entry:
(i) having obtained (whether directly or indirectly) a benefit to do so;
or
(ii) with the intention of obtaining (whether directly or indirectly) a
benefit.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 10 years or 1,000 penalty units, or
both.
(2) Absolute liability applies to the paragraph (1)(c) element of the
offence.
(3) For the purposes of this Code, an offence against subsection (1)
is to be known as the offence of people smuggling.
(1) A person (the first person) is guilty of an offence if
the first person commits the offence of people smuggling in relation to another
person (the victim) and any of the following applies:
(a) the first person commits the offence intending that the victim will be
exploited after entry into the foreign country (whether by the first person or
another);
(b) in committing the offence, the first person subjects the victim to
cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment;
(c) in committing the offence, the first person’s conduct:
(i) gives rise to a danger of death or serious harm to the victim;
and
(ii) the first person is reckless as to the danger of death or serious
harm to the victim that arises from the conduct.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 20 years or 2,000 penalty units, or
both.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1), and without limitation, the
victim will be exploited by a person (the exploiter)
if either of the following applies:
(a) the exploiter’s conduct causes the victim to enter into slavery,
forced labour or sexual servitude;
(b) the exploiter’s conduct causes an organ of the victim to be
removed and:
(i) neither the victim nor the victim’s legal guardian consented to
the removal of the organ; and
(ii) the organ was not removed to meet a medical or therapeutic need of
the victim.
(3) In this section:
forced labour means the condition of a person who provides
labour or services (other than sexual services) and who, because of the use of
force or threats:
(a) is not free to cease providing labour or services; or
(b) is not free to leave the place or area where the person provides
labour or services.
sexual servitude has the same meaning as in
Division 270.
slavery has the same meaning as in
Division 270.
threat means:
(a) a threat of force; or
(b) a threat to cause a person’s deportation; or
(c) a threat of any other detrimental action unless there are reasonable
grounds for the threat of that action in connection with the provision of labour
or services by a person.
(1) A person (the first person) is guilty of an offence
if:
(a) the first person organises or facilitates the entry of a group of at
least 5 persons (the other persons) into a foreign country
(whether or not via Australia); and
(b) the entry of at least 5 of the other persons into the foreign country
does not comply with the requirements under that country’s law for entry
into that country; and
(c) at least 5 of the other persons whose entry into the foreign country
is covered by paragraph (b) are not citizens or permanent residents of the
foreign country; and
(d) the first person organises or facilitates the entry:
(i) having obtained (whether directly or indirectly) a benefit to do so;
or
(ii) with the intention of obtaining (whether directly or indirectly) a
benefit.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 20 years or 2,000 penalty units, or
both.
(2) Absolute liability applies to the paragraph (1)(c) element of the
offence.
(3) If, on a trial for an offence against subsection (1), the trier
of fact is not satisfied that the defendant is guilty of that offence, but is
satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that the defendant is guilty of an offence
against subsection 73.1(1), the trier of fact may find the defendant not guilty
of an offence against subsection (1) but guilty of an offence against
subsection 73.1(1), so long as the defendant has been accorded procedural
fairness in relation to that finding of guilt.
A person commits an offence against this Subdivision only if:
(a) both:
(i) the person is an Australian citizen or a resident of Australia;
and
(ii) the conduct constituting the alleged offence occurs wholly outside
Australia; or
(b) both:
(i) the conduct constituting the alleged offence occurs wholly or partly
in Australia; and
(ii) a result of the conduct occurs, or is intended by the person to
occur, outside Australia.
(1) Proceedings for an offence against this Subdivision must not be
commenced without the Attorney-General’s written consent.
(2) However, a person may be arrested, charged, remanded in custody or
released on bail in connection with an offence against this Subdivision before
the necessary consent has been given.
(1) For the purposes of this Subdivision, a document is a travel or
identity document if it is:
(a) a travel document; or
(b) an identity document.
(2) In subsection (1):
identity document includes any kind of document that may be
used to establish the identity of a person in a country under the law or
procedures of that country.
travel document includes any kind of document required, under
the law of a country, to enter or leave that country.
(1) For the purposes of this Subdivision, a travel or identity document is
a false travel or identity document if, and only if:
(a) the document, or any part of the document:
(i) purports to have been made in the form in which it is made by a person
who did not make it in that form; or
(ii) purports to have been made in the form in which it is made on the
authority of a person who did not authorise its making in that form;
or
(b) the document, or any part of the document:
(i) purports to have been made in the terms in which it is made by
a person who did not make it in those terms; or
(ii) purports to have been made in the terms in which it is made on the
authority of a person who did not authorise its making in those terms;
or
(c) the document, or any part of the document:
(i) purports to have been altered in any respect by a person who did not
alter it in that respect; or
(ii) purports to have been altered in any respect on the authority of a
person who did not authorise its alteration in that respect; or
(d) the document, or any part of the document:
(i) purports to have been made or altered by a person who did not exist;
or
(ii) purports to have been made or altered on the authority of a person
who did not exist; or
(e) the document, or any part of the document, purports to have been made
or altered on a date on which, at a time at which, at a place at which, or
otherwise in circumstances in which, it was not made or altered.
(2) For the purposes of this Subdivision, a person is taken to make
a false travel or identity document if the person alters a document so
as to make it a false travel or identity document (whether or not it was already
a false travel or identity document before the alteration).
(3) This section has effect as if a document that purports to be a true
copy of another document were the original document.
A person (the first person) is guilty of an offence
if:
(a) the first person makes, provides or possesses a false travel or
identity document; and
(b) the first person intends that the document will be used to facilitate
the entry of another person (the other person) into a foreign
country, where the entry of the other person into the foreign country would not
comply with the requirements under that country’s law for entry into the
country; and
(c) the first person made, provided or possessed the document:
(i) having obtained (whether directly or indirectly) a benefit to do so;
or
(ii) with the intention of obtaining (whether directly or indirectly) a
benefit.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 10 years or 1,000 penalty units, or
both.
(1) A person (the first person) is guilty of an offence
if:
(a) the first person provides or possesses a travel or identity document;
and
(b) the first person knows that:
(i) the issue of the travel or identity document; or
(ii) an alteration of the travel or identity document;
has been obtained dishonestly or by threats; and
(c) the first person intends that the document will be used to facilitate
the entry of another person (the other person) into a foreign
country, where the entry of the other person into the foreign country would not
comply with the requirements under that country’s law for entry into the
country; and
(d) the first person provided or possessed the document:
(i) having obtained (whether directly or indirectly) a benefit to do so;
or
(ii) with the intention of obtaining (whether directly or indirectly) a
benefit.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 10 years or 1,000 penalty units, or
both.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1), a threat may
be:
(a) express or implied; or
(b) conditional or unconditional.
(3) For the purposes of subsection (1), dishonest
means:
(a) dishonest according to the standards of ordinary people; and
(b) known by the defendant to be dishonest according to the standards of
ordinary people.
(4) In a prosecution for an offence against this section, the
determination of dishonesty is a matter for the trier of fact.
A person (the first person) is guilty of an offence
if:
(a) the first person provides or possesses a travel or identity document;
and
(b) the first person intends that the document will be used to facilitate
the entry of another person (the other person) into a foreign
country, where the entry of the other person into the foreign country would not
comply with the requirements under that country’s law for entry into the
country; and
(c) the first person knows that the other person is not the person to whom
the document applies; and
(d) the first person provided or possessed the document:
(i) having obtained (whether directly or indirectly) a benefit to do so;
or
(ii) with the intention of obtaining (whether directly or indirectly) a
benefit.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 10 years or 1,000 penalty units, or
both.
A person (the first person) is guilty of an offence
if:
(a) the first person takes possession of, or destroys, a travel or
identity document that applies to another person (the other
person); and
(b) the first person does so intending to conceal the other person’s
identity or nationality; and
(c) at the time of doing so, the first person intends to organise or
facilitate the entry of the other person into a foreign country:
(i) having obtained, or with the intention of obtaining, whether directly
or indirectly, a benefit to organise or facilitate that entry; and
(ii) where the entry of the other person into the foreign country would
not comply with the requirements under that country’s law for entry into
the country.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 10 years or 1,000 penalty units, or
both.
Section 15.2 (extended geographical jurisdiction—category B)
applies to an offence against this Subdivision.
1 The Schedule (after Chapter 8 of the
Criminal Code)
Insert:
(1) For the purposes of this Division, and without limitation, a person
disposes of a firearm if any of the following applies:
(a) the person sells the firearm (whether or not the person to whom the
firearm is sold also acquires physical control of the firearm);
(b) the person hires, leases or rents the firearm to another
person;
(c) the person passes physical control of the firearm to another person
(whether or not the person to whom physical control is passed also acquires
ownership of the firearm).
(2) For the purposes of this Division, and without limitation, a person
acquires a firearm if any of the following applies:
(a) the person purchases the firearm (whether or not the person also
acquires physical control of the firearm);
(b) the person hires, leases or rents the firearm from another
person;
(c) the person obtains physical control of the firearm (whether or not the
person also acquires ownership of the firearm).
(1) A person is guilty of an offence if:
(a) in the course of trade or commerce among the States, between
Territories or between a Territory and a State, the person engages in conduct
that constitutes an offence against a firearm law; and
(b) the primary element of the offence is:
(i) the disposal of a firearm by the person; or
(ii) the acquisition of a firearm by the person.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 10 years or a fine of 2,500 penalty units, or
both.
(2) Absolute liability applies to the paragraph (1)(a) element of the
offence.
(3) In this section:
firearm means a firearm within the meaning of the firearm law
concerned.
firearm law means a law of a State or Territory which is
prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this Division.
(1) A person is guilty of an offence if:
(a) in the course of trade or commerce among the States, between
Territories or between a Territory and a State, the person takes or sends a
firearm from one State or Territory to another State or Territory; and
(b) the person does so intending that the firearm will be disposed of in
the other State or Territory (whether by the person or another); and
(c) the person knows that, or is reckless as to whether:
(i) the disposal of the firearm; or
(ii) any acquisition of the firearm that results from the
disposal;
would happen in circumstances that would constitute an offence against
the firearm law of that other State or Territory.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 10 years or a fine of 2,500 penalty units, or
both.
(2) In this section:
firearm means a firearm within the meaning of the firearm law
mentioned in paragraph (1)(c).
firearm law means a law of a State or Territory which is
prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this Division.
This Division is not intended to exclude or limit the concurrent
operation of any law of a State or Territory.
1 Section 16G
Repeal the section.
2 Section 19AG
Repeal the section.
3 Subsection 19AR(6)
Omit “19AG,”.
Crimes (Traffic in Narcotic
Drugs and Psychotropic Substances) Act 1990
4 Part 1 of Schedule 3 (after table
item dealing with Fenetylline)
Insert:
|
Gamma-hydroxybutyric acid |
2.00 |
1.00 |
5 The Schedule (paragraph 131.7(1)(b) of the
Criminal Code)
Omit “or its proceeds”, substitute “, its proceeds or
value”.
6 The Schedule (subsection 135.2(1) of the
Criminal Code)
Repeal the subsection, substitute:
(1) A person is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the person obtains a financial advantage for himself or herself from
another person, knowing or believing that he or she is not eligible to receive
that financial advantage; and
(b) the other person is a Commonwealth entity.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 12 months.
(1A) Absolute liability applies to the paragraph (1)(b) element of
the offence.
7 The Schedule (subsection 135.2(2) of the
Criminal Code)
Repeal the subsection, substitute:
(2) A person is guilty of an offence if:
(a) the person obtains a financial advantage for another person from a
third person, knowing or believing that the other person is not eligible to
receive that financial advantage; and
(b) the third person is a Commonwealth entity.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 12 months.
(2A) Absolute liability applies to the paragraph (2)(b) element of
the offence.
8 The Schedule (after subsection 136.1(1) of the
Criminal Code)
Insert:
(1A) Absolute liability applies to each of the
subparagraph (1)(d)(i), (ii) and (iii) elements of the offence.
9 The Schedule (after subsection 136.1(4) of the
Criminal Code)
Insert:
(4A) Absolute liability applies to each of the
subparagraph (4)(d)(i), (ii) and (iii) elements of the offence.
10 The Schedule (after subsection 137.1(1) of
the Criminal Code)
Insert:
(1A) Absolute liability applies to each of the
subparagraph (1)(c)(i), (ii) and (iii) elements of the offence.
11 The Schedule (subparagraph 145.2(3)(a)(i) of
the Criminal Code)
Before “cause”, insert “dishonestly”.
12 The Schedule (after subsection 147.1(1A) of
the Criminal Code)
Insert:
(1B) If:
(a) a person is charged with an offence against subsection (1);
and
(b) the public official concerned is a Commonwealth judicial officer or a
Commonwealth law enforcement officer;
a court of summary jurisdiction may, with the consent of the defendant and
the prosecutor and if the court is satisfied that it is proper to do so,
determine the charge summarily.
(1C) If a court of summary jurisdiction convicts a person of an offence
against subsection (1) in accordance with subsection (1B), the penalty
that the court may impose is a sentence of imprisonment not exceeding 2 years or
a fine not exceeding 120 penalty units, or both.
13 The Schedule (paragraphs 148.1(2)(a) and (b)
of the Criminal Code)
Repeal the paragraphs, substitute:
(a) the person falsely represents himself or herself to be a Commonwealth
public official in a particular capacity; and
(b) the person does so in the course of doing an act, or attending a
place, in the assumed capacity of such an official.
14 The Schedule (subsection 148.1(2A) of the
Criminal Code)
Repeal the subsection, substitute:
(2A) For the purposes of subsection (2), it is immaterial whether
that capacity as a Commonwealth public official exists or is
fictitious.
15 The Schedule (subparagraph 148.1(3)(a)(ii) of
the Criminal Code)
Repeal the subparagraph, substitute:
(ii) falsely represents himself or herself to be a Commonwealth public
official in a particular capacity; and
16 The Schedule (subsection 148.1(3A) of the
Criminal Code)
Repeal the subsection, substitute:
(3A) For the purposes of subparagraph (3)(a)(ii), it is immaterial
whether that capacity as a Commonwealth public official exists or is
fictitious.
17 The Schedule (paragraphs 148.2(2)(a) and (b)
of the Criminal Code)
Repeal the paragraphs, substitute:
(a) the official falsely represents himself or herself to be a
Commonwealth public official in a particular capacity; and
(b) the official does so in the course of doing an act, or attending a
place, in the assumed capacity of such an official.
18 The Schedule (subsection 148.2(2A) of the
Criminal Code)
Repeal the subsection, substitute:
(2A) For the purposes of subsection (2), it is immaterial whether
that capacity as a Commonwealth public official exists or is
fictitious.
19 The Schedule (subparagraph 148.2(3)(a)(ii) of
the Criminal Code)
Repeal the subparagraph, substitute:
(ii) falsely represents himself or herself to be a Commonwealth public
official in a particular capacity; and
20 The Schedule (subsection 148.2(3A) of the
Criminal Code)
Repeal the subsection, substitute:
(3A) For the purposes of subparagraph (3)(a)(ii), it is immaterial
whether that capacity as a Commonwealth public official exists or is
fictitious.
Financial Transaction
Reports Act 1988
21 Subsection 3(1) (subparagraph (k)(ib) of
the definition of cash dealer)
After “commercial instruments”, insert “, or making
electronic funds transfers,”.
22 Subsection 3(1) (after paragraph (k) of
the definition of cash dealer)
Insert:
(l) a person (other than a financial institution or a real estate agent
acting in the ordinary course of real estate business) who carries on a business
in Australia of:
(i) on behalf of other persons, arranging for funds to be made available
outside Australia to those persons or others; or
(ii) on behalf of persons outside Australia, making funds available, or
arranging for funds to be made available, in Australia to those persons or
others;
23 Section 17
Omit “sections 81 and 82 of the Proceeds of Crime Act
1987”, substitute “Division 400 of the Criminal
Code”.
International Transfer of
Prisoners Act 1997
24 Subsection 4(1)
Insert:
Immigration Minister means the Minister administering the
Migration Act 1958.
25 At the end of
section 13
Add:
(2) If a request is made for the transfer of a prisoner (other than a
Tribunal prisoner) to Australia, the Attorney-General must consult with the
Immigration Minister about whether the prisoner:
(a) is eligible under subsection (1) for a transfer to Australia;
or
(b) is likely to be eligible under subsection (1) for a transfer to
Australia at a future time specified by the Attorney-General for the purposes of
the consultation.
26 Section 57
Repeal the section, substitute:
If the Attorney-General proposes to consent to the transfer to Australia
of a Tribunal prisoner, the Attorney-General must first obtain the consent of
the Immigration Minister.