Commonwealth of Australia Explanatory Memoranda[Index] [Search] [Download] [Bill] [Help]
2004-2005-2006
THE PARLIAMENT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
CRIMES AMENDMENT
(BAIL AND SENTENCING) BILL 2006
REVISED EXPLANATORY MEMORANDUM
THIS MEMORANDUM TAKES ACCOUNT OF AMENDMENTS MADE BY THE
SENATE TO THE BILL AS INTRODUCED
(Circulated by authority of the Attorney-General,
the Honourable Philip Ruddock MP)
GENERAL OUTLINE
The purpose of the Bill is to amend the sentencing and bail provisions in the Crimes
Act 1914 in accordance with the decisions made by the Council of Australian
Governments on 14 July 2006 following the Intergovernmental Summit on Violence
and Child Abuse in Indigenous Communities on 26 June 2006.
The principal features of the proposed amendments in this Bill are:
· to require a court to consider the potential impact on victims and witnesses,
and specifically the potential impact on victims and witnesses in remote
communities, when granting and imposing bail conditions for Commonwealth
offences,
· to delete the reference to `cultural background' in section 16A of the Crimes
Act for all Commonwealth offences,
· to ensure that no customary law or cultural practice excuses, justifies,
authorises, requires, or lessens the seriousness of any criminal behaviour with
which the Crimes Act is concerned, and
· to give consideration to customary law and cultural practice, specifically, if a
court can not reduce a penalty by having regard to customary law and cultural
practice, then it also should not be able to increase the penalty.
The recommendations of the Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody
were considered during the formulation of this Bill. This Bill's objective is to ensure
that proper sentences are given to offenders. The Australian Government is
particularly concerned about the high levels of family violence and child abuse in
Indigenous communities. The Government wants to ensure that the law covering
such crimes reflects their seriousness.
FINANCIAL IMPACT
There is no financial impact from the provisions in this Bill.
NOTES ON CLAUSES
Clause 1: Short title
This clause sets out the short title by which this Act may be cited Crimes
Amendment (Bail and Sentencing) Act 2006.
Clause 2: Commencement
This clause provides that this Act commences on the day after it receives the Royal
Assent.
Clause 3: Schedule(s)
This clause provides that the amendments to the Crimes Act 1914 made by this Act
are set out in a Schedule.
SCHEDULE 1 - AMENDMENT OF THE CRIMES ACT 1914
Item 1 Subsection 3(1)
Item 1 inserts a definition of "bail authority" into subsection 3(1) of the Crimes Act.
Section 3 of the Crimes Act is that Act's interpretation section.
The inserted definition states that "bail authority" means "a court or person authorised
to grant bail under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory". This
definition is the same as the definition which is currently in the Crimes Act at
subsection 15AA(5). The definition is being moved to the general interpretation
section because it will not only be used in section 15AA.
Item 2 Subsection 15AA(5) (definition of bail authority)
Item 2 repeals the existing definition of term bail authority from subsection 15AA(5).
Item 1 inserts this definition into subsection 3(1) of the Crimes Act.
Item 3 After section 15AA
Item 3 inserts new section 15AB which requires a bail authority, when considering
granting bail and/or imposing bail conditions on alleged offenders in relation to
federal offences, to consider the potential impact of the bail authority's actions on
victims and potential witnesses. This amendment gives primacy in the bail process to
the protection of victims and potential witnesses and will ensure that a bail authority
takes the interests of such persons into account in cases that fall within the scope of
the new section 15AB of the Crimes Act.
New section 15AB also requires that where victims and potential witnesses are living
in, or located in, a remote community, the bail authority must take this into account
when considering granting bail. This is because remote communities are typically
small and isolated, and victims and potential witnesses in such communities face
higher risks than others when alleged offenders are released into their communities on
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bail. This amendment will ensure that bail authorities give appropriate weight to the
special circumstances of victims and potential witnesses in remote communities.
"Remote community" is not a defined term. It will be a matter for the bail authority
to determine on the facts of the case whether an alleged victim or potential witness is
located in a remote community.
Item 3 will also prohibit a bail authority from taking into account any form of
customary law or cultural practice when considering whether to grant bail to an
alleged offender. This amendment helps establish the principle that neither customary
law nor cultural practice can be used to mitigate, or aggravate, the seriousness of the
alleged offender's criminal behaviour - and on that basis influence the decision to
grant bail to an alleged offender.
Item 4 Paragraph 16A(2)(m)
Item 4 omits the term "cultural background" from paragraph 16A(2)(m). The effect
of this amendment is that a court will no longer expressly be required to consider a
person's "cultural background" when passing sentence on that person for committing
a federal offence.
Subject to the amendment to be made by item 5, a court will still be able to take into
consideration the "cultural background" of an offender, in sentencing that offender,
should it wish to do so, but this amendment removes an unnecessary emphasis on the
"cultural background" of convicted offenders.
Item 5 After subsection 16A(2)
This item enacts the Council of Australian Governments' decision, made on
14 July 2006, that no "customary law or cultural practice" can provide a "reason for
excusing, justifying, authorising, requiring or lessening the seriousness of the criminal
behaviour to which the offence relates". This item expressly prohibits a court from
accepting "customary law or cultural practice" as an excuse or justification when
sentencing a person for having committed a federal offence. This item also precludes
a court using "customary law or cultural practice" to "aggravate the seriousness" of
alleged criminal behaviour, and thus this item prevents a court from increasing the
penalty imposed on an offender because of "customary law or cultural practice".
Item 6 Application of amendments
Items 1 to 3 will apply, immediately upon the commencement of this Act, and
therefore will apply in relation to persons who already will have committed offences
but who have not yet been granted bail.
Items 4 and 5, which relate to sentencing, will apply from the day after Royal Assent
is received, though only in relation to offences committed after the commencement of
this Act.
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