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EXTRADITION ACT 1988 - SECT 14
Search and seizure warrants
- (1)
- Where a magistrate is informed by affidavit that there are reasonable
grounds for suspecting that there may be in any place any thing:
- (a)
- that
may be material as evidence in proving any offence in relation to which a
provisional arrest warrant was issued or for which surrender of a person is
sought by an extradition country; or
- (b)
- that has been acquired by a person
as a result of such an offence;
and the affidavit sets out those grounds,
the magistrate may issue a warrant, in the statutory form, authorising a
police officer named in the warrant, with such assistance, and by such force,
as is necessary and reasonable:
- (c)
- to seize the thing;
- (d)
- to enter upon
or into the place and to seize the thing; or
- (e)
- to enter upon or into the
place, to search the place for any such thing and to seize any such thing
found in the place.
- (2)
- The magistrate shall not issue the warrant unless:
- (a)
- there has been given to the magistrate by affidavit such further
information (if any) as the magistrate requires concerning the grounds on
which the issue of the warrant is being sought; and
- (b)
- the magistrate is
satisfied that there are reasonable grounds for issuing the warrant.
- (3)
- The warrant shall state:
- (a)
- the purpose for which it is issued, including
a reference to the nature of any offence referred to in paragraph (1)(a);
- (b)
- whether entry is authorised to be made at any time of the day or night or
during specified hours of the day or night;
- (c)
- the kind of things authorised
to be seized; and
- (d)
- that it ceases to have effect on a specified day, not
being later than 1 month after the day of issue of the warrant.
- (4)
- If, in
the course of searching in accordance with the warrant for a thing that may be
material as evidence in proving an offence or that has been acquired as a
result of an offence, being a thing of a kind stated in the warrant:
- (a)
- a
police officer finds any thing that the police officer believes on reasonable
grounds to be connected with the offence, although not of a kind stated in the
warrant; and
- (b)
- the police officer believes on reasonable grounds that it is
necessary to seize that thing in order to prevent its concealment, loss or
destruction;
the warrant is deemed to authorise the police officer to seize
the thing.
- (5)
- Where a police officer seizes a thing in accordance with this
section, the police officer may retain the thing pending any direction from
the Attorney-General as to the manner in which it is to be dealt with.
- (6)
- In
this section:
"place" includes any public place, area of water, premises, vessel, aircraft
or vehicle in any part of Australia.
"thing" includes a vessel, aircraft or vehicle.
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