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CONFISCATION OF PROCEEDS OF CRIME ACT 1989 - SECT 25
Assessment of pecuniary penalty
25 Assessment of pecuniary penalty
(1) In this section:
"offence period", in relation to an application under section 13 (1) (b) made
in reliance on the conviction of a person for 2 or more serious offences,
means the period commencing when the earliest of those offences was committed
and ending when the latest of those offences was committed.
(2) For the
purposes of an application for a pecuniary penalty order against a person (in
this section called the
"defendant"), the value of the benefits derived by the defendant because of
having committed a serious offence or serious offences shall be assessed by a
court having regard to information before the court concerning all or any of
the following matters: (a) the money, or the value of the property other than
money, that came into the possession or under the control of: (i) the
defendant, or
(ii) another person at the request or by the direction of the
defendant,
because of the defendant’s having committed the offence or any of
the offences,
(a1) subject to subsection (2A), the value of any benefit that
was provided for the defendant (or for another person at the request or
direction of the defendant) for the depiction of the offence or offences, or
the expression of the defendant’s thoughts, opinions or emotions regarding
the offence or offences, in any public promotion,
(b) the value of any
benefit, other than a benefit of the kind referred to in paragraph (a) or
(a1), that was provided for: (i) the defendant, or
(ii) another person at the
request or by the direction of the defendant,
because of the defendant’s
having committed the offence or any of the offences,
(c) if the offence or
any of the offences consisted of the doing of an act or thing in relation to a
prohibited drug or prohibited plant as respectively defined in the
Drug Misuse and Trafficking Act 1985 : (i) the market value, at the time of
the offence, of similar or substantially similar substances, and
(ii) the
amount that was, or the range of amounts that were, ordinarily paid for the
doing of a similar or substantially similar act or thing,
(d) the value of
the defendant’s property: (i) if the application relates to a single
serious offence-before and after the commission of the offence, or
(ii) if
the application relates to 2 or more serious offences-before, during and after
the offence period,
(e) the defendant’s income and expenditure: (i) if the
application relates to a single offence-before and after the commission of the
offence, or
(ii) if the application relates to 2 or more offences-before,
during and after the offence period.
(2A) In considering whether to treat a
benefit of the kind referred to in subsection (2) (a1) as a benefit derived by
the defendant because of having committed a serious offence or
serious offences, a court may have regard to any matter that it thinks fit,
including: (a) whether or not it is in the public interest to treat it as such
a benefit, and
(b) whether or not the depiction of the offence or offences,
or the expression of the defendant’s thoughts, opinions or emotions
regarding the offence or offences, has any general social or educational
value, and
(c) the nature and purposes of the public promotion for which the
benefit was provided, including its use for research, educational or
rehabilitative purposes.
(2B) If a court is satisfied that part (but not all)
of a public promotion relates to a depiction or an expression of the kind
referred to in subsection (2) (a1), the court may, for the purposes of section
24, treat the value of the benefit derived by the defendant because of having
committed an offence as being such proportion of the total value of any
benefit derived by the defendant for the promotion as seems just and equitable
to the court in the circumstances.
(3) If, at the hearing of an application
for a pecuniary penalty order against a defendant in relation to a
serious offence or serious offences, evidence is given that the value of the
defendant’s property: (a) after the defendant committed the serious offence,
or
(b) during and after the end of the offence period,
exceeded the value of
the defendant’s property before the defendant committed the serious offence
or before the commencement of the offence period then, for the purposes of
section 24, the court shall, subject to subsection (4), treat the value of the
benefits derived by the defendant because of having committed the offence or
offences as being not less than the amount of the excess.
(4) If, after
evidence has been given at the hearing of an application for a
pecuniary penalty order against a defendant in relation to a serious offence
or serious offences that the value of the defendant’s property: (a) after
the defendant committed the serious offence, exceeded the value before the
serious offence was committed, or
(b) after the end of the offence period,
exceeded the value before the commencement of the offence period,
the
defendant satisfies the court that the whole or a part of the excess was due
to causes unrelated to the commission of the offence or offences: (c) if the
defendant so satisfies the court in respect of the whole of the
excess-subsection (3) does not apply to the excess, or
(d) if the defendant
so satisfies the court in respect of a part of the excess-subsection (3)
applies to the excess as if it were reduced by the amount of that part.
(5)
In calculating, for the purposes of an application for a
pecuniary penalty order against a defendant in relation to a serious offence
or serious offences, the value of benefits derived by the defendant because of
having committed the offence or offences, any expenses or outgoings of the
defendant in connection with the commission of the offence or offences shall
not be deducted.
(6) This section applies to and in relation to property that
comes into the possession or under the control of a person either within or
outside New South Wales, and to benefits that are provided for a person either
within or outside New South Wales.
(7) At the hearing of an application for a
pecuniary penalty order against a defendant in relation to a serious offence
or serious offences: (a) a member of the Police Force, or
(b) a member of the
Australian Federal Police, or
(c) a Customs officer,
who is experienced in
the investigation of indictable offences under, or similar to offences under,
the Drug Misuse and Trafficking Act 1985 may testify, to the best of his or
her information, knowledge and belief: (d) with respect to the amount that was
the market value of a prohibited drug or prohibited plant as respectively
defined in that Act at a particular time or during a particular period, or
(e) with respect to the amount, or the range of amounts, ordinarily paid at a
particular time, or during a particular period, for the doing of an act or
thing in relation to such a prohibited drug or prohibited plant,
despite any
rule of law or practice relating to hearsay evidence and the testimony shall,
in the absence of evidence to the contrary, be evidence of the matter
testified to.
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