Search warrants and the Senate
1.1
When Australian Federal Police (AFP) officers
execute a search warrant where parliamentary privilege may be involved, they
are required to do so in accordance with a national guideline adopted in 2005
as the result of a memorandum of understanding between the then Presiding
Officers and Attorney-General.
1.2
The preamble to the national guideline states
that it:
… is designed to ensure that search warrants are executed
without improperly interfering with the functioning of Parliament and that
Members and their staff are given a proper opportunity to raise claims for
parliamentary privilege or public interest immunity in relation to documents or
other things that may be on the search premises.
1.3
The committee considers that these purposes –
safeguarding against improper interference and ensuring that privilege claims
may be properly raised and determined – should inform the interpretation and
implementation of the guideline. If these purposes are not met in the execution
of warrants, then the protections available under parliamentary privilege are
undermined.
1.4
The guideline has been tested for the first time
in the investigation of a suspected leak from NBN Co, involving the execution
of three search warrants. The background is set out in the committee’s 163rd
report. The committee now reports on two inquiries arising from the matter,
which in turn deal with:
- the disposition of seized material over which
privilege has been claimed; that is, whether the privilege claim should be
upheld (the privilege matter) and
- allegations of possible contempts arising from
the way warrants were executed (the contempt matter).
1.5
Although referred separately, the committee
reports on these matters together, partly because of their common factual
bases, but also because the committee's recommendations on the two matters are
interlinked.
Documents available to the committee
1.6
The main evidence before the committee
comprises:
- Documents tabled by the President, including
correspondence from former Senator the Hon. Stephen Conroy and a background
paper from the Clerk of the Senate about the execution of search warrants
- A submission from former Senator Conroy on each
matter
- A submission from the AFP on the ‘disposition’
matter, but including background relevant to both matters
- A list from the AFP of the documents seized,
though in general terms, argued (in the AFP submission) to be insufficient to
assist in determining their status
- Copies of the three search warrants and the
affidavits sworn by AFP officers seeking the warrants, with redactions
- Correspondence from the AFP and from NBN Co
responding to the contempt allegations.
1.7
The committee is for now reserving its decision
about the publication of these documents, other than those published with its
preliminary report. A number of them contain details of the AFP investigation,
which is ongoing, as well as details of the seized material.
Structure of the report
1.8
Under the guideline, former Senator Conroy made
a claim of parliamentary privilege over the seized material. The committee must
recommend to the Senate whether that claim ought be upheld. Documents held to
be privileged would be withheld from the AFP investigation. These matters are
dealt with in chapter 2.
1.9
Part of the committee’s assessment of the
privilege claim addresses the question whether the impact of the execution of
the search warrants may have amounted to an improper interference with the
Parliament. The facts underlying the contempt matter are relevant to
determining this question. The contempt matter is dealt with in chapter 3.
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