CHAPTER 2
ATTORNEY-GENERAL'S PORTFOLIO
2.1
This chapter summarises some of the matters raised during the
committee's consideration of the budget estimates for the Attorney-General's Portfolio
for the 2013-14 financial year.
Australian Customs and Border Protection Service
2.2
The Australian Customs and Border Protection Service (Customs) updated
the committee on reform within the agency, as announced by the government in
December 2012.[1]
One of the reforms referred to by the recently appointed Chief Executive
Officer, Mr Michael Pezzullo, in his opening statement was Customs' new drug
and alcohol testing program, which commenced on 13 March 2013.
The committee heard that 551 officers have been tested under the program,
with no breaches of the alcohol-free policy detected and one confirmed positive
result for a cannabis metabolite.[2]
2.3
The Chief Executive Officer indicated that, at the current rate, Customs
expects to 'cycle through' its 5,600 strong workforce every 24-36 months.
However, testing is in a pilot phase (concluding at the end of May or June
2013), after which the results will be reviewed to determine how often
employees need to be tested in order to obtain the desired deterrent and integrity
intelligence effect.[3]
Family Court of Australia
2.4
The committee examined the budgetary outlook for the Family Court of
Australia (Family Court), where Table 3.2.1 of the Portfolio Budget Statements shows
deficits for 2012-13 ($8.4 million), 2013-14 ($8.5 million) and nearly
$9 million in each of the out years. Specifically, the committee asked for
an explanation of the claim that the court will achieve a balanced budget in
the current and upcoming financial years.[4] The Executive Director of
Corporate responded:
Mr Harriott:...[U]nder Operation Sunlight the funding in our
appropriations for depreciation was removed and we get it separately as an
equity injection through our balance sheet. So, in the absence of any other
changes, the first thing that would happen is that you would make a technical
loss in each of those financial years because of the impact of the
depreciation. If you look at the table further down, it talks about the impact
of net cash appropriation arrangements. Essentially, in terms of our
performance, in terms of a true underlying loss or not, you would add back
depreciation. If you look at the 2012-13 figure, which is an $8,424,000 loss,
you would add back on the depreciation expense. If you look under 'Expenses' up
at the top, under 'Depreciation/amortisation', if you add back the $8,424,000
you end up with zero; essentially, you break even. We were representing it as
required, but it is a technical loss...So that is the change that came about
through Operation Sunlight. Essentially, but for the depreciation impact, we
are budgeting to break even over the forward years.[5]
2.5
The Family Court conceded that the financial statements that appear in
the annual report are more comprehensive than the budget documents;[6]
however,
Mr Harriott, advised the committee 'I do not get a sense, over the time I have
been involved, that the notes we have in there now are any less or any more
than we have had in the past'.[7]
Federal Court of Australia
2.6
The committee questioned the Federal Court of Australia (Federal Court)
about the budget provision for the appointment of three additional judges in
Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane. The Federal Court clarified that it had not specifically
requested these appointments and suggested the government had made its
decisions based on numerous expressions of concern made by the Federal Court in
relation to the increasing workload in those cities.[8]
2.7
The committee also asked the Federal Court about a forecasted operating
surplus in the 2012‑13 Budget, given that that there is a predicted
deficit in the forward estimates, including 2012-13. A question was put in
relation to how it is possible to have an operating surplus and a significant
deficit of $3.2 million in the same year. The Chief Finance Officer, Mr Bowen,
provided the committee with an accounting explanation. He advised the committee
that, due to a change in the accounting policies two years ago when
depreciation funding was removed from all of the entities, the Federal Court
will always have a deficit as a result of depreciation that has to be charged
against the Federal Court's financial statements. This deficit is then
rebalanced by an increase in the Federal Court's equity increase from the
department's annual capital budget.[9]
2.8
Mr Bowen acknowledged:
[The information in
the Portfolio Budget Statements] probably should have had a caveat that this is
the figure before taking into account depreciation.[10]
Australian Commission for Law Enforcement Integrity
2.9
The committee questioned the Australian Commission for Law Enforcement
Integrity (ACLEI) about its budget for 2013-14, staffing levels and the
Integrity Commissioner's role in matters involving alleged corruption.
2.10
The Integrity Commissioner advised that there will be an increase of
$0.725 million in ACLEI's 2013-14 budget, but funding for the surveillance
capability enhancement project will cease on 31 December 2013.[11] This pilot project is
currently funded from the proceeds of crime and, in the view of the Integrity
Commissioner, 'has proven its worth, particularly in the context of recent
investigations conducted jointly with the [Australian Federal Police and
Customs]. It has helped the investigation to be efficient and it has produced
strong criminal briefs'.[12]
A review of the project's effectiveness is underway and the committee heard
that it is likely that the project will continue.[13]
2.11
The Integrity Commissioner explained that ACLEI accesses the project's
surveillance capability by arrangement with the Australian Crime Commission
(ACC), which manages the surveillance team. ACLEI has first call on this
capability and utilises it in cases where physical surveillance is required in
an investigation.[14]
If funding for the project were discontinued, the committee heard that ACLEI
would not be able to access surveillance capability for its investigations.[15]
Australian Crime Commission
2.12
The committee asked the Australian Crime Commission (ACC) about the
impact of its reduced budget, from $104.867 million in 2012-13 to $101.787 million
in 2013-14, on work projects and staffing levels. The Chief Executive Officer,
Mr John Lawler AM APM, advised that the ACC's response has been to reduce its
supply costs in order to maintain staff, and to develop efficiencies to manage
the budget.[16]
2.13
The committee also questioned officers about the Illicit drug data
report 2011-12, which was released on 7 February 2013. The Chief Executive
Officer confirmed that there have been a record number of seizures (at 23
tonnes), but stated that it is difficult to attribute supply to increased
street quantity.[17]
Based on figures provided by the World Bank and the United Nations Office on
Drugs and Crime, the Chief Executive Officer estimated the conservative worth
of the illicit drug market in Australia at about $6 billion (or two per cent of
Australia's $1.3 trillion gross domestic product).[18]
Australian Federal Police
2.14
The committee questioned the Australian Federal Police (AFP) about its
use of section 313 of the Telecommunications Act 1997 (Telecommunications
Act). The AFP acknowledged that the provision was previously used to block
malicious software emanating from a particular server. However, section 313 of
the Telecommunications Act is now used for a broader purpose:
Mr Phelan: Section 313 is not limited to blocking websites. It
is a requirement that content service providers, ISPs or telecommunications
carriers do everything in their power to assist law enforcement and stop
offence[s] against the criminal law. It is not only about blocking websites. The
Australian Federal Police do use that section for other requirements that we do
have that are not related at all to blocking websites—that, as a matter of fact
have nothing to do with websites. They are about carriers assisting the AFP in
lawful duties under warrant et cetera.[19]
2.15
The committee heard that the AFP revised its approach upon discovering
that it is much more useful, and far more valuable, to work with the host
companies offshore and block material at its source, rather than attempt to
manage the problem from within Australia.[20]
2.16
In a similar vein, the committee pursued a line of questioning in
relation to the AFP's access of non-content data under sections 178-180 of the Telecommunications
(Interception and Access) Act 1979. The AFP Commissioner confirmed that, in
the last two financial years, over 93,000 requests were made for such access:
50,841 in 2010-11 and 43,362 in 2011-12.[21]
The committee heard that these requests did not include access to content on
overseas servers for which mutual assistance requests are normally required.[22]
2.17
The committee also questioned AFP officers extensively on Interpol red
notices and their application in relation to the assessment of particular
individuals, including an IMA individual currently in detention who has been
convicted of serious crimes 'in absentia' by a military tribunal in Egypt.[23]
2.18
The committee was informed that all law enforcement agencies have access
to Interpol information which is normally facilitated through the AFP. Mr
Colvin emphasised that a red notice is not an arrest warrant and has no legal
basis in Australia:
[It] is a flag so
[the AFP] can go back to the country that has asked Interpol to create this red
notice if [the AFP] need[s] to establish certain things which include [the
requesting country's] preparedness to seek extradition and [that country's]
ability to meet the Australian [extradition] threshold... [The extradition
process] is a process that is managed by the Attorney-General's Department.[24]
Attorney-General's Department
Emergency Management Australia
2.19
The committee questioned the Attorney-General's Department (AGD) on the work
undertaken in relation to the $12 million committed to the National Risk
Information Project, which arose from the Natural Disaster Insurance Review. The
committee sought information about the ongoing mapping of flood-prone areas and
how much information would be collected and made accessible.[25]
2.20
The Secretary, Mr Roger Wilkins AO, advised that although there is
reasonable knowledge of past and current flood-prone areas, the issue in
relation to the project's difficulty, is more related to 'the quality of the
data than the extent of the data', and the use of different methodologies in
different areas.[26]
The department's contribution to the project is to develop common guidelines
for a framework that will ensure 'existing data [is made] more easily available
and accessible through a single web portal' and 'work with jurisdictions to
improve standards'.[27]
2.21
In relation to a question about how much of the $12 million funding has
already been spent, a departmental officer advised that Geoscience Australia,
the agency building the portal, manages all of the funding allocated to the
project.[28]
National Plan to Reduce Violence Against
Women and their Children
2.22
The committee requested an update on how the National Plan to Reduce Violence
Against Women and their Children has progressed via the Standing Council on Law
and Justice since the last estimates hearings.
2.23
The committee heard that of the 186 recommendations in the Australian
Law Reform Commission's Family violence–a national legal response
report, the department is 'halfway through' those components where it has
responsibility to contribute to a national response, via the Standing Council
on Law and Justice, and where the department is responsible for a
Commonwealth-specific response.[29]
The 24 recommendations that the Commonwealth and the states and territories
have jointly responded to are publicly available on the Standing Council on Law
and Justice's website.[30]
2.24
The recommendations that have already been progressed by the
Commonwealth, and are publicly available, include: changes to the
Family Law Act 1975 in relation to family violence and definitions
of family violence; a greater focus on training packages around family
violence, which resulted in the release of the AVERT Family Violence training
package to assist professionals to better understand the subject matter; and preparation
of the DOORS (Detection Of Overall Risk Screen) package, which assists lawyers
in their interactions with clients to identify issues of family violence.[31]
Federal judicial appointments
2.25
The committee pursued an extensive line of questioning in relation to
the advertisement and appointment of three new Federal Court judges in
Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane. The AGD explained that an existing process to
fill vacancies in Melbourne and Sydney was used to shortlist applicants for the
new positions in those cities,[32] with the Brisbane
appointment advertised on 10 May 2013.[33] The AGD
informed the committee that the Attorney-General's office had requested that
expressions of interest be advertised on 10 May 2013. The positions
were advertised prior to the announcement of the vacancies in the Budget on 14
May 2013, because 'the Treasurer had in a sense given his permission for a
measure that was to be announced in the budget to be announced effectively
before the budget'.[34]
Other matters of interest
2.26
The committee questioned the department and its agencies about a range
of other matters, including:
- the arrival of 66 Sri Lankan asylum seekers at Geraldton, Western
Australia on 9 April 2013;[35]
- the amount, and application, of revenue to be collected by
federal courts in 2013-14;[36]
- the current status of the Open Government Partnership Agreement;[37]
- an update on the ratification of the Optional Protocol to the
Convention against Torture;[38]
-
funding arrangements in relation to support provided by the AFP
to the Department of Immigration and Citizenship;[39] and
- the Australian Security and Intelligence Organisation's new
security assessment process for Irregular Maritime Arrivals.[40]
Answers to questions on notice
2.27
The committee commented on the late provision of the CrimTrac Agency's
(CrimTrac) answers to questions on notice for Additional Estimates 2012-13. The
committee had set 2 April 2013 as the return date for answers but did
not receive CrimTrac's responses until approximately three hours prior to their
appearance before the committee.[41]
2.28
The committee reiterated its view that it is not acceptable for
responses to be provided weeks after the due date. The late provision of
answers does not allow committee members sufficient time to consider them
before the hearings, and impedes the role of the committee in examining
proposed expenditure by Commonwealth departments and agencies.
Senator Trish Crossin
Chair
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