Chapter 1 Introduction
Referral and conduct of the inquiry
1.1
On Wednesday 6 July 2011 the Hon Brendan O’Connor MP, Minister for Home
Affairs and Justice, introduced the Extradition and Mutual Assistance in
Criminal Matters Legislation Amendment Bill 2011 (the Bill) into the House of
Representatives.[1] On Thursday 7 July 2011,
the Selection Committee referred the Bill to the House Standing Committee on
Social Policy and Legal Affairs for inquiry.[2]
1.2
The Committee advertised the inquiry on the Committee’s website and
issued a media release on 8 July 2011 inviting submissions. The Committee also
wrote to 25 individuals and organisations inviting submissions. Details of the
inquiry, the Bill, the explanatory memorandum and associated documents were
also placed on the Committee’s website.
1.3
The Committee received six submissions on the Bill. A list of the
submissions is at Appendix A. Copies of the submissions have been placed on the
Committee’s website.
1.4
A public hearing was held in Canberra on Monday, 15 August 2011. A list
of witnesses who appeared before the Committee at the hearing is at Appendix B.
Copies of the Hansard transcript for the hearing are available online.
Consultation and development of the Bill
1.5
The Bill has evolved out of a comprehensive review of Australia’s
international crime cooperation laws. As part of the review, in 2006 the
Government released discussion papers for public consultation that proposed
fundamental reforms to Australia’s extradition and mutual assistance law and
procedures. The concept for the Bill emerged out of this process. Exposure
drafts of the Bill were released for public consultation in 2009 and in January
2011.
1.6
Approximately 26 submissions were received during the 2009 public
consultation process and a number of amendments were subsequently made to the Bill
to address concerns raised. This included removing provisions relating to the
consolidation and deferral of judicial review in extradition cases and
inserting new safeguards such as extending grounds for denying extradition to
include cases where a person may be discriminated against on the basis of their
sex or sexual orientation.
1.7
In the January 2011 public consultation on the Bill, the Government
received around 30 submissions and a number of minor amendments were made to
address concerns raised in consultation. For instance, the Privacy Commissioner
raised a number of concerns relating to the disclosure of ‘personal information’
for foreign law enforcement purposes. Amendments were made to the Bill to
address these concerns by requiring the foreign country to provide certain undertakings
in relation to the use, storage, and destruction of personal information
obtained from a mutual assistance request.
1.8
The Committee is satisfied that the Bill has been through a rigorous
process of public consultation. Interested parties have had successive
opportunities to make submissions to the Government on the Bill. Where it is
appropriate to do so, the Committee has taken account of submissions made to
the Government on exposure drafts of the Bill.
Outline of the Bill
1.9
The Extradition and Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters Legislation
Amendment Bill 2011 (the Bill) will make a number of amendments to legislation
regulating Australia’s extradition and mutual assistance processes. The Bill is
comprised of four Schedules which make amendments to the Extradition Act
1988 (Cth) (the Extradition Act), the Mutual Assistance in Criminal
Matters Act 1987 (Cth) (the Mutual Assistance Act), and various associated
Acts including the Crimes Act 1914, the Migration Act 1958, the Proceeds
of Crime Act 2002, the Surveillance Devices Act 2004 and the Telecommunications
(Interception and Access) Act 1979.
1.10
Extradition is the legal process by which one country surrenders a
person to another country for the purposes of investigation, prosecution or to
serve a sentence.
1.11
Mutual assistance is the formal Government to Government process by
which countries assist each other in the investigation and prosecution of
criminal offences. This can also include assistance in locating and recovering
the proceeds of crime. Mutual assistance is separate from police-to-police and
agency-to-agency assistance and other forms of informal assistance. Extradition
and mutual assistance, as formal Government to Government processes, are
complemented by less formal relationships between Australian law enforcement
agencies and their international counterparts. The reforms in this Bill are
focused on Government to Government assistance and, with some minor exceptions;
do not affect forms of agency to agency assistance.
1.12
The Bill aims to ‘streamline’ extradition and mutual assistance
processes, strengthen some safeguards, and clarify or modify some items to
reflect emergent concerns such as cybercrime.
1.13
The following briefly outlines the amendments proposed in the Bill. A
more detailed examination of the amendments to extradition and mutual
assistance is undertaken in chapters 2 and 3 of this report.
Schedule 1
1.14
Schedule 1 of the Bill makes general amendments relating to both
extradition and mutual assistance. The purpose of the amendments in Schedule 1 is
to enable Federal Magistrates to perform functions under the Extradition Act
and Mutual Assistance Act that are currently confined to State and Territory
Magistrates.
1.15
Proposed legislative amendments will also clarify privacy and
information disclosure provisions relating to extradition and mutual assistance
processes. The measures will clarify the application of the Privacy Act 1988
(Cth) to extradition and mutual assistance processes.
Schedule 2
1.16
Schedule 2 of the Bill contains amendments relating to extradition. The
Bill will make legislative amendments to the Extradition Act to:
- ‘streamline’ the
number of factors the Attorney-General must consider in issuing a notice to a
magistrate that an extradition request has been received
- allow individuals
subject to an extradition request to seek bail in the later stages of the
extradition process, in special circumstances
- allow a person to
waive required processes prior to surrender, subject to certain safeguards
- extend the
circumstances in which a person may be prosecuted in Australia as an
alternative to extradition
- allow a person to
consent to extradition in relation to a wider range of offences, and
- modify the definition
of ‘political offence’ to clarify that the political offence exception to
extradition does not extend to specified crimes such as terrorism, and require
that extradition must be refused if a person may be prejudiced by reason of his
or her sex or sexual orientation following surrender.[3]
1.17
The stated purpose of the measures is to streamline the extradition
process and potentially reduce the amount of time a person is required to spend
in extradition custody, while maintaining appropriate safeguards.[4]
Schedule 3
1.18
Schedule 3 to the Bill contains legislative amendments related to mutual
assistance. The proposed amendments will:
- increase the range
of law enforcement tools available to assist other countries with their
investigations and prosecutions, subject to appropriate safeguards
- streamline existing
processes for providing certain forms of assistance to foreign countries
- strengthen safeguards
in relation to the provision of assistance where there are death penalty or
torture concerns in a particular case
- amend the various
grounds on which Australia can refuse a request for assistance from another
country,[5] including in cases where
a person may be prejudiced at their trial, or where the purpose of the
investigation or prosecution is to persecute a person on the basis of his or
her sexual orientation, and
- streamline the
process used to authorise a proceeds of crime action, and allow Australian
courts to register and enforce foreign non-conviction based proceeds of crime
orders from any country.
Schedule 4
1.19
The Bill contains a number of amendments which are contingent on the
commencement of amendments of other bills currently before Parliament. Schedule
4 of the Bill contains technical contingent amendments to address these issues.
Scope of the report
1.20
This report is not intended to be a complete review of Australia’s
extradition and mutual assistance laws and policies. The Committee’s primary
focus has been to consider the legislative amendments proposed in the Bill.
Chapter 2 discusses the proposed amendments to the Extradition Act and
Chapter 3 discusses the proposed amendments to the Mutual Assistance Act.
1.21
The Joint Standing Committee on Treaties (JSCOT) has previously
conducted a detailed inquiry into Australia’s extradition law and practice in
Report 40 of August 2001.[6] The inquiry looked at the
operation of the Extradition Act in light of Australia’s move to a ‘no
evidence’ extradition model in 1988. In June 2008, JSCOT made further detailed
recommendations in relation to Australia’s extradition law and practice in
JSCOT Report 91.[7]