

- Title
ASIO LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2006
In Committee
- Database
Senate Hansard
- Date
13-06-2006
- Source
Senate
- Parl No.
41
- Electorate
Queensland
- Interjector
- Page
149
- Party
ALP
- Presenter
- Status
Final
- Question No.
- Questioner
- Responder
- Speaker
Ludwig, Sen Joe
- Stage
In Committee
- Type
- Context
Bills
- System Id
chamber/hansards/2006-06-13/0191
Previous Fragment Next Fragment
-
Hansard
- Start of Business
- CONDOLENCES
- ROYAL COMMISSIONS AMENDMENT BILL 2006
- CHILD SUPPORT LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (REFORM OF THE CHILD SUPPORT SCHEME—INITIAL MEASURES) BILL 2006
- MINISTERIAL ARRANGEMENTS
- QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
- DISTINGUISHED VISITORS
- QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
- DISTINGUISHED VISITORS
-
QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
-
Environment: Alternative Energy
(Chapman, Sen Grant, Campbell, Sen Ian) -
Asylum Seekers
(Nettle, Sen Kerry, Campbell, Sen Ian) -
East Timor
(Johnston, Sen David, Ellison, Sen Chris) -
Soccer World Cup: Antisiphoning List
(Conroy, Sen Stephen, Coonan, Sen Helen) -
Indigenous Communities
(Bartlett, Sen Andrew, Kemp, Sen Rod) -
Customs Computer System
(Ludwig, Sen Joe, Ellison, Sen Chris)
-
Environment: Alternative Energy
- QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE: TAKE NOTE OF ANSWERS
- CONDOLENCES
- PETITIONS
- NOTICES
- BUSINESS
- COMMITTEES
- NOTICES
- CHERNOBYL NUCLEAR ACCIDENT
- DOCUMENTS
- AUDITOR-GENERAL’S REPORTS
- COMMITTEES
- AUDITOR-GENERAL’S REPORTS
- BUDGET
- PARLIAMENTARY ZONE
- BUDGET
- COMMITTEES
- FIRST SPEECH
- COMMITTEES
-
ASIO LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2006
TAX LAWS AMENDMENT (PERSONAL TAX REDUCTION AND IMPROVED DEPRECIATION ARRANGEMENTS) BILL 2006 -
AGE DISCRIMINATION AMENDMENT BILL 2006
AUSTRALIAN TRADE COMMISSION LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2006
ELECTORAL AND REFERENDUM AMENDMENT (ELECTORAL INTEGRITY AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2006
EMPLOYMENT AND WORKPLACE RELATIONS LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (WELFARE TO WORK AND OTHER MEASURES) (CONSEQUENTIAL AMENDMENTS) BILL 2006
ENERGY LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2006
EXPORT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2006
FAMILIES, COMMUNITY SERVICES AND INDIGENOUS AFFAIRS AND OTHER LEGISLATION (2006 BUDGET AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2006
FISHERIES LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (FOREIGN FISHING OFFENCES) BILL 2006
PLANT HEALTH AUSTRALIA (PLANT INDUSTRIES) FUNDING AMENDMENT BILL 2006
TAX LAWS AMENDMENT (2006 MEASURES NO. 2) BILL 2006
EXCISE LAWS AMENDMENT (FUEL TAX REFORM AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2006
EXCISE TARIFF AMENDMENT (FUEL TAX REFORM AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2006
CUSTOMS AMENDMENT (FUEL TAX REFORM AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2006
CUSTOMS TARIFF AMENDMENT (FUEL TAX REFORM AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2006 -
AUSTRALIAN BROADCASTING CORPORATION AMENDMENT BILL 2006
NATIONAL HEALTH AND MEDICAL RESEARCH COUNCIL AMENDMENT BILL 2006
SUPERANNUATION LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (TRUSTEE BOARD AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2006 - COMMITTEES
- BUSINESS
- MIGRATION AMENDMENT (DESIGNATED UNAUTHORISED ARRIVALS) BILL 2006
- CHILD SUPPORT LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (REFORM OF THE CHILD SUPPORT SCHEME—INITIAL MEASURES) BILL 2006
- LEAVE OF ABSENCE
- COMMITTEES
-
ASIO LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2006
- Second Reading
-
In Committee
- Ludwig, Sen Joe
- Brown, Sen Bob
- Ellison, Sen Chris
- Brown, Sen Bob
- Ellison, Sen Chris
- Ludwig, Sen Joe
- Brown, Sen Bob
- Abetz, Sen Eric
- Brown, Sen Bob
- Abetz, Sen Eric
- Brown, Sen Bob
- Abetz, Sen Eric
- Brown, Sen Bob
- Abetz, Sen Eric
- Brown, Sen Bob
- Abetz, Sen Eric
- Brown, Sen Bob
- Abetz, Sen Eric
- Brown, Sen Bob
- Ludwig, Sen Joe
- Abetz, Sen Eric
- Ludwig, Sen Joe
- Abetz, Sen Eric
- Ludwig, Sen Joe
- Abetz, Sen Eric
- Division
- Ludwig, Sen Joe
- Ray, Sen Robert
- Faulkner, Sen John
- Bartlett, Sen Andrew
- Ray, Sen Robert
- Abetz, Sen Eric
- Division
- Procedural Text
- Third Reading
- TAX LAWS AMENDMENT (PERSONAL TAX REDUCTION AND IMPROVED DEPRECIATION ARRANGEMENTS) BILL 2006
-
ADJOURNMENT
- Mr Roy Edward Bullock OBE
- Mr Michael Ferguson MP
- Parliamentary Delegation to Denmark and Sweden
-
Black Hawk Accident: 10th Anniversary
Mater Misericordiae Hospital Townsville
Queensland Health System -
National Electric Wheelchair Sports
Qantas: Wheelchair Policy -
Mr Michael Ferguson MP
Queen’s Birthday Holiday - Workplace Relations
- Qantas: Western Australia
- Cricket: Ashes Tour
- Howard Government: Ministerial Staff
- Howard Government: Ministerial Staff
- Adjournment
- DOCUMENTS
-
QUESTIONS ON NOTICE
-
Communications, Information Technology and the Arts: Consultants
(Evans, Sen Chris, Coonan, Sen Helen) -
Human Services: Staffing
(Evans, Sen Chris, Kemp, Sen Rod) -
Advertising Campaigns
(Evans, Sen Chris, Santoro, Sen Santo) -
Advertising Campaigns
(Evans, Sen Chris, Vanstone, Sen Amanda) -
Advertising Campaigns
(Evans, Sen Chris, Coonan, Sen Helen) -
Advertising Campaigns
(Evans, Sen Chris, Kemp, Sen Rod) -
Minister for Health and Ageing: Sponsored Travel
(Evans, Sen Chris, Santoro, Sen Santo) -
Minister for Ageing: Sponsored Travel
(Evans, Sen Chris, Santoro, Sen Santo) -
Aviation: North Queensland
(McLucas, Sen Jan, Campbell, Sen Ian) -
Marine Parks and Reserves
(Siewert, Sen Rachel, Campbell, Sen Ian) -
Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre Privacy Consultative Committee
(Ludwig, Sen Joe, Ellison, Sen Chris) -
Asylum Seekers
(Brown, Sen Bob, Vanstone, Sen Amanda) -
Welfare to Work
(Evans, Sen Chris, Abetz, Sen Eric) -
Transair
(O’Brien, Sen Kerry, Campbell, Sen Ian) -
Civil Aviation Safety Authority: Office of the Chief Executive Officer
(O’Brien, Sen Kerry, Campbell, Sen Ian) -
Transair Pty Ltd
(O’Brien, Sen Kerry, Campbell, Sen Ian) -
Prime Minister and Cabinet: Grants
(O’Brien, Sen Kerry, Minchin, Sen Nick) -
Immigration and Multicultural Affairs: Grants
(O’Brien, Sen Kerry, Vanstone, Sen Amanda) -
Families, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs: Grants
(O’Brien, Sen Kerry, Kemp, Sen Rod) -
Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry: Grants
(O’Brien, Sen Kerry, Abetz, Sen Eric) -
Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry: Grants
(O’Brien, Sen Kerry, Abetz, Sen Eric) -
Prime Minister and Cabinet: Grants
(O’Brien, Sen Kerry, Minchin, Sen Nick) -
Immigration and Multicultural Affairs: Grants
(O’Brien, Sen Kerry, Vanstone, Sen Amanda) -
Communications, Information Technology and the Arts: Grants
(O’Brien, Sen Kerry, Coonan, Sen Helen) -
Immigration Cases: Costs
(Nettle, Sen Kerry, Vanstone, Sen Amanda) -
Immigration Cases: Costs
(Nettle, Sen Kerry, Vanstone, Sen Amanda) -
Temporary Protection Visas
(Nettle, Sen Kerry, Vanstone, Sen Amanda) -
State Funerals
(Brown, Sen Bob, Minchin, Sen Nick) -
Digital Spectrum
(Conroy, Sen Stephen, Coonan, Sen Helen) -
Civil Aviation Safety Authority: Chief Executive Officer
(O’Brien, Sen Kerry, Campbell, Sen Ian) -
Nuclear Waste
(Allison, Sen Lyn, Vanstone, Sen Amanda) -
Terrain Awareness and Warning System
(Brown, Sen Bob, Campbell, Sen Ian) -
Snowy River
(Allison, Sen Lyn, Campbell, Sen Ian) -
Tobacco Products
(Allison, Sen Lyn, Minchin, Sen Nick) -
Youth Smoking
(Allison, Sen Lyn, Santoro, Sen Santo) -
Chen Long and Pong Su
(Ludwig, Sen Joe, Vanstone, Sen Amanda) -
Chen Long
(Ludwig, Sen Joe, Ellison, Sen Chris) -
Port Arthur
(Campbell, Sen George, Kemp, Sen Rod) -
Port Arthur
(Campbell, Sen George, Ellison, Sen Chris) -
Live Animal Exports
(Webber, Sen Ruth, Abetz, Sen Eric) -
Extradition
(Ludwig, Sen Joe, Ellison, Sen Chris) -
Chief Scientist
(Siewert, Sen Rachel, Vanstone, Sen Amanda) -
Aged Care Standards and Accreditation Agency
(McLucas, Sen Jan, Santoro, Sen Santo) -
Business Ethics
(Murray, Sen Andrew, Minchin, Sen Nick) -
Business Ethics
(Murray, Sen Andrew, Ellison, Sen Chris) -
Child Support Agency
(Fielding, Sen Steve, Kemp, Sen Rod) -
Philippines
(Allison, Sen Lyn, Coonan, Sen Helen)
-
Communications, Information Technology and the Arts: Consultants
Page: 149
Senator LUDWIG (9:26 PM)
—Thank you, Senator Brown; that has given me an opportunity to raise a couple more matters with this bill. I sought an answer earlier to explain in more detail why the government say that the prescribed authority should not have those documents that this amendment will provide to them. One of the arguments that I guess I have been putting on behalf of the government, for the government are unwilling to engage, is secrecy. The government did not answer that one, although I could perhaps answer it myself. I think there are sufficient protections in the bill such that the prescribed authority cannot range too far in discussing what might go on in the questioning under the warrant without falling foul of the legislation. Another reason is that they might perform a task which is unrelated to the warrant, or to the factual matrix of circumstances that makes up the warrant, to be more precise. They might, in fact, provide more easily discernible tasks. Perhaps, by explanation, you can see how that could be arrived at by looking at section 34HB of the existing legislation, which says:
Anyone exercising authority under the warrant may request the prescribed authority to permit the questioning to continue for the purposes of subsection (1) or (2). The request may be made in the absence of:
(a) the person being questioned; and
(b) a legal adviser to that person ...
So they perform this task under the request of the person or persons doing the questioning. 34HB(1) says:
Anyone exercising authority under a warrant issued under section 34D must not question a person under the warrant if the person has been questioned under the warrant for a total of 8 hours ...
It might be seen that they only need the warrant and can then say, ‘Eight hours are up,’ if they have a stopwatch, and then they are required to look at that issue. 34HB(2) says:
Anyone exercising authority under a warrant issued under section 34D must not question a person under the warrant if the person has been questioned under the warrant for a total of 16 hours ...
Once more, you get a period where it might be argued—although the government has not argued it—that they do not require the circumstances that these amendments sets out to be able to determine those things. They have a watch, so they can see when eight hours are up or when 16 hours are up. They can then consider the legislation in that light perhaps without considering the factual matrix.
But when you look at (4), I am not convinced—perhaps the government can shed light on it—whether or not they are, in the language that lawyers like to use, cutting off their nose to spite their face. It says:
The prescribed authority may permit the questioning to continue for the purposes of subsection (1) or (2)—
so it might be relatively easy to ascertain (1) or (2), as I have indicated—
but only if he or she is satisfied that:
Now here is the nub:
(a) there are reasonable grounds for believing that permitting the continuation will substantially assist the collection of intelligence that is important in relation to a terrorism offence;
Now hold that; they will have to then look at the circumstances, look at the questioning that is under way, look at the face of the warrant—not the facts and circumstances that underpin it but only the face of the warrant—and, under that scenario, they would have to conclude whether there are reasonable grounds for believing that permitting the continuation would substantially assist the collection of intelligence. In fact, what you might find is that you have left yourself short, because on the face of the warrant itself it may not be sufficient to assist the prescribed authority to come to the conclusion that there are reasonable grounds for believing, and therefore they do not allow the questioning to continue.
If the broader information, as this amendment seeks to put, is put before them and they understand the contextual setting—the questions that are being asked in that contextual setting of the facts and issues that support the warrant—then they might come to reasonable grounds. Be that as it may, it seems that you are asking the prescribed authority not just to make a decision about times and about functions in terms of what their job is but also to look a little further and to permit important issues in relation to a terrorist offence, and to make that decision. So you are now asking the prescribed authority to do more than just a perfunctory role—notwithstanding how important that is—you are now asking them to look a little deeper at what is going on in the setting. If you look at (b), it says:
(b) persons exercising authority under the warrant conducted the questioning of the person properly and without delay in the period mentioned in that subsection.
And (5) states:
(5) The prescribed authority may revoke the permission. Revocation of the permission does not affect the legality ...
So what we really have, tied up with their role, is the discretion, and they have to exercise that discretion on reasonable grounds, for believing that permitting the continuation would substantially assist the collection of intelligence. That may not be apparent from the line of questioning from the questioners. But it might be apparent if the facts and statements that underpin the warrant were available to the prescribed authority. Without that, you might be leaving yourself short—where a prescribed authority might come to the conclusion that the line of questioning is not getting anywhere. It might seem irrelevant to the warrant; it might seem irrelevant more broadly. Without that information that is currently before the issuing authority, the questioning might end, because the prescribed authority may not come on reasonable grounds for believing that it should continue. I would ask you to look at that and provide me with a view.