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Bail Act 2013

The Bail Act 2013 is a New South Wales law that came into effect on 20 May 2014. It replaces the Bail Act 1978, which was considered "groundbreaking" when enacted, but has been reformed several times to presume against bail. The new act was created with the aims that it would be easier to understand, would further protect the community and would promote consistent decision-making. The Bail Act 2013 uses an "unacceptable risk" test in regard to whether "the accused will fail to appear in any proceedings for the offence, commit a serious offence, endanger the safety of victims, individuals or the community, or interfere with witnesses or evidence".

Bail Act 2013
Coat of Arms of New South Wales
Parliament of New South Wales
  • An Act to make provision for bail in connection with criminal and other proceedings.
CitationBail Act 2013
Enacted byNew South Wales Legislative Assembly
Enacted byNew South Wales Legislative Council
Commenced20 May 2014
Administered byDepartment of Attorney General and Justice
Legislative history
First chamber: New South Wales Legislative Assembly
Bill titleBail Bill 2013
Introduced byGreg Smith, Attorney General
First reading
Second reading, , .
Third reading
Second chamber: New South Wales Legislative Council
Member(s) in chargeMichael Gallacher, Minister for Police and Emergency Services, Minister for the Hunter, and Vice-President of the Executive Council
First reading
Second reading,
Third reading
Amended by
Bail Amendment Act 2014, Bail Amendment Act 2015
Status: Current legislation

The Bail Act 2013 passed in the NSW parliament in May 2013. In response to a review, Bail Act reforms passed parliament in September 2014, and came into effect on 28 January 2015.

Review of previous law edit

On 9 June 2011, Premier Barry O'Farrell announced that the NSW Law Reform Commission would review the bail law.[1] In April 2012, the Commission reported that the previous law had become complex, making it difficult even for legal practitioners to understand and apply.[2] The Bail Act 1978[3] was considered "groundbreaking" when enacted[1] but has been reformed several times to presume against bail.[4] In its review of the bail law in New South Wales, the Law Reform Commission noted that over the 15 years prior, the population in remand had tripled due to "policy shifts". It recommended a new, simplified, bail law, to be written in "plain English". The "justification" decision-making process to detain or release was recommended over the "unacceptable risk" model used in the Bail Act 1977 (Vic.).[2][5] The Commission stated that "it is more difficult to include explicit reference to the interests of the person within the unacceptable risk model" and that neither the Victorian bail act nor the Bail Act 1980 (Qld), which use risk-based models, make reference to the interests of the person. The commission also stated that the "justification" model was familiar.[2] In November 2012, the Government decided to create a new Bail Act that was easier to understand, with aims to further protect the community and promote consistent decision-making.[6]

Changes proposed and features of the legislation edit

Premier Barry O'Farrell announced the "new, simpler Bail Act" in a press release in November 2012.[7] The Government did not adopt all of the recommendations made by Law Reform Commission.[8] Different interpretations of the bail laws caused a rift between the Attorney General and Minister for Justice, Greg Smith, and the Police Minister, Michael Gallacher. Greens MLC David Shoebridge explained this as Smith wanting a "more rational" set of laws that removed complexity and unfairness, and Gallacher "fighting the reforms".[4] Max Taylor, a former magistrate, characterised the change in the proposal to a risk-based approach as "the police shouted and the government trembled".[9]

The Government stated that, unlike the Bail Act 1978, the new act is not based on a "system of offence-based presumptions". Instead, it is based on the premise of whether the accused will present as an "unacceptable risk" to society.[10] The new act also allows for a further application if: the accused previously did not have legal representation, there is new relevant information, relevant circumstances have changed, or the accused is under 18 and the previous application was made on a first appearance for the offence.[6][11] In May 2013, on the second reading of the Bail Bill, Attorney General and Minister for Justice Greg Smith described the Government's approach as one of "risk-management".[12] The Bail Act 2013 adds an "unacceptable risk" test in regard to whether "the accused will fail to appear in any proceedings for the offence, commit a serious offence, endanger the safety of victims, individuals or the community, or interfere with witnesses or evidence".[13]

One significant change is in consideration of "the presumption of innocence and the general right to be at liberty." Another important change is that "once bail is granted, it will continue to operate until it is either revoked or the substantive proceedings concluded."[8] Under the Bail Act 2013, bail does not have to be formally continued by the court.[13] When the bail authority determines that the accused poses an "unacceptable risk", it must record the nature of the presumed risk and consider risk mitigation approaches.[8]

To determine whether there is an "unacceptable risk", the bail authority can consider the person's background; the seriousness of the offence; the strength of the case; whether the person has a history of violence or non-compliance with bail requirements, apprehended violence orders, parole or good behaviour bonds; the likely length of the sentence if bail is not granted; and whether the person is of a disadvantaged group.[14][15] It was noted by a member of the NSW Bar Association that, while they were not "unusual or unfamiliar", not all of the factors the bail authority may consider are directly related to the "unacceptable risk" test.[16]

Shoebridge noted that determination of who bore the burden of proof as to whether an accused person constitutes an unacceptable risk was not well covered in the law.[4] Christopher White, the Policy Manager, Justice Policy, Department of Attorney General and Justice, stated in his introduction to the Bail Act 2013 that if the prosecution asserted that an unacceptable risk was present, the onus was on the prosecution to prove it.[17] However, in the decision of R v Lago [2014] NSWSC 660, Hamill J held at [5] that the Bail Act 2013 does not place an onus on either party to prove whether there is or is not an unacceptable risk.[18]

Three kinds of bail applications were defined: a release application, a detention application and a variation application.[8]

The president of the NSW Bar Association was disappointed that there was not "a universal presumption in favour of bail". David Shoebridge was disappointed that adults would be limited to one bail application.[19]

The Bail Act 2013 passed in the NSW parliament in May 2013,[20] and the law commenced on 20 May 2014.[21][22][23]

Don Weatherburn of the NSW Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research has raised concerns that police are using future Court Attendance Notices instead of refusing bail as much as they were before. Weatherburn noted that during the period when the new law was first introduced, there were "fewer bail cases coming before the courts". At around the same time as the new Bail Act commenced, the NSW Police Force put into practice a new custody system. According to some police officers this has made the bail assessment paperwork take three times as long as the previous system.[24]

Hatzistergos Review and Bail Amendment Act 2014 edit

After two sensationalised cases in 2013 where the accused were granted bail, the laws were pronounced "broken" by media commentators, and Premier Mike Baird announced a review of the new law,[25][26][27] only 'weeks' after the law was commenced.[24] A senior law expert at the University of Wollongong, Julia Quilter, stated that denying bail has become a way of condemning the alleged crime of the person, rather than an assurance that they will continue to attend court while the case continues.[28]

The review of the Bail Act 2013 by John Hatzistergos investigated whether the risk management approach adequately reduced the risk that the accused would endanger others' safety, commit a serious offence while on bail, interfere with witnesses in their case, or not attend court; whether the Act was balanced in looking after the safety of the community as well as the rights of the accused; and looking at bail decisions. The review found that the two-stage test as to whether a risk was 'unacceptable' but could be mitigated through bail conditions was confusing to the public, and recommended that the test be altered so that an 'unacceptable risk' was defined as a risk that would preclude granting bail. It recommended adding the following reasons to the 'unacceptable risk' test: the criminal connections of the accused, the views of the victim or the victim's family (for serious offences and where known), and the conduct of the accused toward the victim and his or her family after the event. The review noted that there was little guidance as to what constituted a serious offence.[29] Reforms to the Bail Act passed parliament in September 2014. The burden of proof was placed on people accused of "the most serious crimes" to show why they should be released on bail. The amendment incorporated all the recommendations of the review.[30][31]

The amendments were described by Quilter, the president of the NSW Bar Association, and a member of the Law Society of NSW as premature and unnecessary,[32][33] and Quilter and David Brown of UNSW's Law Faculty later wrote that the amendments were likely to "create complexity and confusion" and "have unintended consequences".[34] David Brown, who consulted on the Law Reform Commission's review, suggested that there was a trend to devalue judicial expertise, not requiring evidence before reviewing, and a lack of faith in the ability of the judicial system to self-correct through the appeals process. Another trend Brown noted was the increasing influence of the "shock jocks" to determine public discourse.[35] The amendments came into effect on 28 January 2015.[36][37]

Lesley Townsley argues that instead of balancing the need for community protection with the rights of the individual, the amendments consider the community's safety as "paramount", and argues that the "show cause" clause introduced by the amendments effectively introduces a "justification" model for release, which Townsley states is "a punitive turn in bail policy which counteracts the weight given to the presumption of innocence and the general right to liberty".[38] Prajesh Shrestha argues that the 2014 amendments undermine the presumption of innocence, because the protection of the community is given more weight than the presumption of innocence, and that the 'show cause' provision gives the burden of proof to the defendant, not the prosecutor and goes against the presumption of innocence, and that adding in the victim's views is unnecessary and "highly prejudicial to the rights of the accused".[39]

Also in September 2014, the Attorney General referred a suggestion by the Police Association of NSW to the NSW Sentencing Council. The suggestion was that "a new show cause category [should] include people charged with a serious indictable offence while 'on sentence'."[40]

John Hatzistergos tabled his final report reviewing the laws in June 2015. The final review focused "on the application of the Bail Act 2013, particularly after the commencement of the Bail Amendment Act 2014", examining bail decisions after 28 January 2015.[41]

Bail Monitoring Group edit

After the Hatzistergos review in July 2014, a Bail Monitoring Group was formed with representatives from the Department of Justice, the Ministry of Police and Emergency Services, the NSW Police Force, the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions, NSW Legal Aid Commission, the NSW Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research, and the Department of Premier and Cabinet. It meets monthly, and monitors bail reviews by the NSW Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions.[42]

Changes sought in response to the Sydney siege edit

After the Lindt Cafe siege, there was a petition on Change.org for further tightening of the NSW bail laws.[36] The gunman, Man Haron Monis, was out on bail at the time of the attack,[43] and determining why this was so was investigated in the inquest.[44] Brad Hazzard stated that if the amendments from 2014 had been in force, it was "very unlikely" that Monis would have been free,[43] but Greg Barns of the Australian Lawyers Alliance stated that the laws "already undermine fundamental human rights" and that "changes made to those laws in the past two years might not have made any difference".[45]

In the NSW Government's response to the joint Federal-State review of the Sydney hostage crisis, it states that in addition to the final stage of the Hatzistergos review, the government will seek to amend the Bail Act further to "ensure that a bail authority must refuse bail where the authority is satisfied that an accused person is an identified terrorist risk".[46] In February 2015, all 17 recommendations of the Martin Place Siege Review were accepted by the NSW Government in addition to modifying existing gun laws so that there are higher penalties for illegal gun possession.[47]

In August 2015, Mike Baird and Deputy Premier and Minister for Justice and Police Troy Grant announced a tightening of laws on bail and illegal firearms, where a person's involvement in terrorism or violent extremism would be included in the 'unacceptable risk' test for bail.[48] Greg Barns, speaking on behalf of the Australian Lawyers Association, described the proposed changes as "authoritarian". Opposition Leader Luke Foley stated that "Anybody who has been caught up in surveillance and been assessed by the security agencies as being a risk of carrying out a terrorist-related offence should not be given any benefit of the doubt".[49]

Changes in response to tabloid campaign edit

In response to a tabloid campaign around men being granted bail after being convicted of child sexual offenses, the bail laws were amended to require judges to refuse bail "where a person is convicted of a crime where they "will" serve a prison sentence".[50] It also aimed to ensure a minimum standard for electronic surveillance of people on bail.[51]

Further review edit

The Bail Act 2013 is to be reviewed by the Minister three years after the date when the Bail Act 1978 was repealed, rather than the customary five-year period for a review.[2][6] This is to determine whether policy objectives of the Act remain valid and that terms of the Act remain appropriate for securing these objectives. Further, the report of the outcome of review is to be tabled in each House of Parliament within 12 months from the end of the three-year period.[52]

Key cases edit

Supreme Court of New South Wales edit

  • R v Kugor [2015] NSWCCA 14[53]
  • R v Lago [2014] NSWSC 660[53][54]
  • R v Fesus [2014] NSWSC 770[53][54]
  • R v Alexandridis [2014] NSWSC 662[54]
  • R v Morris (NSWSC, Unreported, McCallum J, 20 May 2014)[54]
  • R v SK & DK (NSWSC, Unreported, McCallum J, 20 May 2014)[54]
  • R v Justice (NSWSC, Unreported, Schmidt J, 28 May 2014)[54]
  • R v Karaoglu (NSWSC, Unreported, Adamson J, 10 June 2014)[54]
  • R v Daniel (NSWSC, Unreported, Button J, 23 June 2014)[54]

New South Wales Court of Appeal edit

  • Director of Public Prosecutions (NSW) v Tikomaimaleya [2015] NSWCA 83[55]

Other jurisdictions edit

  • Haidy v DPP [2004] VSC 247 at [14]-[19][53]
  • R v Paterson [2006] VSC 268 at [29]-[36][53]
  • Mokbel v DPP (No 3) [2002] VSC 393 at [10][53]
  • In the matter of an application for bail by Blundell [2008] ACTSC 138 at [2], citing R v Blaikie [1999] NZCA 205 at [34][53]
  • Re Magee [2009] VSC 384 at [15]-[26][53]
  • Burton v R (1974) 3 ACTR 77, at p. 78[53]
  • Re Kheir [2008] VSC 492 at [22][53]
  • R v Wakefield (1969) 89 WN (Pt 1) (NSW) 325[53]
  • Woods v DPP [2014] VSC 1[53]
  • Dunstan v DPP [1999] FCA 921 at [55]-[56], (1999) 92 FCR 168[53]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Nicholas Cowdery (March 2012). "Contemporary Comments: Criminal Justice in New South Wales under the new State Government". Current Issues in Criminal Justice. 3 (23): 447–457.
  2. ^ a b c d Report 133 Law Reform Commission: Bail (2012) NSW Law Reform Commission. December 28, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ "Bail Act 1978 (NSW)" (PDF). New South Wales government. Retrieved 28 December 2014.
  4. ^ a b c Shoebridge, David (August 2014). "Law reform: Bail law reforms in NSW". Alternative Law Journal. 39 (2): 132–133. doi:10.1177/1037969X1403900214. ISSN 1037-969X. S2CID 140897955. Retrieved 17 December 2014.
  5. ^ Bail Act 1977 (Vic)
  6. ^ a b c NSW Govt response to LRC review, November 2012 December 28, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ O'Farrell, Barry (28 November 2012) Press Release: New Bail Laws to put community safety first
  8. ^ a b c d Hatzistergos, John (June 2014). "Criminal law: The bail act 2013: What you need to know". LSJ: Law Society of NSW Journal. 1 (1): 80–81. ISSN 2203-8906. Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  9. ^ Taylor, Max (19 May 2013). "Bail out". Justinian. Retrieved 29 July 2015.
  10. ^ Hatzistergos, John (July 2014) Review of the Bail Act 2013
  11. ^ Section 74(3); "child" is defined in section 4 as a person under 18.
  12. ^ "The Bail Act 2013". Judicial Commission of New South Wales. Retrieved 17 December 2014.
  13. ^ a b . Legal Aid New South Wales. Archived from the original on 27 December 2014. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  14. ^ Johnson, Peter (June 2014). "Assessing the unacceptable risk test in the Bail Act 2013". Judicial Officers Bulletin. 26 (5): 37–41. ISSN 1036-1294. Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  15. ^ Weatherby-Fell, Caitlin (April 2014). "A complete overhaul of the bail system?: The incoming New South Wales bail act 2013 and aboriginal juvenile offenders". Indigenous Law Bulletin. 8 (11): 24–29. ISSN 1328-5475. Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  16. ^ Dobraszczyk, Caroline (2013). "The new Bail Act". Bar News (Winter): 26–28. ISSN 0817-0002. Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  17. ^ White, Christopher (February 2014). "An introduction to the Bail Act 2013". Judicial Officers Bulletin. 26 (1): 1–4. ISSN 1036-1294.
  18. ^ R v Lago [2014] NSWSC 660 at [5]
  19. ^ Anna Patty, Harriet Alexander (29 November 2012). "Bail overhaul revealed". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 1 January 2015.
  20. ^ Smith, Greg (22 May 2013) Press Release: Bail Act passes Parliament
  21. ^ "Bail Act 2013 (NSW)". New South Wales government. Retrieved 28 December 2014.
  22. ^ Bail Act 2013 (NSW)
  23. ^ . Legal Aid New South Wales. Archived from the original on 27 December 2014. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  24. ^ a b Olding, Rachel (8 August 2014). "NSW police suspected of undermining bail laws". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 27 January 2015.
  25. ^ Maley, Jacqueline (5 July 2014). "NSW Bail Act: some freedoms more equal than others". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  26. ^ Clennell, Andrew (28 June 2014). "Premier Mike Baird to toughen controversial bail laws that allowed two accused murderers to walk free". Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  27. ^ Dole, Nick (5 August 2014). "Bail laws toughened in NSW to hold defendants deemed 'unacceptable risk'". ABC News. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  28. ^ Quilter, Julia (3 July 2014). "Not for punishment: we need to understand bail, not review it". The Conversation. Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  29. ^ Hatzistergos, John (July 2014) Report: Review of the Bail Act 2013 2014-12-27 at the Wayback Machine
  30. ^ Hazzard, Brad (17 September 2014) Press Release: Bail Act reforms pass Parliament
  31. ^ "Bail Amendment Act 2014 (NSW)". New South Wales government. Retrieved 28 December 2014.
  32. ^ Geiger, Dominic (4 July 2014). "Changes to Bail Act premature: UOW expert". Illawarra Mercury. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
  33. ^ "Planned NSW bail changes 'threaten rights'". News.com.au. 5 August 2014. Retrieved 17 December 2014.
  34. ^ Quilter, Julia and David Brown (October 2014). "Speaking Too Soon: The Sabotage of Bail Reform in New South Wales". International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy. 3 (3): 73–97. doi:10.5204/ijcjsd.v3i2.181. Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  35. ^ David Brown (14 August 2014). "Is rational law reform still possible in a shock-jock tabloid world?". The Conversation.
  36. ^ a b Alex Heber. "A Change.Org Petition For Stronger Bail Laws In NSW Has Secured More Than 42,000 Signatures In One Day". Business Insider Australia. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
  37. ^ "Bail Amendment Act 2014 No 52 - Historical notes". NSW Legislation. New South Wales government. Retrieved 29 January 2015.
  38. ^ Townsley, Lesley. Returning to presumptions and the erosion of fundamental rights: The Bail Amendment Act 2014 (NSW) [online]. Alternative Law Journal, Vol. 40, No. 1, Mar 2015: 42-45. Availability: <http://search.informit.com.au/documentSummary;dn=035183180151213;res=IELHSS> ISSN 1037-969X. [cited 01 Apr 15].
  39. ^ Shrestha, Prajesh. Two Steps Back: The Presumption of Innocence and Changes to the Bail Act 2013 (NSW) [online]. Sydney Law Review, The, Vol. 37, No. 1, Mar 2015: [147]-154. Availability: <http://search.informit.com.au/documentSummary;dn=166154335125100;res=IELAPA> ISSN 0082-0512. [cited 27 May 15].
  40. ^ Bail – Additional show cause offences (PDF). Sydney: New South Wales Sentencing Council. May 2015. p. 3. ISBN 978-1-922254-03-0.
  41. ^ John Hatzistergos (June 2015). "Review of the Bail Act 2013: Final report" (PDF). Retrieved 1 October 2015.
  42. ^ Commonwealth of Australia (January 2015). (PDF). Canberra: Commonwealth of Australia. pp. 42–43. ISBN 978-1-925237-32-0. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 March 2015. Retrieved 1 October 2015.
  43. ^ a b Whitbourn, Michaela (17 December 2014). "Sydney siege aftermath: why was gunman Man Haron Monis out on bail". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
  44. ^ "Decision of State Coroner Barnes in relation to ruling on scope" (PDF). Department of Justice. 5 June 2015. Retrieved 21 August 2015.
  45. ^ Barns, Greg (18 December 2014). "Stricter bail laws would be an assault on our rights". ABC News. Retrieved 17 December 2014.
  46. ^ (PDF). NSW Government. February 2015. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 9 July 2015.
  47. ^ Baird, M and Grant, T. 2015, NEW LAWS TO COMBAT TERRORISM, Media Release, 28 August.
  48. ^ "New laws to combat terrorism and illegal firearms" (Press release). New South Wales Government. 28 August 2015. Retrieved 30 August 2015.
  49. ^ "New NSW bail and firearms laws announced in response to Lindt Cafe Sydney siege". ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation). 28 August 2015. Retrieved 30 August 2015.
  50. ^ McGowan, Michael (25 July 2022). "Hastily drafted NSW bail laws criticised by judge and legal groups". Guardian Australia.
  51. ^ "Bail Amendment Bill 2022". www.parliament.nsw.gov.au.
  52. ^ Bail Act 2013 (NSW) s 101.
  53. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Key cases 27 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine Legal Aid New South Wales
  54. ^ a b c d e f g h Rebekah Rodger Bail Act 2013 Decisions in the Supreme Court of NSW Legal Aid New South Wales
  55. ^ Bail Decisions NSWCA Legal Aid New South Wales

Further reading edit

  • Taylor, Maxwell Francis (2014) The politics of reform: the New South Wales Bail Act, 1976-2013 Sydney, Australia Macquarie University PhD thesis, 2014 Catalogue reference
  • "Using the Bail Act 2013 as Amended by the Bail Amendment Act 2014". Legal Aid NSW. from the original on 15 June 2016.
  • Hatzistergos, J (February 2015). "Amendments to the bail act 2013". Judicial Officers Bulletin. 27 (1): 1–5. ISSN 1036-1294. Availability
  • Hatzistergos, J (November 2016). "Bail Amendment Act 2015 (NSW) to commence". Judicial Officers Bulletin. 28 (10): 95–98. ISSN 1036-1294. Availability
  • Mark, M (5 July 2014). "New South Wales' bail fail". Border Mail. p. 13.
  • Methven, E (September 2014). "Hasty amendments to Bail Act". Alternative Law Journal. 39 (3): 197. ISSN 1037-969X.
  • Weatherburn, D & Fitzgerald, J (2015). The impact of the NSW Bail Act (2013) on trends in bail and remand in New South Wales (PDF). NSW Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research. ISBN 978-1-921824-99-9.
  • Van der Veen, A (February 2016). "Showing cause under the Bail act 2013: Lessons from the CCA". Law Society of NSW Journal. 3 (1): 94–95. ISSN 2203-8906. Availability

External links edit

bail, 2013, south, wales, that, came, into, effect, 2014, replaces, bail, 1978, which, considered, groundbreaking, when, enacted, been, reformed, several, times, presume, against, bail, created, with, aims, that, would, easier, understand, would, further, prot. The Bail Act 2013 is a New South Wales law that came into effect on 20 May 2014 It replaces the Bail Act 1978 which was considered groundbreaking when enacted but has been reformed several times to presume against bail The new act was created with the aims that it would be easier to understand would further protect the community and would promote consistent decision making The Bail Act 2013 uses an unacceptable risk test in regard to whether the accused will fail to appear in any proceedings for the offence commit a serious offence endanger the safety of victims individuals or the community or interfere with witnesses or evidence Bail Act 2013Coat of Arms of New South WalesParliament of New South WalesLong title An Act to make provision for bail in connection with criminal and other proceedings CitationBail Act 2013Enacted byNew South Wales Legislative AssemblyEnacted byNew South Wales Legislative CouncilCommenced20 May 2014Administered byDepartment of Attorney General and JusticeLegislative historyFirst chamber New South Wales Legislative AssemblyBill titleBail Bill 2013Introduced byGreg Smith Attorney GeneralFirst reading1 May 2013Second reading1 May 2013 8 May 2013 9 May 2013 Third reading9 May 2013Second chamber New South Wales Legislative CouncilMember s in chargeMichael Gallacher Minister for Police and Emergency Services Minister for the Hunter and Vice President of the Executive CouncilFirst reading21 May 2013Second reading21 May 2013 22 May 2013Third reading22 May 2013Amended byBail Amendment Act 2014 Bail Amendment Act 2015Status Current legislationThe Bail Act 2013 passed in the NSW parliament in May 2013 In response to a review Bail Act reforms passed parliament in September 2014 and came into effect on 28 January 2015 Contents 1 Review of previous law 2 Changes proposed and features of the legislation 3 Hatzistergos Review and Bail Amendment Act 2014 4 Bail Monitoring Group 5 Changes sought in response to the Sydney siege 6 Changes in response to tabloid campaign 7 Further review 8 Key cases 8 1 Supreme Court of New South Wales 8 2 New South Wales Court of Appeal 8 3 Other jurisdictions 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksReview of previous law editOn 9 June 2011 Premier Barry O Farrell announced that the NSW Law Reform Commission would review the bail law 1 In April 2012 the Commission reported that the previous law had become complex making it difficult even for legal practitioners to understand and apply 2 The Bail Act 1978 3 was considered groundbreaking when enacted 1 but has been reformed several times to presume against bail 4 In its review of the bail law in New South Wales the Law Reform Commission noted that over the 15 years prior the population in remand had tripled due to policy shifts It recommended a new simplified bail law to be written in plain English The justification decision making process to detain or release was recommended over the unacceptable risk model used in the Bail Act 1977 Vic 2 5 The Commission stated that it is more difficult to include explicit reference to the interests of the person within the unacceptable risk model and that neither the Victorian bail act nor the Bail Act 1980 Qld which use risk based models make reference to the interests of the person The commission also stated that the justification model was familiar 2 In November 2012 the Government decided to create a new Bail Act that was easier to understand with aims to further protect the community and promote consistent decision making 6 Changes proposed and features of the legislation editPremier Barry O Farrell announced the new simpler Bail Act in a press release in November 2012 7 The Government did not adopt all of the recommendations made by Law Reform Commission 8 Different interpretations of the bail laws caused a rift between the Attorney General and Minister for Justice Greg Smith and the Police Minister Michael Gallacher Greens MLC David Shoebridge explained this as Smith wanting a more rational set of laws that removed complexity and unfairness and Gallacher fighting the reforms 4 Max Taylor a former magistrate characterised the change in the proposal to a risk based approach as the police shouted and the government trembled 9 The Government stated that unlike the Bail Act 1978 the new act is not based on a system of offence based presumptions Instead it is based on the premise of whether the accused will present as an unacceptable risk to society 10 The new act also allows for a further application if the accused previously did not have legal representation there is new relevant information relevant circumstances have changed or the accused is under 18 and the previous application was made on a first appearance for the offence 6 11 In May 2013 on the second reading of the Bail Bill Attorney General and Minister for Justice Greg Smith described the Government s approach as one of risk management 12 The Bail Act 2013 adds an unacceptable risk test in regard to whether the accused will fail to appear in any proceedings for the offence commit a serious offence endanger the safety of victims individuals or the community or interfere with witnesses or evidence 13 One significant change is in consideration of the presumption of innocence and the general right to be at liberty Another important change is that once bail is granted it will continue to operate until it is either revoked or the substantive proceedings concluded 8 Under the Bail Act 2013 bail does not have to be formally continued by the court 13 When the bail authority determines that the accused poses an unacceptable risk it must record the nature of the presumed risk and consider risk mitigation approaches 8 To determine whether there is an unacceptable risk the bail authority can consider the person s background the seriousness of the offence the strength of the case whether the person has a history of violence or non compliance with bail requirements apprehended violence orders parole or good behaviour bonds the likely length of the sentence if bail is not granted and whether the person is of a disadvantaged group 14 15 It was noted by a member of the NSW Bar Association that while they were not unusual or unfamiliar not all of the factors the bail authority may consider are directly related to the unacceptable risk test 16 Shoebridge noted that determination of who bore the burden of proof as to whether an accused person constitutes an unacceptable risk was not well covered in the law 4 Christopher White the Policy Manager Justice Policy Department of Attorney General and Justice stated in his introduction to the Bail Act 2013 that if the prosecution asserted that an unacceptable risk was present the onus was on the prosecution to prove it 17 However in the decision of R v Lago 2014 NSWSC 660 Hamill J held at 5 that the Bail Act 2013 does not place an onus on either party to prove whether there is or is not an unacceptable risk 18 Three kinds of bail applications were defined a release application a detention application and a variation application 8 The president of the NSW Bar Association was disappointed that there was not a universal presumption in favour of bail David Shoebridge was disappointed that adults would be limited to one bail application 19 The Bail Act 2013 passed in the NSW parliament in May 2013 20 and the law commenced on 20 May 2014 21 22 23 Don Weatherburn of the NSW Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research has raised concerns that police are using future Court Attendance Notices instead of refusing bail as much as they were before Weatherburn noted that during the period when the new law was first introduced there were fewer bail cases coming before the courts At around the same time as the new Bail Act commenced the NSW Police Force put into practice a new custody system According to some police officers this has made the bail assessment paperwork take three times as long as the previous system 24 Hatzistergos Review and Bail Amendment Act 2014 editAfter two sensationalised cases in 2013 where the accused were granted bail the laws were pronounced broken by media commentators and Premier Mike Baird announced a review of the new law 25 26 27 only weeks after the law was commenced 24 A senior law expert at the University of Wollongong Julia Quilter stated that denying bail has become a way of condemning the alleged crime of the person rather than an assurance that they will continue to attend court while the case continues 28 The review of the Bail Act 2013 by John Hatzistergos investigated whether the risk management approach adequately reduced the risk that the accused would endanger others safety commit a serious offence while on bail interfere with witnesses in their case or not attend court whether the Act was balanced in looking after the safety of the community as well as the rights of the accused and looking at bail decisions The review found that the two stage test as to whether a risk was unacceptable but could be mitigated through bail conditions was confusing to the public and recommended that the test be altered so that an unacceptable risk was defined as a risk that would preclude granting bail It recommended adding the following reasons to the unacceptable risk test the criminal connections of the accused the views of the victim or the victim s family for serious offences and where known and the conduct of the accused toward the victim and his or her family after the event The review noted that there was little guidance as to what constituted a serious offence 29 Reforms to the Bail Act passed parliament in September 2014 The burden of proof was placed on people accused of the most serious crimes to show why they should be released on bail The amendment incorporated all the recommendations of the review 30 31 The amendments were described by Quilter the president of the NSW Bar Association and a member of the Law Society of NSW as premature and unnecessary 32 33 and Quilter and David Brown of UNSW s Law Faculty later wrote that the amendments were likely to create complexity and confusion and have unintended consequences 34 David Brown who consulted on the Law Reform Commission s review suggested that there was a trend to devalue judicial expertise not requiring evidence before reviewing and a lack of faith in the ability of the judicial system to self correct through the appeals process Another trend Brown noted was the increasing influence of the shock jocks to determine public discourse 35 The amendments came into effect on 28 January 2015 36 37 Lesley Townsley argues that instead of balancing the need for community protection with the rights of the individual the amendments consider the community s safety as paramount and argues that the show cause clause introduced by the amendments effectively introduces a justification model for release which Townsley states is a punitive turn in bail policy which counteracts the weight given to the presumption of innocence and the general right to liberty 38 Prajesh Shrestha argues that the 2014 amendments undermine the presumption of innocence because the protection of the community is given more weight than the presumption of innocence and that the show cause provision gives the burden of proof to the defendant not the prosecutor and goes against the presumption of innocence and that adding in the victim s views is unnecessary and highly prejudicial to the rights of the accused 39 Also in September 2014 the Attorney General referred a suggestion by the Police Association of NSW to the NSW Sentencing Council The suggestion was that a new show cause category should include people charged with a serious indictable offence while on sentence 40 John Hatzistergos tabled his final report reviewing the laws in June 2015 The final review focused on the application of the Bail Act 2013 particularly after the commencement of the Bail Amendment Act 2014 examining bail decisions after 28 January 2015 41 Bail Monitoring Group editAfter the Hatzistergos review in July 2014 a Bail Monitoring Group was formed with representatives from the Department of Justice the Ministry of Police and Emergency Services the NSW Police Force the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions NSW Legal Aid Commission the NSW Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research and the Department of Premier and Cabinet It meets monthly and monitors bail reviews by the NSW Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions 42 Changes sought in response to the Sydney siege editAfter the Lindt Cafe siege there was a petition on Change org for further tightening of the NSW bail laws 36 The gunman Man Haron Monis was out on bail at the time of the attack 43 and determining why this was so was investigated in the inquest 44 Brad Hazzard stated that if the amendments from 2014 had been in force it was very unlikely that Monis would have been free 43 but Greg Barns of the Australian Lawyers Alliance stated that the laws already undermine fundamental human rights and that changes made to those laws in the past two years might not have made any difference 45 In the NSW Government s response to the joint Federal State review of the Sydney hostage crisis it states that in addition to the final stage of the Hatzistergos review the government will seek to amend the Bail Act further to ensure that a bail authority must refuse bail where the authority is satisfied that an accused person is an identified terrorist risk 46 In February 2015 all 17 recommendations of the Martin Place Siege Review were accepted by the NSW Government in addition to modifying existing gun laws so that there are higher penalties for illegal gun possession 47 In August 2015 Mike Baird and Deputy Premier and Minister for Justice and Police Troy Grant announced a tightening of laws on bail and illegal firearms where a person s involvement in terrorism or violent extremism would be included in the unacceptable risk test for bail 48 Greg Barns speaking on behalf of the Australian Lawyers Association described the proposed changes as authoritarian Opposition Leader Luke Foley stated that Anybody who has been caught up in surveillance and been assessed by the security agencies as being a risk of carrying out a terrorist related offence should not be given any benefit of the doubt 49 Changes in response to tabloid campaign editIn response to a tabloid campaign around men being granted bail after being convicted of child sexual offenses the bail laws were amended to require judges to refuse bail where a person is convicted of a crime where they will serve a prison sentence 50 It also aimed to ensure a minimum standard for electronic surveillance of people on bail 51 Further review editThe Bail Act 2013 is to be reviewed by the Minister three years after the date when the Bail Act 1978 was repealed rather than the customary five year period for a review 2 6 This is to determine whether policy objectives of the Act remain valid and that terms of the Act remain appropriate for securing these objectives Further the report of the outcome of review is to be tabled in each House of Parliament within 12 months from the end of the three year period 52 Key cases editSupreme Court of New South Wales edit R v Kugor 2015 NSWCCA 14 53 R v Lago 2014 NSWSC 660 53 54 R v Fesus 2014 NSWSC 770 53 54 R v Alexandridis 2014 NSWSC 662 54 R v Morris NSWSC Unreported McCallum J 20 May 2014 54 R v SK amp DK NSWSC Unreported McCallum J 20 May 2014 54 R v Justice NSWSC Unreported Schmidt J 28 May 2014 54 R v Karaoglu NSWSC Unreported Adamson J 10 June 2014 54 R v Daniel NSWSC Unreported Button J 23 June 2014 54 New South Wales Court of Appeal edit Director of Public Prosecutions NSW v Tikomaimaleya 2015 NSWCA 83 55 Other jurisdictions edit Haidy v DPP 2004 VSC 247 at 14 19 53 R v Paterson 2006 VSC 268 at 29 36 53 Mokbel v DPP No 3 2002 VSC 393 at 10 53 In the matter of an application for bail by Blundell 2008 ACTSC 138 at 2 citing R v Blaikie 1999 NZCA 205 at 34 53 Re Magee 2009 VSC 384 at 15 26 53 Burton v R 1974 3 ACTR 77 at p 78 53 Re Kheir 2008 VSC 492 at 22 53 R v Wakefield 1969 89 WN Pt 1 NSW 325 53 Woods v DPP 2014 VSC 1 53 Dunstan v DPP 1999 FCA 921 at 55 56 1999 92 FCR 168 53 See also editCrimes Act 1900 NSW References edit a b Nicholas Cowdery March 2012 Contemporary Comments Criminal Justice in New South Wales under the new State Government Current Issues in Criminal Justice 3 23 447 457 a b c d Report 133 Law Reform Commission Bail 2012 NSW Law Reform Commission Archived December 28 2014 at the Wayback Machine Bail Act 1978 NSW PDF New South Wales government Retrieved 28 December 2014 a b c Shoebridge David August 2014 Law reform Bail law reforms in NSW Alternative Law Journal 39 2 132 133 doi 10 1177 1037969X1403900214 ISSN 1037 969X S2CID 140897955 Retrieved 17 December 2014 Bail Act 1977 Vic a b c NSW Govt response to LRC review November 2012 Archived December 28 2014 at the Wayback Machine O Farrell Barry 28 November 2012 Press Release New Bail Laws to put community safety first a b c d Hatzistergos John June 2014 Criminal law The bail act 2013 What you need to know LSJ Law Society of NSW Journal 1 1 80 81 ISSN 2203 8906 Retrieved 27 December 2014 Taylor Max 19 May 2013 Bail out Justinian Retrieved 29 July 2015 Hatzistergos John July 2014 Review of the Bail Act 2013 Section 74 3 child is defined in section 4 as a person under 18 The Bail Act 2013 Judicial Commission of New South Wales Retrieved 17 December 2014 a b Bail act FAQ Legal Aid New South Wales Archived from the original on 27 December 2014 Retrieved 16 December 2014 Johnson Peter June 2014 Assessing the unacceptable risk test in the Bail Act 2013 Judicial Officers Bulletin 26 5 37 41 ISSN 1036 1294 Retrieved 27 December 2014 Weatherby Fell Caitlin April 2014 A complete overhaul of the bail system The incoming New South Wales bail act 2013 and aboriginal juvenile offenders Indigenous Law Bulletin 8 11 24 29 ISSN 1328 5475 Retrieved 27 December 2014 Dobraszczyk Caroline 2013 The new Bail Act Bar News Winter 26 28 ISSN 0817 0002 Retrieved 27 December 2014 White Christopher February 2014 An introduction to the Bail Act 2013 Judicial Officers Bulletin 26 1 1 4 ISSN 1036 1294 R v Lago 2014 NSWSC 660 at 5 Anna Patty Harriet Alexander 29 November 2012 Bail overhaul revealed The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 1 January 2015 Smith Greg 22 May 2013 Press Release Bail Act passes Parliament Bail Act 2013 NSW New South Wales government Retrieved 28 December 2014 Bail Act 2013 NSW Bail Act Legal Aid New South Wales Archived from the original on 27 December 2014 Retrieved 16 December 2014 a b Olding Rachel 8 August 2014 NSW police suspected of undermining bail laws The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 27 January 2015 Maley Jacqueline 5 July 2014 NSW Bail Act some freedoms more equal than others The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 16 December 2014 Clennell Andrew 28 June 2014 Premier Mike Baird to toughen controversial bail laws that allowed two accused murderers to walk free Daily Telegraph Retrieved 16 December 2014 Dole Nick 5 August 2014 Bail laws toughened in NSW to hold defendants deemed unacceptable risk ABC News Retrieved 16 December 2014 Quilter Julia 3 July 2014 Not for punishment we need to understand bail not review it The Conversation Retrieved 27 December 2014 Hatzistergos John July 2014 Report Review of the Bail Act 2013 Archived 2014 12 27 at the Wayback Machine Hazzard Brad 17 September 2014 Press Release Bail Act reforms pass Parliament Bail Amendment Act 2014 NSW New South Wales government Retrieved 28 December 2014 Geiger Dominic 4 July 2014 Changes to Bail Act premature UOW expert Illawarra Mercury Retrieved 16 December 2014 Planned NSW bail changes threaten rights News com au 5 August 2014 Retrieved 17 December 2014 Quilter Julia and David Brown October 2014 Speaking Too Soon The Sabotage of Bail Reform in New South Wales International Journal for Crime Justice and Social Democracy 3 3 73 97 doi 10 5204 ijcjsd v3i2 181 Retrieved 27 December 2014 David Brown 14 August 2014 Is rational law reform still possible in a shock jock tabloid world The Conversation a b Alex Heber A Change Org Petition For Stronger Bail Laws In NSW Has Secured More Than 42 000 Signatures In One Day Business Insider Australia Retrieved 25 December 2014 Bail Amendment Act 2014 No 52 Historical notes NSW Legislation New South Wales government Retrieved 29 January 2015 Townsley Lesley Returning to presumptions and the erosion of fundamental rights The Bail Amendment Act 2014 NSW online Alternative Law Journal Vol 40 No 1 Mar 2015 42 45 Availability lt http search informit com au documentSummary dn 035183180151213 res IELHSS gt ISSN 1037 969X cited 01 Apr 15 Shrestha Prajesh Two Steps Back The Presumption of Innocence and Changes to the Bail Act 2013 NSW online Sydney Law Review The Vol 37 No 1 Mar 2015 147 154 Availability lt http search informit com au documentSummary dn 166154335125100 res IELAPA gt ISSN 0082 0512 cited 27 May 15 Bail Additional show cause offences PDF Sydney New South Wales Sentencing Council May 2015 p 3 ISBN 978 1 922254 03 0 John Hatzistergos June 2015 Review of the Bail Act 2013 Final report PDF Retrieved 1 October 2015 Commonwealth of Australia January 2015 Martin Place Siege Joint Commonwealth New South Wales review PDF Canberra Commonwealth of Australia pp 42 43 ISBN 978 1 925237 32 0 Archived from the original PDF on 11 March 2015 Retrieved 1 October 2015 a b Whitbourn Michaela 17 December 2014 Sydney siege aftermath why was gunman Man Haron Monis out on bail The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 25 December 2014 Decision of State Coroner Barnes in relation to ruling on scope PDF Department of Justice 5 June 2015 Retrieved 21 August 2015 Barns Greg 18 December 2014 Stricter bail laws would be an assault on our rights ABC News Retrieved 17 December 2014 NSW Government response to the Martin Place siege PDF NSW Government February 2015 Archived from the original PDF on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 9 July 2015 Baird M and Grant T 2015 NEW LAWS TO COMBAT TERRORISM Media Release 28 August New laws to combat terrorism and illegal firearms Press release New South Wales Government 28 August 2015 Retrieved 30 August 2015 New NSW bail and firearms laws announced in response to Lindt Cafe Sydney siege ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation 28 August 2015 Retrieved 30 August 2015 McGowan Michael 25 July 2022 Hastily drafted NSW bail laws criticised by judge and legal groups Guardian Australia Bail Amendment Bill 2022 www parliament nsw gov au Bail Act 2013 NSW s 101 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Key cases Archived 27 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine Legal Aid New South Wales a b c d e f g h Rebekah Rodger Bail Act 2013 Decisions in the Supreme Court of NSW Legal Aid New South Wales Bail Decisions NSWCA Legal Aid New South WalesFurther reading editTaylor Maxwell Francis 2014 The politics of reform the New South Wales Bail Act 1976 2013 Sydney Australia Macquarie University PhD thesis 2014 Catalogue reference Using the Bail Act 2013 as Amended by the Bail Amendment Act 2014 Legal Aid NSW Archived from the original on 15 June 2016 Hatzistergos J February 2015 Amendments to the bail act 2013 Judicial Officers Bulletin 27 1 1 5 ISSN 1036 1294 Availability Hatzistergos J November 2016 Bail Amendment Act 2015 NSW to commence Judicial Officers Bulletin 28 10 95 98 ISSN 1036 1294 Availability Mark M 5 July 2014 New South Wales bail fail Border Mail p 13 Methven E September 2014 Hasty amendments to Bail Act Alternative Law Journal 39 3 197 ISSN 1037 969X Weatherburn D amp Fitzgerald J 2015 The impact of the NSW Bail Act 2013 on trends in bail and remand in New South Wales PDF NSW Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research ISBN 978 1 921824 99 9 Van der Veen A February 2016 Showing cause under the Bail act 2013 Lessons from the CCA Law Society of NSW Journal 3 1 94 95 ISSN 2203 8906 AvailabilityExternal links editNSW Hansard Bail Bill 2013 NSW Hansard Bail Consequential Amendments Bill 2013 NSW Hansard Bail Amendment Bill 2014 The Bail Act 2013 Selected Scenarios Judicial Commission of New South Wales Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bail Act 2013 amp oldid 1147031591, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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