Juries Amendment Act 2000 (WA)

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Western Australia

Juries Amendment Act 2000

Western Australia

Juries Amendment Act 2000

CONTENTS

1.

Short title

1

2.

Commencement

2

3.

The Act amended

2

4.

Section 5 amended

2

5.

Section 18 amended

2

6.

Section 29A amended

2

7.

Section 33 amended

3

8.

Section 36 amended

4

9.

Section 38 amended

4

10.

Sections 56A to 56E inserted

4

Part IXA — Jury confidentiality

56A.

Interpretation and application

4

56B.

Protected information not to be disclosed

6

56C.

Protected information not to be solicited or

obtained

7

56D.

Protected information not to be published

8

56E.

Lawful disclosure of protected information

9

11.

Second Schedule amended

10

Western Australia

Juries Amendment Act 2000

No. 12 of 2000

An Act to amend the Juries Act 1957.

[Assented to 27 May 2000]

The Parliament of Western Australia enacts as follows:

1.             Short title

This Act may be cited as the Juries Amendment Act 2000.

Juries Amendment Act 2000

s. 2

2.             Commencement

(1)

Subject to subsection (2) this Act comes into operation on the

day on which it receives the Royal Assent.

(2)

Section 10 comes into operation on such day as is fixed by

proclamation.

3.             The Act amended

The amendments in this Act are to the Juries Act 1957*.

[* Reprinted as at 2 December 1987.

For subsequent amendments see 1997 Index to Legislation of

Western Australia, Table 1, p. 120.]

4.             Section 5 amended

(1)

Section 5(a)(ii) is amended by deleting “65 years;” and inserting

instead —

“ 70 years; ”.

(2)

Section 5(b)(ii)(I) is amended by deleting “served any part” and

inserting instead —

“ been the subject ”.

5.             Section 18 amended

(1)

Section 18(3)(c) is amended by deleting “, stand asides,”.

(2)

Section 18(4) is amended by deleting “, or the number of stand

asides,”.

6.             Section 29A amended

Section 29A(1) is amended as follows:

(a)

by deleting “computer in respect of a trial in a Circuit Court — ” and inserting instead —

“ computer — ”; and

Juries Amendment Act 2000

s. 7

(b)

in paragraph (a) before “the procedures”, by inserting — “

in respect of a criminal trial held at a place

other than Perth,

”.

7.             Section 33 amended

(1)

Section 33(1)(a) is deleted and “or” after it and the following is

inserted instead —

(a)

if delivered personally to that person, or if left —

(i)      at the address appearing in the Jurors’ Book in respect of that person; or

(ii)      if it is in the same jury district as that address, at an address recorded by the Electoral Commissioner in respect of that person;

or

”.

(2)

Section 33(1)(b) is amended by deleting “that address.” and

inserting instead —

“ an address referred to in paragraph (a). ”.

(3)

After section 33(5) the following subsection is inserted —

(6)

In subsection (1) —

“Electoral Commissioner” means the Electoral

Commissioner appointed under the Electoral Act 1907.

”.

Juries Amendment Act 2000

s. 8

8.             Section 36 amended

Section 36(2) and (3) are repealed.

9.             Section 38 amended

Section 38(1) and (2) are repealed and the following subsection

is inserted instead —

(1)

Without affecting the right of challenge to the array or

for cause shown which might have been claimed or

exercised immediately prior to the coming into

operation of this Act, any party at any criminal trial

(including those prosecuting for the Crown) may

challenge 5 jurors peremptorily.

”.

10.           Sections 56A to 56E inserted

Before section 57 of the principal Act, the following heading

and sections are inserted —

Part IXA — Jury confidentiality

56A.

Interpretation and application

(1)

In this Part —

“prosecuting officer” means —

(a)

the Director of Public Prosecutions or the Deputy Director of Public Prosecutions appointed under the Director of Public Prosecutions Act 1991;

(b)

a member of the staff referred to in section 30 of the Director of Public

Juries Amendment Act 2000

s. 10

Prosecutions Act 1991 who is a practitioner

as defined by the Legal Practitioners

Act 1893;

(c)

the Director of Public Prosecutions or the Associate Director of Public Prosecutions appointed under the Director of Public

Prosecutions Act 1983, as amended from

time to time, of the Parliament of the

Commonwealth;

(d)

a member of the staff referred to in Prosecutions Act 1983, as amended from time to time, of the Parliament of the Commonwealth who is a legal practitioner as defined in that Act; or

(e)

a person employed under section 27(3) of the Director of Public Prosecutions Act 1983, as amended from time to time, of the

Parliament of the Commonwealth who is a legal practitioner as defined in that Act;

“protected information” means —

(a)

statements made, opinions expressed, arguments advanced or votes cast by members of a jury in the course of their

deliberations, other than anything said or

done in open court; or

(b)

information that identifies, or is likely to identify, a person as, or as having been, a juror in particular proceedings;

“publish”, in relation to protected information, means

communicate or disseminate the information in

such a way or to such an extent that it is available

Juries Amendment Act 2000

s. 10

to, or likely to come to the notice of, the public or

a section of the public.

(2)

This Part applies in relation to juries in trials or

coronial proceedings in a court of the State or another

State, the Commonwealth or a territory of the

Commonwealth whether begun before or after the

commencement of the Juries Amendment Act 2000 and

to juries in inquests held under the Coroners Act 1920

before its repeal by section 60 of the Coroners

Act 1996.

56B.

Protected information not to be disclosed

(1)

A person who discloses protected information commits

an offence if the person is aware that, in consequence

of the disclosure, the information will, or is likely to,

be published.

Penalty: $5 000 or imprisonment for 6 months, or both.

(2)

Subsection (1) does not prohibit disclosing protected

information —

(a) to a court;

(b)

to a board or commission appointed by the Governor;

(c)

to the Anti-Corruption Commission established Commission Act 1988;

(d)

Administrative Investigations or the Deputy

Parliamentary Commissioner for

Administrative Investigations appointed under

to the Parliamentary Commissioner for Act 1971;

Juries Amendment Act 2000

s. 10

(e)

to a prosecuting officer or a police officer for the purpose of an investigation concerning an alleged contempt of court or alleged offence

relating to jury deliberations or a juror’s

identity;

(f)

as part of a fair and accurate report of an investigation referred to in paragraph (e);

(g)

to a person in accordance with an authorization granted by the Minister to conduct research into matters relating to juries or jury service; or

(h)

to a practitioner as defined by the Legal Practitioners Act 1893 for the purpose of obtaining advice in relation to a matter referred to in paragraph (a), (b), (c), (d) or (e).

56C.

Protected information not to be solicited or

obtained

(1)

A person who solicits or obtains protected information

with the intention of publishing or facilitating the

publication of that information commits an offence.

Penalty: $5 000 or imprisonment for 6 months, or both.

(2)

Subsection (1) does not prohibit soliciting or obtaining

protected information —

(a)

in the course of proceedings in a court;

(b)

by a board or commission appointed by the Governor;

(c)

by the Anti-Corruption Commission established Commission Act 1988;

(d)

by the Parliamentary Commissioner for Administrative Investigations or the Deputy

Juries Amendment Act 2000

s. 10

Parliamentary Commissioner for

Administrative Investigations appointed under

section 5 of the Parliamentary Commissioner

Act 1971;

(e)

by a prosecuting officer or a police officer for the purpose of an investigation concerning an alleged contempt of court or alleged offence

relating to jury deliberations or a juror’s

identity;

(f)

by a person in accordance with an authorization granted by the Minister to conduct research into matters relating to juries or jury service; or

(g)

by a practitioner as defined by the Legal Practitioners Act 1893 for the purpose of giving advice in relation to a matter referred to

in paragraph (a), (b), (c), (d) or (e).

56D.

Protected information not to be published

(1)

A person who publishes protected information commits

an offence.

Penalty: $5 000 or imprisonment for 6 months, or both.

(2)

Subsection (1) does not prohibit publishing protected

information —

(a)

in accordance with an authorization granted by the Minister to conduct research into matters relating to juries or jury service;

Juries Amendment Act 2000

s. 10

(b)

as a part of a fair and accurate report of —

(i)      proceedings in respect of an alleged contempt of court, an alleged offence against this Part or an alleged offence otherwise relating to jury deliberations or a juror’s identity;

(ii)

proceedings by way of appeal from subparagraph (i); or

(iii)      if the protected information relates to jury deliberations, proceedings by way of appeal from the trial in the course of which the deliberations took place if the nature or circumstances of the deliberations is an issue relevant to the appeal;

or

(c)

about a prosecution for an alleged offence against section 56B, 56C or this section if, before the prosecution was instituted, that information had been published generally to the

public.

56E.

Lawful disclosure of protected information

Sections 56B, 56C and 56D do not prohibit a person —

(a)

during the course of a trial, disclosing, soliciting or obtaining, or publishing, with the leave of the court or otherwise with lawful excuse, information that identifies, or is likely to identify, the person or another person as, or as having been, a juror in the trial; or

Juries Amendment Act 2000

s. 11

(b)

after the trial has been completed, disclosing, soliciting or obtaining, or publishing —

(i)      information that identifies, or is likely to identify, the person as having been a juror in the trial; or

(ii)

information that identifies, or is likely to a juror in the trial if the other person has consented to the publication or disclosure of that information.

”.

11.           Second Schedule amended

Part II of the Second Schedule is amended after item 4 by

inserting the following item —

5.             Age.

Persons who have reached the age of 65 years.

”.

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