<!--The Official Report of Parliamentary Debates (Hansard) of the Legislative Council and the House of Assembly of the Parliament of South Australia are covered by parliamentary privilege. Republication by others is not afforded the same protection and may result in exposure to legal liability if the material is defamatory. You may copy and make use of excerpts of proceedings where (1) you attribute the Parliament as the source, (2) you assume the risk of liability if the manner of your use is defamatory, (3) you do not use the material for the purpose of advertising, satire or ridicule, or to misrepresent members of Parliament, and (4) your use of the extracts is fair, accurate and not misleading. Copyright in the Official Report of Parliamentary Debates is held by the Attorney-General of South Australia.-->
<hansard id="" tocId="" xml:lang="EN-AU" schemaVersion="1.0" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xmlns:xml="http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2007/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xsi:noNamespaceSchemaLocation="hansard_1_0.xsd">
  <name>Legislative Council</name>
  <date date="2008-07-23" />
  <sessionName>Fifty-First Parliament, Second Session (51-2)</sessionName>
  <parliamentNum>51</parliamentNum>
  <sessionNum>2</sessionNum>
  <parliamentName>Parliament of South Australia</parliamentName>
  <house>Legislative Council</house>
  <venue></venue>
  <reviewStage>published</reviewStage>
  <startPage num="3557" />
  <endPage num="3661" />
  <dateModified time="2022-08-06T14:30:00+00:00" />
  <proceeding continued="true">
    <name>Bills</name>
    <subject>
      <name>Summary Offences (Indecent Filming) Amendment Bill</name>
      <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001615">
        <heading>SUMMARY OFFENCES (INDECENT FILMING) AMENDMENT BILL</heading>
      </text>
      <subproceeding>
        <name>Introduction and First Reading</name>
        <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001616">
          <heading>Introduction and First Reading</heading>
        </text>
        <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001617">Received from the House of Assembly and read a first time.</text>
      </subproceeding>
      <subproceeding>
        <name>Second Reading</name>
        <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001618">
          <heading>Second Reading</heading>
        </text>
        <talker role="member" id="574" kind="speech">
          <name>The Hon. P. HOLLOWAY</name>
          <house>Legislative Council</house>
          <electorate id="">Minister for Police, Minister for Mineral Resources Development, Minister for Urban Development and Planning</electorate>
          <startTime time="2008-07-23T00:27:00" />
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001619">
            <timeStamp time="2008-07-23T00:27:00" />
            <by role="member" id="574">The Hon. P. HOLLOWAY (Minister for Police, Minister for Mineral Resources Development, Minister for Urban Development and Planning) (00:27):</by>  I move:</text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001620">
            <inserted>That this bill be now read a second time.</inserted>
          </text>
          <text continued="true" id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001621">I seek leave to have the second reading explanation inserted in <term>Hansard </term>without my reading it.</text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001622">Leave granted.</text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001623">
            <inserted>Concern has arisen about whether the present law is adequate to deal with misconduct made possible by recent advances in technology. We now have mobile telephones that incorporate cameras. We have email, by which the resulting pictures can be circulated quickly to others, and the internet, where they can be displayed for all to see. It is easy to use devices covertly to film people in private situations. Members will recall the discovery a few years ago that a camera had been installed in the women's shower block at Lincoln College. A more recent example was the reported use of mobile telephones at a tennis match in Melbourne to take pictures under the clothing of some women spectators attending the event. Everyone agrees that this sort of conduct is unacceptable and the criminal law must be able to deal with it.</inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001624">
            <inserted>This Bill therefore creates new offences of indecent filming and distributing the resulting pictures. Indecent filming occurs when a person takes moving or still pictures, by any means, of a person who is undressed or engaging in a private act or takes pictures under a person's outer clothing of the person's genital region (sometimes called upskirting). The offence only occurs if the film was taken in circumstances where a reasonable person would expect privacy or, in the case of upskirting, would not expect such pictures to be taken.</inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001625">
            <inserted>There are many circumstances in ordinary life where people are lawfully under surveillance. There are surveillance cameras in busy streets and on public transport, in banks, shops and offices, at petrol pumps and at automatic teller machines. This Bill does not restrict filming of that sort. It is directed specifically at filming people in circumstances where they can reasonably expect privacy. The Bill does not attempt to list these but leaves it to the courts to consider whether, in each case, a reasonable person would expect privacy in the particular circumstances.</inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001626">
            <inserted>The making of the film or picture by itself will be illegal, whether or not anyone ever sees it. Distribution will be separately illegal. That includes, for example, exhibiting a film, sending a picture to another person's mobile phone, emailing the picture or uploading it to the internet. The distribution offence also extends to making an agreement to distribute the film or pictures, for example, a contract to supply it to someone else. The court on convicting an offender can also order forfeiture of the film or pictures or the equipment used to make them.</inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001627">
            <inserted>There is a defence to the indecent-filming offence if it is established that the subject of the film or picture consented to its being taken. Such consent is a waiver of privacy. Likewise, there is a defence to the distribution offence if the subject consented to the distribution or if the defendant could not reasonably have known that the subject did not consent.</inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001628">
            <inserted>The Bill does not intend to restrict the lawful activities of the police. It is sometimes necessary to keep people or places under surveillance to detect and prosecute crime. The Listening and Surveillance Devices Act 1972 provides for warrants to cover this activity. The Bill provides that a police officer acting lawfully in the course of law-enforcement activities does not commit an indecent-filming offence.</inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001629">
            <inserted>Likewise, the Bill does not seek to prevent the use of licensed private investigators to catch out fraudulent claimants for compensation, where that might involve filming private acts. This is judged necessary because some fraudsters are careful not to be seen in public acting inconsistently with the alleged injury. Such film would be relevant in any resulting legal proceedings.</inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001630">
            <inserted>Subject to these necessary exceptions, therefore, the Bill seeks to protect personal privacy by making illegal the sort of technologically-assisted spying that occurred in the Lincoln College case. It is important that the law keeps pace with technology in this respect.</inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001631">
            <inserted>I commend the Bill to Members.</inserted>
          </text>
          <bookmark>Explanation of Clauses</bookmark>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001632">
            <inserted>
              <subheading>Explanation of Clauses</subheading>
            </inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001633">
            <item>
              <inserted>Part 1—Preliminary</inserted>
            </item>
          </text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001634">
            <item>
              <inserted>1—Short title</inserted>
            </item>
          </text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001635">
            <inserted>This clause is formal.</inserted>
          </text>
          <page num="3661" />
          <text continued="true" id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001636">
            <inserted>2—Commencement</inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001637">
            <inserted>The measure will be brought into operation be proclamation.</inserted>
          </text>
          <text continued="true" id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001638">
            <inserted>3—Amendment provisions</inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001639">
            <inserted>This clause is formal.</inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001640">
            <item>
              <inserted>Part 2—Amendment of Summary Offences Act 1953</inserted>
            </item>
          </text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001641">
            <item>
              <inserted>4—Insertion of section 23AA</inserted>
            </item>
          </text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001642">
            <inserted>Proposed new section 23AA creates an offence to engage in indecent filming with a maximum penalty of $10,000 or imprisonment for 2 years. The clause defines indecent filming to mean filming of—</inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001643">
            <inserted>(a)&amp;#x9;another person in a state of undress in circumstances in which a reasonable person would expect to be afforded privacy; or</inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001644">
            <inserted>(b)&amp;#x9;another person engaged in a private act in circumstances in which a reasonable person would expect to be afforded privacy; or</inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001645">
            <inserted>(c)&amp;#x9;another person's private region in circumstances in which a reasonable person would not expect that the person's private region might be filmed.</inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001646">
            <inserted>The clause proposes a defence if the indecent filming occurred with the consent of the person filmed or if the indecent filming was undertaken by a licensed investigation agent within the meaning of the Security and Investigation Agents Act 1995 and occurred in the course of obtaining evidence in connection with a claim for compensation, damages, a payment under a contract or some other benefit.</inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001647">
            <inserted>An offence is also committed if a person distributes a moving or still picture obtained by indecent filming. This carries a maximum penalty of $10,000 or imprisonment for 2 years. It is a defence to prove—</inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001648">
            <inserted>(a)&amp;#x9;that the person filmed consented to the distribution of the moving or still picture; or</inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001649">
            <inserted>(b)&amp;#x9;that the defendant did not know, and could not reasonably be expected to have known, that the indecent filming was without the person's consent; or</inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001650">
            <inserted>(c)&amp;#x9;that the indecent filming was undertaken by a licensed investigation agent within the meaning of the Security and Investigation Agents Act 1995 and occurred in the course of obtaining evidence in connection with a claim for compensation, damages, a payment under a contract or some other benefit and the distribution of the moving or still picture was for a purpose connected with that claim.</inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001651">Debate adjourned on motion of Hon. J.M.A. Lensink.</text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001652" />
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001653">At 00:24 the council adjourned until Thursday 24 July 2008 at 11:00.</text>
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001654" />
          <text id="2008072373c816ee013a4650a0001655" />
        </talker>
      </subproceeding>
    </subject>
  </proceeding>
</hansard>