<!--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="2015-03-18" />
  <sessionName>Fifty-Third Parliament, Second Session (53-2)</sessionName>
  <parliamentNum>53</parliamentNum>
  <sessionNum>2</sessionNum>
  <parliamentName>Parliament of South Australia</parliamentName>
  <house>Legislative Council</house>
  <venue></venue>
  <reviewStage>published</reviewStage>
  <startPage num="307" />
  <endPage num="342" />
  <dateModified time="2022-08-06T14:30:00+00:00" />
  <proceeding continued="true">
    <name>Bills</name>
    <subject>
      <name>Juries (Prejudicial Publicity) Amendment Bill</name>
      <bills>
        <bill id="s3741">
          <name>Juries (Prejudicial Publicity) Amendment Bill</name>
        </bill>
      </bills>
      <text id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000427">
        <heading>Juries (Prejudicial Publicity) Amendment Bill</heading>
      </text>
      <subproceeding>
        <name>Second Reading</name>
        <text id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000428">
          <heading>Second Reading</heading>
        </text>
        <talker role="member" id="1821" kind="speech">
          <name>The Hon. G.E. GAGO</name>
          <house>Legislative Council</house>
          <electorate id="">Minister for Employment, Higher Education and Skills, Minister for Science and Information Economy, Minister for the Status of Women, Minister for Business Services and Consumers</electorate>
          <startTime time="2015-03-18T17:21:42" />
          <text id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000429">
            <timeStamp time="2015-03-18T17:21:42" />
            <by role="member" id="1821">The Hon. G.E. GAGO (Minister for Employment, Higher Education and Skills, Minister for Science and Information Economy, Minister for the Status of Women, Minister for Business Services and Consumers) (17:21):</by>  I move:</text>
          <text id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000430">
            <inserted>That this bill be now read a second time.</inserted>
          </text>
          <text continued="true" id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000431">I seek leave to have the second reading explanation inserted in <term>Hansard </term>without my reading it.</text>
          <text id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000432">Leave granted.</text>
          <text id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000433">
            <inserted>The law about seeking a stay on the ground that there has been prejudicial publicity sufficient to threaten a fair trial and the course of jury deliberations is governed by the decision of the High Court in <term>Dupas v The Queen</term> (2010) 247 CLR 231. The applicant was charged with a particularly vicious and notorious murder. The circumstances of the murder and the identity of the applicant were the subject of widespread and inflammatory pre-trial publicity. The applicant applied to have the trial permanently stayed as an abuse of process of the court because, he alleged, it would be impossible for him to ever have a fair trial. The High Court held that there should not be a stay. It decided that any unfair consequences of prejudice or prejudgment arising out of extensive adverse pre-trial publicity, was capable of being relieved by the trial judge, in the conduct of the trial, by thorough and appropriate directions to the jury.</inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000434">
            <inserted>But the court went further. It adopted as authoritative this statement of the law from <term>R v Glennon </term>(1992) 173 CLR 592 at 605-606:</inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000435">
            <inserted>
              <term>[A] permanent stay will only be ordered in an extreme case and there must be a fundamental defect 'of such a nature that nothing that a trial judge can do in the conduct of the trial can relieve against its unfair consequences'. And a court of criminal appeal, before it will set aside a conviction on the ground of a miscarriage of justice, requires to be satisfied that there is a serious risk that the pre-trial publicity has deprived the accused of a fair trial. It will determine that question in the light of the evidence as it stands at the time of the trial and in the light of the way in which the trial was conducted, including the steps taken by the trial judge with a view to ensuring a fair trial.</term>
            </inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000436">
            <inserted>The law on trial by judge alone is set out in s 7 of the <term>Juries Act 1927</term>. It was changed substantially by the <term>Statutes Amendment (Serious and Organised Crime) Act 2012</term>. That set of amendments dealt with the situation in which a charge of a serious and organised crime offence had been laid and there was a real and substantiated threat of a miscarriage of justice by reason of threats to the jury or other forms of intimidation. In such an event, the DPP was empowered to make an application to the trial judge for trial by judge alone and the trial judge was given an unfettered discretion to make that order if he or she found that the interests of justice required it.</inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000437">
            <inserted>The public's demand to know and the media's determination to sensationalise is ever present. The stay discretion lies in the inherent discretion of a court, as a court, to deal with an abuse of its process. Even if it was wise to examine that area of law, one could not do so without threatening the independence of the jury and making demands of the judicial system that would clearly be unconstitutional.</inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000438">
            <inserted>But the courts can be offered constitutional alternatives to manage a fair trial and counter threats to its process. That is what this proposal is designed to do. Its operation depends, not on an application by the DPP, nor upon the court of its own motion, but on an application for a stay by the defendant. (It may be noted that Queensland has a similar provision but it is activated by application of the DPP). The making of the order for trial by judge alone is entirely discretionary and would only be made if it was in the interests of justice to do so.</inserted>
          </text>
          <page num="342" />
          <text id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000439">
            <inserted>The following points should be noted:</inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000440">
            <item sublevel="1" bullet="true">
              <inserted>The Bill applies to an application for a stay whether the publicity alleged to be prejudicial occurs pre-trial or at any other stage in the trial, and whether or not it is submitted that the prejudice may occur or has occurred (or both);</inserted>
            </item>
          </text>
          <text id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000441">
            <item sublevel="1" bullet="true">
              <inserted>The Bill applies to an application whenever made and, in particular, whether or not a jury has been empanelled;</inserted>
            </item>
          </text>
          <text id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000442">
            <item sublevel="1" bullet="true">
              <inserted>The sole criterion for the making of the order is that the court (at the relevant time, be it the trial judge or a judge hearing an application pre-trial) thinks that the order is necessary in order to ensure a fair trial;</inserted>
            </item>
          </text>
          <text id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000443">
            <item sublevel="1" bullet="true">
              <inserted>If the accused in question is being jointly tried with another or others, the court retains an absolute discretion whether or not to order joint trial by judge alone for one or more of the co-accused. That decision will be influenced by the extent to which the prejudicial publicity will impact on those co-accused and the discretion of the court, in all the circumstances, to weigh the necessity for joint (or separate) trials in the interests of justice; and</inserted>
            </item>
          </text>
          <text id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000444">
            <item sublevel="1" bullet="true">
              <inserted>The Bill expressly preserves the powers of a court in relation to contempt of court as an explicit reminder to those who might be tempted to use this measure as a warrant to prejudice the trial of an accused.</inserted>
            </item>
          </text>
          <text id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000445">
            <inserted>I commend the Bill to Members.</inserted>
          </text>
          <bookmark>Explanation of Clauses</bookmark>
          <text id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000446">
            <inserted>
              <subheading>Explanation of Clauses</subheading>
            </inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000447">
            <item>
              <inserted>Part 1—Preliminary</inserted>
            </item>
          </text>
          <text id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000448">
            <item>
              <inserted>1—Short title</inserted>
            </item>
          </text>
          <text id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000449">
            <item>
              <inserted>2—Commencement</inserted>
            </item>
          </text>
          <text id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000450">
            <item>
              <inserted>3—Amendment provisions</inserted>
            </item>
          </text>
          <text id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000451">
            <inserted>These clauses are formal.</inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000452">
            <item>
              <inserted>Part 2—Amendment of <term>Juries Act 1927</term></inserted>
            </item>
          </text>
          <text id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000453">
            <item>
              <inserted>4—Amendment of section 7—Trial without jury</inserted>
            </item>
          </text>
          <text id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000454">
            <inserted>This clause amends section 7 of the principal Act to allow a court to order trial by judge alone in the circumstances set out in new subsection (3ca) in order to ensure a fair trial.</inserted>
          </text>
          <text id="20150318e0751d18a6534bccb0000455">Debate adjourned on motion of Hon. S.G. Wade.</text>
        </talker>
      </subproceeding>
    </subject>
  </proceeding>
</hansard>