{"id":"C2004A05172","name":"International Transfer of Prisoners Act 1997","slug":"international-transfer-of-prisoners-act-1997","collection":"act","jurisdiction":"commonwealth","status":"in_force","isInForce":true,"actNumber":"75 of 1997","makingDate":null,"administeringDepartment":null,"currentVersion":{"id":7741,"registerId":"commonwealth-C2004A05172-current","compilationNumber":null,"startDate":"2026-03-30","status":"InForce","reasons":null,"registeredAt":null},"sections":[{"sectionNumber":"Part 1","sectionType":"part","heading":"Preliminary","content":"## Part 1—Preliminary","sortOrder":0},{"sectionNumber":"1","sectionType":"section","heading":"Short title","content":"#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the International Transfer of Prisoners Act 1997.","sortOrder":1},{"sectionNumber":"2","sectionType":"section","heading":"Commencement","content":"#### 2 Commencement\n\n  (1) Sections 1 and 2 commence on the day on which this Act receives the Royal Assent.\n  (2) The remaining provisions of this Act commence on a day or days to be fixed by Proclamation.","sortOrder":2},{"sectionNumber":"3","sectionType":"section","heading":"Objects of Act","content":"#### 3 Objects of Act\n\n  The objects of this Act are:\n    (a) to facilitate the transfer of prisoners between Australia and certain countries with which Australia has entered agreements for the transfer of prisoners so that the prisoners may serve their sentences of imprisonment in their countries of nationality or in countries with which they have community ties; and\n    (b) to facilitate the transfer of prisoners to Australia from countries in which prisoners are serving sentences of imprisonment imposed by certain war crimes tribunals.","sortOrder":3},{"sectionNumber":"4","sectionType":"section","heading":"Definitions","content":"#### 4 Definitions\n\n  (1) In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears:\n\n> ACT means the Australian Capital Territory.\n\n> ACT Minister means the Minister for the ACT administering the law of the ACT relating to the transfer of prisoners and includes any Minister acting for the time being for or on behalf of that Minister.\n\n> appropriate Ministerial consent means Ministerial consent given as required by section 5.\n\n> Attorney‑General means the Attorney‑General of the Commonwealth.\n\n> Australian court means a court or tribunal of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory.\n\n> Australian law means a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory.\n\n> child: without limiting who is a child of a person for the purposes of this Act, someone is the child of a person if he or she is a child of the person within the meaning of the Family Law Act 1975.\n\n> close family member: see section 4AA.\n\n> community ties has the meaning given by subsections (4) and (5).\n\n> continued enforcement method, in relation to enforcement of a sentence of imprisonment, has the meaning given by section 42.\n\n> converted enforcement method, in relation to enforcement of a sentence of imprisonment, has the meaning given by section 42.\n\n> de facto partner has the meaning given by the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n> escort officer, in relation to a prisoner, means the police officer, prison officer or other person specified in the warrant authorising the transfer of the prisoner under this Act as the escort officer for the prisoner.\n\n> extradition country has the same meaning as in the Extradition Act 1988.\n\n> federal prisoner:\n\n    (a) means a prisoner who is serving a sentence of imprisonment imposed under a law of the Commonwealth; and\n    (b) includes a prisoner who is serving a sentence of imprisonment imposed under a law of the Northern Territory and who was, before 12 June 1985, removed to the State of South Australia under section 3 of the Removal of Prisoners (Territories) Act 1923.\n\n> foreign law means a law of a foreign country or of a part of, or in force in a part of, a foreign country.\n\n> Former Yugoslavia Tribunal:\n\n    (a) means the International Tribunal for the Prosecution of Persons Responsible for Serious Violations of International Humanitarian Law Committed in the Territory of the Former Yugoslavia since 1991, established by United Nations Security Council Resolution 827 S/RES/827 (1993); and\n    (b) includes the organs referred to in Article 11 of the Statute of the Tribunal.\n\n> Note: In 2013, the text of United Nations Security Council resolutions was accessible through the United Nations website (www.un.org).\n\n> Immigration Minister means the Minister administering the Migration Act 1958.\n\n> International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals:\n\n    (a) means the International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals, established by United Nations Security Council Resolution 1966 S/RES/1966 (2010); and\n    (b) includes the organs referred to in Article 4 of the Statute of the Tribunal.\n\n> Note 1: In 2013, the text of United Nations Security Council resolutions was accessible through the United Nations website (www.un.org).\n\n> Note 2: The United Nations Security Council decided on 22 December 2010 to establish this Mechanism to carry out residual functions of the Former Yugoslavia Tribunal and the Rwanda Tribunal.\n\n> joint prisoner means:\n\n    (a) a prisoner who is serving sentences of imprisonment imposed under the laws of 2 or more of the States and Territories; or\n    (b) a federal prisoner who is also serving one or more sentences of imprisonment imposed under the laws of one or more of the States and Territories.\n\n> law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory, means a law (whether written or unwritten) of the Commonwealth, that State or that Territory, and includes a law (whether written or unwritten) in force in the Commonwealth, that State or that Territory or in any part of the Commonwealth, that State or that Territory.\n\n> mental illness means an underlying pathological infirmity of the mind, whether of long or short duration and whether permanent or temporary, but does not include a condition that results from the reaction of a healthy mind to extraordinary stimuli.\n\n> mental impairment includes senility, intellectual disability, mental illness, brain damage and severe personality disorder.\n\n> mentally impaired prisoner means:\n\n    (a) a person serving a sentence of imprisonment on the acquittal of the person for an offence on the ground of mental impairment; or\n    (b) a person serving a sentence of imprisonment because the person has been found mentally unfit to stand trial.\n\n> national of a country means a person who is a citizen of the country under the law of the country.\n\n> non‑parole period, in relation to a sentence of imprisonment, means that part of the period of imprisonment for that sentence during which the person is not to be released on parole, whether that part of the period is fixed or recommended by a court or tribunal or fixed by operation of law.\n\n> non‑Tribunal offence means an offence other than a Tribunal offence.\n\n> parent: without limiting who is a parent of a person for the purposes of this Act, someone is the parent of a person if the person is his or her child because of the definition of child in this subsection.\n\n> police officer means:\n\n    (a) a member or special member of the Australian Federal Police; or\n    (b) a member of the police force of a State or Territory.\n\n> prisoner means a person (however described) who is serving a sentence of imprisonment and includes:\n\n    (a) a mentally impaired prisoner; and\n    (b) a person who has been released on parole.\n\n> prisoner’s representative means a person who may consent to the transfer of a prisoner as referred to in section 6.\n\n> prison officer means a person appointed or employed to assist in the management of a prison.\n\n> release on parole means any form of conditional release in the nature of parole and includes:\n\n    (a) release on probation; and\n    (b) release on licence to be at large.\n\n> Rwanda Tribunal:\n\n    (a) means the International Criminal Tribunal for the Prosecution of Persons Responsible for Genocide and Other Serious Violations of International Humanitarian Law Committed in the Territory of Rwanda and Rwandan citizens responsible for genocide and other such violations committed in the territory of neighbouring States, between 1 January 1994 and 31 December 1994, established by United Nations Security Council Resolution 955 S/RES/955 (1994); and\n    (b) includes the organs referred to in Article 10 of the Statute of the Tribunal.\n\n> Note: In 2013, the text of United Nations Security Council resolutions was accessible through the United Nations website (www.un.org).\n\n> sentence of imprisonment means any punishment or measure involving:\n\n    (a) deprivation of liberty; or\n    (b) potential deprivation of liberty, if the punishment or measure relates to a conviction for a non‑Tribunal offence;\n  ordered by a court or tribunal for a determinate or indeterminate period in the exercise of its criminal jurisdiction, and includes any direction or order given or made by the court or tribunal with respect to the commencement of the punishment or measure.\n\n> Note: Paragraph (b) covers suspended sentences.\n\n> serving: see subsection 4B(1).\n\n> State includes the ACT and the Northern Territory.\n\n> State Minister means:\n\n    (a) in relation to a particular State other than the ACT or the Northern Territory—the Minister of the State administering the law of the State relating to the transfer of prisoners; and\n    (b) in relation to the ACT—the ACT Minister; and\n    (c) in relation to the Northern Territory—the Minister for the Northern Territory administering the law of the Northern Territory relating to the transfer of prisoners;\n  and includes any Minister acting for the time being for or on behalf of that Minister and any person to whom the Minister has delegated any of the Minister’s functions under this Act.\n\n> State prisoner means a prisoner who is serving a sentence of imprisonment imposed under a law of a State.\n\n> Statute of the Tribunal means:\n\n    (a) for the Former Yugoslavia Tribunal—the Statute of the Tribunal:\n    (i) adopted by United Nations Security Council Resolution 827 S/RES/827 (1993); and\n    (ii) annexed to the United Nations Secretary‑General’s report S/25704 (1993) given pursuant to paragraph 2 of United Nations Security Council Resolution 808 S/RES/808 (1993); and\n    (b) for the Rwanda Tribunal—the Statute of the Tribunal annexed to (and adopted by) United Nations Security Council Resolution 955 S/RES/955 (1994); and\n    (c) for the International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals—the Statute of the Mechanism in Annex 1 to (and adopted by) United Nations Security Council Resolution 1966 S/RES/1966 (2010).\n\n> Note: In 2013, the text of United Nations Security Council resolutions and United Nations Secretary‑General reports was accessible through the United Nations website (www.un.org).\n\n> superintendent of a prison means the person for the time being in charge of the prison.\n\n> suspended part: see subsection 4B(2).\n\n> Territory means the Jervis Bay Territory, Norfolk Island, the Territory of Christmas Island and the Territory of Cocos (Keeling) Islands, but does not include the ACT and the Northern Territory.\n\n> Territory Minister, in relation to a Territory, means the Minister administering the law of the Territory relating to the transfer of prisoners, and includes:\n\n    (a) any Minister acting for the time being for or on behalf of that Minister; and\n    (b) any person to whom the Minister has delegated any of the Minister’s functions under this Act.\n\n> Territory prisoner means a prisoner who is serving a sentence of imprisonment imposed under a law of a Territory.\n\n> transfer country means a foreign country or a region that is declared by the regulations under section 8 to be a transfer country.\n\n> treaty includes a convention, protocol, agreement or arrangement.\n\n> Tribunal means:\n\n    (a) the Former Yugoslavia Tribunal; or\n    (b) the Rwanda Tribunal; or\n    (c) the International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals.\n\n> Tribunal country means a foreign country in which a Tribunal prisoner is serving, or is to serve, a sentence of imprisonment imposed by the Tribunal.\n\n> Tribunal offence means:\n\n    (a) an offence in relation to which the Former Yugoslavia Tribunal has the power to prosecute persons under Article 2, 3, 4 or 5 of the Statute of the Tribunal; or\n    (b) an offence in relation to which the Rwanda Tribunal has the power to prosecute persons under Article 2, 3 or 4 of the Statute of the Tribunal; or\n    (c) an offence in relation to which the International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals has the power to prosecute persons under Article 1 of the Statute of the Tribunal.\n\n> Tribunal prisoner means a prisoner who is serving a sentence of imprisonment imposed by a Tribunal for a Tribunal offence.\n\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, the following persons are taken not to be serving a sentence of imprisonment:\n    (a) a person who has been released by a court from serving the whole or a part of a sentence of imprisonment on the person giving a security (with or without sureties) by recognisance or otherwise, that the person will comply with conditions relating to the person’s behaviour and in relation to whom action can no longer be taken because of a breach of a condition of the security or because of the expiration of the security;\n    (b) a person who, through exercise of the Royal prerogative of mercy or other executive prerogative or discretion given by law, is no longer required to serve the whole or part of a sentence of imprisonment;\n    (c) a person on whom a sentence of imprisonment has been imposed that has not yet commenced.\n  (3) If a sentence of death imposed on a person has been commuted to a term of imprisonment or to imprisonment for life, this Act applies to and in relation to the person as if the sentence of death had been a sentence of imprisonment for that term or for life.\n  (4) For the purposes of this Act, a prisoner has community ties with a transfer country if:\n    (a) the prisoner’s principal place of residence immediately before being sentenced to imprisonment in Australia was in the transfer country; or\n    (b) the principal place of residence of a close family member of the prisoner is in the transfer country; or\n    (d) the prisoner has a close continuing relationship (involving frequent personal contact and a personal interest in the other person’s welfare) with anyone whose principal place of residence is in the transfer country.\n  (5) For the purposes of this Act, a prisoner has community ties with a State or a Territory if:\n    (a) the prisoner’s principal place of residence immediately before being sentenced to imprisonment in the transfer country was in that State or Territory; or\n    (b) the principal place of residence of a close family member of the prisoner is in that State or Territory; or\n    (d) the prisoner has a close continuing relationship (involving frequent personal contact and a personal interest in the other person’s welfare) with anyone whose principal place of residence is in that State or Territory.","sortOrder":4},{"sectionNumber":"4AA","sectionType":"section","heading":"Close family member","content":"#### 4AA Close family member\n\n  (1) A close family member of a person is:\n    (a) the person’s spouse or de facto partner; or\n    (b) a parent, step‑parent or grandparent of the person; or\n    (c) a child, stepchild or grandchild of the person; or\n    (d) a brother, sister, stepbrother or stepsister of the person; or\n    (e) a guardian or carer of the person.\n\n> Note: De facto partner, parent and child are defined in subsection 4(1).\n\n  (2) For the purposes of, and without limiting, subsection (1):\n    (a) if one person is the child of another person because of the definition of child, relationships traced to or through the person are to be determined on the basis that the person is the child of the other person; and\n    (b) someone is the stepchild, stepbrother, stepsister or step‑parent of another person if this would be the case except that 2 persons who are each other’s de facto partner are not legally married.","sortOrder":5},{"sectionNumber":"4A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Sentences of imprisonment imposed by military commissions of the United States of America","content":"#### 4A Sentences of imprisonment imposed by military commissions of the United States of America\n\n  For the purposes of this Act:\n    (a) a military commission of the United States of America is taken to be a court or tribunal of the United States of America; and\n    (b) any punishment or measure involving deprivation of liberty ordered by a military commission of the United States of America is taken to have been ordered by a court or tribunal of the United States of America in the exercise of its criminal jurisdiction; and\n    (c) any direction or order given or made by a military commission of the United States of America with respect to the commencement of such punishment or measure is taken to have been given or made by a court or tribunal of the United States of America.","sortOrder":6},{"sectionNumber":"4B","sectionType":"section","heading":"Suspended sentences of imprisonment","content":"#### 4B Suspended sentences of imprisonment\n\n  (1) Serving a sentence of imprisonment includes being subject to so much of the period of the sentence of imprisonment as involves a potential deprivation of liberty.\n\n> Note: While a person is subject to a suspended sentence of imprisonment, he or she is treated under this Act as a prisoner serving that sentence of imprisonment.\n\n  (2) The suspended part of a sentence of imprisonment is so much of the period of the sentence of imprisonment as:\n    (a) involves a potential deprivation of liberty; and\n    (b) is not a period of release on parole.","sortOrder":7},{"sectionNumber":"5","sectionType":"section","heading":"Appropriate Ministerial consent to transfer","content":"#### 5 Appropriate Ministerial consent to transfer\n\n  (1) Ministerial consent to the transfer of a prisoner from Australia to a transfer country is required to be given:\n    (a) if the prisoner is a federal prisoner—by the Attorney‑General; or\n    (b) if the prisoner is a State prisoner—by both the Attorney‑General and the State Minister concerned; or\n    (c) if the prisoner is a Territory prisoner—by both the Attorney‑General and the Territory Minister concerned; or\n    (d) if the prisoner is a joint prisoner—by the Attorney‑General and all State Ministers or Territory Ministers concerned.\n  (2) Ministerial consent to the transfer of a prisoner from a transfer country to Australia is required to be given:\n    (a) by both the Attorney‑General and the State or Territory Minister of the State or Territory in which the prisoner is to begin to complete serving a sentence of imprisonment imposed by the transfer country in accordance with this Act; and\n    (b) if applicable:\n    (i) if the prisoner is to begin to complete serving a sentence of imprisonment imposed by the transfer country in accordance with this Act in New South Wales but has community ties with the ACT, the Jervis Bay Territory or Norfolk Island—by the ACT Minister or Territory Minister concerned; or\n    (ii) if the prisoner is to begin to complete serving a sentence of imprisonment imposed by the transfer country in accordance with this Act in Western Australia but has community ties with a Territory other than the Jervis Bay Territory or Norfolk Island—by the Territory Minister.\n\nNote: Community ties with a State or Territory is defined in subsection 4(5).\n\n  (3) Ministerial consent to the transfer of a Tribunal prisoner from a Tribunal country to Australia is required to be given by the Attorney‑General and the State Minister or Territory Minister of the State or Territory in which the Tribunal prisoner is to begin to complete serving the sentence of imprisonment imposed by the Tribunal in accordance with this Act.\n\n> Note: A prisoner may be transferred from the prison, hospital or other place in which the prisoner begins to complete serving a sentence of imprisonment to another prison, hospital or other place in the State or Territory or to a prison, hospital or other place in another State or Territory. See paragraphs 46(5)(d), (e) and (i).","sortOrder":8},{"sectionNumber":"6","sectionType":"section","heading":"Prisoner’s and prisoner’s representative’s consent to transfer","content":"#### 6 Prisoner’s and prisoner’s representative’s consent to transfer\n\n  (1) A prisoner may consent to his or her transfer under this Act only if:\n    (a) the prisoner is an adult; and\n    (b) the prisoner is capable of consenting to the transfer.\n  (2) A prisoner’s close family member, or legal representative, (the prisoner’s representative) may consent to the prisoner’s transfer under this Act if:\n    (a) the prisoner is not an adult; or\n    (b) the prisoner is incapable of consenting to the transfer.\n  (3) A prisoner or prisoner’s representative must be informed, through an interpreter if necessary, in language (including sign language or braille) in which the prisoner or prisoner’s representative is able to communicate with reasonable fluency, of the legal consequences of transfer of the prisoner under this Act before consenting to the transfer.\n  (4) The prisoner’s or prisoner’s representative’s consent to transfer must be accompanied by certification by the prisoner or prisoner’s representative that he or she has been so informed.\n  (5) For the purposes of this section, a prisoner is incapable of consenting to his or her transfer if the prisoner is an adult who:\n    (a) is incapable of understanding the general nature and effect of the transfer; or\n    (b) is incapable of indicating whether he or she consents or does not consent to a transfer.\n  (6) A prisoner’s or prisoner’s representative’s consent to transfer cannot be withdrawn after the prisoner leaves the country from which the prisoner is being transferred.\n  (7) In this section:\n\n> adult means:\n\n    (a) in the case of a prisoner in Australia—a person of or above 18 years of age; and\n    (b) in the case of a prisoner in a transfer country or a Tribunal country—a person of or above the age that under the law of that country is the age at which a person is considered for legal purposes to be an adult.","sortOrder":9},{"sectionNumber":"7","sectionType":"section","heading":"Extension to external Territories","content":"#### 7 Extension to external Territories\n\n  This Act extends to the external Territories.","sortOrder":10},{"sectionNumber":"8","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application of Act to transfer countries","content":"#### 8 Application of Act to transfer countries\n\n  (1) The regulations may provide that this Act applies to a foreign country declared by the regulations to be a transfer country for the purposes of this Act.\n  (2) The regulations may declare that this Act applies in relation to such a foreign country subject to limitations, conditions, exceptions or qualifications referred to in the regulations.\n  (3) The limitations, conditions, exceptions or qualifications in relation to a transfer country that may be referred to in the regulations are any one or more of the following:\n    (a) limitations, conditions, exceptions or qualifications that are necessary to give effect to a bilateral treaty in relation to transfer of prisoners to or from that country, a copy of which is set out in the regulations;\n    (b) limitations, conditions, exceptions or qualifications that are necessary to give effect to a multilateral treaty in relation to transfer of prisoners to or from that country, a copy of which is set out in the regulations;\n    (c) limitations, conditions, exceptions or qualifications (other than limitations, conditions, exceptions or qualifications that are necessary to give effect to a treaty) for the transfer of prisoners to or from that country that are set out, or identified in any other way, in the regulations.\n  (4) The limitations, conditions, exceptions or qualifications that are necessary to give effect to a treaty in relation to a transfer country may be expressed in the form that this Act applies to that country subject to the treaty.\n  (5) For the purposes of the application of this Act in relation to a transfer country:\n    (a) a colony, territory or protectorate of that country; and\n    (b) a region that is part of that country; and\n    (c) a region that is under the protection of that country; and\n    (d) a region over which that country exercises jurisdiction or control; and\n    (e) a region for whose international relations that country is responsible;\n  are taken to be part of the country.\n  (6) For the purposes of this section, a region is taken to be a foreign country if:\n    (a) the region is a colony, territory or protectorate of a foreign country; or\n    (b) the region is part of a foreign country; or\n    (c) the region is under the protection of a foreign country; or\n    (d) a foreign country exercises jurisdiction or control over the region; or\n    (e) a foreign country is responsible for the region’s international relations.","sortOrder":11},{"sectionNumber":"9","sectionType":"section","heading":"Act to bind Crown","content":"#### 9 Act to bind Crown\n\n  This Act binds the Crown in each of its capacities.","sortOrder":12},{"sectionNumber":"Part 2","sectionType":"part","heading":"Transfers generally","content":"## Part 2—Transfers generally","sortOrder":13},{"sectionNumber":"10","sectionType":"section","heading":"When may a prisoner (other than a Tribunal prisoner) be transferred?","content":"#### 10 When may a prisoner (other than a Tribunal prisoner) be transferred?\n\n  A prisoner (other than a Tribunal prisoner) may be transferred between Australia and a transfer country under this Act if:\n    (a) the prisoner is eligible for transfer from or to Australia (as the case requires); and\n    (b) Australia and the transfer country have agreed to the transfer of the prisoner on terms agreed under this Act; and\n    (c) the prisoner or the prisoner’s representative has consented in writing to transfer on those terms; and\n    (d) appropriate Ministerial consent in writing has been given to transfer on those terms; and\n    (e) the relevant conditions for transfer of the prisoner are satisfied; and\n    (f) the transfer of the prisoner is not likely to prevent the surrender of the prisoner to any extradition country known by the Attorney‑General to have requested the extradition of the prisoner or to have expressed interest in extraditing the prisoner or that, in the opinion of the Attorney‑General, is reasonably likely to request extradition.","sortOrder":14},{"sectionNumber":"10A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Decisions by the Attorney‑General about transfers","content":"#### 10A Decisions by the Attorney‑General about transfers\n\n  (1) The Attorney‑General need not take any steps for making:\n    (a) a decision on an application under section 16 (about transfers from Australia) for the transfer of a prisoner; or\n    (b) a decision under section 24 (about transfers to Australia) about a request for the transfer of a prisoner;\n  if any of the following requirements for the transfer are not met:\n    (c) paragraph 10(a), (c), (e) or (f);\n    (d) paragraph 10(b), to the extent that it requires the agreement of the transfer country to the transfer;\n    (e) paragraph 10(d), to the extent that it requires the consent of State Ministers or Territory Ministers to the transfer.\n\n> Note: The prisoner will be kept informed about the progress of the application or request (see section 52).\n\n  (2) The Attorney‑General need not take any steps for making a decision referred to in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) for the transfer of a prisoner if:\n    (a) the prisoner had made an earlier application or request; and\n    (b) the Attorney‑General received the current application or request less than 12 months after the later of either:\n    (i) the day the prisoner was informed under section 52 that the earlier application or request did not meet one or more of the requirements in section 10;\n    (ii) the day the prisoner informed the Attorney‑General that the prisoner was withdrawing the earlier application or request.\n  (3) Parts 3 and 4 have effect subject to this section.","sortOrder":15},{"sectionNumber":"11","sectionType":"section","heading":"When may a Tribunal prisoner be transferred?","content":"#### 11 When may a Tribunal prisoner be transferred?\n\n  A Tribunal prisoner may be transferred to Australia under this Act if:\n    (a) Australia and the Tribunal have agreed to the transfer of the prisoner on terms agreed under this Act; and\n    (b) unless the Attorney‑General determines that it is not necessary in the prisoner’s case—the prisoner or prisoner’s representative has consented to transfer on those terms; and\n    (c) appropriate Ministerial consent in writing has been given to transfer on those terms; and\n    (d) the relevant conditions for transfer to Australia of Tribunal prisoners are satisfied.","sortOrder":16},{"sectionNumber":"12","sectionType":"section","heading":"Eligibility for transfer from Australia of prisoners (other than Tribunal prisoners)","content":"#### 12 Eligibility for transfer from Australia of prisoners (other than Tribunal prisoners)\n\n  A prisoner (other than a Tribunal prisoner) is eligible for transfer from Australia to a transfer country under this Act if the prisoner:\n    (a) is a national of the transfer country; or\n    (b) has community ties with the transfer country.\n\n> Note: Community ties with a transfer country is defined in subsection 4(4).","sortOrder":17},{"sectionNumber":"13","sectionType":"section","heading":"Eligibility for transfer to Australia of prisoners (other than Tribunal prisoners)","content":"#### 13 Eligibility for transfer to Australia of prisoners (other than Tribunal prisoners)\n\n  (1) A prisoner (other than a Tribunal prisoner) is eligible for transfer to Australia from a transfer country under this Act if the prisoner:\n    (a) is an Australian citizen; or\n    (b) is permitted to travel to, enter and remain in Australia indefinitely pursuant to the Migration Act 1958 and has community ties with a State or a Territory.\n\n> Note: Community ties with a State or Territory is defined in subsection 4(5).\n\n  (2) If a request is made for the transfer of a prisoner (other than a Tribunal prisoner) to Australia, the Attorney‑General must consult with the Immigration Minister about whether the prisoner:\n    (a) is eligible under subsection (1) for a transfer to Australia; or\n    (b) is likely to be eligible under subsection (1) for a transfer to Australia at a future time specified by the Attorney‑General for the purposes of the consultation.","sortOrder":18},{"sectionNumber":"14","sectionType":"section","heading":"Transfer conditions—transfer from Australia","content":"#### 14 Transfer conditions—transfer from Australia\n\n  (1) The conditions for transfer from Australia of a prisoner (other than a mentally impaired prisoner) are satisfied if:\n    (a) neither the sentence of imprisonment imposed by the Australian court nor the conviction on which it is based is subject to appeal; and\n    (b) subject to subsection (3), the acts or omissions constituting the offence on account of which the prisoner is serving the sentence in Australia would, if the acts or omissions had occurred in the transfer country at the time the Attorney‑General received the application under section 16 for the prisoner, have constituted an offence in the transfer country; and\n    (c) if the sentence of imprisonment is determinate—on the day of receipt of the application at least 6 months of the prisoner’s sentence remains to be served (whether or not the prisoner has been released on parole or is serving the suspended part of the sentence), or a shorter period remains to be served and the Attorney‑General has determined that, in the circumstances, transfer for a shorter period is acceptable.\n  (2) The conditions for transfer from Australia of a mentally impaired prisoner are satisfied if:\n    (a) neither the sentence of imprisonment imposed by the Australian court nor the acquittal or finding of unfitness to stand trial on which it is based is subject to appeal; and\n    (b) subject to subsection (3), the acts or omissions constituting the offence:\n    (i) in respect of which the prisoner was charged but acquitted on the ground of mental impairment or found unfit to stand trial; and\n    (ii) on account of which the prisoner is serving the sentence in Australia;\n    would, if the acts or omissions had occurred in the transfer country at the time the Attorney‑General received the application under section 16 for the prisoner, have constituted an offence in the transfer country; and\n    (c) if the sentence of imprisonment is determinate—on the day of receipt of the application at least 6 months of the prisoner’s sentence remains to be served (whether or not any review affecting the duration of the sentence is pending), or a shorter period remains to be served and the Attorney‑General has determined that, in the circumstances of the case, transfer for a shorter period is acceptable.\n  (3) The Attorney‑General may determine that the requirements of subsection (1)(b) or (2)(b) need not be satisfied in a particular prisoner’s case.","sortOrder":19},{"sectionNumber":"15","sectionType":"section","heading":"Transfer conditions—transfer to Australia","content":"#### 15 Transfer conditions—transfer to Australia\n\n  (1) The conditions for transfer to Australia of a prisoner (other than a mentally impaired prisoner or Tribunal prisoner) are satisfied if:\n    (a) neither the sentence of imprisonment imposed by the transfer country’s court or tribunal nor the conviction on which it is based is subject to appeal under the law of the transfer country; and\n    (b) subject to subsection (3), the acts or omissions constituting the offence on account of which the prisoner is serving the sentence in the transfer country would, if the acts or omissions had occurred in Australia at the time the Attorney‑General received the request under section 24 for the prisoner, have constituted an offence in Australia; and\n    (c) if the sentence of imprisonment is determinate—on the day of receipt of the request at least 6 months of the prisoner’s sentence remains to be served (whether or not the prisoner has been released on parole or is serving the suspended part of the sentence), or a shorter period remains to be served and the Attorney‑General has determined that, in the circumstances, transfer for a shorter period is acceptable.\n  (2) The conditions for transfer to Australia of a mentally impaired prisoner are satisfied if:\n    (a) neither the sentence of imprisonment imposed by the transfer country’s court or tribunal nor the acquittal or finding of unfitness to stand trial on which it is based is subject to appeal under the law of the transfer country; and\n    (b) subject to subsection (3), the acts or omissions constituting the offence:\n    (i) in respect of which the prisoner was charged but acquitted on the ground of mental impairment or found unfit to stand trial; and\n    (ii) on account of which the prisoner is serving the sentence in the transfer country;\n    would, if the acts or omissions had occurred in Australia at the time the Attorney‑General received the request under section 24 for the prisoner, have constituted an offence in Australia; and\n    (c) if the sentence of imprisonment is determinate—on the day of receipt of the request at least 6 months of the prisoner’s sentence remains to be served (whether or not any review affecting the duration of the sentence is pending), or a shorter period remains to be served and the Attorney‑General has determined that, in the circumstances, transfer for a shorter period is acceptable.\n  (3) The Attorney‑General may determine that the requirements of subsection (1)(b) or (2)(b) need not be satisfied in a particular prisoner’s case.\n  (4) The conditions for transfer to Australia of a Tribunal prisoner are satisfied if:\n    (a) neither the sentence of imprisonment imposed by the Tribunal nor the conviction on which it is based is subject to appeal under the Statute of the Tribunal; and\n    (b) if the sentence of imprisonment is determinate—on the day of receipt of the request for transfer at least 6 months of the prisoner’s sentence remains to be served (whether or not the prisoner has been released on parole or is serving the suspended part of the sentence), or a shorter period remains to be served and the Attorney‑General has determined that, in the circumstances, transfer for a shorter period is acceptable.","sortOrder":20},{"sectionNumber":"Part 3","sectionType":"part","heading":"Transfers from Australia","content":"## Part 3—Transfers from Australia","sortOrder":21},{"sectionNumber":"16","sectionType":"section","heading":"Applications for transfer from Australia","content":"#### 16 Applications for transfer from Australia\n\n  A prisoner serving a sentence of imprisonment in Australia, or the prisoner’s representative, may apply to the Attorney‑General, using a form approved in writing by the Attorney‑General, for transfer of the prisoner to a transfer country to complete serving the sentence on terms agreed in accordance with this Act.\n\n> Note: The Attorney‑General need not take any steps to decide the application if certain requirements are not met, or if it is less than 12 months since an earlier application for the prisoner was not proceeded with (see section 10A).","sortOrder":22},{"sectionNumber":"18","sectionType":"section","heading":"Asking the transfer country to consent to the transfer","content":"#### 18 Asking the transfer country to consent to the transfer\n\n  (1) The Attorney‑General must ask the transfer country:\n    (a) whether it consents to the transfer of a prisoner for whom an application has been given under section 16; and\n    (b) to propose any terms on which any consent is to be subject.\n  (2) When asking the transfer country, the Attorney‑General must give the transfer country the following:\n    (a) a copy of the application given under section 16 for the prisoner;\n    (b) any information required to be provided in accordance with arrangements made with the transfer country; and\n    (c) any other information the Attorney‑General considers relevant, including details of:\n    (i) any request for extradition of the prisoner that has been made under the Extradition Act 1988; and\n    (ii) any expression of interest made to the Attorney‑General by another country to extradite the prisoner.\n\n> Note: The Attorney‑General may also ask the transfer country for information relevant to the transfer.","sortOrder":23},{"sectionNumber":"19","sectionType":"section","heading":"Decision by the Attorney‑General to refuse consent to transfer from Australia","content":"#### 19 Decision by the Attorney‑General to refuse consent to transfer from Australia\n\n  (1) If the transfer country consents to the transfer of the prisoner on terms that it proposes, the Attorney‑General may decide to refuse consent to the transfer on those terms.\n  (2) Before deciding under subsection (1) to refuse consent, the Attorney‑General must notify the prisoner (or the prisoner’s representative) of the proposed terms on which the transfer country has consented to the transfer, including the proposed method by which the sentence of imprisonment will be enforced by the transfer country.\n  (3) If the Attorney‑General decides under subsection (1) to refuse consent to the transfer on terms proposed by the transfer country, the Attorney‑General:\n    (a) must notify the transfer country of the decision; and\n    (b) may advise the transfer country in writing that consent may be given if the transfer country proposes a variation of those terms, including any variation suggested by the Attorney‑General.\n\n> Note: This section applies separately for each occasion where the transfer country proposes varied terms. This means the Attorney‑General can consider whether to refuse consent under subsection (1) in relation to each variation of terms proposed by the transfer country.\n\n  (4) If the Attorney‑General decides under subsection (1) to refuse consent to the transfer on terms proposed by the transfer country, sections 20 to 23 do not apply for the transfer on those particular terms.\n\n> Note: Sections 20 to 23 continue to apply for the transfer on any proposed variation of those terms, unless the Attorney‑General has refused consent to the varied terms under subsection (1) of this section.","sortOrder":24},{"sectionNumber":"20","sectionType":"section","heading":"Governmental consent to transfer from Australia","content":"#### 20 Governmental consent to transfer from Australia\n\n  (1) If the transfer country consents to the transfer of the prisoner on terms that it proposes, the Attorney‑General must:\n    (a) give any State Ministers and Territory Ministers whose consent is required for the transfer to have appropriate Ministerial consent:\n    (i) a copy of the application given under section 16; and\n    (ii) any other information the Attorney‑General considers relevant; and\n    (b) notify the following of the proposed terms on which the transfer country has given consent to the transfer, including the proposed method by which the sentence of imprisonment will be enforced by the transfer country:\n    (i) each Minister concerned;\n    (ii) unless earlier notified under subsection 19(2) of those proposed terms—the prisoner (or the prisoner’s representative).\n  (1A) Each Minister concerned may:\n    (a) advise the Attorney‑General of any matters that Minister considers relevant to the processing of the application; and\n    (b) request the Attorney‑General to obtain information from the transfer country that is relevant to that Minister’s assessment of the application.\n  (2) The prisoner or prisoner’s representative and each Minister concerned are to advise the Attorney‑General as to whether they consent to the transfer on the terms proposed by the transfer country.\n  (3) The Attorney‑General must decide whether to consent to the transfer of the prisoner on the terms proposed by the transfer country.\n  (4) The Attorney‑General must notify the transfer country of his or her decision under subsection (3).\n  (5) If the Attorney‑General decides not to consent to the transfer on those terms, the Attorney‑General may advise the transfer country in writing that consent may be given if the transfer country proposes a variation of those terms, including any variation suggested by the Attorney‑General.","sortOrder":25},{"sectionNumber":"21","sectionType":"section","heading":"Issue of warrant for transfer from Australia","content":"#### 21 Issue of warrant for transfer from Australia\n\n  The Attorney‑General may, subject to Part 2, issue a warrant, in the form prescribed by the regulations, for the transfer of the prisoner from Australia to a transfer country if the prisoner’s or the prisoner’s representative’s consent and appropriate Ministerial consent in writing to the transfer on the terms proposed by the transfer country (including proposed terms that are an agreed variation of earlier terms) have been given.","sortOrder":26},{"sectionNumber":"22","sectionType":"section","heading":"Warrants for transfer from Australia","content":"#### 22 Warrants for transfer from Australia\n\n  (1) A warrant for the transfer of a prisoner from Australia authorises the transfer of the prisoner from Australia to the transfer country to complete serving the sentence of imprisonment in accordance with the terms agreed under this Act.\n  (2) A warrant for transfer from Australia must:\n    (a) specify the name and date of birth of the prisoner to be transferred; and\n    (b) specify the transfer country to which the prisoner is to be transferred; and\n    (c) state that the following written consents to the transfer have been given:\n    (i) the prisoner’s or prisoner’s representative’s consent;\n    (ii) the transfer country’s consent;\n    (iii) appropriate Ministerial consent.\n  (3) If the prisoner has not been released on parole and is not serving the suspended part of the sentence of imprisonment, the warrant is:\n    (a) to require the superintendent of the prison, or the person in charge of the hospital or other place, in which the prisoner is serving the sentence of imprisonment to release the prisoner into the custody of a person specified in the warrant; and\n    (b) to authorise the person to take the prisoner to a place in Australia and, if necessary, to detain the prisoner in custody for the purpose of placing the prisoner in the custody of an escort officer for transport out of Australia; and\n    (c) to authorise the escort officer to transport the prisoner in custody out of Australia to the transfer country for surrender to a person appointed by the transfer country to receive the prisoner.\n  (4) If the prisoner has been released on parole, the warrant is:\n    (a) to specify any approvals, authorities, permissions or variations to the parole or other order or licence to be at large that have been made under an Australian law; and\n    (b) to specify any procedures for the transfer of the prisoner to the transfer country that have been agreed upon with the transfer country and to give any necessary authorisations and directions.\n  (4A) If the prisoner is serving the suspended part of the sentence of imprisonment, the warrant is:\n    (a) to specify any conditions relating to that part of the sentence that have been imposed under an Australian law; and\n    (b) to specify any procedures for the transfer of the prisoner to the transfer country that have been agreed upon with the transfer country, and to give any necessary authorisations and directions.\n  (5) The Attorney‑General may give any direction or approval that is necessary to ensure that the warrant is executed in accordance with its tenor.","sortOrder":27},{"sectionNumber":"23","sectionType":"section","heading":"Cancellation of warrant for transfer from Australia","content":"#### 23 Cancellation of warrant for transfer from Australia\n\n  (1) The Attorney‑General may cancel a warrant for transfer from Australia at any time before the prisoner it concerns leaves Australia.\n  (2) Without limiting the grounds on which the Attorney‑General may cancel a warrant for transfer, it must be cancelled if the Attorney‑General, a State or Territory Minister, the prisoner or prisoner’s representative or the transfer country concerned, withdraws consent to the transfer.","sortOrder":28},{"sectionNumber":"Part 4","sectionType":"part","heading":"Transfers to Australia of prisoners from transfer countries","content":"## Part 4—Transfers to Australia of prisoners from transfer countries","sortOrder":29},{"sectionNumber":"24","sectionType":"section","heading":"Transfer request from outside Australia","content":"#### 24 Transfer request from outside Australia\n\n  (1) The Attorney‑General may consent to a request for the transfer of a prisoner (other than a Tribunal prisoner) serving a sentence of imprisonment in a transfer country to Australia to complete serving the sentence on terms agreed under this Act if the Attorney‑General is satisfied that, were the Attorney‑General to give that consent, the transfer could be made in compliance with section 10.\n\n> Note: The Attorney‑General need not take any steps to decide the request if certain requirements are not met, or if it is less than 12 months since an earlier request for the prisoner was not proceeded with (see section 10A).\n\n  (2) The request may be made by the transfer country, the prisoner or the prisoner’s representative.","sortOrder":30},{"sectionNumber":"24A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Decision by the Attorney‑General to refuse consent to transfer to Australia","content":"#### 24A Decision by the Attorney‑General to refuse consent to transfer to Australia\n\n  (1) The Attorney‑General may decide to refuse consent to the transfer of a prisoner to Australia under this Part:\n    (a) after the Attorney‑General receives a request under section 24 for the transfer; but\n    (b) before the Attorney‑General has started to act under any of sections 26 to 32 in relation to the transfer.\n  (2) Sections 26 to 32 do not apply for the transfer of the prisoner if the Attorney‑General decides under subsection (1) of this section to refuse consent to the transfer.","sortOrder":31},{"sectionNumber":"25","sectionType":"section","heading":"Information to accompany request","content":"#### 25 Information to accompany request\n\n  Before consenting to the transfer of a prisoner to Australia under this Part, the Attorney‑General may request the transfer country to provide:\n    (a) details of any request for extradition of the prisoner that has been made to the transfer country or of any country that has expressed interest in extraditing the prisoner or that is likely, in the opinion of the transfer country, to request extradition; and\n    (b) any other information the Attorney‑General considers relevant to the assessment of whether consent should be given for the transfer of the prisoner to Australia.","sortOrder":32},{"sectionNumber":"26","sectionType":"section","heading":"Enforcement of foreign sentence","content":"#### 26 Enforcement of foreign sentence\n\n  Before consenting to the transfer of a prisoner to Australia under this Part, the Attorney‑General is to determine, in accordance with Part 6, the method by which the sentence of imprisonment imposed by the transfer country will be enforced in Australia if the prisoner is transferred and is to advise the transfer country of this and of any other proposed terms on which consent will be given to the transfer.","sortOrder":33},{"sectionNumber":"27","sectionType":"section","heading":"Governmental consent to transfer to Australia","content":"#### 27 Governmental consent to transfer to Australia\n\n  (1) Before consenting to the transfer of a prisoner to Australia under this Part, the Attorney‑General is to notify the State or Territory Minister of the place in which the prisoner wishes to begin to complete serving the sentence of imprisonment imposed by the transfer country in Australia, in writing, in the form prescribed by the regulations, of receipt of the request.\n  (2) If the prisoner wishes to begin to complete serving the sentence of imprisonment in New South Wales or Western Australia but has community ties with the ACT or a Territory, the Attorney‑General is also to notify the ACT Minister or Territory Minister concerned of the matters referred to in subsection (1).\n\n> Note: Community ties with a State or Territory is defined in subsection 4(5).\n\n  (3) The Attorney‑General is to provide each Minister concerned with any information that the transfer country has given the Attorney‑General and particulars of the method by which the Attorney‑General considers the sentence of imprisonment imposed by the transfer country could be enforced by Australia and any other proposed terms of the transfer.\n  (4) Each Minister concerned is to advise the Attorney‑General in writing as to whether the Minister consents to the transfer on the terms proposed as soon as possible after receiving the notification.\n  (5) If the Minister of the State or Territory in which the prisoner is to begin to complete serving the sentence of imprisonment imposed by the transfer country consents to the transfer, the Minister is to advise the Attorney‑General of:\n    (a) the prison, or hospital or other place, in which the prisoner will begin to complete serving the sentence in the State or Territory; and\n    (b) in the case of a prisoner who has been released on parole—any recommended terms or conditions on which the prisoner is to complete serving the sentence; and\n    (ba) in the case of a prisoner serving the suspended part of the sentence—any recommended terms or conditions on which the prisoner is to complete serving the sentence; and\n    (c) any other matters the Minister considers relevant to sentence enforcement in the State or Territory.\n\n> Note: A prisoner may be transferred from the prison, hospital or other place in the State or Territory in which the prisoner begins to complete serving a sentence of imprisonment to another prison, hospital or other place in the State or Territory or to a prison, hospital or other place in another State or Territory. See paragraphs 46(5)(d), (e) and (i).","sortOrder":34},{"sectionNumber":"28","sectionType":"section","heading":"Transfer country’s consent to transfer","content":"#### 28 Transfer country’s consent to transfer\n\n  (1) The Attorney‑General must, as soon as possible after the matters mentioned in subsection (2) are satisfied for a transfer, notify the transfer country of this and ask it:\n    (a) whether it consents to the transfer on the terms proposed in writing by the Attorney‑General; and\n    (b) to advise whether the prisoner, or the prisoner’s representative, consents to the transfer on those terms.\n  (2) The matters are as follows:\n    (a) paragraphs 10(a), (e) and (f);\n    (b) consent in writing, by any applicable State Ministers and Territory Ministers, has been given to transfer on those terms.","sortOrder":35},{"sectionNumber":"29","sectionType":"section","heading":"Issue of warrant for transfer to Australia","content":"#### 29 Issue of warrant for transfer to Australia\n\n  The Attorney‑General may issue a warrant, in the form prescribed by the regulations, for the transfer of the prisoner from a transfer country to Australia if the written consent of the prisoner or prisoner’s representative and the transfer country and appropriate Ministerial consent in writing to transfer on the terms proposed by Australia have been given.","sortOrder":36},{"sectionNumber":"30","sectionType":"section","heading":"Warrants for transfer to Australia","content":"#### 30 Warrants for transfer to Australia\n\n  (1) A warrant for the transfer of a prisoner to Australia authorises the transfer of the prisoner from the transfer country to Australia to complete serving the sentence of imprisonment imposed by the transfer country in accordance with the terms agreed under this Act.\n  (2) A warrant for transfer to Australia must:\n    (a) specify the name and date of birth of the prisoner to be transferred; and\n    (b) specify the transfer country from which the prisoner is to be transferred; and\n    (c) state that the following written consents to the transfer have been given:\n    (i) the prisoner’s or prisoner’s representative’s consent;\n    (ii) the transfer country’s consent;\n    (iii) appropriate Ministerial consent.\n  (3) If the prisoner has not been released on parole and is not serving the suspended part of the sentence of imprisonment, the warrant is:\n    (a) to authorise an escort officer to collect the prisoner from a place (whether in Australia or the transfer country) specified in the warrant; and\n    (b) if the place is in the transfer country, to authorise the escort officer to transport the prisoner in custody to Australia for surrender to a person appointed by the Attorney‑General to receive the prisoner and, if appropriate, to authorise the appointed person to escort the prisoner to the prison, or hospital or other place, in Australia where the prisoner is to begin to complete serving the sentence of imprisonment in accordance with this Act; and\n    (c) if the place is in Australia, to authorise the escort officer to escort the prisoner to the prison, or hospital or other place, in Australia where the prisoner is to begin to complete serving the sentence of imprisonment in accordance with this Act; and\n    (d) if the prisoner is to be escorted to a prison, to require the superintendent of the prison to take the prisoner into custody to be dealt with in accordance with the terms agreed under this Act; and\n    (e) if the prisoner is to be escorted to a hospital or other place, to authorise the detention of the prisoner in that hospital or place to be dealt with in accordance with the terms agreed under this Act.\n\n> Note: A prisoner may be transferred from the prison, hospital or other place in the State or Territory in which the prisoner begins to complete serving a sentence of imprisonment to another prison, hospital or other place in the State or Territory or to a prison, hospital or other place in another State or Territory. See paragraphs 46(5)(d), (e) and (i).\n\n  (4) However, if the prisoner:\n    (a) has been released on parole; or\n    (b) is serving the suspended part of the sentence of imprisonment;\n  the warrant is to specify any procedures for the transfer of the prisoner to Australia that have been agreed upon with the transfer country and to give any necessary authorisations and directions.\n  (5) The Attorney‑General may give any direction or approval that is necessary to ensure the warrant is executed in accordance with its tenor.","sortOrder":37},{"sectionNumber":"31","sectionType":"section","heading":"Cancellation of warrant","content":"#### 31 Cancellation of warrant\n\n  (1) The Attorney‑General may cancel a warrant for transfer to Australia at any time before the prisoner it concerns leaves the transfer country.\n  (2) Without limiting the grounds on which the Attorney‑General may cancel a transfer warrant, it must be cancelled if the Attorney‑General, a State or Territory Minister, a prisoner or prisoner’s representative, or the transfer country concerned, withdraws consent to the transfer.","sortOrder":38},{"sectionNumber":"32","sectionType":"section","heading":"Effect of warrant on prisoner’s sentence","content":"#### 32 Effect of warrant on prisoner’s sentence\n\n  The prisoner to whom a warrant relates is to be released when the prisoner has completed serving the sentence of imprisonment in accordance with this Act unless any other law authorises the prisoner’s detention in respect of an offence other than that on account of which the sentence of imprisonment was imposed.","sortOrder":39},{"sectionNumber":"Part 5","sectionType":"part","heading":"Transfer to Australia of Tribunal prisoners","content":"## Part 5—Transfer to Australia of Tribunal prisoners","sortOrder":40},{"sectionNumber":"33","sectionType":"section","heading":"Transfer request from a Tribunal","content":"#### 33 Transfer request from a Tribunal\n\n  The Attorney‑General may consent to a request from a Tribunal for the transfer of a Tribunal prisoner serving a sentence of imprisonment imposed by the Tribunal in a Tribunal country to Australia to complete serving the sentence of imprisonment on terms agreed under this Act if the Attorney‑General is satisfied that the transfer can be made in compliance with section 11.","sortOrder":41},{"sectionNumber":"33A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Decision by the Attorney‑General to refuse consent to transfer of Tribunal prisoner to Australia","content":"#### 33A Decision by the Attorney‑General to refuse consent to transfer of Tribunal prisoner to Australia\n\n  (1) The Attorney‑General may decide to refuse consent to the transfer of a Tribunal prisoner to Australia under this Part:\n    (a) after the Attorney‑General receives a request under section 33 for the transfer; but\n    (b) before the Attorney‑General has started to act under any of sections 35 to 41 in relation to the transfer.\n  (2) Sections 35 to 41 do not apply for the transfer of the Tribunal prisoner if the Attorney‑General decides under subsection (1) of this section to refuse consent to the transfer.","sortOrder":42},{"sectionNumber":"34","sectionType":"section","heading":"Information to accompany request","content":"#### 34 Information to accompany request\n\n  Before consenting to the transfer of a Tribunal prisoner to Australia, the Attorney‑General may request the Tribunal requesting the transfer to provide the Attorney‑General with any relevant information that will enable the Attorney‑General to assess whether consent should be given for the transfer of the prisoner to Australia.","sortOrder":43},{"sectionNumber":"35","sectionType":"section","heading":"Enforcement of Tribunal sentence of imprisonment","content":"#### 35 Enforcement of Tribunal sentence of imprisonment\n\n  Before consenting to the transfer of a Tribunal prisoner to Australia under this Part, the Attorney‑General is to determine, in accordance with Part 6, the method by which the sentence of imprisonment imposed by the Tribunal will be enforced in Australia if the prisoner is transferred and is to advise the Tribunal of this and of any other proposed terms on which consent will be given to the transfer.","sortOrder":44},{"sectionNumber":"36","sectionType":"section","heading":"Governmental consent to transfer to Australia","content":"#### 36 Governmental consent to transfer to Australia\n\n  (1) Before consenting to the transfer of a Tribunal prisoner to Australia, the Attorney‑General is to determine the State or Territory in which it would be most appropriate for the prisoner to begin to complete serving the sentence of imprisonment imposed on the prisoner by the Tribunal in Australia and to seek the consent of the State or Territory Minister concerned.\n  (2) The Attorney‑General is to provide the Minister with details of any information that the Tribunal has given the Attorney‑General and particulars of the method by which the Attorney‑General considers the sentence of imprisonment could be enforced by Australia and any other proposed terms of the transfer.\n  (3) The Minister is to advise the Attorney‑General in writing as to whether the Minister consents to the transfer on the terms proposed as soon as possible after receiving the notification.\n  (4) If the Minister refuses to consent to the transfer, the Attorney‑General may request consent to transfer of the prisoner to another State or Territory from the appropriate State or Territory Minister.\n  (5) If a State Minister or Territory Minister consents to the transfer, the Minister is to advise the Attorney‑General of:\n    (a) the prison, or hospital or other place, in which the prisoner is to begin to complete serving the sentence of imprisonment in accordance with this Act in the State or Territory; and\n    (b) in the case of a prisoner who has been released on parole—any recommended terms or conditions on which the prisoner is to complete serving the sentence of imprisonment in accordance with this Act; and\n    (c) any other matters the Minister considers relevant to enforcement of the sentence of imprisonment in the State or Territory.\n\n> Note: A prisoner may be transferred from the prison, hospital or other place in the State or Territory in which the prisoner begins to complete serving a sentence of imprisonment to another prison, hospital or other place in the State or Territory or to a prison, hospital or other place in another State or Territory. See paragraphs 46(5)(d), (e) and (i).","sortOrder":45},{"sectionNumber":"37","sectionType":"section","heading":"Formal consent to transfer","content":"#### 37 Formal consent to transfer\n\n  The Attorney‑General is to notify the Tribunal as soon as possible after appropriate Ministerial consent to the transfer has been given and is to ask the Tribunal:\n    (a) to formally consent to the transfer on the terms proposed by Australia; and\n    (b) to advise of the prisoner’s formal consent to transfer on those terms (if the Tribunal has determined that it is appropriate to obtain the prisoner’s consent).","sortOrder":46},{"sectionNumber":"38","sectionType":"section","heading":"Issue of warrant for transfer to Australia","content":"#### 38 Issue of warrant for transfer to Australia\n\n  The Attorney‑General may issue a warrant, in the form prescribed by the regulations, for the transfer of a Tribunal prisoner from a Tribunal country to Australia if the written consent of the prisoner or prisoner’s representative (if the Attorney‑General considers such consent is necessary), and the Tribunal and appropriate Ministerial consent in writing to transfer on the terms proposed by Australia, have been given.","sortOrder":47},{"sectionNumber":"39","sectionType":"section","heading":"Warrants for transfer to Australia","content":"#### 39 Warrants for transfer to Australia\n\n  (1) A warrant for the transfer of a Tribunal prisoner to Australia authorises the transfer of the prisoner from the Tribunal country to Australia to complete serving the sentence of imprisonment imposed by the Tribunal in accordance with the terms agreed under this Act.\n  (2) A warrant for transfer to Australia must:\n    (a) specify the name and date of birth of the Tribunal prisoner to be transferred; and\n    (b) specify the Tribunal country from which the prisoner is to be transferred; and\n    (c) state that the following written consents to the transfer have been given:\n    (i) the prisoner’s or prisoner’s representative’s consent (if the Attorney‑General considers such consent is necessary);\n    (ii) the Tribunal’s consent;\n    (iii) appropriate Ministerial consent.\n  (3) If the prisoner is a Tribunal prisoner other than a Tribunal prisoner who has been released on parole, the warrant is:\n    (a) to authorise an escort officer to collect the Tribunal prisoner from a place (whether in Australia or the Tribunal country) specified in the warrant; and\n    (b) if the place is in a Tribunal country, to authorise the escort officer to transport the Tribunal prisoner in custody to Australia for surrender to a person appointed by the Attorney‑General to receive the prisoner and, if appropriate, to authorise the appointed person to escort the prisoner to the prison, or hospital or other place, in Australia where the Tribunal prisoner is to begin to complete serving the sentence of imprisonment in accordance with this Act; and\n    (c) if the place is in Australia, to authorise the escort officer to escort the Tribunal prisoner to the prison, or hospital or other place, in Australia where the prisoner is to begin to complete serving the sentence of imprisonment in accordance with this Act; and\n    (d) if the Tribunal prisoner is to be escorted to a prison, to require the superintendent of the prison to take the prisoner into custody to be dealt with in accordance with the terms agreed under this Act; and\n    (e) if the Tribunal prisoner is to be escorted to a hospital or other place, to authorise the detention of the prisoner in that hospital or place to be dealt with in accordance with the terms agreed under this Act.\n\n> Note: A prisoner may be transferred from the prison, hospital or other place in the State or Territory in which the prisoner begins to complete serving a sentence of imprisonment to another prison, hospital or other place in the State or Territory or to a prison, hospital or other place in another State or Territory. See paragraphs 46(5)(d), (e) and (i).\n\n  (4) If the Tribunal prisoner has been released on parole, the warrant is to specify any procedures for the transfer of the prisoner to Australia that have been agreed upon with the Tribunal and to give any necessary authorisations and directions.\n  (5) The Attorney‑General may give any direction or approval that is necessary to ensure the warrant is executed in accordance with its tenor.","sortOrder":48},{"sectionNumber":"40","sectionType":"section","heading":"Cancellation of warrant","content":"#### 40 Cancellation of warrant\n\n  (1) The Attorney‑General may cancel a warrant for transfer to Australia at any time before the Tribunal prisoner it concerns leaves the Tribunal country.\n  (2) Without limiting the grounds on which the Attorney‑General may cancel a transfer warrant, it must be cancelled if the Attorney‑General, a State or Territory Minister or the Tribunal concerned (or, in those cases where a Tribunal prisoner or prisoner’s representative’s consent to transfer was required by the Attorney‑General, the Tribunal prisoner or prisoner’s representative) withdraws consent to the transfer.","sortOrder":49},{"sectionNumber":"41","sectionType":"section","heading":"Effect of warrant on Tribunal prisoner’s sentence","content":"#### 41 Effect of warrant on Tribunal prisoner’s sentence\n\n  The Tribunal prisoner to whom a warrant relates is to be released when the prisoner has completed serving the sentence of imprisonment in accordance with this Act unless any other law authorises the prisoner’s detention in respect of an offence other than that on account of which the sentence of imprisonment was imposed.","sortOrder":50},{"sectionNumber":"Part 6","sectionType":"part","heading":"Enforcement of sentences","content":"## Part 6—Enforcement of sentences","sortOrder":51},{"sectionNumber":"42","sectionType":"section","heading":"Sentence enforcement in Australia","content":"#### 42 Sentence enforcement in Australia\n\n  The Attorney‑General may direct that a sentence of imprisonment imposed on a prisoner by a court or tribunal of a transfer country, or on a Tribunal prisoner by a Tribunal, be enforced on transfer of the prisoner to Australia under this Act:\n    (a) without any adaptation of the duration of the sentence of imprisonment or its legal nature, or with only such adaptations to the duration of the sentence or its legal nature as the Attorney‑General considers are necessary to ensure that enforcement of the sentence is consistent with Australian law (in this Act called the continued enforcement method); or\n    (b) by substituting a different sentence of imprisonment for that imposed by the transfer country or Tribunal (in this Act called the converted enforcement method).","sortOrder":52},{"sectionNumber":"43","sectionType":"section","heading":"Duration and nature of enforced sentence","content":"#### 43 Duration and nature of enforced sentence\n\n  (1) The sentence of imprisonment to be enforced under the continued enforcement method or converted enforcement method must not be harsher, in legal nature or duration, than the sentence of imprisonment imposed by the transfer country or Tribunal.\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1):\n    (a) if the sentence of imprisonment imposed by the transfer country or Tribunal is for a determinate period, the sentence of imprisonment to be enforced under this Act must not be for a longer duration than that sentence; and\n    (b) if the sentence of imprisonment imposed by the transfer country or Tribunal is for an indeterminate period, the sentence of imprisonment to be enforced under this Act is, as far as practicable, to be subject to similar terms affecting the duration of the sentence as those imposed in the transfer country or by the Tribunal; and\n    (c) the sentence of imprisonment to be enforced under this Act must not be of a kind that involves a more severe form of deprivation of liberty than the sentence of imprisonment imposed by the transfer country or Tribunal.","sortOrder":53},{"sectionNumber":"44","sectionType":"section","heading":"Directions concerning enforcement of sentence","content":"#### 44 Directions concerning enforcement of sentence\n\n  (1) In ordering that a sentence of imprisonment be enforced by the continued enforcement method or the converted enforcement method, the Attorney‑General may, subject to section 43, give such directions as the Attorney‑General considers appropriate as to the duration and legal nature of the sentence of imprisonment as it is to be enforced under this Act.\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), directions may be made:\n    (a) as to entitlements to release on parole (including any non‑parole period) of the prisoner or Tribunal prisoner following transfer; and\n    (b) if the prisoner is a mentally impaired prisoner—as to any review to be undertaken of the mental condition of the prisoner and treatment to be provided to the prisoner following transfer.\n  (3) For the purpose of forming an opinion or exercising a discretion under this section, the Attorney‑General may inform himself or herself as the Attorney‑General thinks fit and, in particular, may have regard to the following:\n    (a) any submissions made by the transfer country or Tribunal;\n    (b) any views expressed by any State Minister or Territory Minister concerned with the proposed transfer;\n    (c) any views expressed by parole or prison authorities of any State or Territory;\n    (d) the sentence of imprisonment that might have been imposed if the acts and omissions constituting the offence had been committed in Australia;\n    (e) any limitations or requirements in relation to the way in which a sentence of imprisonment imposed by a transfer country or Tribunal may be enforced in Australia arising from any agreement to which Australia and the transfer country or Tribunal are parties.","sortOrder":54},{"sectionNumber":"45","sectionType":"section","heading":"Appeal and review of sentences of imprisonment imposed by transfer country or Tribunal and sentence enforcement decisions of Attorney‑General","content":"#### 45 Appeal and review of sentences of imprisonment imposed by transfer country or Tribunal and sentence enforcement decisions of Attorney‑General\n\n  (1) On transfer of a prisoner to Australia under this Act, no appeal or review lies in Australia against the sentence of imprisonment imposed by the court or tribunal of the transfer country or by the Tribunal.\n  (2) No appeal lies against a decision of the Attorney‑General concerning the enforcement in Australia under this Act of a sentence of imprisonment imposed by a court or tribunal of a transfer country or the Tribunal.","sortOrder":55},{"sectionNumber":"46","sectionType":"section","heading":"Prisoner transferred to Australia taken to be federal prisoner","content":"#### 46 Prisoner transferred to Australia taken to be federal prisoner\n\n  (1) A sentence of imprisonment imposed by the transfer country or Tribunal that is to be enforced in Australia under the continued enforcement method or the converted enforcement method is taken, for the purpose of enforcement of the sentence of imprisonment in Australia on transfer of the prisoner or Tribunal prisoner to Australia under this Act, to be a federal sentence of imprisonment and the prisoner to be a federal prisoner.\n  (2) Any period of the sentence of imprisonment as originally imposed by the transfer country or Tribunal served by the prisoner or Tribunal prisoner before the transfer is taken to have been served under the sentence of imprisonment as it is enforced under this Act.\n  (3) A prisoner who is transferred to Australia under this Act while serving a sentence of imprisonment (other than the suspended part of the sentence) that is:\n    (a) imposed by a transfer country; and\n    (b) enforced under this Act;\n  may be detained in a prison or hospital or other place in a State or Territory.\n  (3A) A prisoner who is transferred to Australia under this Act while serving the suspended part of a sentence of imprisonment that is:\n    (a) imposed by a transfer country; and\n    (b) enforced under this Act;\n  may be supervised in a State or Territory in accordance with terms agreed under this Act.\n  (3B) A Tribunal prisoner who is transferred to Australia under this Act while serving a sentence of imprisonment that is:\n    (a) imposed by a Tribunal; and\n    (b) enforced under this Act;\n  may be detained in a prison or hospital or other place in a State or Territory.\n  (4) Any relevant Australian law, or practice or procedure lawfully observed, concerning the detention of prisoners applies in relation to the prisoner or Tribunal prisoner on and after that transfer to the extent that it is capable of applying concurrently with this Act.\n  (5) Without limiting subsection (4), Australian law and practice and procedure relating to the following matters are applicable to a prisoner or Tribunal prisoner who is transferred to Australia under this Act:\n    (a) conditions of imprisonment and treatment of prisoners;\n    (b) release on parole of prisoners;\n    (ba) serving the suspended part of a sentence of imprisonment;\n    (c) classification and separation of prisoners;\n    (d) removal of prisoners from one prison to another;\n    (e) removal of prisoners between prisons and hospitals or other places or between one hospital or other place and another;\n    (f) treatment of mentally impaired prisoners;\n    (g) eligibility for participation in prison programs, including release under a pre‑release permit scheme (however called);\n\nNote: See, for example, subsection 19AZD (3) of the Crimes Act 1914.\n\n    (h) temporary absence from prison (for example, to work or seek work, to attend a funeral or visit a relative suffering a serious illness or to attend a place of education or training);\n    (i) transfer of prisoners between States and Territories.\n  (6) The prisoner or Tribunal prisoner is entitled to any remission or reduction of the sentence of imprisonment imposed by the transfer country or Tribunal that is to be enforced under this Act for which the prisoner would be eligible in accordance with any applicable Australian law if the sentence were a sentence of imprisonment for an offence against a law of the Commonwealth.\n  (7) Nothing in this section prevents the transfer country or Tribunal from pardoning or granting amnesty to or quashing or otherwise nullifying the conviction of a prisoner serving a sentence of imprisonment imposed by the transfer country or Tribunal in Australia in accordance with this Act, or from commuting the sentence.\n  (8) Nothing in this Act imposes any financial responsibility on the Commonwealth to maintain a prisoner transferred under Part 4 of this Act in a prison, or hospital or other place, in a State or Territory unless the prisoner has community ties with the Jervis Bay Territory, the Territory of Christmas Island or the Territory of Cocos (Keeling) Islands.","sortOrder":56},{"sectionNumber":"47","sectionType":"section","heading":"Prisoner transferred from Australia taken to be prisoner of transfer country","content":"#### 47 Prisoner transferred from Australia taken to be prisoner of transfer country\n\n  On transfer of a prisoner from Australia under this Act, the sentence of imprisonment imposed by the Australian court ceases to have effect in Australia and, except as provided by section 48, the sentence of imprisonment is taken for all purposes in Australia to be a sentence of imprisonment imposed by a court or tribunal of the transfer country and the prisoner is to be a prisoner of the transfer country.","sortOrder":57},{"sectionNumber":"48","sectionType":"section","heading":"Pardon, amnesty or commutation of sentences of imprisonment—prisoners transferred from Australia","content":"#### 48 Pardon, amnesty or commutation of sentences of imprisonment—prisoners transferred from Australia\n\n  (1) During the period in which a sentence of imprisonment is served in a transfer country by a prisoner transferred from Australia under this Act, the prisoner’s conviction may be quashed or otherwise nullified and the prisoner may be pardoned or granted any amnesty or commutation of sentence of imprisonment that could be granted under Australian law if the prisoner were serving the sentence of imprisonment in Australia.\n  (2) If, during the period in which the sentence of imprisonment is served by a prisoner transferred from Australia under this Act in a transfer country, the prisoner’s conviction is quashed or otherwise nullified or the prisoner is pardoned or granted amnesty or commutation of sentence of imprisonment under Australian law, the Attorney‑General is to immediately notify the transfer country that the prisoner should no longer be detained in custody or otherwise subjected to detention or supervision only because of the sentence of imprisonment.","sortOrder":58},{"sectionNumber":"49","sectionType":"section","heading":"Pardon, amnesty or commutation of sentences of imprisonment—prisoners transferred to Australia","content":"#### 49 Pardon, amnesty or commutation of sentences of imprisonment—prisoners transferred to Australia\n\n  (1) During the period in which a sentence of imprisonment is served in Australia by a prisoner transferred to Australia under this Act, the prisoner may be pardoned or granted any amnesty or commutation of sentence of imprisonment that could be granted under Australian law if the sentence of imprisonment had been imposed for an offence against an Australian law.\n  (2) The Attorney‑General is to direct, in a form prescribed by the regulations, that a prisoner must not be detained in custody or otherwise be subjected to detention or supervision in Australia under a sentence of imprisonment imposed by a transfer country enforced under this Act only because of that sentence of imprisonment if, during the period in which the sentence of imprisonment is served in Australia:\n    (a) the prisoner is pardoned or granted amnesty or commutation of sentence of imprisonment under an Australian law; or\n    (b) the transfer country notifies the Attorney‑General that the prisoner’s conviction has been quashed or otherwise nullified or that the prisoner has been pardoned or granted amnesty or commutation of sentence of imprisonment under the law of the transfer country.\n  (3) The Attorney‑General is to direct, in a form prescribed by the regulations, that a prisoner must not be detained in custody or otherwise be subjected to detention or supervision in Australia under a sentence of imprisonment imposed by a Tribunal enforced under this Act only because of that sentence of imprisonment if, during the period in which the sentence is served in Australia:\n    (a) the Tribunal notifies the Attorney‑General that the prisoner may be pardoned or granted amnesty or commutation of sentence of imprisonment under an Australian law and the prisoner is granted such amnesty or commutation of sentence of imprisonment; or\n    (b) the Tribunal notifies the Attorney‑General that the prisoner’s conviction has been quashed or otherwise nullified or that the prisoner has been pardoned or granted amnesty or commutation of sentence of imprisonment by the Tribunal.","sortOrder":59},{"sectionNumber":"Part 7","sectionType":"part","heading":"Miscellaneous","content":"## Part 7—Miscellaneous","sortOrder":60},{"sectionNumber":"50","sectionType":"section","heading":"Arrangements with States and Territories","content":"#### 50 Arrangements with States and Territories\n\n  (1) The Governor‑General may make arrangements with the Governor of a State, the Chief Minister of the ACT or the Administrator of a Territory with respect to the administration of this Act, including arrangements relating to the exercise by officers of the State or Territory of functions under this Act.\n  (2) An arrangement may be varied or terminated at any time.\n  (3) The Attorney‑General is to cause notice of the making, variation or termination of an arrangement to be published in the Gazette.","sortOrder":61},{"sectionNumber":"51","sectionType":"section","heading":"Recovery of costs and expenses of transfer","content":"#### 51 Recovery of costs and expenses of transfer\n\n  (1) The terms agreed under this Act for transfer of a prisoner or Tribunal prisoner may, if the Attorney‑General considers it appropriate, include terms relating to the recovery of the costs and expenses reasonably incurred in transferring the prisoner or Tribunal prisoner.\n  (2) If any costs or expenses in respect of money recovered in accordance with such terms were incurred by a State or Territory, the Commonwealth is to reimburse the State or Territory concerned.","sortOrder":62},{"sectionNumber":"52","sectionType":"section","heading":"Prisoner and prisoner’s representative to be kept informed","content":"#### 52 Prisoner and prisoner’s representative to be kept informed\n\n  The Attorney‑General must arrange for a prisoner or prisoner’s representative to be kept informed of the progress of:\n    (a) any application made under section 16; or\n    (b) any request made under section 24 or 33;\n  for the transfer of the prisoner.","sortOrder":63},{"sectionNumber":"53","sectionType":"section","heading":"Delegation","content":"#### 53 Delegation\n\n  The Attorney‑General may delegate in writing all or any of the Attorney‑General’s powers under this Act or the regulations to:\n    (a) the Secretary of the Department; or\n    (b) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department; or\n    (c) an APS employee who holds or performs the duties of an Executive Level 2, or equivalent, position in the Department.","sortOrder":64},{"sectionNumber":"54","sectionType":"section","heading":"Notification of countries as transfer countries","content":"#### 54 Notification of countries as transfer countries\n\n  The Attorney‑General is to inform each State and Territory Minister whenever a country is declared by the regulations to be a transfer country and request the State and Territory Ministers to use their best endeavours to notify any prisoner who may be eligible for transfer under this Act of the application of this Act to a country of which the prisoner is a national and of the operation of this Act.","sortOrder":65},{"sectionNumber":"55","sectionType":"section","heading":"Transit of prisoners","content":"#### 55 Transit of prisoners\n\n  (1) The following provisions apply to the transport in custody through Australia of a prisoner or Tribunal prisoner who is being transferred from a transfer country or Tribunal country to another transfer country or Tribunal country:\n    (a) the prisoner may be transported in custody through Australia for the purposes of the transfer;\n    (b) if the aircraft or ship that transports the prisoner makes a landing or calls at a place in Australia:\n    (i) the person holding the prisoner in custody before the landing or call is made may hold the prisoner in custody at the place for a period not exceeding 24 hours;\n    (ii) any police officer may provide such assistance at the place as is reasonable and necessary to facilitate transporting of the prisoner in custody;\n    (iii) any magistrate to whom application is made, in the form prescribed by the regulations, by or on behalf of the transfer country or Tribunal concerned must issue a warrant ordering a person specified in the warrant to hold the prisoner in custody for such period or periods as the magistrate considers necessary to facilitate the transporting of the prisoner;\n    (iv) the Attorney‑General may, on application by the transfer country or Tribunal concerned, authorise in writing a magistrate to issue a warrant ordering a person specified in the warrant to hold the prisoner in custody for a further specified period in order to facilitate the transporting of the prisoner;\n    (v) the Attorney‑General may at any time direct a person having custody of the prisoner under this paragraph to release the prisoner from custody.\n  (2) The total period or periods of any custody in accordance with subparagraphs (1)(b)(i) and (ii) must not exceed 96 hours.","sortOrder":66},{"sectionNumber":"56","sectionType":"section","heading":"Arrest of persons escaping from custody","content":"#### 56 Arrest of persons escaping from custody\n\n  (1) A police officer may, without warrant, arrest a person if the officer has reasonable grounds to believe that the person has escaped from custody authorised by this Act.\n  (2) The police officer must, as soon as practicable, take the person before a magistrate.\n  (3) If the magistrate is satisfied that the person has escaped from custody authorised by this Act, the magistrate may issue a warrant authorising any police officer to return the person to the custody from which the person escaped.","sortOrder":67},{"sectionNumber":"56A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Aiding persons to escape etc.","content":"#### 56A Aiding persons to escape etc.\n\n  Division 5 of Part III of the Crimes Act 1914 has effect as if:\n    (a) custody or detention in Australia under this Act were custody in respect of an offence against a law of the Commonwealth; and\n    (b) arrest under section 56 of this Act were arrest in respect of an offence against a law of the Commonwealth.","sortOrder":68},{"sectionNumber":"57","sectionType":"section","heading":"Consent of the Immigration Minister","content":"#### 57 Consent of the Immigration Minister\n\n  If the Attorney‑General proposes to consent to the transfer to Australia of a Tribunal prisoner, the Attorney‑General must first obtain the consent of the Immigration Minister.","sortOrder":69},{"sectionNumber":"58","sectionType":"section","heading":"Regulations","content":"#### 58 Regulations\n\n  (1) The Governor‑General may make regulations prescribing matters:\n    (a) required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed; or\n    (b) necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n  (2) In particular, regulations may make provision for or with respect to information to be provided to prisoners and other persons for the purposes of this Act and any State or Territory Act relating to the international transfer of prisoners.\n  (3) The regulations may prescribe penalties not exceeding a fine of 10 penalty units for offences against the regulations.","sortOrder":70}],"analysis":{"issue_detection":{"absurdities":[{"type":"other","section":"s4(4) and s4(5)","severity":"medium","reasoning":"Subsection 4(4) lists paragraphs (a), (b) and then jumps to (d). Subsection 4(5) does the same. There is no paragraph (c) in either subsection. This is almost certainly a drafting error from a prior amendment that deleted the original paragraph (c) without re-lettering the remainder. While the substantive effect may be understood in context, the missing paragraph creates textual uncertainty about whether an intended ground of community ties was deliberately removed or accidentally omitted, and leaves the numbering permanently anomalous.","confidence":0.95,"description":"Both subsections use paragraph lettering (a), (b), then skip to (d), omitting paragraph (c) entirely. This creates a permanent gap in the enumeration that cannot be filled without legislative amendment."},{"type":"other","section":"s4(1) — definition of 'prisoner', s4(2)(c)","severity":"medium","reasoning":"The definition of 'sentence of imprisonment' is broad enough to capture a sentence that has been imposed but not commenced (the commencement order is part of the sentence). However s4(2)(c) expressly deems a person in that situation to not be serving a sentence. Read together, there is a person who has a 'sentence of imprisonment' within the Act but who categorically cannot be a 'prisoner' under the Act, making transfer impossible for them. While arguably intentional, it creates a logical gap where a person with an operative sentence order falls outside the transferable class with no mechanism to address the gap as their sentence approaches commencement.","confidence":0.75,"description":"A person on whom a sentence of imprisonment has been imposed but which has not yet commenced is expressly excluded from the definition of 'prisoner' (s4(2)(c)), yet the definition of 'sentence of imprisonment' includes 'any direction or order given or made by the court or tribunal with respect to the commencement of the punishment or measure.' The Act thus defines a sentence to include its commencement order, but excludes from the class of 'prisoners' exactly those persons whose sentence has not yet commenced. This creates a gap: such a person has a 'sentence of imprisonment' under the Act but cannot be transferred because they are not a 'prisoner'."},{"type":"other","section":"s4(1) — definition of 'mentally impaired prisoner', s6(1)–(2)","severity":"low","reasoning":"The Act creates two parallel regimes for incapacity — a clinical/legal status (mentally impaired prisoner) and a functional consent-capacity test (s6(5)). A finding of unfitness to stand trial does not automatically satisfy s6(5), so a mentally impaired prisoner could theoretically be required to personally consent even though a court has found them mentally unfit. Conversely, a prisoner may pass s6(5) but still fall within the 'mentally impaired prisoner' definition. The interaction is not harmonised.","confidence":0.7,"description":"A mentally impaired prisoner is defined to include a person found mentally unfit to stand trial, meaning by definition they may be incapable of consenting. Section 6(1) requires that for a prisoner to consent, the prisoner must be 'capable of consenting.' Section 6(2) then permits a prisoner's representative to consent only if the prisoner is not an adult or is incapable of consenting. However, the Act nowhere explicitly provides that a mentally impaired prisoner is automatically 'incapable of consenting' — it merely defines a category of impairment. A court finding of unfitness to stand trial does not necessarily equate to incapacity to consent to transfer under s6(5), which sets a separate functional test. This creates an anomaly where a prisoner found by a court to be mentally unfit to stand trial might still be required to personally consent (if they pass the s6(5) test), producing inconsistent results."},{"type":"impossible_compliance","section":"s6(6)","severity":"low","reasoning":"While the rule is internally consistent, it is logically absurd that a prisoner's consent becomes binding and irrevocable at the moment they are most physically powerless to resist the transfer (airborne, in custody, leaving the country). There is no savings provision for emergency circumstances — e.g., new information arising during transit that would have caused the prisoner to refuse consent — making compliance with any change of mind factually impossible.","confidence":0.65,"description":"Consent to transfer cannot be withdrawn after the prisoner leaves the country from which they are being transferred. For transfers from Australia this means consent becomes irrevocable once the prisoner crosses the border. However, s23(2) mandates cancellation of the warrant if any party withdraws consent 'at any time before the prisoner leaves Australia.' These provisions are consistent, but together they create a situation where a prisoner who is mid-flight over international waters has no mechanism to halt a transfer they now oppose. The consent becomes irreversible at the precise moment the prisoner loses all practical ability to act on it."},{"type":"impossible_compliance","section":"s45(2)","severity":"high","reasoning":"Section 45(2) attempts a blanket ouster of appeals against Attorney-General enforcement decisions. Australian constitutional law, particularly under s75(v) of the Constitution, cannot be ousted by statute in relation to jurisdictional error. The provision therefore purports to achieve something constitutionally impossible for federal jurisdiction. The practical effect is that the section misleads prisoners about their rights, which is a significant absurdity in legislation dealing with personal liberty.","confidence":0.8,"description":"No appeal lies against a decision of the Attorney-General concerning the enforcement in Australia of a foreign or Tribunal sentence. This is an ouster clause that purports to remove all appellate and judicial review rights against an executive decision that determines how long and in what manner a person is imprisoned. Given the constitutional guarantee of judicial review under s75(v) of the Constitution, this provision may be of no practical legal effect, creating an absurdity where the legislation purports to do something it cannot constitutionally achieve."},{"type":"self_contradicting","section":"s55(2)","severity":"medium","reasoning":"Subsection 55(2) caps total custody under s55(1)(b)(i) and (ii) at 96 hours. However, s55(1)(b)(ii) only gives police power to 'provide assistance' — it is not itself a custody-authorising provision. There is therefore nothing in (b)(ii) that generates a custody period to count towards the 96-hour cap. The drafting conflates a custody provision with an assistance provision, making the total-period calculation in s55(2) internally meaningless.","confidence":0.72,"description":"The transit custody provisions at s55(1)(b)(i) authorise custody at a landing place 'for a period not exceeding 24 hours,' while s55(2) states the total period of custody under subparagraphs (b)(i) and (ii) must not exceed 96 hours. However, subparagraph (b)(ii) only authorises police to provide 'assistance' — it does not itself authorise any period of custody. The 96-hour cap in s55(2) therefore applies to a combination of a time-limited custody power (24 hours under (b)(i)) and a provision that does not confer any custody period at all (b)(ii)). The cross-reference is logically incoherent."},{"type":"circular_definition","section":"s4(1) — definition of 'International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals', paragraph (b)","severity":"low","reasoning":"The definitions of 'Former Yugoslavia Tribunal', 'Rwanda Tribunal' and 'International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals' each refer to specific articles of the 'Statute of the Tribunal', which is itself a defined term that depends on which Tribunal is being referred to. This creates a mild circularity: to understand what the IRMCT includes (its organs), you need the Statute of the Tribunal, but the Statute of the Tribunal definition requires you to know which Tribunal you are dealing with — information only established by the definition you are trying to read.","confidence":0.55,"description":"The definition of the International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals states it 'includes the organs referred to in Article 4 of the Statute of the Tribunal.' However, the defined term uses 'Statute of the Tribunal' which is itself a defined term that varies depending on which Tribunal is under consideration (s4(1), definition of 'Statute of the Tribunal'). For the IRMCT, 'Statute of the Tribunal' means the Statute in Annex 1 to Resolution 1966. The internal cross-reference is ambiguous because 'Statute of the Tribunal' only makes sense when the Tribunal is first identified, yet it is used within the very definition that establishes what the Tribunal is."}],"contradictions":[{"severity":"medium","section_a":"s11(b)","section_b":"s38","confidence":0.7,"description":"Section 11(b) provides that a Tribunal prisoner may be transferred to Australia if 'unless the Attorney-General determines that it is not necessary in the prisoner's case — the prisoner or prisoner's representative has consented.' Section 38 then requires a warrant to be issued only if 'the written consent of the prisoner or prisoner's representative (if the Attorney-General considers such consent is necessary)... have been given.' The standard for dispensing with consent differs: s11 uses 'not necessary in the prisoner's case' while s38 uses 'if the Attorney-General considers such consent is necessary' — one is a factual/legal necessity standard, the other is a subjective consideration standard. These are not identical tests and could produce different outcomes."},{"severity":"medium","section_a":"s46(7)","section_b":"s41","confidence":0.65,"description":"Section 46(7) preserves the power of the transfer country or Tribunal to pardon, grant amnesty, quash convictions or commute sentences of prisoners serving foreign sentences in Australia. Section 41 provides that a Tribunal prisoner 'is to be released when the prisoner has completed serving the sentence of imprisonment in accordance with this Act.' Read together, a Tribunal could quash a conviction (triggering s46(7)) but s41 provides for release only upon completion of service, not upon quashing. Section 49(3) provides the mechanism for the Attorney-General to direct release on notification from the Tribunal, but s41 on its face does not accommodate early release due to quashing, creating a potential contradiction between the release trigger in s41 and the foreign/Tribunal pardon mechanism."},{"severity":"high","section_a":"s43(1)","section_b":"s46(6)","confidence":0.75,"description":"Section 43(1) prohibits the enforced sentence from being 'harsher, in legal nature or duration, than the sentence of imprisonment imposed by the transfer country or Tribunal.' Section 46(6) entitles the transferred prisoner to any remission or reduction for which they would be eligible under Australian law as if serving a Commonwealth sentence. If Australian law provides more generous remission than the transfer country's law, this is beneficial to the prisoner and consistent with s43. However, if Australian law provides less generous remission — for instance, stricter parole eligibility for the equivalent Commonwealth offence — then applying s46(6) could result in the prisoner serving longer than they would have in the transfer country, potentially making the enforced sentence harsher in duration contrary to s43(1)."},{"severity":"low","section_a":"s5(1)(a)","section_b":"s5(1)(b)–(d)","confidence":0.55,"description":"Section 5(1)(a) provides that for a federal prisoner transferred from Australia, only the Attorney-General's consent is required. Sections 5(1)(b)–(d) require both the Attorney-General and the relevant State/Territory Minister(s) for State, Territory and joint prisoners. A 'joint prisoner' under s4(1) includes a federal prisoner who is also serving State/Territory sentences. Under s5(1)(a), a pure federal prisoner needs only the Attorney-General's consent. Under s5(1)(d), a joint prisoner (who is by definition also a federal prisoner) needs the Attorney-General and all relevant State/Territory Ministers. However the definition of 'federal prisoner' under s4(1)(b) includes a specific category of NT prisoner removed to South Australia — this prisoner could arguably be classified as either a federal prisoner or a joint prisoner depending on interpretation, leading to contradictory consent requirements."},{"severity":"medium","section_a":"s14(1)(c)","section_b":"s4(1) — definition of 'prisoner', s4(2)(c)","confidence":0.68,"description":"Section 14(1)(c) sets a transfer condition that at least 6 months of the sentence 'remains to be served.' Section 4(2)(c) provides that a person on whom a sentence has been imposed that has not yet commenced is not 'serving' a sentence. If a prisoner has a sentence that has not commenced (and is therefore not a 'prisoner'), they could not apply for transfer at all. However, once the sentence commences, the clock starts. There is no mechanism to apply for transfer before sentence commencement to ensure the 6-month condition will be met at the time of transfer, even though the transfer process itself can take many months. This creates a practical impossibility where a prisoner with, say, an 8-month sentence commencing soon could satisfy the 6-month rule at application but have insufficient time remaining by the time the transfer is actually executed."},{"severity":"high","section_a":"s46(4)","section_b":"s45(1)","confidence":0.72,"description":"Section 46(4) applies 'any relevant Australian law, or practice or procedure lawfully observed, concerning the detention of prisoners' to transferred prisoners. Section 45(1) prohibits any appeal or review in Australia against the sentence imposed by the foreign court or Tribunal. However, Australian law applicable under s46(4) would normally include judicial review and habeas corpus rights concerning the lawfulness of detention. Section 45(1) attempts to exclude review of the foreign sentence, but s46(4) simultaneously imports Australian detention law. These provisions pull in opposite directions as to whether the basis of the transferred prisoner's detention can be reviewed in Australian courts."}]},"flash_summary":{"complexity_score":7,"scope_assessment":{"changed":false,"description":"The Act’s operative provisions implement the objects stated in s3 (facilitating transfers to/from transfer countries and transfers from Tribunal countries). The definitions, eligibility criteria, consent and approval mechanisms, enforcement methods and procedural steps in Parts 2–6 are consistent with those objects as expressed in the text. The Act delegates core operational choices to the Attorney‑General and requires coordination with State/Territory Ministers and foreign countries or Tribunals (see ss3, 5, 18, 26, 42–46). There is no text within the supplied Act suggesting a different or expanded scope from the objects declared in s3."},"complexity_factors":["Multiple decision gates and consents required: prisoner, transfer country/Tribunal, Attorney‑General, and one or more State/Territory Ministers (see ss5, 6, 18, 20, 27, 36).","Significant Attorney‑General discretion to refuse, not proceed, and to choose enforcement method (continued vs converted) including exceptions to dual‑criminality (ss10A, 19–20, 24A, 33A, 42–44, 14(3)/15(3)).","Interplay between Commonwealth, State/Territory law and practice once a prisoner is transferred (ss46(1), 46(4)–(5), 47), requiring coordination of prison administration and parole regimes.","Procedural safeguards and compliance inputs: information exchange, certified informed consent in accessible language, prescribed forms and warrants, and delegation rules (ss6(3)–(4), 16, 21–22, 29–30, 53, 58).","Limited domestic remedies: statutory bar on appeals in Australia against foreign/tribunal sentences and Attorney‑General enforcement decisions (s45).","Regulatory dependence for identifying transfer countries and imposing country‑specific limitations, increasing variability by regulation (s8, 58).","Special categories and technical definitions (Tribunal prisoners, mentally impaired prisoners, suspended sentences, joint prisoners) that alter eligibility and process in nuanced ways (ss4, 4A, 4B, 11–15).","Practical operational provisions (transit, short custody on landing, arrest for escape) that engage multiple agencies and magistrates (ss55–56)."],"plain_english_summary":"# What this law does\n\nThis Act sets out how and when people serving prison sentences can be moved between Australia and certain foreign countries (\"transfer countries\") or between Australia and international war‑crimes tribunals. It defines who may be transferred, what approvals are needed, who decides, how a transferred sentence is to be treated in Australia, and practical steps for carrying out transfers (warrants, escorts, transit and custody).\n\n# Who it affects\n\n- Prisoners and, where relevant, their close family members or legal representatives (who may apply or give consent) (see s6, s16).  \n- The Attorney‑General, who makes core decisions and sets enforcement terms (see ss10A, 18, 20, 26, 42–44).  \n- State and Territory Ministers, whose written consent is required in many cases (see s5, ss20, 27, 36).  \n- Transfer countries, tribunals (where relevant), and officials who receive or hand over prisoners; police, prison officers and magistrates involved in custody, transit and arrests under the Act (see ss21–23, 29–31, 55–56).\n\n# How it works, mechanically\n\n- Eligibility rules: A prisoner in Australia may be eligible to go to a transfer country if they are a national of that country or have community ties there (see s12). A prisoner outside Australia may be eligible to come to Australia if they are an Australian citizen or have indefinite permission to remain in Australia and have community ties with a State or Territory (see s13).  \n\n- Consent and approvals: A transfer requires written consent from the prisoner (or their representative in limited circumstances) (s6), the transfer country or tribunal, and appropriate Ministerial consent (usually the Attorney‑General plus any relevant State/Territory Ministers) (s5, ss20, 27, 36). The prisoner must be informed of legal consequences in a language they understand and must certify that they were informed (s6(3)–(4)). Prisoner consent cannot be withdrawn after the prisoner leaves the country of transfer (s6(6)).  \n\n- Attorney‑General’s role and discretion: The Attorney‑General coordinates requests and applications, gets information from transfer countries, notifies Ministers and prisoners, may refuse or not proceed with applications where statutory requirements are not met (ss10A, 18–20, 24, 24A, 33, 33A). The Attorney‑General decides how a foreign or tribunal sentence will be enforced in Australia: either continued (no substantive change) or converted (substituted) enforcement, subject to limits (ss42–44). The Attorney‑General may delegate powers to senior departmental officials (s53).  \n\n- Enforcement of sentences: When a prisoner is transferred to Australia, the foreign/tribunal sentence becomes a \"federal\" sentence for enforcement purposes and the person is treated as a federal prisoner; Australian laws about detention, parole, remission, classification, and prison programs apply as far as they can alongside this Act (ss42, 43, 46). Conversely, when a prisoner leaves Australia under the Act their Australian sentence ceases to operate in Australia and the person is treated as prisoner of the transfer country (s47). Appeals in Australia against the original foreign/tribunal sentence or against the Attorney‑General’s enforcement decision are excluded (s45).  \n\n- Practical instruments: The Attorney‑General issues warrants in a prescribed form to enable transfer, authorise escorts, and direct execution of warrants (ss21, 22, 29, 30, 38–39). Warrants can be cancelled before the prisoner leaves (ss23, 31, 40). Transit, short custody on landing and arrest powers for escape are provided (ss55–56). Regulations name transfer countries and may set conditions; the Governor‑General makes regulations (ss8, 58).  \n\n# Stated purpose and practical trade‑offs\n\nThe Act’s stated objects are to facilitate transfers so prisoners can serve sentences in their country of nationality or where they have community ties, and to facilitate transfers from tribunal countries (s3). The Act implements that goal by creating a consent‑and‑approval framework, procedural safeguards for prisoner consent, and a mechanism for turning foreign or tribunal sentences into enforceable Australian sentences (ss5–6, 18–20, 26, 42–46).  \n\nKey trade‑offs and operational implications drawn from the Act’s mechanics:  \n- Concentrated decision power: The Attorney‑General has significant discretion to decide whether to proceed, to accept or refuse terms proposed by a transfer country, and to choose how a sentence will be enforced in Australia (see ss10A, 19–20, 26, 42–44). That creates centralised control but also concentrates operational responsibility and legal risk in a single office.  \n- Multi‑level approvals and coordination costs: Many transfers require both Commonwealth and State/Territory Ministerial consents (s5) and consultation with the Immigration Minister for tribunal prisoners (s57). This creates coordination and timing requirements across governments (ss20, 27, 36).  \n- Information and consent compliance burden: The prisoner (or representative) must be informed in an accessible language and must certify that they were informed before consenting (s6(3)–(4)). The Attorney‑General must exchange detailed information with transfer countries and may request additional material (ss18, 25, 34). These are explicit compliance inputs to the process.  \n- Financial flows and who pays: Transfer agreements may include cost‑recovery terms; if a State/Territory incurred costs, the Commonwealth will reimburse that State/Territory (s51). The Act also limits Commonwealth financial responsibility in one respect (no maintenance obligation under Part 4 unless the prisoner has community ties with specified external Territories) (s46(8)).  \n- Legal remedies and finality: The Act prohibits appeals in Australia against foreign or tribunal sentences and against the Attorney‑General’s enforcement decisions (s45). That limits domestic judicial challenge to foreign sentencing outcomes and administrative enforcement decisions under this Act.  \n- Implementation dependency on foreign cooperation and regulations: Transfers require agreement by the transfer country or tribunal and can be limited by regulations that declare transfer countries and set conditions (ss8, 18, 28). If a transfer country does not agree, transfers cannot proceed (s10(b), s28).  \n\n# Risks and practical consequences identified in the Act’s text\n\n- Delay or non‑action: The Attorney‑General need not act on an application or request where statutory requirements are not met or where a prior application was recently refused or withdrawn (s10A).  \n- Unilateral cancellation: A warrant may be cancelled up until the prisoner leaves the relevant country (ss23, 31, 40), and consent withdrawals by any party trigger cancellation (ss23(2), 31(2), 40(2)).  \n- Limited judicial review of sentencing and enforcement choices: Section 45 removes appeal rights in Australia against the foreign/tribunal sentences and against the Attorney‑General’s enforcement decisions.  \n\n# Summary of concrete who‑pays, who‑decides and likely behaviour changes\n\n- Who pays: Transfer terms may include cost recovery; the Commonwealth reimburses States/Territories for costs they incur in transfer (s51). The Act otherwise leaves ordinary maintenance and custodial costs to existing arrangements, with a limited exception in s46(8).  \n- Who decides: The Attorney‑General is the central decision‑maker for consenting to transfers and for choosing enforcement methods; affected State/Territory Ministers must also give written consent where required; transfer countries and tribunals must consent; prisoners or authorised representatives must give informed written consent (ss5, 6, 18, 20, 24, 27, 36, 37, 42).  \n- Behavioural effects: Eligible prisoners or their representatives may apply for transfer (s16); transfer countries and tribunals will be asked to consent and to propose/accept terms (ss18, 28, 37); State/Territory ministers will be consulted and must provide consent or information about where and how the prisoner will serve the sentence (ss20, 27, 36). Prisoners who leave a country under their consent cannot withdraw that consent after departure (s6(6)).\n\n(References in parentheses are to sections of the International Transfer of Prisoners Act 1997 cited above.)"},"kimi_summary":{"content_quality":"ok","complexity_score":7,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"The legislation has expanded significantly beyond its original 1997 scope. Originally focused on bilateral prisoner transfers between Australia and treaty partner countries, it has grown to include: (1) transfers from international war crimes tribunals (Former Yugoslavia Tribunal, Rwanda Tribunal, and the International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals) added via amendments; (2) specific provisions for US military commissions; (3) complex arrangements for suspended sentences and parole; (4) detailed provisions for mentally impaired prisoners; and (5) intricate multi-jurisdictional coordination mechanisms between federal, State and Territory governments. The machinery provisions for enforcement methods and warrant procedures have also become substantially more elaborate than the original framework."},"complexity_factors":["Multiple overlapping categories of prisoners requiring different procedural tracks: federal prisoners, State prisoners, Territory prisoners, joint prisoners, mentally impaired prisoners, Tribunal prisoners, and prisoners on parole or suspended sentences","Complex consent architecture requiring layered approvals: prisoner/representative consent, transfer country consent, Attorney-General consent, plus State/Territory Minister consents with varying combinations depending on prisoner type and destination","Extensive defined terms section (47+ definitions) with nested cross-references, including complex relational definitions like 'close family member' and 'community ties'","Bifurcated enforcement mechanisms (continued enforcement vs converted enforcement) with specific limitations on sentence duration and legal nature","Multiple procedural pathways: Part 3 (transfers from Australia), Part 4 (transfers to Australia from transfer countries), and Part 5 (transfers to Australia of Tribunal prisoners), each with distinct steps","Conditional logic for warrant issuance and cancellation with multiple triggering events and withdrawal scenarios","Interaction with multiple external legal regimes: Migration Act 1958, Extradition Act 1988, Family Law Act 1975, Crimes Act 1914, and various State/Territory laws","Specific provisions for historical anomalies (e.g., Northern Territory prisoners removed to South Australia before 1985)","Regulation-dependent operation: the Act only applies to countries declared by regulation as 'transfer countries', with potential treaty-specific limitations, conditions, exceptions or qualifications"],"plain_english_summary":"This law sets up a system for moving prisoners between Australia and other countries so they can serve their sentences closer to home or in places where they have family connections.\n\n**What it does:**\n- Allows Australian prisoners held overseas to return to Australia to finish their sentences, and lets foreign prisoners in Australia go home to serve their time.\n- Also covers prisoners convicted by international war crimes tribunals (for crimes in Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia), letting them serve sentences in Australia.\n\n**Who it affects:**\n- **Prisoners** who are citizens of another country or have close family there (called \"community ties\").\n- **Australian citizens** imprisoned overseas who want to come home.\n- **War crimes prisoners** from international tribunals.\n- **State and Territory governments**, which must agree to transfers and house the prisoners.\n\n**How it works:**\n- The prisoner (or their family representative if they're a child or mentally impaired) must agree to the transfer.\n- Multiple ministers must sign off: the federal Attorney-General plus relevant State or Territory ministers.\n- The foreign country must also agree.\n- Once transferred, sentences can be enforced in two ways: either keeping the original sentence details (\"continued enforcement\") or converting it to an Australian equivalent sentence (\"converted enforcement\").\n- The law ensures transferred prisoners aren't treated worse than they would have been in the original country—sentences can't be made harsher.\n\n**Why it matters:**\n- Helps prisoners rehabilitate by keeping them near family and cultural support.\n- Lets Australia meet its international obligations, particularly for war crimes tribunals.\n- Creates a formal, legal process for what would otherwise be complex diplomatic arrangements."},"summary":{"complexity_score":8,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"The original stated objects focus on two purposes: transferring prisoners to their home countries under bilateral/multilateral agreements, and transferring war crimes tribunal prisoners to Australia. However, the Act's scope expanded beyond a simple prisoner welfare mechanism to include: US military commission prisoners (section 4A, a specific geopolitical addition not mentioned in the objects); complex extradition interaction provisions that prioritise surrender over transfer; detailed financial responsibility carve-outs between Commonwealth and States/Territories; and a regulatory framework allowing transfer country declarations subject to treaty-specific conditions and qualifications. The inclusion of the International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals (added after the original 1997 enactment) also represents a scope extension to cover successor bodies to the original war crimes tribunals."},"complexity_factors":["Multiple overlapping jurisdictions: Federal, State, and Territory governments all have roles, with different consent requirements depending on the prisoner type and location","Three distinct prisoner categories with different rules: ordinary prisoners, mentally impaired prisoners, and Tribunal (war crimes) prisoners","Two directions of transfer (to Australia and from Australia), each with separate procedural pathways","Two sentence enforcement methods (continued enforcement and converted enforcement) with nuanced rules about how foreign sentences are adapted","Extensive definition section with interdependent defined terms (e.g., 'community ties', 'joint prisoner', 'Tribunal offence', 'sentence of imprisonment' including suspended sentences)","International treaty obligations embedded into domestic law via regulations, creating a layered regulatory structure","Special provisions for US military commissions, reflecting geopolitically specific arrangements","Interaction with multiple other statutes: Extradition Act 1988, Migration Act 1958, Family Law Act 1975, Crimes Act 1914","Consent rules are complex: who can consent, when consent is valid, when it can be withdrawn, and when it can be dispensed with (Tribunal prisoners)","Federal-State financial responsibility provisions for prisoner maintenance costs add an additional layer of complexity"],"plain_english_summary":"## What This Law Does\n\nThe **International Transfer of Prisoners Act 1997** creates a legal system for moving prisoners between Australia and other countries, so people can serve their sentences closer to home or family.\n\n## Who Does It Affect?\n\n- **Prisoners in Australia** who want to serve their sentence in another country (e.g., their home country)\n- **Australians imprisoned overseas** who want to come back to Australia to serve their sentence\n- **War crimes prisoners** — people convicted by international war crimes tribunals (such as those established for crimes in the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda) who are transferred to Australia to serve their sentences\n- **State, Territory, and Federal governments** — multiple Ministers must agree before any transfer happens\n\n## How Does It Work?\n\n**To send a prisoner OUT of Australia:**\n1. The prisoner (or their representative, if they can't consent) applies to the Attorney-General (the federal government's chief law officer)\n2. The country receiving the prisoner must agree\n3. Multiple Australian Ministers must agree (Federal, plus State/Territory depending on which prison the person is in)\n4. The prisoner must be a national of — or have strong community ties to — the receiving country\n5. A formal legal document (called a **warrant**) is issued to authorise the transfer\n\n**To bring a prisoner INTO Australia:**\n1. The request comes from the foreign country, the prisoner, or their representative\n2. The prisoner must be an Australian citizen or permanent resident with ties to Australia\n3. Similar multi-ministerial approval is needed\n4. The foreign sentence is then enforced in Australia — either kept the same or converted to an equivalent Australian sentence, but it can never be made **harsher**\n\n## Key Protections and Rules\n\n- **Consent is central:** Prisoners must agree to transfer (unless they lack capacity, in which case a close family member or legal representative can consent on their behalf). Consent cannot be withdrawn once the prisoner has left the country\n- **No harsher punishment:** If a prisoner is brought to Australia, their overseas sentence cannot be increased in severity or length\n- **No appeal of overseas conviction:** Once transferred to Australia, you cannot challenge your foreign conviction in Australian courts\n- **Extradition takes priority:** A transfer won't happen if another country is trying to extradite (formally request the handover of) the prisoner\n- **Community ties matter:** Even if you're not a citizen, you may qualify for transfer if you have close family or strong personal connections in the country\n- **War crimes tribunal prisoners:** Prisoners convicted by the Former Yugoslavia Tribunal, Rwanda Tribunal, or the International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals can be transferred to Australia under special rules — their consent may not always be required\n\n## Practical Example\n\nIf an Australian citizen is convicted of a crime in Germany and imprisoned there, they could apply to be transferred back to Australia to finish their sentence. Germany and Australia would both need to agree, the sentence would be adapted to fit Australian law (but not made worse), and the prisoner would serve the remainder in an Australian prison under Australian prison rules.\n\n## Why It Matters\n\nServing a sentence far from family, in a foreign language, in an unfamiliar legal system is significantly harder on prisoners and their families. This Act provides a humane mechanism for rehabilitation closer to home — while ensuring governments retain control and public safety is protected."}},"importantCases":[],"_links":{"self":"/api/acts/international-transfer-of-prisoners-act-1997","history":"/api/acts/international-transfer-of-prisoners-act-1997/history","analysis":"/api/acts/international-transfer-of-prisoners-act-1997/analysis","conflicts":"/api/acts/international-transfer-of-prisoners-act-1997/conflicts","importantCases":"/api/acts/international-transfer-of-prisoners-act-1997/important-cases","documents":"/api/acts/international-transfer-of-prisoners-act-1997/documents"}}