The process and hearing before the Tribunal
6 On 31 May 2019, the Tribunal notified the Minister that the application for review had been made and that the matter would be listed for directions and a hearing. The notice to the Minister also noted that the matter was an "expedited matter". This is a reference to s 500 (6L) of the Migration Act which provides that if the Tribunal has not made a decision in relation to a cancellation decision within the period of 84 days after the day on which the person was notified of the decision under review the Tribunal would be taken, at the end of that period, to have made a decision to affirm the decision under review. The matter was subsequently listed for hearing on 24 and 25 July 2019.
7 On 19 June 2019, the Tribunal notified the Minister that summonses had been issued at the Minister's request to the Australian Federal Police, ACT Corrective Services and the ACT Magistrates Court. The return date for the summonses was 8 July 2019. The Tribunal's notice said the standard access order was for the applicant to be given first access to the documents and the respondent to be given access 14 days later.
8 On 12 July 2019, the Tribunal sent five emails to the applicant attaching the documents produced in accordance with the summonses. The attachments totalled 659 pages. According to the applicant's unchallenged evidence he did not know what to do with the documents. He tried viewing them on his mobile phone but this was difficult. He tried to use the computers in the detention facility but "they have a lot of problems and always break". He did not think about printing the documents. Also on 12 July 2019, the Tribunal granted the applicant first access to the documents from 15 July 2019 with the Minister to have access from 22 July 2019, two days before the hearing scheduled to start on 24 July 2019.
9 On the day before the hearing, 23 July 2019, the Minister's solicitor emailed the Tribunal and the applicant attaching "relevant excerpts" from the documents. The attachment totalled 120 pages. The applicant's unchallenged evidence was to the same effect as his evidence about the attachments to the emails which the Tribunal had sent him; that is, that he did not know what to do with the documents, tried to view them on his mobile phone which was difficult and on the computers at the detention facility, and did not think about printing the attachments.
10 The Tribunal hearing started on 24 July 2019. The applicant remained in detention and attended the hearing via a video link. The Tribunal asked the applicant if he had had a chance to go through the material and the applicant said if that meant the email he had received "last night" (in fact, at 1.08pm the previous day) then he had done so "very briefly". The Tribunal asked if the applicant wanted more time to go through that material to which the applicant responded if the documents were just extracts from what had previously been sent then it "should be fine". Having heard from the Minister's representative the Tribunal said that if more time was needed by the applicant to review the documents now, in the afternoon or overnight then the Tribunal would "make sure you have that opportunity". The Tribunal also said that the material was "historical" and was "very similar to a driving history" and that a person's driving history "is what it is" and "cannot be changed now".
11 The applicant then gave evidence. He was cross-examined including about the documents served by the Minister which were admitted as exhibit SM1. The transcript discloses that the applicant was attempting to look at the documents on his mobile phone during his questioning and that the Tribunal was aware of this fact. At the end of the first day of the hearing the Tribunal said this in response to the evidence the applicant had been giving:
Now, if the answer - and the simple answer to these questions is, 'I was so drunk, I can't even remember what I was doing,' that's the answer to the question. If the answer is, 'I was so drunk that I might have done those things, but I didn't mean to hurt anybody,' that's the answer. And if you want to tell us that Ms Loverich is unreliable because of her BPD, you can say that as well. But what you can't say, and what is not standing up to any sort of scrutiny, is that these police reports are not to be accepted, because Ms Loverich might be a little bit - or a lot - mentally unwell. If that were the case, the police wouldn't have made the reports. Do you see?---All right, yes.
…
Now, overnight, I want you to have a really careful look through that summonsed material. So have a look at these police reports that Mr Ray has just referred you to. Go through them?---Certainly.
See if you can go back in time to the night where this incident happened, and see if you've got some kind of explanation, all right?---Yes.
You're not the first person to have marital trouble with a spouse. You're not the first person to have trouble with alcohol. There's nothing unique in that. But you need to answer the questions that Mr Ray puts to you squarely. Because at the moment, it's going towards you telling stories, and it's not sounding very convincing, all right?---All right, yes, your Honour.
I thought it [sic] should warn you about that, in your best interests. So read the material overnight, think about your answers, and then just give him the straight answers, no matter what they are, all right?---Yes.
(Emphasis added.)
12 The applicant's unchallenged evidence before this Court was that he understood from this that he was not allowed to say that things did not happen the way they were reported in the police reports tendered by the Minister. He thought he was being directed that he could not dispute the police reports and wondered how he could get his point across if he "can't tell [the Tribunal] my side". He understood that he could not stand up for himself and had to keep his answers as brief as possible and was to just say "yes" or "no" as much as he could. He believed the Tribunal was "telling me my role and what I had to do, directing me".
13 After the end of the first day of the hearing the Tribunal sent three emails to the applicant again attaching all of the material on the summonses and then sent another three emails again attaching all of the same material. The applicant's evidence is that he did not understand which documents he was meant to look at.
14 The applicant's evidence to this Court is that on the second day of the hearing and as a result of what he had been told by the Tribunal he did not think he could support himself and should just say "yes". He said he did not explain matters that he wanted to explain because he thought that if he did so it would be to "go against what [the Tribunal] had said to [him] the day before about not disputing the police reports" and because he thus thought that he could not dispute those reports. The police reports, it should be noted, related to uncharged matters, many involving complaints by third parties including the applicant's former partner, rather than offences.
15 The Tribunal asked the applicant on the second day of the hearing if he had "read all those police reports" and he answered that he had "sort of browsed through them" and had looked at them. He was asked if there was anything he had read in those reports that he disputed and answered that "[t]here were a few. I can't really recall them". Later he said that "[i]t should be fine". The Tribunal then said it would look at the facts the police had recorded in the police reports about each of the offences and would "basically accept them". The Tribunal then said that if the applicant needed a bit more time it would give it to him and the applicant asked for 10 minutes "to go over it", a request which the Tribunal granted.
16 When the Tribunal resumed its hearing it asked the applicant if there was anything he would like to speak further about and he answered "I have, but I think it [sic] just the nerves getting the better of me". The Tribunal asked if the applicant wanted to talk about these things now and the applicant answered "No, it's truly fine, thank you". The Tribunal asked "so nothing further to say about them?" and the applicant answered "no".
17 The applicant said in his evidence to this Court, however, that there were definitely things he did not agree with in the police reports but did not know how he could bring those parts up or how he could sort through it all on his email to find those parts. He said the talk the Tribunal had given him on the first day was in his mind and he thought it best not to argue but if he had been given the chance he would have told the Tribunal about parts of the police reports which were not true and other parts which he could have explained. In his unchallenged evidence to this Court the applicant gave examples of these matters. The examples included his explanation that one of his former partners, to whom a number of the police reports related, was diagnosed with borderline personality disorder and that as a result of this disorder she would escalate things and blow them out of proportion, routinely reporting the applicant to police and then making up with him the following week. Further, an alleged assault on his brother for which the applicant was not charged involved the applicant acting in self-defence, as did another (uncharged) alleged assault on an Irish tourist. Another incident involving the applicant allegedly kicking down a door, the applicant explained, was based on a misunderstanding of events by the police.
18 As the submissions for the applicant put it:
Overall, the applicant wanted to explain to the Tribunal that he is not a violent or aggressive person, although he accepts that he has had problems with alcohol, which brings out the worst in him, and has had some volatile relationships. Plainly, that is not the impression the Tribunal formed from reviewing the Summonsed Material, unaided by explanations from the applicant.