Ground 1
10 Under this ground, the applicant contends the Tribunal asked itself the wrong question, or misconstrued Direction No 79, by giving an impermissibly wide operation to a particular aspect of one of the primary considerations set out in Direction No 79.
11 Section 13 of Direction No 79 provides that, when deciding whether to revoke the mandatory cancellation of a non-citizen's visa, there are three primary considerations:
(a) protection of the Australian community from criminal or other serious conduct;
(b) the best interests of minor children in Australia; and
(c) expectations of the Australian community.
12 As to the first of these, paragraph 13.1 directs decision-makers to consider the following matters:
13.1 Protection of the Australian community
(1) When considering protection of the Australian community, decision-makers should have regard to the principle that the Government is committed to protecting the Australian community from harm as a result of criminal activity or other serious conduct by non-citizens. Remaining in Australia is a privilege that Australia confers on noncitizens in the expectation that they are, and have been, law abiding, will respect important institutions, and will not cause or threaten harm to individuals or the Australian community. Mandatory cancellation without notice of certain non-citizen prisoners is consistent with this principle by ensuring that serious offenders remain in either criminal or immigration detention while their immigration status is resolved.
(2) Decision-makers should also give consideration to:
a) The nature and seriousness of the non-citizen's conduct to date; and
b) The risk to the Australian community should the non-citizen commit further offences or engage in other serious conduct.
13 Then, under the heading "nature and seriousness of the conduct", 13.1.1 provides:
13.1.1 The nature and seriousness of the conduct
(1) In considering the nature and seriousness of the non-citizen's criminal offending or other conduct to date, decision-makers must have regard to factors including:
a) The principle that, without limiting the range of offences that may be considered serious, violent and/or sexual crimes are viewed very seriously;
b) The principle that crimes of a violent nature against women or children are viewed very seriously, regardless of the sentence imposed;
c) The principle that crimes committed against vulnerable members of the community (such as the elderly and the disabled), or government representatives or officials due to the position they hold, or in the performance of their duties, are serious;
d) Subject to subparagraph (b) above, the sentence imposed by the courts for a crime or crimes;
e) The frequency of the non-citizen's offending and whether there is any trend of increasing seriousness;
f) The cumulative effect of repeated offending;
g) Whether the non-citizen has provided false or misleading information to the department, including by not disclosing prior criminal offending;
h) Whether the non-citizen has re-offended since being formally warned, or since otherwise being made aware, in writing, about the consequences of further offending in terms of the non-citizen's migration status (noting that the absence of a warning should not be considered to be in the non-citizen's favour);
i) Where the non-citizen is in Australia, that a crime committed while the non-citizen was in immigration detention; during an escape from immigration detention; or after the non-citizen escaped from immigration detention, but before the non-citizen was taken into immigration detention again is serious, as is an offence against section 197A of the Act;
14 The applicant's argument is that, despite the long list of factors in 13.1.1, the nature and seriousness of a person's criminal offending is not to be considered "at large"; rather, it is relevant only insofar as it contributes to an assessment of what the protection of the Australian community requires in a given case.
15 The applicant contends that, contrary to the correct approach, the Tribunal in this case undertook its own assessment of the nature and seriousness of the applicant's offending, as if it were the sentencing court. The Tribunal, he contends, set itself up as an arbiter of the gravity of the applicant's conduct, and did so by only referring to the adverse aspects of the sentencing judge's remarks, excluding those which tended in favour of the applicant. The applicant submits he made this point clearly in written submissions to the Tribunal, where he submitted:
In short: the Applicant accepts the gravity of his offending. He pleaded guilty to and was punished for it. Self-evidently, this is not an opportunity for further punishment, nor should Direction No 79 be applied punitively. The present primary consideration is concerned with protecting the Australian community.
16 Despite having its attention drawn to the distinction, the applicant submits the Tribunal, in making findings at [77]-[79] of its reasons, decided to take an impermissible approach:
It is propounded on behalf of the Applicant that he had pleaded guilty to his criminal offending and has been punished for it. On that basis, the Applicant contends that, "… this is not an opportunity for further punishment, nor should Direction No 79 be applied punitively. The present primary consideration is concerned with protecting the Australian community". The difficulty in accepting that contention is that the application of the Direction is not conditioned by a preliminary consideration of whether its application will have the effect propounded by the Applicant.
The Direction is applied (for the purposes of this Primary Consideration A) for the protection of the Australian community. The Applicant's criminal offending was punished by a sentencing regime contained in relevant legislation governing criminal conduct in the State of Victoria. The Direction is to be applied in the instant case to determine the outcome of the Applicant's migration status in this country pursuant to the Commonwealth Migration Act. The outcome of one is not interdependent or otherwise related to the other. Judicial officers sentencing applicants for their criminal offending do not take into account any adverse impact of their sentences upon that person's migration status. It follows that nor should a decision-maker in my position take into account the effect of this decision on what may have befallen the Applicant in the Victorian criminal courts.
While outcomes arising from a clinical and prudent application of the Direction may well result in an additional adverse outcome for an applicant, the Direction must be applied with reference to, but independently of, the previous sentencing result for an applicant's criminal offending.
(Footnote omitted.)
17 The Tribunal concluded at [88] of its reasons:
For the purposes of this Primary Consideration A, I am of the view that this Applicant has committed extremely serious crimes of a sexual nature against children in the Australian community and, on that basis, it is correct to allocate a very heavy level of weight to this Primary Consideration A in favour of non-revocation. I am of the further view that this Applicant's criminal offending in this country is of such a serious magnitude that any risk of similar conduct in the future is unacceptable. I make this finding even in the circumstances of the countervailing opinion of Mr Cummins and the more conditional countervailing opinion of Dr Ducat. Were this Applicant to re-offend, the harm that would be occasioned to others would be both physically and psychologically substantial and, quite conceivably, catastrophic.
18 The Tribunal was, the applicant contends, setting itself up as an arbiter of the applicant's right to remain in Australia in a way that the task in s 501CA, read with Direction No 79, does not permit. The Tribunal was, the applicant contends, asking itself whether it was morally appropriate to readmit the applicant to the Australian community.
19 Although I have some misgivings about the language used by the Tribunal, the applicant's arguments on ground 1 should not be accepted. In my opinion, the Tribunal applied itself correctly to the task required of it by Direction No 79. It considered each of the factors set out at 13.1.1 of Direction No 79 which it identified as relevant: see [25]-[47]. That is what it was required to do.
20 In its reasons, it is clear from the language used that the Tribunal was seriously affronted by the nature of the applicant's offending conduct and considered it abhorrent. The Tribunal employed a series of adjectives and descriptions which make its affront clear. It referred to the applicant's offending as "appalling" and "shocking"; when considering the vulnerability of the applicant's victims, it referred to the "generational difference … between the age of the victims and the Applicant"; it stated that "[t]he extremely serious nature of the Applicant's offending stridently militates against acceptance of any suggestion that the nature of the harm were he to reoffend in the future would not be serious"; and it quoted the sentencing judge's observation that "[v]ulnerable children were cynically exploited with a brutal lack of regard and respect for them", with emphasis added by the Tribunal.
21 It was open to the Tribunal on the evidence to form this adverse view of the applicant's offending conduct. There was nothing irrational or illogical about it doing so, in light of the nature and circumstances of the offences, and the remarks of the sentencing judge. The transparency with which the Tribunal expressed itself in its reasons - considering some of the purposes of the giving of reasons as an explanation for the outcome reached by a decision-maker - is not necessarily to be criticised. The applicant, and others reading the decision, could be left in no doubt about the view taken by the Tribunal after it had considered the evidence and information before it. There was, I emphasise, no allegation of actual or apprehended bias made on this application, or before the Tribunal.
22 There are aspects of the language used by the Tribunal which do tend to the moralistic, or to the language one might expect to find in a sentencing judgment, for example paragraphs [41] and [42]:
Sub-paragraph (f) of paragraph 13.1.1(1) of the Direction concerns itself with an examination of the cumulative effect of an applicant's repeated offending and how such an effect does or does not demonstrate the seriousness of the offending. The Applicant's multiple sexual assaults against children is offending that was perpetrated for something in the order of eight years. It involves a shocking lack of judgment and absence of self-control. It undeniably demonstrates an inability to distinguish right from wrong.
It is offending that, in the most appalling way, is not respectful of the personal rights of other quite vulnerable members of our community. Ultimately, it is offending that is not respectful of the lawful authority governing the rights of those vulnerable victims. The overwhelming majority of the remainder of the Australian community respect those laws and do not attack the vulnerable in our midst. Despite his offending, the Applicant now seeks to be re-admitted to the Australian community.
23 Despite this language, reading the Tribunal's reasons fairly, I find that while the Tribunal was making clear its own views about the nature and seriousness of the applicant's offending, it did so for the purpose of assessing what weight should be given to one of the stipulated primary considerations in the revocation decision - protection of the Australian community.