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Evidence Act 2011
165BDelay in prosecution
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165B Delay in prosecution
(1) This section applies in a criminal proceeding in which there is a jury.
(2) If the court, on application by the defendant, is satisfied that the
defendant has suffered a significant forensic disadvantage because of
the consequences of delay, the court must tell the jury about the nature
of that disadvantage and the need to take that disadvantage into
account when considering the evidence.
(3) The judge need not comply with subsection (2) if there is a good
reason for not doing so.
(4) It is not necessary that a particular form of words be used in telling
the jury about the nature of the significant forensic disadvantage
suffered and the need to take the disadvantage into account, but the
judge must not in any way suggest to the jury that it would be
dangerous or unsafe to convict the defendant solely because of the
delay or the forensic disadvantage suffered because of the
consequences of the delay.
(5) The judge must not warn or tell the jury about any forensic
disadvantage the defendant may have suffered because of delay
except in accordance with this section, but this section does not affect
any other power of the judge to give a warning to, or to inform, the
jury.
(6) For this section:
(a) delay includes delay between the alleged offence and its being
reported; and
(b) significant forensic disadvantage is not to be regarded as being
established by the mere existence of a delay.
Division 4.6.1 Requests to produce documents or
call witnesses
Note The Commonwealth Act, s 182 gives the Commonwealth Act, pt 4.6,
div 1 a wider application in relation to Commonwealth records and
certain Commonwealth documents.