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Supreme Court Act 1933
68HApplication—pt 8AA
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68H Application—pt 8AA
(1) This part applies if—
(a) a person has been acquitted of an offence (a principal offence);
and
(b) a double jeopardy law of the Territory would, but for this part,
prevent the person from being retried for the principal offence,
or from being tried for another offence, in a proceeding in the
ACT.
(2) A reference to a person acquitted of a principal offence includes a
person acquitted of a principal offence in a proceeding in another
jurisdiction if a law of the jurisdiction provides for the retrial of the
person for the offence, or the trial of the person for another offence.
(3) This part abrogates the doctrine of double jeopardy, however
expressed in a double jeopardy law, to the extent necessary for the
operation of this part and—
(a) confers on the Crown a right of appeal against an acquittal in a
criminal proceeding; and
(b) permits the retrial of a person acquitted of an offence
(the acquittal offence), and the trial of the person for another
Note A reference to a territory law includes a reference to an Act and the
common law (see Legislation Act, dict, pt 1, def territory law).
Important concepts Division 8AA.2
double jeopardy law means a territory law that gives effect to a rule
of double jeopardy in a criminal proceeding.
Example—law that gives effect to a rule of double jeopardy
a law that does any of the following in relation to a criminal proceeding:
(a) makes available the plea of autrefois acquit or autrefois convict;
(b) gives effect to the principle that a person should not be punished more than
once for the same matter;
(c) gives effect to the principle of finality of an acquittal;
(d) prevents an abuse of process brought about by repeated prosecution for an
offence when the repeated prosecution is based on facts that are manifestly
inconsistent with a previous acquittal or previous conviction