Terrorism (Police Powers) Act 2002 No 115
Current version for 30 January 2012 to date (accessed 22 May 2013 at 17:27)
26ZG Contacting lawyer
(1) The person being detained is entitled to contact a lawyer but
solely for the purpose of:(a) obtaining advice from the lawyer about the person’s legal
rights in relation to:(i) the preventative detention order, or
(ii) the treatment of the person in connection with the person’s
detention under the order, or
(b) arranging for the lawyer to act for the person in relation to, and
instructing the lawyer in relation to, proceedings in the Supreme Court
relating to:(i) the making of a preventative detention order against the person,
or
(ii) the revocation of a preventative detention order made against the
person, or
(c) arranging for the lawyer to act for the person in relation to, and
instructing the lawyer in relation to, any other proceedings in a court for a
remedy relating to:(i) the preventative detention order, or
(ii) the treatment of the person in connection with the person’s
detention under the order, or
(d) arranging for the lawyer to act for the person in relation to, and
instructing the lawyer in relation to, a complaint to the Ombudsman or the
Police Integrity Commission in relation to:(i) the application for, or the making of, the preventative detention
order, or
(ii) the treatment of the person by a police officer in connection with
the person’s detention under the order, or
(e) arranging for the lawyer to act for the person in relation to an
appearance, or hearing, before a court that is to take place while the person
is being detained under the order.
(2) The form of contact that the person being detained is entitled to
have with a lawyer under subsection (1) includes:(a) being visited by the lawyer, and
(b) communicating with the lawyer by telephone, fax or
email.
(3) If:(a) the person being detained asks to be allowed to contact a
particular lawyer under subsection (1), and
(b) either:(i) the person is not entitled to contact that lawyer because of a
prohibited contact order, or
(ii) the person is not able to contact that
lawyer,
the police officer who is detaining the person must give the person
reasonable assistance to choose another lawyer for the person to contact under
subsection (1).
(3A) Without limiting the assistance that may be given to a person
under subsection (3), the police officer may refer the person to the Legal Aid
Commission.
(4) If the police officer who is detaining a person under a
preventative detention order has reasonable grounds to believe that:(a) the person is unable, because of inadequate knowledge of the
English language or a disability, to communicate with reasonable fluency in
that language, and
(b) the person may have difficulties in choosing or contacting a
lawyer because of that inability,
the police officer must give the person reasonable assistance (including,
if appropriate, by arranging for the assistance of an interpreter) to choose
and contact a lawyer under subsection (1).
(5) In recommending lawyers to the person being detained as part of
giving the person assistance under subsection (3), the police officer who is
detaining the person may give priority to lawyers who have been given a
security clearance at an appropriate level by the Attorney-General’s
Department of the Commonwealth.
(6) Despite subsection (5) but subject to any prohibited contact
order, the person being detained is entitled under this section to contact a
lawyer who does not have a security clearance of the kind referred to in
subsection (5).