Australian Capital Territory Current Regulations

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COURT PROCEDURES RULES 2006 - REG 4053

Criminal proceedings—inspection of registry files

    (1)     Anyone may search the registry for, inspect, or take a copy of, any document filed in the registry in a criminal proceeding.

Note     A fee may be determined under the href="http://www.legislation.act.gov.au/a/2004-59" title="A2004-59">Court Procedures Act 2004

for this provision.

    (2)     However, the registrar must not allow a person who is not a party to a proceeding to search the registry for, inspect, or take a copy of, any of the following documents about the proceeding unless the person appears to the registrar to have a sufficient interest in the document or the court gives leave:

        (a)     an order, transcript of the proceeding, or any other document, that the court has ordered to be kept confidential;

        (b)     an affidavit that has not been read in court;

        (c)     a part of an affidavit ruled to be inadmissible in evidence;

        (d)     an admission that has not been admitted into evidence;

        (e)     a subpoena;

Note     Rule 6609 (Inspection of, and dealing with, subpoenaed documents and things produced otherwise than on attendance) deals with the inspection of documents produced in response to a subpoena.

        (f)     a deposition taken before an examiner;

        (g)     a document filed in support of an application made in the absence of a party;

        (h)     a written submission that has not been read in court;

              (i)     an unsworn statement of evidence;

        (j)     an indictment on which the accused has not yet been arraigned;

        (k)     a case statement filed by the prosecution until read in court;

        (l)     a questionnaire completed by the parties;

        (m)     a document that the registrar decides should be confidential to the parties to the proceeding in the interests of justice.

Note     Pt 6.2 (Applications in proceedings) applies to an application for leave under this rule.

    (3)     Also, a party to a proceeding may search the registry for, inspect, or take a copy of, a subpoena issued at the request of another party only with the court's leave.

    (4)     However, subrule (3) does not apply to a subpoena that has been served on the party.

    (5)     Further, a party to a proceeding may search the registry for, inspect, or take a copy of, a document filed to support any of the following applications only with the court's leave:

        (a)     an application for a document, evidence or thing to be kept confidential;

        (b)     an application for a document or thing to be granted privilege from production.

    (6)     Before considering an application for leave under subrule (2), the court may require the applicant for leave to do either or both of the following:

        (a)     give notice of the application for leave to a party to the relevant proceeding or another interested person;

        (b)     obtain the agreement of a party to the relevant proceeding or another interested person to the applicant searching the registry for, inspecting, or taking a copy of, a document to which the application relates.

    (7)     In this rule:

"document"—to remove any doubt, document includes a document kept electronically or in any other way.

Note     The title="A2001-14">Legislation Act

, dict, pt 1, defines "document" to mean any record of information, and includes—

        (a)     anything on which there is writing; or

        (b)     anything on which there are figures, marks, numbers, perforations, symbols or anything else having a meaning for persons qualified to interpret them; or

        (c)     anything from which images, sounds, messages or writings can be produced or reproduced, whether with or without the aid of anything else; or

        (d)     a drawing, map, photograph or plan.



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