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CRIMES (HIGH RISK OFFENDERS) ACT 2006 - SECT 17
Determination of application for continuing detention order
(1) The Supreme Court may determine an application under this Part for a
continuing detention order-- (a) by making an extended supervision order, or
(b) by making a continuing detention order, or
(c) by dismissing the
application.
(2) In determining whether or not to make a
continuing detention order or extended supervision order, the safety of the
community must be the paramount consideration of the Supreme Court.
(4) In
determining whether or not to make a continuing detention order or
extended supervision order, the Supreme Court must also have regard to the
following matters in addition to any other matter it considers relevant-- (b)
the reports received from the persons appointed under section 15 (4) to
conduct examinations of the offender, and the level of the offender's
participation in any such examination,
(c) the results of any other
assessment prepared by a qualified psychiatrist, registered psychologist or
registered medical practitioner as to the likelihood of the offender
committing a further serious offence, the willingness of the offender to
participate in any such assessment, and the level of the offender's
participation in any such assessment,
(d) the results of any statistical or
other assessment as to the likelihood of persons with histories and
characteristics similar to those of the offender committing a further
serious offence,
(d1) any report prepared by Corrective Services NSW as to
the extent to which the offender can reasonably and practicably be managed in
the community,
(e) any treatment or rehabilitation programs in which the
offender has had an opportunity to participate, the willingness of the
offender to participate in any such programs, and the level of the offender's
participation in any such programs,
(e1) if the offender is kept in custody
or is in the community (whether or not under supervision)--any options
available that might reduce the likelihood of the offender re-offending over
time,
(e2) whether it is satisfied that the offender is likely to comply with
the obligations of an extended supervision order,
(f) without limiting
paragraph (e2), the level of the offender's compliance with any obligations to
which he or she is or has been subject while on release on parole or while
subject to an interim supervision order or an extended supervision order,
(g)
the level of the offender's compliance with any obligations to which he or she
is or has been subject under the
Child Protection (Offenders Registration) Act 2000 or the
Child Protection (Offenders Prohibition Orders) Act 2004 ,
(h) the
offender's criminal history (including prior convictions and findings of guilt
in respect of offences committed in New South Wales or elsewhere), and any
pattern of offending behaviour disclosed by that history,
(h1) the views of
the sentencing court at the time the sentence of imprisonment was imposed on
the offender,
(i) any other information that is available as to the
likelihood that the offender will commit a further serious offence,
(j) in
the case of an application made on the basis that the offender has been found
guilty of an offence of failing to comply with the requirements of an
extended supervision order or interim supervision order--the nature of the
failure to comply with those requirements and the likelihood of further
failures to comply,
(k) in the case of an application made on the basis that
circumstances have altered since the making of an extended supervision order
or interim supervision order against the offender--whether circumstances have
altered since the making of the order and whether those altered circumstances
mean that the risk of the offender committing a serious offence would be
unacceptable unless a continuing detention order were made.
(4A) To avoid
doubt, section 11 (2) applies to an extended supervision order made under this
section.
(5) In determining whether or not to make a
continuing detention order, the Supreme Court is not to consider the ability
to take action for a breach of the order in relation to whether there is an
unacceptable risk of the offender committing further serious offences.
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