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MENTAL HEALTH (FORENSIC PROVISIONS) ACT 1990 - SECT 32
Persons suffering from mental illness or condition or cognitive impairment
32 Persons suffering from mental illness or condition or cognitive impairment
(1) If, at the commencement or at any time during the course of the hearing of
proceedings before a Magistrate, it appears to the Magistrate: (a) that the
defendant is (or was at the time of the alleged commission of the offence to
which the proceedings relate): (i) cognitively impaired, or
(ii) suffering
from mental illness, or
(iii) suffering from a mental condition for which
treatment is available in a mental health facility,
but is not a
mentally ill person, and
(b) that, on an outline of the facts alleged in the
proceedings or such other evidence as the Magistrate may consider relevant, it
would be more appropriate to deal with the defendant in accordance with the
provisions of this Part than otherwise in accordance with law,
the Magistrate
may take the action set out in subsection (2) or (3).
(2) The Magistrate may
do any one or more of the following: (a) adjourn the proceedings,
(b) grant
the defendant bail in accordance with the Bail Act 2013 ,
(c) make any other
order that the Magistrate considers appropriate.
(3) The Magistrate may make
an order dismissing the charge and discharge the defendant: (a) into the care
of a responsible person, unconditionally or subject to conditions, or
(b) on
the condition that the defendant attend on a person or at a place specified by
the Magistrate: (i) for assessment or treatment (or both) of the defendant's
mental condition or cognitive impairment, or
(ii) to enable the provision of
support in relation to the defendant's cognitive impairment, or
(c)
unconditionally.
(3A) If a Magistrate suspects that a defendant subject to an
order under subsection (3) may have failed to comply with a condition under
that subsection, the Magistrate may, within 6 months of the order being made,
call on the defendant to appear before the Magistrate.
(3B) If the defendant
fails to appear, the Magistrate may: (a) issue a warrant for the defendant's
arrest, or
(b) authorise an authorised officer within the meaning of the
Criminal Procedure Act 1986 to issue a warrant for the defendant's arrest.
(3C) If, however, at the time the Magistrate proposes to call on a defendant
referred to in subsection (3A) to appear before the Magistrate, the Magistrate
is satisfied that the location of the defendant is unknown, the Magistrate may
immediately: (a) issue a warrant for the defendant's arrest, or
(b) authorise
an authorised officer within the meaning of the Criminal Procedure Act 1986 to
issue a warrant for the defendant's arrest.
(3D) If a Magistrate discharges a
defendant subject to a condition under subsection (3), and the defendant fails
to comply with the condition within 6 months of the discharge, the Magistrate
may deal with the charge as if the defendant had not been discharged.
(4) A
decision under this section to dismiss charges against a defendant does not
constitute a finding that the charges against the defendant are proven or
otherwise.
(4A) A Magistrate is to state the reasons for making a decision as
to whether or not a defendant should be dealt with under subsection (2) or
(3).
(4B) A failure to comply with subsection (4A) does not invalidate any
decision of a Magistrate under this section.
(5) The regulations may
prescribe the form of an order under this section.
(6) In this section:
"cognitive impairment" means ongoing impairment of a person's comprehension,
reasoning, adaptive functioning, judgment, learning or memory that materially
affects the person's ability to function in daily life and is the result of
damage to, or dysfunction, developmental delay or deterioration of, the
person's brain or mind, and includes (without limitation) any of the
following: (a) intellectual disability,
(b) borderline intellectual
functioning,
(c) dementia,
(d) acquired brain injury,
(e) drug or alcohol
related brain damage, including foetal alcohol spectrum disorder,
(f) autism
spectrum disorder.
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