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PENALTIES AND SENTENCES ACT 1992 - SECT 179K
Giving details of impact of crime on victim during sentencing
179K Giving details of impact of crime on victim during sentencing
(1) A victim of the offence is to be permitted to give the prosecutor for the
offence details of the harm caused to the victim by the offence, for the
purpose of the prosecutor informing the sentencing court. Notes— 1 If the
offender’s mental condition relating to the offence is referred to the
Mental Health Court under the Mental Health Act 2016 , see section 162 of that
Act for the information a victim of the offence may give that court to help it
make a decision on the reference.
2 See also the victim’s rights set out in
the victims charter under the Victims’ Commissioner and Sexual Violence
Review Board Act 2024 .
(2) The prosecutor may continue with the sentencing
proceeding without having permitted the victim to give details of the harm if
it is reasonable to do so in the circumstances, having regard to the following
matters— (a) the interests of justice;
(b) whether permitting the details
of the harm to be given would unreasonably delay the sentencing of the
offender;
(c) anything else that may adversely affect the reasonableness or
practicality of permitting details of the harm to be given.
(3) If details of
the harm are given to the prosecutor, the prosecutor must— (a) decide what,
if any, details are appropriate to be given to the sentencing court; and
(b)
give the appropriate details to the sentencing court, whether or not in the
form of a victim impact statement under section 179L .
Note— In sentencing
the offender, the sentencing court must have regard to the harm done to, or
impact of the offence on, the victim under— (a) section 9 (2) (c) (i) ; or
(b) if the offender is a child—the Youth Justice Act 1992 , section 150 (2)
.
(4) In deciding what details are appropriate, the prosecutor may have
regard to the victim’s wishes.
(5) The fact that details of the harm caused
to a victim by the offence are absent at the sentencing does not, of itself,
give rise to an inference that the offence caused little or no harm to the
victim.
(6) To remove any doubt, it is declared that it is not mandatory for
a victim to give the prosecutor details of the harm caused to the victim by
the offence.
(7) Subject to section 179M , the sentencing court is to decide
if, and how, details of the harm are to be given to the court in accordance
with the rules of evidence and the practices and procedures applying to the
court. Example of how details of harm may be given to sentencing court—
production of a victim impact statement to the sentencing court
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