(1) An application under section 61 may be made by phone, fax, email, radio, videoconferencing or another form of electronic communication if the inspector considers it necessary because of--
(a) urgent circumstances; or
(b) other special circumstances, including, for example, the inspector's remote location.
(2) The application--
(a) may not be made before the inspector prepares the written application under section 61(2); but
(b) may be made before the written application is sworn.
(3) The magistrate may issue the warrant (the original warrant) only if the magistrate is satisfied--
(a) it was necessary to make the application under subsection (1); and
(b) the way the application was made under subsection (1) was appropriate.
(4) After the magistrate issues the original warrant--
(a) if there is a reasonably practicable way of immediately giving a copy of the warrant to the inspector, for example, by sending a copy by fax or email, the magistrate must immediately give a copy of the warrant to the inspector; or
(b) otherwise--
(i) the magistrate must tell the inspector the date and time the warrant is issued and the other terms of the warrant; and
(ii) the inspector must complete a form of warrant, including by writing on it--
(5) The copy of the warrant mentioned in subsection (4)(a), or the form of warrant completed under subsection (4)(b) (in either case the duplicate warrant) is a duplicate of, and as effectual as, the original warrant.
(6) The inspector must, at the first reasonable opportunity, send to the magistrate--
(a) the written application complying with section 61(2) and (3); and
(b) if the inspector completed a form of warrant under subsection (4)(b)--the completed form of warrant.
(7) The magistrate must keep the original warrant and, on receiving the documents under subsection (6)--
(a) attach the documents to the original warrant; and
(b) give the original warrant and documents to the clerk of the court of the relevant magistrates court.
(8) Despite subsection (5), if--
(a) an issue arises in a proceeding about whether an exercise of a power was authorised by a warrant issued under this section; and
(b) the original warrant is not produced in evidence;
the onus of proof is on the person relying on the lawfulness of the exercise of the power to prove a warrant authorised the exercise of the power.
(9) This section does limit section 61.
(10) In this section--
relevant magistrates court, in relation to a magistrate, means the Magistrates Court that the magistrate constitutes under the Magistrates Act 1991.