Crimes Act 1914
Part IB - Sentencing, imprisonment and release of federal offenders
Division 7 - Acquittal because of mental illness
SECTION 20BJ Acquittal where person mentally ill
(1)
Where
a person has been charged with a federal offence on indictment and the person
is acquitted because of mental illness at the time of the offence, the court
must order that the person be detained in safe custody in prison or in a hospital
for a period specified in the order, not exceeding the maximum period of imprisonment
that could have been imposed if the person had been convicted of the offence
charged.
(2)
The
Attorney-General may, at any time, by order in writing, vary the prison or
hospital at which a person is detained under subsection (1).
(3)
Where,
for urgent medical or security reasons it becomes necessary to do so, an officer
of the State or Territory in which a person is detained under this section
may vary the prison or hospital at which the person is detained but, where
the officer does so, the officer must forthwith notify the Attorney-General,
in writing, of the variation and of the reasons for the variation.
(4)
Despite
subsection (1), the court may, if in the court's opinion it is more appropriate
to do so than to make an order under subsection (1), order the person's release
from custody either absolutely or subject to conditions to apply for such
period as the court specifies in the order, not exceeding 3 years.
(5)
The
conditions may include:
(a)
a condition that
the person remain in the care of a responsible person nominated in the order;
and
(b)
a condition that
the person attend upon a person nominated, or at a place specified, in the
order for assessment of the person's mental illness, mental condition or intellectual
disability and, where appropriate, for treatment.
(6)
Where
a person has been released from custody subject to conditions, the person
or the Director of Public Prosecutions may, at any time, apply to the court
to vary those conditions.
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