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Tuvalu Sessional Legislation |
TUVALU
REHABILITATION
OF OFFENDERS ACT 1991
(Act 9 of
1991)
ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS
Section
1.
Citation and commencement
2.
Rehabilitated persons and spent
convictions
3. Effect of
rehabilitation
4. Rehabilitation
periods for particular sentences
5.
Extension of the rehabilitation
period
6. Limitations on
rehabilitation under this Act
7.
Defamation actions
8. Unauthorized
disclosure of spent convictions
9.
Definitions
Schedule 1 rehabilitation
periods according to sentence (sec. 4)
--------------------------------------------------------
REHABILITATION
OF OFFENDERS ACT 1991
(Act 9 of
1991)
I assent
Toaripi
Lauti PC
GCMG
Governor-General
31st December 1991
AN
ACT to rehabilitate offenders who have
not been reconvicted of any serious offence for periods of years, to penalise
the unauthorised
disclosure of their previous convictions, to amend the laws of
defamation, and for purposes connected
therewith.
ENACTED
by the Parliament of Tuvalu
–
Citation
and
commencement
1.
(1) This Act may be cited as the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act
1991.
(2) This Act shall come into
force on 1 January
1992
Rehabilitated
persons and spent
convictions
2.
(1) Subject to sub-section (2) below, where an individual has been convicted,
whether before or after the commencement of this Act,
of any offence or
offences, and if:
(a) the sentence imposed on him for that conviction was not one excluded from rehabilitation under this Act ("an excluded sentence"); and
(b) during the rehabilitation period relating to that first conviction he has not had imposed on him an excluded sentence for a subsequent conviction;
then,
after the end of the rehabilitation period applicable (including, where
appropriate, any extension under section 5(1) of the
period) or, where that
rehabilitation period ended before the commencement of this Act, after the
commencement of this Act, that
individual shall for the purposes of this Act be
treated as a rehabilitated person in respect of the first conviction and that
conviction
shall for those purposes be treated as
spent.
(2) A person shall not
become a rehabilitated person for the purposes of this Act in respect of a
conviction unless he has served
or otherwise undergone or complied with any
sentence imposed on him in respect of that conviction; but a person shall not be
prevented
from becoming a rehabilitated person due to:
(a) failure to pay a fine or other sum adjudged to be paid by or imposed on a conviction, or breach of a condition of a recognizance or security to keep the peace or be of good behaviour;
(b) breach of any condition or requirement applicable in relation to a sentence which renders the person to whom it applies liable to be dealt with for the offence for which the sentence was imposed, or, where the sentence was a suspended sentence of imprisonment, liable to be dealt with in respect of that sentence (whether or not, in any case, he is in fact so dealt with);
(c) failure to comply with any requirement of a suspended sentence order.
Effect
of
rehabilitation
3.
(1) Subject to sections 6 and 7 below, a
person who has become a rehabilitated person for the purposes of this Act in
respect of a
conviction shall be treated for all purposes in law as a person who
has not committed, or been charged with, or prosecuted for, or
convicted of, or
sentenced for the offence or offences which were the subject of that conviction;
and, notwithstanding the provisions
of any other enactment or rule of law to the
contrary, but subject as aforesaid –
(a) no evidence shall be admissible in any proceedings before a judicial authority exercising its jurisdiction or functions in Tuvalu to prove that any such person has committed, or been charged with, or prosecuted for, or convicted of, or sentenced for any offence which was the subject of a spent conviction; and
(b) a person shall not, in any such proceedings, be asked, and, asked, shall not be required to answer, any question relating to his past which cannot be answered without acknowledging or referring to a spent conviction or spent convictions or any circumstances ancillary thereto.
(2)
Subject to the provisions of any order made under subsection (4) below, where a
question seeking information with respect to a
person's previous convictions,
offences, conduct or circumstances is put to him or to any other person
otherwise than in proceedings
before a judicial authority –
(a) the question shall be treated as not relating to special convictions or to a; circumstances ancillary to spent convictions, and the answer thereto may be framed accordingly; and
(b) the person questioned shall not be subjected to any liability or otherwise prejudiced in law by reason of any failure to acknowledge or disclose a spent conviction or any circumstances ancillary to a spent conviction in his answer to the question.
(3)
Subject to the provisions of any order made under subsection (4) below
-
(a) any obligation imposed on any person by any rule of law or by the provisions of any agreement or arrangement to disclose any matters to any other person shall not extend to requiring him to disclose a spent conviction or any circumstances ancillary to a spent conviction (whether the conviction is his own or another's); and
(b) a conviction which has become spent or any circumstances ancillary thereto, or any failure to disclose a spent conviction or any such circumstances, shall not be a proper ground for dismissing or excluding a person from any office, profession, occupation or employment, or for prejudicing him in any way in any occupation or employment in Tuvalu or elsewhere.
(4)
The Minister may be order -
(a) make such provision as seems to him appropriate for excluding or modifying the application of either or both of paragraphs (a) and (b) of subsection (2) above in relation to questions put in such circumstances as may be specified in the order;
(b) provide for such exceptions from the provisions of subsection (3) above as seem to him appropriate, in such cases or classes of case, and in relation to convictions of such a description, as may be specified in the order.
Rehabilitation
periods for particular
sentences
4.
(1) The sentences excluded from
rehabilitation under this Act are –
(a) a sentence of imprisonment for life; and
(b) a sentence of imprisonment for a term exceeding thirty months;
and
any other sentence is a sentence subject to rehabilitation under this
Act.
(2) For the purposes of this
Act-
(a) the rehabilitation period applicable to a sentence specified in the first column of Schedule 1 is the period specified in the second column of that Schedule in relation that sentence;
(b) the rehabilitation period applicable to a sentence (with the exception of a care order) imposed on a person who was under 17 years of age at the date of his conviction is half the period specified in Schedule 1.
(3)
For the purposes of this section –
(a) consecutive terms of imprisonment and terms which are wholly or partly concurrent (being terms of imprisonment imposed in respect of offence of which a person was convicted in the same proceedings) shall be treated as a single term;
(b) no account shall be taken of any subsequent variation, made by a court in dealing with a person in respect of a suspended sentence of imprisonment, of the term originally imposed; and
(c) a sentence imposed by a court outside Tuvalu shall be treated as a sentence of that one of the descriptions mentioned in this section or Schedule 1 which most nearly corresponds to the sentence imposed
(4)
Where more than one sentence is imposed in respect of a conviction (whether or
not in the same proceedings) and none of the sentences
imposes is an excluded
sentence then, if the periods applicable to those sentences in accordance with
section 4 differ, the rehabilitation
period applicable to the conviction shall
be the longer or the longest (as the case may be) of those
periods.
Extension
of the rehabilitation
period
5.
(1) Subject to subsection (3) below,
where during the rehabilitation period applicable to a
conviction-
(a) the person convicted is convicted of a further offence; and
(b) a sentence which is not excluded from rehabilitation under this Act is imposed on. him in respect of the later conviction;
if
one rehabilitation period would end earlier than the other, the rehabilitation
period which would end earlier shall be extended
so that it ends at the same
time as the other.
(2) For the
purposes of this section, no extension of a rehabilitation period shall be
occasioned by a rehabilitation period applicable
to an order imposing any
disqualification, disability, prohibition or other like
penalty.
(3) For the purposes (of
subsection (1) (a) above there shall be disregarded -
(a) any conviction in Tuvalu of a bye-law offence; or
(b) any conviction by or before a court outside Tuvalu of an offence in respect of conduct which, if it had taken place in Tuvalu would not have constituted an offence under the law in force in Tuvalu.
Limitations
on rehabilitation under this
Act
6.
(1) Nothing in section 3(1) above shall
affect –
(a) any right of the Head of State Act to exercise mercy in accordance with section 80 of the Constitution;
(b) the enforcement by any process or proceedings of any fine or other sum adjudged to be paid by or imposed on a spent conviction;
(c) the issue of any process for the purpose of proceedings in respect of any breach of a condition or requirement applicable to a sentence imposed in respect of a spent conviction; or
(d) the operation of any enactment by virtue of which, in consequence of any conviction, a person is subject, otherwise than by way of sentence, to any disqualification, disability, prohibition or other penalty the period of which extends beyond the rehabilitation period applicable in accordance with section 4 above to the conviction.
(2)
Nothing in section 3(1) above shall affect the determination of any issue, or
prevent the admission or requirement of any evidence,
relating to a person's
previous convictions or to circumstances ancillary thereto-
(a) in any criminal proceedings before a court in Tuvalu (including any appeal or reference in a criminal matter);
(b) in any proceedings relating to adoption to the guardianship, wardship, marriage, custody, care or control of, or access to, any young, person, or to the provision by any person of accommodation, care or schooling for young persons;
(c) in any proceedings in which he is a party or a witness, provided that, on the occasion when the issue or the admission or requirement of the evidence falls to be determined, he consents to the determination of the issue or, as the case may be, the admission or requirement of the evidence notwithstanding the provisions of section 3(1).
(3)
If at any stage in any proceedings before a judicial. authority in Tuvalu (not
being proceedings to which, by virtue of any of
paragraphs (a) or (b) of
subsection (2) above or of any order for the time being in force under
subsection (4) below, section 3(1)
above had no application, or proceedings to
which section 7 below applies), the authority is satisfied, in: the light of any
considerations
which appear to it to be relevant (including any evidence which
has been or may thereafter be put before it) , that justice cannot
be done in
the case except by admitting or requiring evidence relating to a person's spent
convictions or to circumstances ancillary
thereto, that authority may admit or,
as the case may be; require the evidence in question notwithstanding the
provisions of subsection
(1) of section 3 above, and may determine any issue to
which the evidence relates in disregard, so far as necessary, of those
provisions.
(4) The Minister may
by order exclude the application of section 3(1) above in relation to any
proceedings specified in the order,
(other than proceedings to which section 7
below applies) to such extent and for such purposes as may be so
specified.
(5) No order made by a
court with respect to any person otherwise than on a conviction shall be
included in any list or statement
of that person's previous convictions given or
made to any court which is considering how to deal with him in respect of any
offence.
Defamation
actions
7.
(1) This section applies to any action
for libel or slander begun after the commencement of this Act by a rehabilitated
person and
founded upon the publication of any matter imputing that the
plaintiff has committed, or been charged with, or prosecuted for, or
convicted
of, or sentenced for an offence which was the subject of a spent
conviction.
(2) Nothing in section
3(1) above shall affect an action to which this section applies where the
publication complained of took place
before the conviction in question became
spent, and the following provisions of this section shall not apply in any such
case.
(3) Subject to subsection
(5) and (6) below, nothing in section, 3(1) above shall prevent the defendant in
an, action to which this
section applies from relying on any defence of
justification or fair comment or of absolute or qualified privilege which is
available
to him, or restrict the matters he may establish in support of any
such defence.
(4) Without
prejudice to the generality of subsection (3) above, where in any such action
malice is alleged against a defendant who
is relying on a defence of qualified
privilege, nothing in section 3(1) above shall restrict the matters he may
establish in rebuttal
of the
allegation.
(5) A defendant in any
such action shall not by virtue of subsection (3) above be entitled to rely upon
the defence of justification
if the publication is proved to have been made with
malice.
(6) Subject to subsection
(7) below a defendant in any such action shall not, by virtue of subsection (3)
above, be entitled to rely
on any matter or adduce or require any evidence for
the purpose of establishing the defence that the matter published constituted
a
fair and accurate report of judicial proceedings if it is proved that the
publication contained a reference to evidence which was
ruled to be inadmissible
in the proceedings by virtue of section 3(1)
above.
(7) Subsection (3) above
shall apply without the qualifications imposed by subsection (6) above in
relation to -
(a) any report of judicial proceedings contained in any bona fide series of law reports which does not form part of any other publication and consists solely of reports of proceedings in courts of law; and
(b) any report or account of judicial proceedings published for bona fide educational, scientific or professional purposes, or given in the course of any lecture, class or discussion given or held for any of those purposes.
Unauthorized
disclosure of spent
convictions
8.
(1) In this section
–
"official record" means a record kept for the purposes of its functions by any court, police force, Government department, local or other public authority in Tuvalu, or a record kept, in Tuvalu or elsewhere, being in either case a record containing information about persons convicted of offences; and
"specified information" means information imputing that a named or otherwise identifiable rehabilitated living person has committed or been charged with or prosecuted for or convicted of or sentenced for any offence which is the subject of a spent conviction.
(2)
Subject to the provisions of any order made under subsection (5) below, any
person who, in the course of his official duties,
has or at any time has had
custody of or access to any official record or the information contained
therein, shall be guilty of an
offence if, knowing or having reasonable cause to
suspect that any specified information he has obtained in the course of those
duties
is specified information, he discloses it, otherwise than in the course
of those duties, to another
person.
(3) In any proceedings for
an offence under subsection (2) above it shall be a defence for the defendant to
show that the disclosure
was made –
(a) to the rehabilitated person or to another person at the express request of the rehabilitated person; or
(b) to a person whom he reasonably believed to be the rehabilitated person or to another person at the express request of a person whom he reasonably believed to be the rehabilitated person.
(4)
Any person who obtains any specified information from any official record by
means of any fraud, dishonesty or bribe shall be
guilty of an
offence.
(5) The Minister may by
order make such provision as appears to him to be appropriate for excepting the
disclosure of specified information
derived from an official record from the
provisions of subsection (2) above in such cases or classes of case as may be
specified
in the order.
(6) Any
person guilty of an offence under subsection (2) above shall be liable on
summary conviction to a fine not exceeding
$500.
(7) Any person guilty of an
offence under subsection (4) above shall be liable on summary conviction to a
fine not exceeding $1000
or to imprisonment. for a term not exceeding six
months, or to both.
(8)
Proceedings for an offence under subsection (2) above shall not be instituted
except by or on behalf of the
Attorney-General.
Definitions
9.
(1) In this Act “sentence” includes any order made by a court in
dealing with a person in respect of his conviction of
any offence or offences,
other than -
(a) an order. for committal or any other order made in default of payment of any fine or other sum adjudged to be paid by or imposed on a conviction or for want of sufficient distress to satisfy any such fine or other sum;
(b) an order dealing with a person in respect of a suspended sentence of imprisonment.
(2)
In this Act, references to a conviction, however expressed, include references
-
(a) to a conviction by or before a court outside Tuvalu; and
(b) to any finding (other than a finding linked with a finding of :insanity) in any criminal proceedings that a person has committed an offence or done the act or made the omission charged;
and
notwithstanding anything in sections 38 and 39 of the Penal Code a finding in
respect of which an order is made committing him to the care of any fit person
or discharging him absolutely or conditionally
shall be treated as a conviction
for the purposes of this Act and the person in question may become a
rehabilitated person in respect
of that, conviction and the conviction a spent
conviction for those purposes
accordingly.
(3) For the purposes
of section 3 and section 6 any of the following are circumstances ancillary to a
conviction, that is to say-
(a) the offence or offences which were the subject of that conviction;
(b) the. conduct constituting that offence or those offences; and
(c) any process or proceedings preliminary to that conviction, any sentence imposed in respect of that conviction, any proceedings (whether by way of appeal or otherwise) for reviewing that conviction or any such sentence, and anything done in pursuance of or undergone in compliance with any such sentence.
(4)
For the purposes of section 3 and section 6 "proceedings before a judicial
authority" includes, in addition to proceeding before
any of the ordinary courts
of law proceedings before any tribunal, body or person having power
-
(a) by virtue of any enactment, law, custom or practice;
(b) under the rules governing any association, institution, profession, occupation or employment; or
(c) under any provision of an agreement providing for arbitration with respect to questions arising thereunder;
to
determine any question affecting the rights, privileges, obligations or
liabilities of any person, or to receive evidence affecting
the determination of
any such question.
------------------------------------------------------
SCHEDULE I
|
Sentence
or order
|
Rehabilitation
Period
|
absolute discharge |
6 months from conviction |
|
s.38 conditional discharge; s.35
recognisance to keep the peace and be of good behaviour; s.36
security for coming up for judgment s.39
care order. |
1 year from conviction or a period commencing and ending when the order ceases to have effect, whichever is the longer. |
|
s.37
residence order |
A period commencing with conviction and ending 1 year after the order ceases to have effect |
An order imposing any disqualification, disability, prohibition or other like penalty |
A period commencing with conviction and ending on the date when the order ceases to have effect |
Imprisonment for a term more than 6 months but not more than 30 months. |
7 years from conviction |
Imprisonment for a term not more than 6 months |
5 years from conviction |
A fine or other sentence subject to rehabilitation under this Act. |
2 years from conviction |
------------------------------
REHABILITATION
OF OFFENDERS ACT 1991
(Act 9 of
1991)
EXPLANATORY
MEMORANDUM
(This memorandum is not
part of the Act)
The purpose of this Act is
to rehabilitate offenders after a period of time, provided during that time they
have not been reconvicted.
Rehabilitation means that the conviction is treated
as spent and the offender is treated as if he had never committed the
offence.
Section 2 provides that
at the end of the relevant rehabilitation period, the individual becomes a
rehabilitated person, provided
that he has served his sentence. Section 3 says
that a person who has become rehabilitated is to be treated in law as if he had
not
committed, or been dealt with, for the offence of which he was convicted. No
evidence of the conviction is admissible in most legal
proceedings. In
particular a spent conviction shall not prejudice a person regarding
employment.
Section 4 includes
certain sentences from rehabilitation, and specifies rehabilitation period for
different sentences. For persons
under 17 years, the periods are half of those
for adults. A person who during the rehabilitation period is reconvicted of an
offence
(other than a trivial offence or offence given an excluded sentence) is
liable to extension of rehabilitation period by section
5.
Limits on rehabilitation are
placed by section 6; law of defamation is amended in section 7, and section 8
deals with the unauthorized
disclosure of spent convictions.
Section 9 contains definitions
and Schedules I lists sentences for the applicable rehabilitation
periods.
----------------------
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