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28 Bond L. Rev. 169 (2016)
Extraterritorial Jurisdiction, Criminal Law and Transnational Crime: Insights from the Application of Australia's Child Sex Tourism Offences

handle is hein.journals/bondlr28 and id is 173 raw text is: 





Extraterritorial Jurisdiction, Criminal Law

and Transnational Crime: Insights from

the Application of Australia's Child Sex

Tourism Offences

MELISSA  CURLEY*  AND  ELIZABETH   STANLEY**


                                 Abstract
       Scholars have  noted  an  increased reliance on extraterritorial
       criminal jurisdiction as a response  to  transnational crimnal
       activity, the rise in treaty law, and the resultant moral obligations.
       Meanwhile,  existing international legal commentary notes that
       there are difficulties attached to using extraterritorial offences as
       the primary tool to deter and combat Child Sex Tourism ('CST').
       While  extraterritorial offences are recognised as one  (albeit
       important) part of a spectrum of legal and socio-political sanctions
       against  CST   serious  obstacles  remain  to  their  effective
       implementation.   Various  scholars  and  commentators   have
       identified the challenges involved in bringing charges related to
       extraterritorial CST offenses  within the jurisdiction of  the
       offender's citizenshio. Frederick Martens is an Australian citizen
       who  was prosecuted unders 50BA of the Crimes Act 1914 (Cth), a
       provision inserted into the Act  to prevent  and punish  CST
       Martens' experience exemplifies some of the common  difficulties
       arising in prosecuting extraterritorial CST offences  He  was
       convicted of having sex  with a minor outside of Australia and
       sentenced to a term of imprisonment. It later emerged that there
       was additional evidence that cast significant doubt upon his guilt,
       and  as a result of this fresh evidence, Martens was granted a
       pardon and released. The case serves as a waring regarding the
       difficulties of these trials and the dangers  of ill-considered
       prosecutions. Concerns raised by the case are canvassed in the
       conclusion, including evidentiary concerns, issues inherent to
       relying on  child witnesses, the time delay often involved  in
       prosecuting CST offenders, fafr trial concerns, and the problematic
       application of extraterritorial jurisdiction. This article abns to
       contribute to the existing body of research on the application of
       Australian  CST   laws  and   the  wider  international debate
       concernming the utility of extraterritorial CST offences, and will
       address certain related controversies regarding the extraterritorial
       application of crimnal laws,  including those regarding sexual
       offences committed by UNPeacekeeping  personnel.

*   Senior Lecturer in International Relations, School of Political Science and International
    Studies, University of Queensland.
** Arts-Law degree candidate, T C Beirne School of Law, University of Queensland.

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