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2 Current Issues Crim. Just. 37 (1990-1991)
The Abolition of Committal Proceedings

handle is hein.journals/cicj2 and id is 161 raw text is: THE ABOLITION OF COMMITTAL PROCEEDINGS
John B. Bishop 1
Barrister-at-Law
In a media release dated 18 February 1990 the New South Wales Attorney General, John
Dowd MP, announced sweeping changes to committal procedures. According to the
release, the changes will confer on the Director of Public Prosecutions a more significant
role in the prosecution process and reduce delays in the courts. More particularly, the
Director will enter the prosecution process from the outset, and in due course determine
whether a person should be committed for trial. The changes will mean that a magistrate
will no longer be able to discharge an accused or commit an accused for trial; the
magistrate's role will be confined to presiding over a pre-trial hearing. If committal
proceedings are properly described as a hearing before a Justice or Justices for the
purpose of deciding whether a person charged with an offence should be committed for
trial or for sentence,2 the effect of the government's decision will be not merely to change
committal proceedings, but to abolish them. Accordingly, for the purpose of this paper,
this is the primary issue to be addressed.
A secondary, yet very important, issue concerns the format of the pre-trial
hearing. The hearing is to be confined to the cross-examination of key witnesses. These
witnesses fall into two groups: those that may be cross-examined by the accused as a
matter of right; and those that may be so cross-examined with the approval of the
magistrate, where there are reasonable grounds to suspect that cross-examination will
affect either the assessment of the reliability of the witness or would elicit further material
to support a defence.3 The former group of witnesses is confined to those identifying the
accused, accomplices of the accused, indemnified witnesses, scientific experts, and
witnesses examined by the prosecution or approved by the prosecution for
cross-examination. The media release contemplates a decision to prosecute, or not to
prosecute, by the Director of Public Prosecutions at the outset, and, where there is a
pre-trial hearing, after its termination.4 Where he decided not to proceed to trial, he will
make public his reasons.
There are two other proposed reforms of note. First, legislation will be introduced
to prevent unduly offensive, badgering or harassing questioning of witnesses. Second,
the prosecution will be required to disclose to the accused not merely its case, but also
other material helpful to the defence. These are subsidiary to the principal reforms, but
are still very important.
1    Paper delivered at a public seminar entitled Committal for Trial and Pre-Trial Disclosure, convened by
the Institute of Criminology, The University of Sydney, 11 April 1990
2    Justices Act 1902 s 3(l) (definition of committal proceedings)
3    Media Release, 18 February 1990, p2
4    Ibid at 1, 3

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