(1) A person commits an offence if—
(a) the person causes—
(i) unauthorised access to data held in a computer; or
(ii) unauthorised modification of data held in a computer, or
(iii) unauthorised impairment of electronic communication to or from a computer; and
(b) the person knows the access, modification or impairment is unauthorised; and
(c) the person intends to commit, or enable the commission of, a serious offence (by the person or by someone else).
Maximum penalty: the maximum penalty applicable if the person had committed, or enabled the commission of, the serious offence in the ACT.
(2) In a prosecution for an offence against this section it is not necessary to prove that the defendant knew that the offence was a serious offence.
(3) A person can be found guilty of an offence against this section—
(a) even if committing the serious offence is impossible; or
(b) whether the serious offence is to be committed at the time of the unauthorised conduct or at a later time.
(4) It is not an offence to attempt to commit an offence against this section.
(5) In this section:
"serious offence" means an offence punishable by imprisonment for 5 years or longer, and includes an offence in another jurisdiction that would be a serious offence if committed in the ACT.