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CRIMINAL ASSETS RECOVERY ACT 1990 - SECT 9
Meaning of "serious crime derived property" and "illegally acquired property"
9 Meaning of "serious crime derived property" and "illegally acquired
property"
(1) An interest in property is serious crime derived property if-- (a) it is
all or part of the proceeds of a serious crime related activity, or
(b) it is
all or part of the proceeds of the disposal of or other dealing in
serious crime derived property, or
(c) it was wholly or partly acquired using
serious crime derived property.
(2) The references in subsection (1) (b) and
(c) to serious crime derived property are not limited to
serious crime derived property described in subsection (1) (a) but also
include interests in property that are serious crime derived property because
of a previous operation or previous operations of subsection (1) (b) or (c) or
their combined operation.
(2A) Without limiting subsection (1), an interest
in property is taken to be wholly or partly acquired using
serious crime derived property if it is, or has been, subject to a mortgage,
lien, charge, security or other encumbrance wholly or partly discharged using
all or part of the proceeds of a serious crime related activity or
serious crime derived property.
(3) Once an interest in property becomes
serious crime derived property it remains serious crime derived property even
if the interest is disposed of or otherwise dealt with (including by being
used to acquire an interest in property), but this is qualified by subsection
(5).
(4) The meaning of
"illegally acquired property" is ascertained by substituting, in subsections
(1)-(3),
"illegally acquired property" for
"serious crime derived property" and
"illegal activity" for
"serious crime related activity" .
(5) An interest in property ceases to be
serious crime derived property or illegally acquired property-- (a) when it is
acquired by a person for sufficient consideration without knowing, and in
circumstances that would not arouse a reasonable suspicion, that the interest
was, at the time of acquisition, serious crime derived property or
illegally acquired property, or
(b) when it vests in a person as a result of
the distribution of the estate of a deceased person, or
(c) when the interest
is sold or otherwise disposed of under the authority of this Act (including
when discharging a proceeds assessment order or unexplained wealth order), or
(d) when it is the proceeds of the sale or other disposition of
serious crime derived property or illegally acquired property under the
authority of this Act, except if-- (i) the sale or other disposition is
pursuant to an order of the Supreme Court under this Act and the order does
not expressly provide for the property to cease to be
serious crime derived property or illegally acquired property on its sale or
disposition, or
(ii) the sale or other disposition is under section 10B (4)
(b) or 14, or
(e) when it is acquired by a person as payment of reasonable
legal expenses incurred in connection with an application under this Act or
incurred in defending a criminal charge, or
(f) in such other circumstances
as may be prescribed.
(6) If an interest in property that is not
serious crime derived property or illegally acquired property was once owned
by a person and was then serious crime derived property or
illegally acquired property, the property becomes
serious crime derived property or illegally acquired property, respectively,
if and when it is again acquired by the person.
(7) The proceeds of a sale or
other dealing do not lose their identity as such merely as a result of being
credited to an account.
(8) It does not matter whether the
serious crime related activity, illegal activity, disposition or other dealing
or acquisition by reason of which an interest in property becomes
serious crime derived property or illegally acquired property took place
before or after the commencement of this section.
(9) The following are
examples of the practical operation of this section showing the ways in which
an interest in property can become serious crime derived property and stop
being serious crime derived property-- (a) if money that is the proceeds of a
serious crime related activity is used to buy land, the land becomes
serious crime derived property and the money used (which is now in the hands
of some other person) continues to be serious crime derived property,
(b) if
the land is then sold it continues to be serious crime derived property and
the money paid for it becomes serious crime derived property,
(c) if the
money paid for the land is then used to buy a car, the car becomes
serious crime derived property and the money used to buy it (now in the hands
of the car's former owner) continues to be serious crime derived property
unless the purchase was for sufficient consideration from an innocent person.
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