New South Wales Consolidated Acts
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CRIMINAL PROCEDURE ACT 1986 - SECT 289
Written statements admitted in committal proceedings
(1) This section applies to a written statement (a
"prescribed written statement" ) the whole or any part of which has been
admitted as evidence under Division 6 of Part 2 of Chapter 3 or under Division
3A of Part 3 of the Children (Criminal Proceedings) Act 1987 , including any
part of the statement that has been rejected for the purposes of that
Division.
(2) Except in so far as the court otherwise orders, a
prescribed written statement may be admitted as evidence for the prosecution
at the trial of the accused person on proof on oath that the person who made
the statement-- (a) is dead, or so ill as not to be able to travel or to give
evidence without a risk of endangering the person's life, or
(b) is absent
from Australia.
(3) If the accused person so requires, a
prescribed written statement may be admitted as evidence in the
accused person's defence at the trial of the accused person whenever-- (a) the
person who made the statement-- (i) is dead, or so ill as not to be able to
travel or to give evidence without a risk of endangering the person's life, or
(ii) is absent from Australia, or
(b) the committing Magistrate has
certified, before committing the person for trial, that in the opinion of the
Magistrate-- (i) the evidence of the person who made the statement is
material, and
(ii) the person is willing to attend the trial, but is unable
to bear the expense of attendance.
(4) A statement may not be admitted as
evidence on the ground referred to in subsection (3) (b) if the person who
made the statement has, in due time before the trial, been subpoenaed by the
Crown.
(5) A prescribed written statement made in respect of an
indictable offence may be admitted as evidence on the trial of the
accused person for any other offence, whether of the same or of a different
kind, if it would be admissible on his or her trial for the offence in respect
of which it was made.
(6) If at a trial it appears to the court that the
whole or any part of a prescribed written statement is inadmissible, the court
may reject the statement or that part, as the case may be, as evidence.
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