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Queensland University of Technology Law and Justice Journal |
SCREENING AND ‘FRISK SEARCHES’
AS PART OF AIRPORT SECURITY: MATTERS OF
CHOICE?
THE NEED FOR ‘CHECKS AND
BALANCES’ IN AVIATION SECURITY
LEGISLATION
GARY N HEILBRONN [*]
I INTRODUCTION
Airport security is achieved by controlling access to the secure areas at
airports and aerodromes through various policing and pseudo-policing
operations
ranging from the humble ‘hands-on’ ‘frisk
search’,[1] to optical
surveillance and portrait recognition systems as well as technologies that can
analyse voice patterns to identify suspect
emotions. Whether
‘high-tech’ or ‘low-tech’, such processes are
fundamentally differing manifestations of
police powers to stop, search and
detain. However, it is private enterprise in the security industry, which not
only develops most
of the technologies applied at airports, but also, takes most
responsibility for implementing airport security procedures and powers
at an
operational level. Each day in any major city with an airport, hundreds of
people are subjected to these policing powers as
they are screened by security
personnel at the airport, whereas on the city streets just a few dozen go
through similar processes
at the hands of police officers. The airport security
context is perhaps unusual and potentially very hazardous, but when masses
of
people are subjected to policing powers in such a context, it is important that
the legislative and regulatory environment in
which this occurs be appropriate
and properly adapted to the relevant circumstances. For various reasons, this
does not appear to
be the case with airport screening and related
procedures.
Legal authority and the procedures for the implementation of
most airport security measures do not come from enactments dealing with
police
powers (except as regards the highly specialised Australian Protective Service
officers), but are to be found in provisions
somewhere in the complex and
voluminous matrix of legislation and regulation applying to airports and
airlines, aviation security
and
counter-terrorism.[2] Both the threat
posed by terrorism and the actual counter-measures: including the development,
operation and even the effectiveness
of existing and emerging technologies and
procedures now being applied to airport security, inevitably pose new problems
for lawmakers
and give rise to a broader question as to the nature and extent of
regulation required in this area.[3]
Though the broader question is an important one, the focus here is on the
narrower issue of the implementation of airport security
processes. A simple,
but telling illustration of the kinds of issues raised in this context, as well
as the considerable practical
difficulties experienced when imposing physical
controls on access to secure areas at airports, is clearly presented by the all
too
common practice of running a hand-held metal detector around the body or the
somewhat more intrusive ‘frisk search’ and
‘clothing removal
request’ both used as part of the passenger screening process. Even these
well-tried and ‘low-tech’
procedures still raise concerns, partly
because of the somewhat impenetrable nature of the applicable legislative scheme
and the
vagueness of the concepts described in some of the relevant provisions,
but also because of the continuing difficulty experienced
when trying to balance
conflicting rights and powers[4] in a
context where costs (of both success and failure) are significant and benefits
are nearly impossible to estimate.[5]
It should be noted - although it does not detract from the illustrative and other significance of this particular aspect of airport security operations - that technological advances are beginning to reduce reliance on physical restraint and intrusive searches at certain major airports. Of course, such technologies are expensive and also have their limits, so human intervention will always be needed in some cases. For example, throughout much of 2007, ‘backscatter’ X-ray machines and millimetre wave technology are being used on an experimental basis at several major United States international airports, to carry out a one minute full-body scan which allows screeners to see through a person’s clothes and detect potentially threatening objects by picking up x-rays scattered by materials which may be present under the garments. Edge-detection x-ray machines can clearly see, for example, a vest being worn by a potential suicide bomber or some other hidden object. These machines differ from traditional x-ray machines which pick up signals that pass through or are absorbed by the body.[6]
This is just one of many new and developing technologies that are being
applied to airport security,[7] and
that, aside from helping to streamline the security screening process, may
impact positively on the present regulatory system
by, for example, replacing
some of the potentially intrusive, humiliating and
controversial[8] ‘clothing
removal request’ and ‘frisk search’ powers now regularly
exercised by airport screening officers;
or indeed, may also impact negatively,
in ways not yet understood.[9]
Whether screening at airports involves ‘clothing removal
requests’ and ‘frisk searches’ or other technological
alternatives, or a mix of them all, increased emphasis is being accorded to the
passenger and airport personnel screening process
in Australia: the Australian
Government Review of Airport Security and Policing: 2005 (The Wheeler Review)
stated:
[i]n the next few years ... the responsibility of screeners will
grow, because they will become an even more important line of defence
against
those who might cause danger on and to planes. In the same time period, rapid
technological change in detection devices will
demand extra efforts from
screeners if they are to keep up to
date.[10]
The Review went on
to support increased and more vigilant screening, including ‘frisk
searches’ of all aviation staff
having access to secure areas at security
controlled airports.[11] Naturally,
it is not just passengers who are subject to security controls, though these
controls differ in nature and intensity for
different groups of airport users
and, of course, security control exemptions do exist for some airport staff and
other persons (see
below).
At the same time, it should not be overlooked
that there is an important ‘safety’ as well as
‘security’ element
to the screening of passengers and their baggage,
though these two imperatives do overlap. Indeed, aviation safety regulations
define
a wide range of personal items to be ‘prohibited items’ (see
below) and restrict their carriage through screening points,
into secure areas
in airports and on board
aircraft,[12] for safety reasons and
irrespective of security considerations.
Completely apart from the
normal search, detention and arrest powers of police and other law enforcement
officers such as the Australian
Customs
Service,[13] the specific powers of
airport screening officers to impose screening procedures (including
‘clothing removal requests’)
and to effect ‘frisk
searches’ are provided for in ss 94-96 of the Aviation Transport
Security Act 2004 (Cth) and the latest amendment to the Act, which commenced
on 31 March 2007,[14] purporting to
extend and clarify the powers of airport screening officers to conduct a
‘frisk search’ of a person wishing
to pass a screening
point.[15] The Act also requires the
Aviation Transport Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) to elaborate on the
methods and procedures for screening and to specify the training, qualifications
and procedures to be followed
by screening
officers.[16] Parts 4 and 5 of those
regulations do deal with screening and clearing of persons, baggage and cargo in
some descriptive detail, though perhaps
with inadequate precision, and relevant
provisions are discussed below. Because it illustrates the kinds of problems
which the present
regulatory system is unable to deal with, the emphasis here is
on the screening of persons in the ordinary process of airport security.
It is
this process which (even aside from its uncertain efficacy), can have
potentially objectionable social, cultural and psychological
effects; and
questionable legality, partly because of vagueness and conceptual issues in the
legislation, and partly because it is
performed by persons other than law
enforcement officers, acting without the benefit of clear guidelines.
II SCREENING
All access to aircraft, as well as to designated areas and zones at an
airport is to be restricted to persons who have received clearance.
The same
applies to goods, vehicles and cargo. Where access is restricted in this way,
the aircraft, area or zone is said to be ‘cleared’
and to obtain
access clearance generally requires going through a screening
process.[17] The Aviation
Transport Security Act 2004 (Cth) ss 41-43, expressly require persons, goods
and vehicles to be screened and receive clearance before going or being taken on
board an aircraft,
and also before entering an ‘area’ or
‘zone’ within a security controlled airport (security controlled
airports
and zones etc are discussed below). Although for persons (and to some
extent for goods and vehicles), this process is usually performed
by a screening
officer exercising his or her functions in accordance with ss 94-96 of the Act,
regulated air cargo agents – themselves private companies engaged in the
freight forwarding business - provide
for the screening of cargo (which can
include goods and some vehicles). Goods, vehicles and cargo screening are not
discussed here
as, although from a management perspective, related screening
responsibilities are an adjunct to the agents’ business activities,
resembling the situation of airports and airlines, the screening of goods and
cargo does not raise the same kinds of legal and social
issues as the security
screening of persons.
A Security Controlled Airports
Screening is only required at ‘security controlled airports’. Most, but not all commercial airports in Australia are ‘security controlled airports’. They need to have been so declared by the Secretary by notice published in the Gazette.[18]
Of course, potential terrorist action could occur at or originate from an
airport which is not in this category. Doubtless, a small
plane laden with
aviation fuel or explosives, taking off from such an uncontrolled airport could
still cause significant damage there
or elsewhere. However, the extent of such a
risk is unknown.
Security controlled airports have a ‘landside
area’ and an ‘airside area’. The latter, established by the
notice, is designated and delineated on the map accompanying the notice: the aim
being to control access to the operational parts
of the
airport,[19] which are generally
assumed to be more ‘at risk’ from terrorist and the like activity
than non-operational areas, though
this may no longer be a correct perception,
as a less protected ‘landside area’ makes an easier
target.[20] The part of the airport
not designated as airside is known as
landside,[21] but there are no
substantive criteria for either of these designations in the definitions; only
the un-stated assumption that landside
areas are less hazardous. Both these
designated areas are further subdivided into zones of various types and are
subject to slightly
varying levels of security and access
control.
1 Secure areas
At airports, it is ‘secure
areas’ that are most at risk and require screening and other access
controls. Such ‘secure
areas’ are created under the legislation.
First, airside security zones may be established by the Secretary under the
Aviation Transport Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 30. This is done by written
notice to the airport operator. The various types of airside security zones,
including airside event zones
(though special event zones may be temporary), are
prescribed in ss 31, 31A and 31B of the
Act.[22] The zone types are
established for different purposes and include zones for controlling the
movement of people, vehicles and goods;
for preventing interference with
aircraft; for ensuring the security of air traffic control facilities; for cargo
and baggage handling
facilities, for fuel storage; for navigational aids; for
fire-fighting and emergency facilities etc as well as for what are known
as
‘critical facilities’ and ‘critical structures’, damage
to which could put the safe operation of airports
or aircraft at
risk.[23]
Though
potentially less hazardous and ‘at-risk’ of terrorist action,
landside security zones and landside event zones
(and temporary special event
zones) may also be established by the Secretary by notice given to the operator
of a security controlled
airport; and these are, in theory, the same types of
zones as those that may be established as airside security
zones.[24] Other different landside
security zones may, under s 33(1) of the Act, be prescribed by the regulations
and, in fact, four are listed in reg 3.02 of the Aviation Security
Regulations 2005 (Cth). These prescribed landside security zones are: the
sterile area (which is important as it is the post-screening area for
passengers);
the fuel storage zone; the air traffic control facilities zone; and
the navigational aids zone. The sterile area is more susceptible
to unauthorised
passenger access than other areas, as passengers are rarely in a position to
approach fuel storage zones and air
traffic control facilities which are more
likely to be targeted by ‘bogus’ staff or a commando raid. The
distinction
is underlined by the nature of and the potential for harm that may
result from uncontrolled passenger access to a sterile zone, and,
uncontrolled
staff access to, for example, a fuel storage area. The difference between these
two scenarios, in potential for harm
and the manner in which it could be caused,
may well indicate that a difference should exist in the nature and extent of
screening
and other security procedures that need to be applied in each
scenario.
At a security controlled airport, all of airside (including
airside security zones) and also the landside security zones are referred
to as
‘secure areas’ under reg 1.03. Such airside and landside security
and event zones are specifically designated as
secure areas in order to impose
stricter or more specialised kinds of controls, notably access controls, over
certain areas on a
security controlled airport. The primary kinds of access
controls are a requirement for the display of identification cards and physical
measures such as security barriers and screening, including ‘frisk
searches’. The extent to which stricter or different
kinds of access
controls are imposed, and whether such controls are, or even should be,
proportionate to the potential hazard, is
not specified in the regulations, nor
are these matters the subject of any stated mechanism for verification or
surveillance.[25]
2 Display
of Aviation Security Identity Cards
Under the legislation, a
significant feature of secure areas at security controlled airports is that they
are said to be ‘cleared’
(subject to restricted access: see above)
and also, with certain exceptions (notably screened passengers), it is an
offence for a
person to be there unless they display a valid red Aviation
Security Identity Card (ASIC).[26]
Incidentally, ASIC display requirements do not apply to any security controlled
airport from which no regular public transport (RPT)
traffic operates, though at
present there are only four of these in
Australia.[27] More relevant here,
are two important passenger-related exceptions to the ASIC display requirement,
and they are: (i) for persons
who are in sterile areas (discussed below) in
airports that are accessible to passengers or the public generally; and (ii) for
passengers
who are boarding or disembarking an aircraft by means of an
aerobridge or in a secure area and moving reasonably directly between
the
aircraft and the terminal
building.[28] It is not expressly
stated, though would normally be the situation in practice, that such passengers
would have to be under the continuous
control of an authorised person or member
of airport or airline staff. Another narrow exception to the obligation to
display ASICs
exists for uniformed members of the Australian Defence Force on
duty guarding an aircraft; as well as for uniformed crew members
of foreign
aircraft and state aircraft; and, for foreign defence forces personnel
displaying appropriate
identification.[29] It is perhaps
arguable that all but the first-mentioned category, should also be under the
continuous control or supervision of an
authorised person or member of airport
or airline staff.[30]
Apart
from having to display a valid ASIC within secure areas at security controlled
airports, all persons seeking access to restricted
and secure areas by passing
through a screening point, (except for those specified persons and classes of
persons who are exempted),
are required to be
screened.[31] It is significant,
however, that not all secure areas at airports need to be entered through
screening points, and in this way, a
person who may represent a risk to aviation
security may avoid the screening process (see below at Part B.2 ‘Screening
passengers
and others: some aberrations’ of this article). So for access
to those areas, the possession and display of an ASIC or a Visitor
Identification Card (VIC) (as required) is particularly important.
3 Physical access controls
All aspects of access
to, and use of, secure areas are subject to comprehensive regulatory measures,
including physical access controls.
The Aviation Transport Security Act
2004 (Cth) ss 35, 36 and 36A, respectively, authorise the making of
regulations, including the creation of offences, for the purposes of
safeguarding the airside area of a security controlled airport, airside
security zones and airside event zones against any unlawful interference with
aviation.
In particular, the regulations are required to govern access,
patrolling, fencing, marking, screening of persons, security checking,
maintenance of integrity, access to aircraft, management of person etc. From
time to time, relatively benign breaches of physical
access controls at major
airports have occurred, when, for example, persons have gained access to runways
at Sydney Airport by cutting
through
fences.[32]
Almost
identical provisions exist as regards regulation of the landside area of
a security controlled airport, landside security zones and landside event zones,
under ss 37, 38 and 38A of the Act.
More specifically, and
understandably, given the increased hazards associated with the airside area,
the manner of controlling physical
access to airside secure areas at an airport
is subject to quite detailed
regulation,[33] under which the
‘responsible aviation industry participant for the airside area (who may
be the airport operator or, in other
cases, another entity in aviation, such as
an airline: under the Aviation Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) reg 3.13)
must ensure that access is only allowed to:
• authorised persons or
vehicles driven by authorised persons displaying the appropriate ASIC or VIC (in
other words, mainly
airport or airline staff and contractors);
or
• exempt persons; or
• persons holding valid tickets for
air carriage and who are moving reasonably directly from the terminal exit or
entry to or
from the aircraft under the supervision of the aircraft or airport
operator for the purpose of boarding or after disembarking (reg
3.15(3), though
confusion may occur, as supervision is expressly required under this provision,
unlike under reg 3.03(5)).
In addition to the above general access
restrictions, the regulations prescribe slightly more strenuous physical
controls such as
security barriers and signs, as regards access to airside
special zones,[34] notably
for:
(a) an ‘airside security zone that is a security restricted
area’ (reg 3.16), (and also, specific offences are created
for
unauthorised entry to, remaining in, entry with a vehicle into and leaving a
vehicle in such secure areas (reg 3.17)); and
(b) landside security zones
other than sterile areas[35] (reg
3.21(2)), (and again, specific offences are created for unauthorised entry to,
remaining in, entry with a vehicle into and leaving
a vehicle in such secure
areas (reg 3.25)). However, the various landside zones differ considerably from
each other in nature and
purpose, for example some are used for navigational
aids, others house air traffic control facilities or are used for fuel storage,
and there are additional and differing physical access controls which can to be
affected for each of those
areas.[36]
Thus, in respect
of the obligations of the aviation industry participants responsible for such
airside secure areas, notably airlines
and airport operators, the regulations
have gone into considerable detail so that such entities can be keenly aware of
the nature
and limits of their responsibilities. This approach of controlling
delegated responsibilities is consistent with the whole tenor
of the
developments in civil aviation legislation over the last several
years.[37] However, the same levels
of detailed insight and precision do not seem to be reflected in other parts of
the regulatory system, for
example, as regards matters such as the screening
process, including ‘frisk searches’ and ‘clothing removal
requests’
(see below: at Part II.C ‘Screening Officers and Their
Powers’ of this article).
Significantly, from the perspective of
ordinary air travellers, to access a landside secure area that is a sterile area
(that is,
where passengers may go after screening), there are certain different
and stricter physical security access requirements imposed
by the Aviation
Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) reg. 3.20 on the responsible aviation
industry participant. To control access to such sterile areas, in particular,
there must
be at least one screening point. Notably, this is not required for
access to other security zones where normally, just the display
of an ASIC is
required. However, although landside sterile areas may well present less of a
hazard than other landside security zones,
not only are stricter controls in
place there, but the efficacy of the ASIC system which alone guarantees that
inappropriate persons
do not have access to other landside secure areas, is yet
to be fully tested and proved to be an adequate counter-terrorist measure.
The
nature of screening points and the screening process are discussed below at Part
II.B ‘Screening and Clearance: Methods
and Procedures’ of this
article.
Finally, emergency response personnel belonging to ambulance,
fire and rescue and defence force services benefit from exemptions to
these
physical controls on access to airside and to airside secure areas. Similar
exemptions apply in respect of access by such personnel
to landside secure areas
(including sterile areas).[38]
B Screening and Clearance: Methods and Procedures
Having identified the role that screening plays in the context of airport
security measures, it remains to define the nature of the
screening process and
also the powers of screening officers who carry out screening (discussed in Part
II.C ‘Screening Officers
and Their Powers’ of this article).
Screening and clearance, as well as related matters such as controls over
weapons and prohibited
items are specifically provided for in Part 4 of the
Aviation Transport Safety Act 2004 (Cth). Although ss 40-44 in Part 4,
‘Division 2 – Screening and Clearing’ are the most relevant
provisions here,
ss 45-60 provide for and create offences in relation to the
carriage through screening points of authorised and unauthorised weapons
as well
as prohibited items. These sections also provide for an unauthorised
person’s possession of weapons or prohibited items
in secure areas and on
cleared aircraft.
1 Screened air services and cleared
aircraft
An aircraft operating an international air service that is a
RPT or an open charter operation, or a jet aircraft operating a domestic
air
service that is a RPT operation – which together account for almost all
commercial public transport aircraft operations
in Australia – must be
‘cleared’ before departure, and such aircraft are described as
operating a ‘screened
air
service’.[39] If a person is a
passenger, or a member of the crew, on an aircraft operating a screened air
service, then that person must also
be screened and cleared before boarding the
aircraft.[40] Exceptionally, a
member of the crew is taken to have been screened if he or she has, since being
last screened, continuously been
either on the airside or in a sterile area of
an airport, or on board an aircraft that operates a screened air
service.[41] However, as discussed
immediately below, there are other classes of person, including airport and
airline contracted staff, who may
legitimately enter a screened aircraft without
being themselves screened. Thus, these excepted classes of persons are not
subject
to the standard screening process, including the possibility of
‘frisk searches’ and ‘clothing removal
requests’.
2 Screening passengers and others: some
aberrations
In principle, every person must be cleared through a
screening point before entering a sterile area (whether as a precursor to
boarding
an aircraft or otherwise), unless either that
person:
• enters from airside after disembarking from a screened
air service; or
• belongs to the classes of persons which the
regulations specify as being ‘taken to be
cleared’.[42]
It is of
note, however, that even other classes of authorised persons are entitled to
enter sterile areas other than through screening
points. These are: aviation
security inspectors, Australian Customs Service officers and even authorised
contractors and employees
of contractors to the airport operator or screened air
service operator.[43] It would seem
that it is this final class of airport personnel, in particular contractors and
their employees, that the Wheeler
Review[44] had in mind when it
proposed the increased use of ‘frisk searches’ (and thus screening)
for airport employees,[45] even
though all such persons must display a valid ASIC or valid VIC and be supervised
by a person ‘taken to be cleared’
and displaying a valid
ASIC.[46]
It would seem
reasonable that these classes of persons employed to work in such secure areas,
carrying tools and equipment etc into
sterile areas and on board aircraft, or
working with screened luggage and cargo, should fully expect screening
procedures, clothing
removal requests and ‘frisk searches’; and be
prepared to accept them more willingly than ordinary air passengers. Yet
this
class of contracted airport or airline personnel can legitimately enter secure
areas without screening, despite the fact that
they and their activities may
well represent a clearer risk to aviation security than the average
passenger.[47] The regulations do
not expressly require any form of screening or frisk searching of such persons
and it is noteworthy that the Wheeler
Review found, in 2005, that for an
ASIC:
[t]he checking process can take weeks to complete, causing
unacceptable reliance on procedures for visitor cards which do not require
background checks. There are 188 ASIC databases and authorising bodies around
Australia and these are neither consistent nor linked.
Some casual or contract
workers, such as security screeners and cleaners do not initially hold ASICs and
may not always be accompanied
on-the-job by an ASIC holder as required under
current legislation.[48]
As
the recommendations of the Wheeler Review are gradually being implemented, it
remains to be seen if this perhaps anomalous situation
whereby airport contract
workers are subject to less stringent controls than ordinary air travellers, is
satisfactorily remedied.
Though at the moment, the regulations only require
screening points for access to a landside sterile
area,[49] there would seem to be no
reason why airport operators may not choose, or be otherwise encouraged, to
install such points for access
to other secure areas or zones as needed, given
that the operator does not seem to be precluded from doing this by any
legislative
provision, and there is flexibility as to some of the security
measures that the operator may choose to impose. In the meantime,
this remains a
flaw in the effectiveness of the screening process as a whole and undermines its
credibility as a counter-terrorist
measure.
3 Screening and
clearance requirements
The method and procedure for screening and
obtaining clearance at security controlled airports are prescribed in detail in
Part 4.1 of the Aviation Transport Security Regulations 2005 (Cth). The
regulations governing the screening of persons, goods and vehicles (though
goods, vehicles and cargo are irrelevant for
present purposes), are made
pursuant to the Aviation Transport Safety Act 2004 (Cth) s 44 which
provides that:
(1) The regulations may, for the purposes of safeguarding against unlawful
interference with aviation, prescribe requirements in relation
to one or more of
the following:
(a) screening;
(b) receiving clearance;
(c) the
circumstances in which persons, goods or vehicles are required to be
cleared;
(d) ....
(2) Without limiting the matters that may be dealt
with by regulations made under subsection (1), the regulations may deal with the
following:
(a) the persons who are authorised or required to conduct
screening;
(b) the things to be detected by screening;
(c) the procedures
for dealing with things detected by screening;
(d) the circumstances in which
persons must be cleared in order to:
(i) board an aircraft; or
(ii) enter
a landside security zone, a landside event zone, an airside area, an airside
security zone or an airside event zone;
(e) the circumstances in which goods,
other than baggage and cargo, must be cleared in order to be taken:
(i) onto
an aircraft; or
(ii) into a landside security zone, a landside event zone, an
airside area, an airside security zone or an airside event zone;
(f) the
circumstances in which baggage must be cleared in order to be taken:
(i) onto
an aircraft; or
(ii) into a landside security zone, a landside event zone, an
airside area, an airside security zone or an airside event zone;
(g) ...
[cargo].... :
(h) ....[ vehicles]...
(i) the places where screening is to
be conducted;
(j) the methods, techniques and equipment to be used for
screening;
(k) the notices that are to be displayed in places where screening
is to be conducted;
(l) the supervision and control measures for ensuring
that persons, goods and vehicles that have received clearance remain cleared
in
areas or zones that are not cleared areas or cleared zones;
(m)
...[cargo].
While these provisions allow scope for, and indeed authorise,
comprehensive regulatory control, there are many exceptions and exemptions
(some
of which have been discussed above), as well as several instances of vagueness
and uncertainty as regards, in particular, the
powers exercisable by airport
screening officers as part of their screening procedures, thus requiring such
officers to accept and
carry out various responsibilities, as well as to make
too many choices and to exercise significant discretions without adequate
and
appropriate guidance (see below: Part II.C ‘Screening Officers and
Their Powers’ of this article).
(a) Exempt
passengers
Persons are ‘screened’ when they undergo
screening in accordance with the regulations made pursuant to s 44 of the Act
and receive ‘clearance’ when they are allowed to pass a screening
point after having been screened. Alternatively, persons
may receive
‘clearance’ when the Secretary has provided by written notice that
those persons may pass though without
being screened, or that they may otherwise
enter a cleared zone, cleared area or cleared
aircraft.[50] Certain persons who
are passengers (but who are not airport or airline employees etc and security
personnel: discussed above) are
exempt from screening, in various circumstances
in accordance with Tables in the Aviation Transport Security Regulations
2005 (Cth) reg 4.2. Two factors which diminish the need for screening are
(i) if the aircraft they are boarding is not a RTP aircraft,
and (ii) if they
are entering the aircraft directly from a vehicle. The most notable passengers
exempt from screening are the Queen
of Australia, members of the royal family
and Heads of State and their protection officers, especially if they are
entering a state
aircraft.[51] These
exemptions are quite rare.
(b) Absence of guidelines in the
regulations
Otherwise, the legislation provides few clear and
publicly-stated guidelines as to the manner in which screening is to be carried
out, though naturally there are internal procedures recommended. Additionally
the Secretary may specify by written notice that is
to be given to the person
responsible for carrying out the screening, the methods, techniques and
equipment to be used for screening,
but the notice is only binding if served
upon the person.[52] Failure to
comply with such directions may expose the person to disciplinary action, but
even if such directions were available to
the public, their legal significance
is far from clear.
4 Screening offences
Screening is
designed to detect specified classes of things being carried on or by any person
entering a sterile area. These are:
(i) if on a person, their belongings or
aircraft stores - weapons and prohibited items; and (ii) if in checked baggage -
explosives.[53] Weapons and
prohibited items detected during the screening must be stored and handled in
accordance with any applicable Commonwealth,
State or Territory
law.[54] Screening officers are to
be specifically trained for this purpose (see below: Part II.C.1
‘Screening officers and Others’ of this article).
It
is an offence carrying a maximum penalty of seven years imprisonment (but 100
penalty units for a strict liability offence i.e.
where fault is
immaterial),[55] if a person passes
through a screening point and has a weapon in his or her possession, unless of
course, the person is a law enforcement
officer or otherwise authorised to do so
by the regulations or permitted in writing to do so by the
Secretary.[56] A wide range of
things are included as
‘weapons’.[57]
Incidentally, a thing that is both a prohibited item and a weapon is taken to be
a weapon.[58]
Otherwise, it is an offence carrying a maximum penalty of two years
imprisonment (but 20 penalty units for a strict liability offence
i.e. where
fault is immaterial),[59] if a
person passes through a screening point and has a prohibited item in his or her
possession, unless they are a law enforcement
officer or otherwise authorised to
do so by the regulations or permitted in writing to do so by the
Secretary.[60] As there appear to be
no reported cases dealing with these offences, it must be assumed that there are
few such offences that are
charged or prosecuted, or perhaps more likely, few
that are defended. On the other hand, large numbers of prohibited items are
actually
confiscated at airports in Australia.
Airport security guards
and airport screening officers are both authorised to restrain physically a
person who they reasonably suspect
is committing or has committed an offence
against the Aviation Transport Security Act 2004 (Cth) (discussed below).
Thus, persons carrying prohibited items or weapons through a screening point may
be legitimately detained
by screening officers.
C Screening Officers and Their Powers
It is in respect of the actual policing powers accorded to airport screening
officers that most anomalies, uncertainties, arbitrary
choices and discretions
arise and best illustrate the weaknesses in this aspect of the existing
regulatory system in its application
to airport security. When policing powers,
in whatever form, are given to persons other than recognized law enforcement
officers,[61] questions will
inevitably be posed as to the suitability of such persons, the precise nature of
their powers and the circumstances
in which those persons are entitled to
exercise such powers. This is especially the case in the context of airport
security and counter-terrorism
where concerns have already been expressed over
the erosion of individual rights in the face of such
legislation.[62]
1 Screening
officers and others
It may first be of some concern that airport
screening officers are not police
officers,[63] though police and
other law enforcement officers are also on duty at
airports.[64] Screening officers are
essentially specialised security guards, and usually privately
employed.[65] However, they must
wear a distinctive and recognizable
uniform,[66] carry an
ASIC,[67] and, where that
State’s or Territory’s legislation so requires (which is only in a
few States),[68] they must be
licensed as a security guard in the State or Territory where the airport is
situated.[69] The character of
airport screening officers as essentially private security guards has
inescapable implications for the nature and
legitimacy of the authority they
exercise as well as their credibility in the eyes of the public. This is another
reason why the
regulations should go further towards including the provisions
necessary to ensure that the powers and discretions exercised by such
officers
are justifiable and based on clear principles.
To somewhat offset any
possible doubts as to the authority they exercise, there are substantial
training requirements prescribed for
screening officers: namely, that they hold
at least Certificate II or its equivalent in security operations; or
alternatively, that
they have undergone training and acquired experience while
working as a security guard for the purpose of obtaining such a
certificate.[70] However, an issue
as to credibility again arises, as having appropriate ‘work
experience’ (whatever that may be) can
alone be an adequate precondition
to appointment. More precision in this area is needed and clear standards should
be set.
Further, it is required that while on duty as a screening
officer, such persons must be supervised by a qualified screening officer
and
not take independent screening decisions until the supervisor is satisfied they
are competent. Such a requirement does however
open itself to varying
interpretations and subjective implementation by supervisors: the degree and
closeness of supervision is unspecified
and no prescribed assessment or
standards are required to establish competence. At least, some minimal standards
can be independently
assured, as screening officers must also complete training
which has been approved by the Secretary of the Department of Transport
and
Regional Services (DoTARS) to ensure familiarity with the Aviation Transport
Security Act 2004 (Cth) and, in particular, with the powers of screening
officers. Unfortunately, as the following analysis reveals, there is some
uncertainty as to the true nature and scope of these powers. Also, they need to
have completed training approved by the Secretary
designed to ensure competency
in maintaining the integrity of a sterile area, the operation of screening
equipment, screening methods
and techniques as well as dealing with weapons and
prohibited items[71] that have been detected or
surrendered.[72]
2 Powers
of screening officers and airport security guards
There is a clear
distinction made between ‘airport security guards’ and
‘screening officers’ in the Aviation Transport Security Act
2004 (Cth) ss 91-7, though screening officers may also exercise powers given
to security guards. Airport security guards are persons who satisfy the
training, qualification and other requirements prescribed in the regulations for
airport security guards[73] and who
are on duty at a security controlled airport, but who are not law enforcement
officers.[74] They have the
authority to restrain physically a person who they reasonably suspect is
committing or has committed an offence against
the Aviation Transport
Security Act 2004 (Cth), provided they reasonably believe that it is
necessary to ensure that a person who has not been cleared does not enter or
remain
in a cleared area or cleared zone, or, to maintain the integrity of a
landside security zone, a landside event zone, an airside area,
an airside
security zone or an airside event
zone,[75] This power of restraint is
limited. A person so restrained may only be detained until they can be dealt
with by a law enforcement
officer.[76] Furthermore, and this
is where a discretion arises, in restraining such persons, airport security
guards must not use more force
or subject a person to greater indignity that is
both ‘necessary and reasonable’ (discussed below). Otherwise, such
powers
of airport security guards would seem to be not inappropriate and
relatively unexceptional.
(a) Powers to restrain and request or
require clothing removal
Screening officers are equipped with similar
powers to airport security guards, but have additional powers which are in some
ways
quite specific and in other respects quite vague. They do have the same
powers of physical restraint as airport security
guards,[77] – an important
power when people are often in a hurry to catch a plane - and there seems no
reason why these restraint powers
may not be exercised in appropriate
circumstances in conjunction with their screening powers. In exercising any of
their powers,
screening officers (like security guards) must not use more force
or subject a person to greater indignity than is both ‘necessary
and
reasonable’.[78] There is
therefore the assumption that in the exercise of any of the screening
officer’s powers, persons being screened will
necessarily endure some
level of indignity: just how much indignity is acceptable can only depend on the
circumstances.[79] This wording
appears to set quite a strict standard as to how much indignity is acceptable
and it is equivalent to the standards
to be followed by a police officer under s
3UD(2) of the Crimes Act 1914 (Cth) and by protective services officers,
members and special members of the Australian Federal Police Force under, ss
14B, 14D,
14J (for example) of the Australian Federal Police Force Act
1979 (Cth).[80] However, is it
appropriate that private security guards and screening officers be authorised to
exercise the same level of discretion
in carrying out their statutory powers as
fully trained police or law enforcement officers, when such members of the
security staff
have not had the same training, and are not subject to the same
duties and responsibilities as police or law enforcement
officers,[81] and do not have the
benefit of any clear and recognized guidelines?
As mentioned above,
screening officers have additional powers. Notably, a screening officer may, if
he or she ‘considers it
necessary’ in order to screen a person
properly, request the person to ‘remove any item’ of his or her
clothing.[82] Note, the text of the
Act, s 95(1) does not use the words: ‘reasonably consider’ nor
‘consider on reasonable grounds’,
so apparently the screening
officer’s decision to request clothing removal is based on purely
subjective criteria. That is,
it only matters that the particular screening
officer ‘considers it necessary’ to make the clothing removal
request,
even if a reasonable screening officer would not have done so. There is
nothing in the legislation to say that the request needs
to be based on some
legislatively imposed objective criterion, such as a reasonable suspicion of the
commission of the offence of
carrying a prohibited item or weapon through a
screening point, which criterion an officer can comprehend and a court can
easily
investigate and verify. Instead the test is whether the individual
screening officer ‘considers it necessary’. The word
‘considers’ would appear to be satisfied if, first, the particular
officer says he or she applied his or her mind to
the issue, and second, that it
would be possible, in all the circumstances, for this screening officer, given
the purpose of the
powers he or she was exercising, to conclude that the request
was necessary. It would appear to be enough, perhaps, that the screening
officer’s decision to make the request was based on the prospective
passenger’s demeanour, dress, racial or ethnic origin
or general
scruffiness or even conformity to a given
profile.[83]
However, the
subsection also uses the word ‘necessary’ which imposes, or seems to
impose, quite a high standard and requires
much more certainty than would, for
example, the word: ‘desirable’. ’Necessary’ means simply
that it is something
that has to be done, once the officer has considered the
case.
The legislation assumes that persons passing through a screening
point will ordinarily comply with such a clothing removal request
and thus,
involuntary or enforced removal of clothing is not expressly provided for.
However, screening officers commit a strict
liability
offence,[84] if they require
removal, or remove, or cause to be removed, any such item of
clothing,[85] unless they have, and
can provide evidence that they have, ‘reasonable
excuse’.[86] Unfortunately,
this defence is based on a concept which is somewhat
vague,[87] and seemingly, leaves
open the possibility of legitimate involuntary or enforced removal of clothing
in appropriate circumstances.[88]
The circumstances may also justify the screening officer exercising other
powers, such as the power of restraint under s 96 of the Aviation Transport
Security Act 2004 (Cth). To establish ‘reasonable excuse’, it is
not enough that the particular screening officer believed he or she had
an
excuse or even a reasonable excuse. It must be an excuse which is reasonable by
objective standards: the question is, what would
a reasonable person consider to
be a reasonable excuse (see below). There is, however, no guidance in the
legislation on what may
amount to a ‘reasonable excuse’ in this
context. The screening officer has to make this choice unaided and presumably,
under pressure.
(b) When will the ‘consent’ be freely
given
There can be no certainty that consent to clothing removal is
given freely. Even accepting that there is no express or implicit authority
for
the screening officer to require the removal of clothing, whether there is a
reasonable excuse or not, it would seem, as a matter
of practical reality, that
the consent required implicitly by the wording of s 95 of the Aviation
Transport Security Act 2004 (Cth), would be easily obtained. It is indeed
arguable that there would be, at the least, considerable external pressure
experienced
by the person concerned, to comply with a clothing removal request
made under s 95(1) of the Aviation Transport Security Act 2004 (Cth). It
is not as if air passengers being screened on their way to catch a flight have
much real choice when deciding whether or
not to comply with the screening
officer’s clothing removal request. This is because the legislation
requires that such passengers
be refused passage through the screening point and
risk missing their flights, with considerable economic and other consequences)
if they refuse to remove the item of clothing on the request of the screening
officer.[89] However, before finally
being denied passage by the screening officer, a person initially refusing the
clothing removal request must
be given the option of a private screening. That
option may be refused, or if it is accepted, the person may still refuse to
comply
with the clothing removal request. Then passage may be again denied, if
the refusal in question has meant that it has not been possible
to screen the
person properly,[90] because he or
she has either: refused the option to be screened in a private room by an
officer of the same sex; or, if having accepted
the private screening option,
refused to remove the item of clothing requested during that
screening.[91]
There is a
further issue here. It is that the legislation does not specifically
state that it is the screening officer concerned, who is to consider, believe or
come to the conclusion that it has
not been possible to screen the person
properly. Nor does it state that the matter should, or should not, be referred
to a supervisor.
It is left open and the screening officer has no publicly
recognized guidance on the matter. At best it could be said that there
is no
reason to assume that the decision to deny passage should be made according to
anything other than purely objective criteria.
If this is the case, the test is:
what a reasonable person or reasonable screening officer would have concluded as
to the impossibility
of being able to screen the person properly without the
removal of clothing. So a screening officer, after having subjectively
considered it necessary to request the removal of clothing, must decide
objectively if without the clothing removal, it is possible to screen the
person properly. If this is what the provisions mean, on a proper construction
of the Act’s, s 95, the legislation would seem to put the screening
officer in an invidious position, especially considering
that the screening
officer is not a recognised and duly authorised law enforcement officer. Even a
properly directed jury would find
it difficult to perform the mental acrobatics
involved in making such decisions.
Leaving aside the difficult
conceptual legal issues mentioned above, it may seem reasonable for innocent
prospective air travellers
to accept willingly to remove items of clothing as
requested, or, to undergo the private screening option, especially if this can
occur immediately with little or no inconvenience to the air traveller.
Nonetheless, in the circumstances in which passengers find
themselves when
making either or both decisions, they must inevitably feel a compulsion to
comply. Then, the genuineness and volition
of the consent or otherwise may well
become an issue and may even render the screening and search process unlawful.
What if on the
screening officer’s request, the person answers
‘well, if I really have to!’ Is this consent? How can a screening
officer make this judgement? Where does ‘grudging consent’ end and
‘unwilling compliance’ begin? In such
cases, do screening officers
also lay themselves open to being charged with committing the offence under s
95(2) and (3) of the Aviation Transport Security Act 2004
(Cth)?
(c) Passengers choosing to be ‘frisk searched’
rather than remove clothing
Airport screening officers also have
specific ‘frisk search’ powers, and the circumstances in which a
frisk search can
be made are significant and are discussed below. However, the
legislation also states that a person may actually choose to undergo
a frisk
search as an alternative to any other screening
procedure.[92] It is highly unlikely
that a person will know that such a choice exists unless specifically informed
that this alternative to a clothing
removal request (or any other screening
procedure) is actually open to them under the legislation. It can only be
assumed that the
screening officer should inform them that they may make this
choice, especially if the person has already refused a request to remove
clothing and is being denied passage through a screening point. However, there
is no requirement in the legislation that the screening
officer or anyone else
makes information available as to screening choices. Is it even practical and
convenient for this to be done?
Is all this also another difficult matter of
choice for the screening officer? Clarification of respective rights and duties
in these
cases is needed.
3 Power to ‘frisk search’ and
limitations
A frisk
search[93] may be performed by a
screening officer in various circumstances. First, it can be requested by the
officer, if a person undergoes
a screening procedure and the results indicate
that additional screening procedures are necessary in order to screen the person
properly.[94] This is a decision to
be made by the screening officer concerned. As anyone who has taken an
international flight will know, there
are, in practice, several stages of the
screening process, beginning with queuing and placing most cabin baggage items
as well as
emptying pocket contents etc on to the conveyor belt to pass through
the x-ray machine; followed by passing though a walk-though
door-frame-like
metal detector, before sometimes being subjected to an additional body scan by a
hand-held metal detector[95] and an
explosives scent detector or a dog performing a similar task. Then, there may
even be a frisk search and we will assume that
there is always a request made
(though perhaps unspoken) before a frisk search is performed. Most of that whole
process goes without
mention in the legislation. Is it appropriate that such
procedures be ignored, especially in view of the new technologies being employed
in passenger screening at airports?
If there is a frisk search request,
it is not required in the legislation that there first be a clothing removal
request, but if ‘considered
necessary’, there may well be such a
request (see above). It is only if there has been a refusal to comply with the
clothing
removal request that a difficulty arises. This is because s 95(5) of
the Aviation Transport Security Act 2004 (Cth) mandates that the
screening officer then refuse the person passage through the screening point. It
would appear that the screening
officer has no choice. But how definitive is
this? Is it that all that is required is merely a refusal to pass through the
screening
point at this stage, or, until some other screening procedures are
performed? If so, this is not stated in the legislation. On the
other hand, is
it then too late to perform a frisk search? Does the screening officer have a
choice here? Does the legislature really
intend that the refusal of a clothing
removal request be the end of the matter and that a frisk search only be
possible where there
has not already been a refusal to comply with a clothing
removal request? Or are these two procedures intended to be complementary
as
well as alternatives? A literal interpretation of the provisions would suggest
that the two procedures are potentially mutually
exclusive once a clothing
removal request has been made to, and refused by, the person concerned. This
would not necessarily appear
to be consistent with the purpose of the
legislation nor its provisions, which purpose, at some secondary level, must be
also to
facilitate the smooth and proper passenger departure process.
On
the other hand, there would appear to be nothing in the wording of the
provisions to say that a ‘frisk search’ cannot
be performed
before a clothing removal request is made. Thus, it appears from the
legislation that if there has been a ‘clothing removal request’,
a
‘frisk search’ can certainly be requested before the person refuses,
either to remove clothing or to undergo screening
in a private room. It may also
be that after such refusals, a frisk search request can still be made provided
the officer has not
yet concluded that the person should be denied passage
through the screening point. This may be a ‘common sense’ approach
but it is not clear from the legislation that it is correct. Whichever is the
correct interpretation of these provisions, it must
be exceedingly difficult for
screening officers to understand properly and fully the powers they have been
given and to exercise
them lawfully.
(a) Consent and ‘reasonable
excuse’ in its absence
As regards frisk searches, screening
officers are given very similar powers to those existing in respect of removal
of clothing requests
under s 95 of the Aviation Transport Security Act
2004 (Cth) (discussed above). Either upon the choice of the person being
screened, or, where the results of a screening indicate that
additional
screening procedures are necessary, (and if the screening officer’s
request to perform a frisk search is consented
to by the person being screened),
the screening officer may perform a frisk search which may be carried out
‘to the extent
necessary’ in order to screen the person properly or
complete the proper screening (see below Part II.C.3.(b) ‘searching to the
extent necessary’ of this
article).[96] Further, under s 95C
of the Aviation Transport Security Act 2004 (Cth) (inserted in
2007)[97] a screening officer may
‘if [he or she] considers it necessary’ request a frisk
search.[98] In the last two
situations (but not the first, where it is the person’s choice to be frisk
searched), the person must be given
the option for the frisk search to be
carried out in a private room by someone of the same sex. Then, if the person
refuses to submit
to the frisk search in public or in private, the screening
officer must refuse passage past the screening
point.[99] It was, however,
mentioned above that giving consent either to a clothing removal request (and
likewise to a frisk search), or to
a private screening procedure is really, in
practice, open to criticism as not being a consent freely given, as persons on
their
way to catch flights may already feel a strong compulsion, if not an
obligation to submit.
As with the removal of clothing, the carrying out
of a frisk search cannot be required or conducted by screening officers without
the person’s consent, unless the screening officer has, and can prove he
or she has, ‘reasonable
excuse’.[100] To do so is an
offence. Inclusion of this notion of ‘reasonable excuse’ as a
defence, could, as with a clothing removal
request, imply that the frisk search
can be forcibly performed if there is a ‘reasonable excuse’. Again,
there are no
legislative guidelines as to what would amount to a
‘reasonable excuse’ in such cases and although there has been varied
judicial comment in diverse facts situations, it appears that what applies is
the rather imprecise common law rule that its meaning
depends on the
circumstances of the individual case, and, on the purpose of the provision to
which the defence of ‘reasonable
excuse’ is an
exception.[101] The main purpose
of the present legislation, including the frisk search and clothing removal
request provisions, is to safeguard
against unlawful interference with aviation
by establishing minimum security
obligations.[102] In such a
context of combating terrorist activity, it may be acceptable to be able to
establish a ‘reasonable excuse’
for an enforced frisk search, based
on quite minimal indices, especially given the uncertainty as to the meaning of
this expression.[103] However, the
matter is far from unequivocal and to ask screening officers to exercise such a
power without publicly recognized guidelines
is to require them to make an
invidious choice between letting go a potential terrorist and committing an
offence themselves.
(b) Searching ‘to the extent
necessary’
Another troubling and uncertain phrase in the
applicable legislation, which would likely be subject to the same kind of
interpretative
analysis as has been carried out above in respect of the phrase
‘reasonable cause’, is the significant qualification
that the search
may be performed ‘to the extent necessary’, though these words do
not appear to have been the subject
of judicial pronouncement. Under s 9 of the
Aviation Transport Security Act 2004 (Cth), a ‘frisk search’
has the same meaning as in the Crimes Act 1914 (Cth), where s 3C defines
it as:
(a) a search of a person conducted by quickly running the hands
over the person’s outer garments; and
(b) an examination of anything
worn or carried by the person that is conveniently and voluntarily removed by a
person.
Do these qualifying words mean that the frisk search, as
defined, is the maximum that can be requested by the screening officer, and
if
consented to, carried out by that officer. Does it mean that there is a
discretion or choice to carry it out less fully or emphatically:
perhaps quicker
and using less hand pressure, or overlooking certain parts of the body; or,
perhaps over-emphasising certain parts
and under-emphasising others. Whatever it
means, the interaction of the definition of a frisk search (which seems to
require that
any removal of clothing as part of a frisk search be voluntary),
and the notion that it should be carried out ‘to the extent
necessary’ is likely to cause confusion, especially for the screening
officer, further obfuscating that delicate dividing line
between the right not
to be arbitrarily detained and searched, and the power of screening officers
(who are after all not law enforcement
officers with their concomitant duties
and responsibilities), to stop, request removal of clothing, detain and frisk
search with
some form of consent or with reasonable cause, and in the absence of
any articulated reasonable suspicion of the commission of an
offence.
III CONCLUSION: TOO MANY CHOICES?
As the relevant provisions in the legislation stand, there are various
issues raised relating to who is screened at airports, by whom
and how this is
carried out. Many, if not all of these involve what could be described as
‘uninformed’ choices being
made by the entity responsible for the
particular secure area, by security guards and screening officers, or by the
persons undergoing
screening.
As far as airport screening of passengers
and other persons, including airport and airline staff and contractors is
concerned, the
practical reality is that any person turning up at an airport and
wishing to enter a sterile area or to transit such an area to take
a flight,
must, if he or she wishes to pass through the screening point for either
purpose, and, if a screening officer so requests
or requires, undergo either in
public or in private, a screening process which may include, aside from being
scanned by X-ray and
metal detection devices, removal of any item of clothing
and/or a frisk search, where the screening officer ‘considers it
necessary’.
Further, if a frisk search is performed, it may be effected
‘to the extent necessary’. The passenger or other person
has, in
many cases, no real practical choice. Submit to the requests or miss the flight.
On the other hand, the legislation permits
the screening officer the choice of
which procedures, if any, to follow (though even this is not always clear), but
with very few
useful guidelines as to how to go about making such choices. In
other words, the screening officer, who has had considerably less
training than,
and has not the same duties and responsibilities as, a law enforcement officer,
makes decisions and exercises discretion
which effectively impose upon persons
passing through screening points, the obligation to submit to clothing removal
and/or frisk
searches, based almost exclusively on subjective criteria and
without legislative or other certain guidance as to standards to apply
or
procedures to follow. Yet, every day, there are thousands of persons potentially
affected by these choices.
Should a review of any such screening
officer’s decisions ever occur, the screening officer would need to show
that rather than
following standard procedure, consideration was given to, or,
that his or her mind had been turned to, the relevant question: should
a
particular procedure be invoked in any particular case. Otherwise, it would
likely mean that there was no actual consideration
of the question at all,
effectively rendering the procedure unlawful. Further, if the screening officer
did consider the question,
but could not articulate or identify any grounds at
all for making the decision, then it could be said that he or she has acted
arbitrarily
or unlawfully. On the other hand, it is not necessary that any such
grounds for the officer’s decision that do exist, actually
justify it on
purely ‘objective criteria’, as the legislation does not always
require or specify that the screening officer
must act reasonably in this
respect. Screening officers are therefore left to exercise their powers with
little guidance or concern
for the consequences. But if they do make a mistake,
then they are likely to have committed an offence.
The Aviation
Transport Security Act 2004 (Cth) and Aviation Transport Security
Regulations 2005 (Cth) alone run to some five hundred pages in length and
there are several other lengthy legislative and regulatory enactments which
deal
in different ways, and more or less directly, with matters pertaining to airport
security. Of course, only specific divisions
and a limited number of provisions
in these enactments govern airport security, and in particular the airport
screening procedures,
though a substantial part of the legislation elaborates on
the various secure areas of airports, the control of access to such areas,
duties of airport operators and others, as well as the creation of relevant
offences. Yet there is little that can assist the screening
officer looking for
guidance on how to exercise the powers given by legislation.
Even aside
from the difficulty of ascertaining precisely what rights and duties exist in
respect of airport security screening under
these rather prolix and repetitive
legislative provisions, there is a further significant tension between
society’s need for
adequate counter-terrorism measures to be implemented
at airports and the desirability of reasonably free and efficient functioning
of
the air transport industry and the persons who participate in it. The
legislature has not included or applied, in its provisions,
any ‘checks
and balances’ that would appear to be needed to deal with the
uncertainties and questions that may arise:
for example, objective guidelines
for screening procedures, clothing removal requests and for the performance of
frisk searches;
the possibility of immediate review of screening and searching
decisions by a supervisor; or examples of what amounts to a ‘reasonable
excuse’ for imposing a clothing removal request or frisk search without
the person’s genuine and willingly-given consent,
or guidance as to how
one goes about deciding if there is ‘reasonable excuse’.
Further, despite the reality that all sorts of technologies are being
used in the airport security context, and that advances are
occurring in the
nature and efficiency of devices used especially in the screening process, there
is, at this stage, very little
in the legislation that betrays any recognition
that highly technical scientific equipment is increasingly being used in the
screening
process.[104] It may be
that the suppliers of such equipment, and operators such as screening officers,
are to be left to perform their functions
with even less guidance, certainty and
perhaps protection, than screening officers have at present.
The
implementation of airport security procedures, whether they be high or
‘low-tech’, must be founded in legislative
or regulatory provisions.
Most of these provisions have been enacted in the aviation context, where,
subject to prescribed surveillance
procedures and guidelines, industry
participants are often required to establish and implement their own regulatory
measures in respect
of many of their own operational activities. This kind of
independent regulatory responsibility cannot be asked of security guards
and
screening officers. So, arguably, this is perhaps an inappropriate context for
legislative provisions governing the exercise
of policing powers over large
sections of the general public. The frisk search and clothing removal request
powers of airport screening
officers are indicative of the kinds of questions
and uncertainties that can arise in these circumstances. However, whether such
powers are legislated in the aviation context or elsewhere, it is highly
desirable that the powers be clear and unambiguous, that
difficult concepts be
explained or clarified, that as much guidance as possible be provided as to how
discretions are to be exercised
and that there be a clear statement of the
factors to be taken into account when choices, if any, are to be made.
[*] BA LLB (Qld) LLM (Mon) Dip Crim (Melb) Dip Comm L (Mon) PhD (Qld), Aviation
Law Consultant, Honorary Associate, Law Faculty, Monash
University; Aviation
Legislation Consultant, Technical Co-operation Programme, ICAO (Montreal);
Consultant, Johnson Stokes &
Master, Solicitors and Notaries (Hong
Kong).
[1] By the Aviation
Transport Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 9, a ‘frisk search’ has the
same meaning as in the Crimes Act 1914 (Cth), where s 3C defines it as
‘(a) a search of a person conducted by quickly running the hands over the
person’s outer garments; and
(b) an examination of anything worn or
carried by the person that is conveniently and voluntarily removed by a
person.’ Also,
a ‘frisk search’ is defined in the Criminal
Code 1995 (Cth) s 101.1(1) in the same manner.
[2] There are many laws that
affect airport security, not the least the range of legislation relating to
airports and aerodromes in
the connect of civil aviation: Civil Aviation Act
1988 (Cth); Civil Aviation Regulations 1988 (Cth); and Civil
Aviation Safety Regulations 1998 (Cth), pts 93, 139, 143, 171, 172;
Crimes (Aviation) Act 1991 (Cth) and Crimes (Aviation) Regulations
1992 (Cth); airports generally: Airports Act 1996 (Cth) pt 12 –
Protection of Airspace; and Airports (Protection of Airspace) Regulations
1996 (Cth); and terrorism: Anti-Terrorism Act 2004 (Cth);
Anti-Terrorism Act 2005 (Cth); and Anti-Terrorism Act (No.2) 2005
(Cth) which enactments primarily make amendments to the Criminal Code
1995 (Cth); the Crimes Act 1914 (Cth); and several other relevant
enactments including the most relevant, the Aviation Transport Security Act
2004 (Cth); the Aviation Transport Security Regulations 2005 (Cth);
and the Air Navigation Regulations 1947 (Cth) pt 7. The last-mentioned is
given less attention here, because, although it complements the other two
enactments, it may need revision
as it partially duplicates and further
complicates the regulatory regime which those enactments set up.
[3] Additionally, significant
government funds are being invested in airport counter-terrorism. However, there
has so far been little
focus on the operational efficacy and legal implications
of airport and aerodrome security measures. The adequacy of existing combination
of aviation and corporate regulatory systems to deal with this rapidly expanding
area is the subject of further research by the present
author.
[4] The issue of human
rights and counter-terrorism initiatives has been already explored in studies: L
Lasry, and K Eastman, ‘Memorandum
of Advice: Anti-Terrorism Bill 2005
(Cth) and the Human Rights Act 2004 (Cth) Act’ [2005] UWSLawRw 6; (2005) 9 University of
Western Sydney Law Review 111; A Garwood-Gowers, ‘Self-Defence Against
Terrorism in the Post-9/11 World’ (2004) 4 Queensland University of
Technology Law and Justice Journal 167; and P Emerton, ‘Paving the Way
for Conviction Without Evidence – A Disturbing Trend in Australia’s
Anti-Terrorism
Laws’ (2004) 4 Queensland University of Technology Law
and Justice Journal
129.
[5] While enhanced
policing and security controls and their impact on the individual are all too
visible and obvious, any assessment
of their dissuasive effect on would-be
terrorists is almost impossible to
make.
[6] D Biello, The Naked
Truth: Is New Passenger Scanner a Terrorist Trap or a Virtual Strip Search?
(2007) Scientific American
<http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=terrorist-trap-or-virtual-strip-search>
at 2 December 2007.
[7] Others
include CCTV surveillance, fingerprint and voice recognition, biometric readers,
facial recognition, metal detectors
etc.
[8] While there may be no
doubt that the power to perform frisk searches and request clothing removal
should exist, even aside from
privacy issues, the imposition of such searches
seems arbitrary and there is little evidence as to how effective they are in
preventing
terrorist activities or even avoiding the carriage into sterile
areas, of any of a wide range of weapons or potentially dangerous
items now
prohibited in aviation.
[9] For
example, if the increased use of advanced technology in airport security gives
rise to other, different legal issues yet to be
explored, or if, for example, it
has negative health and safety or other implications for persons subjected to
it.
[10] Rt Hon Sir John Wheeler,
The Australian Government Review of Airport Security and Policing
(Wheeler Review) (2005) The Australian Government [77]
<http://www.aspr.gov.au/>
at 2 December
2007.
[11] See ibid
[78].
[12] For the latest list,
see the Department of Transport and Regional Services (DoTARS) website
<http://www.dotars.gov.au/transport/security/aviation/index.aspx>
at 2
December 2007. Otherwise issues as to the carriage of dangerous goods by air are
not within the ambit of this
article.
[13] Indeed, almost all
of the case law related to frisk searches involves the Australian Customs
Service and the illegal import or export
of drugs or other prohibited
items.
[14] Aviation Transport
Security Amendment (Additional Screening Measures) Act 2007 (Cth) s
2.
[15] Though greater internal
consistency has been achieved, little has been done to increase clarity.
[16] Aviation Transport
Security Act 2004 (Cth) s
94.
[17] Aviation Transport
Security Act 2004 (Cth) s
40.
[18] The declaration is made
by the Secretary by notice in the Gazette and includes a map of the airport and
specified zones: Aviation Transport Security Act 2004 (Cth) ss 9 and
28(2). Section 41 declared such airports were notified in Gazette No’s S
40, 3 March 2005. Subsequent declarations of amendments have been made
eg for
Canberra airport: Gazette No’s S 39, 16 March 2006 and S 124, 4 July 2006.
Of security controlled airports in Australia , there are: one in ACT; 39 in NSW;
21 in NT; 66 in QLD; 10 in SA; 8 in TAS;
10 in VIC; and 29 in WA: see Civil
Aviation Safety Authority (CASA) website
<http://www.casa.gov.au/fcl/>
at
2 December 2007 and DoTARS website
<http://www.dotars.gov.au/>
at 2 December 2007. Four of these airports do not have regular public transport
(RPT) operations and do not require an Aviation
Security Identity Card
(ASIC).
[19] Aviation
Transport Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 29(1),
(2).
[20] Witness the various
well publicised ‘car bomb’ attacks on airport entrances in recent
years eg at Edinburgh airport in
August
2007.
[21] Aviation Transport
Security Act 2004 (Cth) s
29(3).
[22] By the Aviation
Transport Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 31(1), the regulations may prescribe
different types of airside security zones and by the Aviation Transport
Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) reg 3.01, ‘the security restricted
area’ is prescribed. To complicate matters further, the Air Navigation
Regulations 1947 (Cth) reg 57 also creates the category of ‘security
sensitive areas’.
[23] Some of these can be
notified as ‘airside event zones’ under the Aviation Transport
Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 31A and s 31B in order for the Secretary to
subject those zones to different controls to those generally applicable.
Aviation Transport Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) reg 3.02A prescribes
these to be ‘airside special event zones’. Airport operators may
apply to the Secretary to
establish special event zones under Div. 3A.2 of the
Aviation Transport Security Regulations 2005
(Cth).
[24] Aviation Transport
Security Act 2004 (Cth) ss 32-33 and ss
33A-33B.
[25] There is in fact
increasing emphasis upon auditing and surveillance of security measures, notably
the International Civil Aviation
Organization (ICAO) has an on-going audit
system: Universal Security Audit Programme (USAP) evaluating the implementation
of Annex
17 ‘Security’ and Annex 9 ‘Facilitation’: see
International Civil Aviation Organization (2007)
<http://www.icao.int/>
at 2 December 2007.
[26] In
secure areas other than an airside security zone, either a valid red or a valid
grey ASIC must be displayed: Aviation Transport Security Regulations 2005
(Cth) reg 3.03(1). See also Air Navigation Regulations 1947 (Cth) regs
102-103. For issue and other aspects of ASICS, see Air Navigation Regulations
1947 (Cth) regs 76-101.
[27]
See above n 18.
[28] Aviation
Transport Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) reg
3.03(5).
[29] Aviation
Transport Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) regs 3.05, 3.06. There are a few
other minor exceptions: see regs 3.07 and 3.08. Likewise, in places where a
valid VIC may
be displayed: see reg 3.09. See also Air Navigation Regulations
1947 (Cth) regs 104-107; reg 104 excludes a police officer from carrying an
ASIC.
[30] There appear to be no
reciprocal or other international obligations requiring this exemption. Note
that all operation and safety
regulation, and much security regulation in
aviation derives from international obligations under the Convention on
International Civil Aviation, opened for signature 7 December 1944,
15 UNTS 295 (entered into force 4 April 1947) (Chicago Convention) and the
Annexes to that convention, notably Annex 17 ‘Security –
Safeguarding International Civil Aviation Against Acts of Unlawful
Interference’ (8 ed April 2006).
[31] Aviation Transport
Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) regs 4.09-4.12. Discussed
below.
[32] Five recent cases in
2006-2007 were cited, though none apparently for terrorist purposes, in Joseph
Sumegi, ‘Airport Security
Flaws Exposed’, Inner West Courier
(Sydney), 13 March
2007.
[33] Detailed requirements
are set out as regards fencing, lighting etc for airside generally in the
Aviation Transport Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) reg
3.15.
[34] Apart from landside
sterile areas, landside secure areas and zones and airside secure areas and
zones are, in most respects, similar
in nature and as regards the controls
imposed: Air Transport Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) reg
3.20.
[35] Sterile areas are
those areas that passengers and other persons move to after passing though the
screening process. See also below:
at Part II.B.2 ‘Screening passengers
and others: some aberrations’ of this
article.
[36] Aviation
Transport Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) regs
3.21-3.24.
[37] Under the
Civil Aviation Safety Regulations 1998 (Cth), which are gradually
replacing the Civil Aviation Regulations 1988 (Cth), there has been vast
expansion of and increased precision as regards the regulatory obligations of
airlines and other operators
of aviation facilities: see G N Heilbronn,
Aviation - Laws of Australia, Vol 34 (Law Book Co, 2nd
ed, 2007) Ch 3 generally and R I C Bartsch, Aviation Law in Australia
(Law Book Co, 2nd ed, 2004) 15-44. Note also that the Air
Navigation Regulations 1947 (Cth) regs 63-68 divide airports into five
categories for the purposes of regulating aviation security generally.
[38] Aviation Transport
Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) regs 3.18 (airside), 3.2 (landside). The
extent to which this exemption represents a potential security risk is unknown,
but
ambulance, fire and rescue personnel may be infiltrated by potential
terrorists in a similar manner to airport staff and
contractors.
[39] Air
Transport Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) reg 4.02. Also included are other
aircraft departing from the same airport apron within the ‘operational
period’
as such screened air services: reg 4.02(2). The operational
period, for most specified major airports, is two hours before and 30
minutes
after the actual departure time of the cleared aircraft. For departures from
other security controlled airports and all arrivals
from all airports it is 30
minutes either side of the departure time: reg
4.01.
[40] Aviation Transport
Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) reg
4.08(2).
[41] Aviation
Transport Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) reg
4.08(3).
[42] Aviation
Transport Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) reg 4.09. These are a law
enforcement officer who produced an ID; a screening office engaged in the
management of the screening
point; an ambulance or fire rescue service officer
responding to an emergency on the landside of the airport; or a member of the
Defence Force responding to an event or threat of unlawful interference with
aviation: see Aviation Transport Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) reg
4.10.
[43] See Aviation
Transport Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) reg
4.11.
[44] See Wheeler, above n
10.
[45] Ibid
78.
[46] See Aviation
Transport Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) reg
4.11(1).
[47] There is only
anecdotal evidence for this commonly held view, as there is an absence of
empirical evidence on such
matters.
[48] Wheeler, above n
10, xiii. Note however, that reforms are pending as regards the more centralised
provision and delivery of
ASICs.
[49] See Aviation
Transport Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) reg
3.20(3)(a).
[50] Aviation
Transport Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 41(1), (2) and (3).
[51] By Aviation Transport
Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) reg 4.12(5), a ‘state
aircraft means: (a) aircraft of any part of the Defence Force (including
any aircraft that is commanded by a member of that Force in the course
of his or
her duties as such a member); and (b) aircraft used in the military, customs or
police services of a country other than
Australia.’
[52] Aviation Transport
Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) reg 4.17. The Secretary is the Secretary,
DoTARS.
[53] Aviation
Transport Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) reg
4.04(2).
[54] Aviation
Transport Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) regs 4.05 (weapons) and 4.06
(prohibited items).
[55] By the
Criminal Code 1995 (Cth) s 6.1, if a law that creates an offence provides
that the offence is an offence of strict liability: (a) there are no fault
elements for any of the physical elements of the offence; and (b) the defence of
mistake of fact under s 9.2 is available; s 6.1(1):
(that is, the person has
considered if certain facts existed and is under a mistaken but reasonable
belief about those facts, and
had the mistaken facts existed, they would not
have constituted an offence: s 9.2(1)). The existence of strict liability does
not
make any other defence unavailable: s
6.1(3).
[56] Aviation
Transport Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 47(1)-(2) (strict liability) and s
47(3). Of course it is also similarly offences to be in possession of a weapon
on board and aircraft: Aviation Transport Security Act 2004 (Cth) ss
48-9; and in an airside area, landside security zones and landside event zones:
Aviation Transport Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 46.
[57] By Aviation Transport
Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 9, a weapon is defined as: (a) a firearm of any
kind; or (b) a thing prescribed by the regulations to be a weapon; or (c) a
device
that, except for the absence of, or a defect in, a part of the device,
would be a weapon of a kind mentioned in paragraph (a) or
(b); or (d) a device
that is reasonably capable of being converted into a weapon of a kind mentioned
in paragraph (a) or (b).
[58] Prohibited items and weapons
specified in Tables 1.07 and 1.09 are weapons: Aviation Transport Security
Regulations 2005 (Cth) reg 1.09(5), although there are certain specified
exceptions. See also
<http://www.dotars.gov.au/transport/security/aviation/LAG/index.aspx>
at 2 December 2007.
[59] By the
Criminal Code 1995 (Cth) s 6.1, if a law that creates an offence provides
that the offence is an offence of strict liability: (a) there are no fault
elements for any of the physical elements of the offence; and (b) the defence of
mistake of fact under s 9.2 is available; s 6.1(1):
(that is, the person has
considered if certain facts existed and is under a mistaken but reasonable
belief about those facts, and
had the mistaken facts existed, they would not
have constituted an offence: s 9.2(1)). The existence of strict liability does
not
make any other defence unavailable: s
6.1(3).
[60] Aviation
Transport Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 55(1)-(2) (strict liability) and s
47(3). Of course it is also similarly offences to be in possession of a weapon
on board and aircraft: Aviation Transport Security Act 2004 (Cth) ss
48-9; and in an airside area, landside security zones and landside event zones:
Aviation Transport Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 46.
[61] There can be confusion, as
various persons, including police officers, are described as being a
‘security officer’ for
the purposes of aviation security regulation,
see Air Navigation Regulations 1947 (Cth) reg 27. By the Criminal Code
1995 (Cth) s 146.1, Commonwealth law enforcement officer means
a person who is:
(a) a member or special member of the Australian Federal
Police; or
(aa) the Integrity Commissioner (within the meaning of the
Law Enforcement Integrity Commissioner Act 2006); or
(ab) a staff
member of ACLEI (within the meaning of the Law Enforcement Integrity
Commissioner Act 2006); or
(b) a member of the Board of the Australian
Crime Commission established under section 7B of the Australian Crime
Commission Act 2002; or
(ba) an examiner (within the meaning of that
Act); or
(c) a member of the staff of the ACC (within the meaning of that
Act); or
(d) the Chief Executive Officer of Customs; or
(e) a person
employed in the Australian Customs Service.
[62] See above n
4.
[63] Police officers have, in
relation to terrorist acts, substantial search, questioning and detention powers
in airports pursuant to
the Crimes Act 1914 (Cth) Div 3A.
[64] Police are concerned at what
is perceived as a reduction in police presence at airports: see M Carroll,
‘Airport Policing’
(2006) April Police Journal 16.
Airport policing responsibilities are shared amongst Federal (AFP and APS)
and State and Territorial police services. The Australian
Protective Service
(APS) became fully integrated into the Australian Federal Police (AFP) from 1
July 2004 following two years of
partial integration; see ‘An Independent
Review of Airport Security and Policing for the Government of Australia’
Commonwealth
of Australia (September 2005) (Australian Government Review of
Airport Security and Policing 2005) 41. The AFP, under s 9 of the
Australian
Police Force Act 1979 (Cth), have the power to enforce state laws in
commonwealth places such as airports, just as State police have the duty to
enforce
the State law at airports under the Commonwealth Places (Application
of Laws) Act 1970 (Cth).
[65] See eg Pawson v Sydney
Night Patrol and Enquiry Company t/as SNPSecurity [2005] NSWCIMC 45 (a
salary dispute between a Passenger Screening Officer and his
employer).
[66] Aviation
Transport Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) reg
5.07.
[67] Aviation Transport
Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) 5.08. Discussed
above.
[68] The Australian
Government Review of Airport Security and Policing 2005 (Wheeler Review), (see
above n 10, 77) recently stated: ‘Because
of the importance of these
screening personnel, and of the private security guards employed at larger
airports, it is necessary that
realistic but rigorous standards be set for
employment in this field....Some States and Territories (NSW, the ACT and most
recently
Victoria) have already instituted licensing standards; the work done in
preparing those could help in establishing a national licensing
regime’.
[69] Aviation Transport
Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) reg 5.06(1)(b).
[70] See Australian Government,
Attorney-General’s Department, PSCC Training Centre (2007)
<http://www.ag.gov.au/www/agd/agd.nsf/page/Security_training>
at 4
December 2007 for security guard training
programmes.
[71] There is now a
lengthy list of such items: see Australian Government, Department of
Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development
and Local Government,
Aviation (2007) <www.dotars.gov.au/aviation> at 4
December 2007.
[72] Aviation
Transport Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) reg 5.06(1)((a),(c),(d) and
(e).
[73] Aviation Transport
Security Regulations 2005 (Cth) reg 5.03. Instead of receiving training in
the use of screening equipment and related matters, the security guard
undertakes
training in the use of metal detectors and the powers of airport
security guards under the Aviation Transport Security Act 2004 (Cth) s
92.
[74] Aviation Transport
Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 91(1).
[75] Aviation Transport
Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 91(1)(a) and (b).
[76] Aviation Transport
Security Act 2004 (Cth) s
92(2).
[77] Aviation
Transport Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 96.
[78] Aviation Transport
Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 97.
[79] There is surprisingly
little judicial clarification of what ‘necessary and reasonable’
means in this context. Unlike
cases where legislation makes it clear that what
counts is the subjective perceptions of the person required to act in a manner
which
is ‘necessary and reasonable’, eg R v Clotheir [2002]
SASC 9, it would seem that in the present circumstances it is a matter of fact
for the arbiter of factual questions to decide according
to objective rather
than subjective standards, though the matter is as yet undecided.
[80] Under s 3UA of the
Crimes Act 1914 (Cth), a ‘police officer’ means: (a) a
member of the Australian Federal Police (within the meaning of the Australian
Federal Police Act 1979); or (b) a special member (within the meaning of
that Act); or (c) a member, however described, of a police force of a State or
Territory.
[81] Even apart from statutory
powers and duties imposed on police officers, there can be no comparison between
the level of training,
discipline, psychological evaluation of permanent Federal
and State police officers, and that of security guards and airport screening
officers.
[82] Aviation
Transport Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 95(1).
[83] There is little in the
legislation to require it, other than the legislative context, but it may be
arguable that a court should
impose the requirements that the decision to make
the request be one that would be made by a properly or fully trained screening
officer, as the legislation requires training and competence. It might also be
argued that as a form of administrative decision,
principles of natural justice
should apply, so that the decision must not be biased and made not with an
improper purpose or illegally;
and made only with reference to relevant
considerations and after giving the person concerned a chance to be
heard.
[84] Aviation
Transport Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 95(4).
[85] Aviation Transport
Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 95(2).
[86] Aviation Transport
Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 95(3).
[87] There is no further
elaboration as to what may constitute ‘reasonable excuse’.
[88] If clothing has been removed
without the passenger’s consent, could it be said that there is tacit
authorisation from the legislation
when there is ‘reasonable
excuse’. Could it even be said that it is a necessary implication of the
reading together of
s 95(2) and (3) that there is an implicit authority of an
enforced removal of the clothing requested when there is ‘reasonable
excuse’?
[89] Aviation Transport
Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 95(4).
[90] Aviation Transport
Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 95(5)(d).
[91] Aviation Transport
Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 95(a)–(c).
[92] Aviation Transport
Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 95A.
[93] By the Aviation
Transport Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 9, a ‘frisk search’ has the
same meaning as in the Crimes Act 1914 (Cth), where s 3C defines it as
‘(a) a search of a person conducted by quickly running the hands over the
person’s outer garments; and
(b) an examination of anything worn or
carried by the person that is conveniently and voluntarily removed by a
person.’ Also,
a ‘frisk search’ is defined in the Criminal
Code 1995 (Cth) s 101.1(1) in the same
manner.
[94] Aviation
Transport Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 95(B)(1).
[95] Hand held metal detectors
must only be operated in accordance with written notice or special directions
given by the Secretary under
the Aviation Transport Security Act 2004
(Cth) s 44(3) or s 67 respectively.
[96] This is authorised under
the Aviation Transport Security Act 2004 (Cth) ss 95A and
95B.
[97] Aviation Transport
Security Amendment (Additional Screening Measures) Act 2007 (Cth) s
5.
[98] Aviation Transport
Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 95C(1), (2).
[99] Aviation Transport
Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 95B(5).
[100] Aviation Transport
Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 95B(4) and s 95C(4). The wording of these
provisions seems to be inordinately long-winded and repetitive and arguably does
not sufficiently emphasise
procedures to be followed or elucidate principles or
guidelines upon which screening officers are to make decisions as to when
clothing
removal and frisking should be requested.
[101] See Taikato v
Regina [1996] HCA 28; (1996) 186 CLR 454, 464 followed in The Council of the New South
Wales Bar Association v Davison [2006] NSWSC 699; Prothonotary of the
Supreme Court of New South Wales v McCaffery [2004] NSWCA 470. See Weeks
v Nominal Defendant [2005] QCA 118; and Callanan v B [2004] QCA 478; [2005] 1 Qd R
348. But see also Nicholls v The Queen [2005] HCA 1 where the High Court
refused the admission of evidence of admissions which had not been videotaped on
the grounds of ‘reasonable
excuse’ where the legislation gave three
sets of circumstances that amounted to ‘reasonable
excuse’.
[102]
Aviation Transport Security Act 2004 (Cth) s 3(1)-(2).
[103] See also the Acts
Interpretation Act 1901 (Cth) s 15AA and eg Newcastle City Council v GIO
Limited [1997] HCA
53.
[104] Aside from general
principles relating to optical surveillance devices in the Aviation Transport
Security Act 2004 (Cth) ss 74J and 74K.
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