Laghairt
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The "They must like me thread" started by Solar17 got me thinking about a few things (before it was hijacked and went off the rails that is).
In that thread, pythoninfinite (Jamie) said that in WA wildlife officers can enter your house without a warrant. This is a disgraceful breach of keeper's privacy.
I have an good knowledge of Cth Privacy Act and there is no way these kind of powers would be granted to any Cth agency unless there were extremely good reasons (e.g. national security). I think the ATO is the only other agency that has these powers but they are rarely used from what I understand.
I also note that unlike NSW, WA doesn't have it's own legislation governing privacy which means they are constrained by the same Cth legislation as the rest of Australia.
Western Australian Consolidated Acts beginning with P ...
Can someone from WA point me to the relevant Act that grants wildlife officers these powers? I would like to read it for myself as I find it to be very strange that government officials responsible for reptile licensing would require these powers.
For a comparison, in NSW the only officials I am aware of who have the power to enter premises without a warrant are Corrective Services Officers charged with monitoring convicted criminals who are on parole or officers responsible for monitoring registered sex offenders. (There are probably more I'm not aware of but they are very limited).
Do WA reptile keepers deserve to be in the same category? Even convicted drug dealers etc (who aren't on parole) seem to have more rights to privacy than reptile keepers in WA.
Can anyone from WA give examples of how often they are inspected etc? I suspect that if this was ever legally tested, the WA wildlife officers would be stripped of their powers in an instant.
R
In that thread, pythoninfinite (Jamie) said that in WA wildlife officers can enter your house without a warrant. This is a disgraceful breach of keeper's privacy.
I have an good knowledge of Cth Privacy Act and there is no way these kind of powers would be granted to any Cth agency unless there were extremely good reasons (e.g. national security). I think the ATO is the only other agency that has these powers but they are rarely used from what I understand.
I also note that unlike NSW, WA doesn't have it's own legislation governing privacy which means they are constrained by the same Cth legislation as the rest of Australia.
Western Australian Consolidated Acts beginning with P ...
Can someone from WA point me to the relevant Act that grants wildlife officers these powers? I would like to read it for myself as I find it to be very strange that government officials responsible for reptile licensing would require these powers.
For a comparison, in NSW the only officials I am aware of who have the power to enter premises without a warrant are Corrective Services Officers charged with monitoring convicted criminals who are on parole or officers responsible for monitoring registered sex offenders. (There are probably more I'm not aware of but they are very limited).
Do WA reptile keepers deserve to be in the same category? Even convicted drug dealers etc (who aren't on parole) seem to have more rights to privacy than reptile keepers in WA.
Can anyone from WA give examples of how often they are inspected etc? I suspect that if this was ever legally tested, the WA wildlife officers would be stripped of their powers in an instant.
R
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