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The Right to Silence

The Right to Silence

Advice on legislation or legal policy issues contained in this paper is provided for use in parliamentary debate and for related parliamentary purposes. This paper is not professional legal opinion.
Briefing Paper No. 11/1997 by Gareth Griffith
This paper presents an overview of the debate concerning the right to silence, taking as its focus the right to pre-trial silence in the face of police questioning. Its main findings are as follows:
    • on 28 May 1997 the NSW Police Commissioner, Mr Peter Ryan, is reported to have set out a blueprint for major change in NSW's justice system', which included examination of the right of silence for the accused (page 5);
    • on 25 June 1997 the Attorney General said that he had decided to refer the wider issue of disclosure' of a defence relied on by the accused to the NSWLRC under the general heading of a review of the right to silence (page 5);
    • no major empirical studies of the right to silence have been undertaken in Australia (page 6);
    • the right to silence operates in at least two distinct contexts, that is, at the police station and in the courtroom. Thus, there is silence before trial in the face of police questioning, as well as silence at trial under which an accused person cannot be compelled to plead or to give evidence (page 9);
    • the right to pre-trial silence involves a primary right, which states that there is no legal obligation on citizens to talk to the police, as well as an incidental or secondary right, prohibiting the drawing of any adverse inference at trial from the exercise of silence. In this secondary sense the right extends to the situation where the accused had silence remained silent before the trial and later raised a defence for the first time at the trial (the ambush defence) (page 10);
    • in the leading High Court case of Petty (1991) 173 CLR 95 the above right, both in its primary and secondary forms, was said to be a fundamental rule of the common law' (page 10);
    • section 89 of the NSW Evidence Act 1995 substantially reflects the common law position. The section refers to the silence of a person (who becomes a defendant in criminal proceedings) in response to official questioning' (page 11);
    • in England and Wales the right to silence (both pre-trial and at trial) has been curtailed under the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 (pages 22); crucial to the debate in England and Wales was the perception in some quarters of the changing balance between police powers and the rights of suspects as this operates under the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984. The Act incorporates a right to free legal advice (page 20); a new caution has been introduced in England and Wales which reflects the position that adverse inferences may now be drawn from silence (page 23);
    • the key substantive issues in the debate include whether: pre-trial silence is an indication of guilt?; would altering the pre-trial right to silence place innocent suspects at greater risk of wrongful conviction?; and, conversely, would altering the right lead to the proper conviction of more guilty offenders? (page 26);
    • empirical research on the right to silence is characterised by certain definitional and methodological problems (page 17 and page 28); as a result studies from England have produced widely varying estimates of the use by suspects of the right to pre-trial silence, ranging in one estimate from between 5% and 23 % and in another from 6% to 22% (page 29); several studies have suggested that there is an association between receipt of legal advice and the exercise of the right to silence (page 32); one study at least has suggested that professional criminals use the right to silence more than other suspects (page 33); however, there does not appear to be any conclusive evidence suggesting that those exercising their right to pre-trial silence gain a clear advantage in terms of the outcome of their case (page 34); Leng's study of the use of ambush defences found that the concerns in this regard are largely unfounded (page 35);
    • arguments in favour of retaining the right to pre-trial silence can be categorised under the headings of symbolic retentionism' and instrumental retentionism'. A key argument of the latter is that the case for reform is not supported by empirical evidence (pages 35-39); arguments in favour of curtailing the right can be categorised under the headings of utilitarian abolitionism' and exchange abolitionism'. The former maintains that the right is used by professional criminals to avoid justice; whereas the latter focuses on exchanging the right to silence, which it sees as a largely illusory right, for real protections and safeguards for suspects (pages 39-43);and
    • except in relation to alibis, at present in NSW there are no statutory requirements of advance notification of defences (page 43).