Regulation of Investigatory Powers (Jersey) Law 2005

 

L.17/2005

Regulation of Investigatory Powers (Jersey) Law 2005

Arrangement

Article

INTRODUCTORY   521

1             Interpretation. 521

2             Meaning and location of “interception” etc. 525

3             Meaning of “traffic data”, etc. 526

CHAPTER 1  527

INTERCEPTION   527

4             Interpretation of Chapter 1. 527

5             Unlawful interception. 527

6             Civil action in respect of interception. 528

7             Lawful authority for interception. 528

8             Lawful interception without an interception warrant 529

9             Powers to provide for lawful interception. 530

10           Power to issue interception warrant 531

11           Application for and issue of interception warrant 532

12           Contents of warrants. 532

13           Duration, cancellation and renewal of warrants. 533

14           Modification of warrants and certificates. 534

15           Implementation of warrants. 534

16           Maintenance of interception capability. 536

17           Technical Advisory Board. 537

18           Grants for interception costs. 538

19           General safeguards for intercepted material 538

20           Extra safeguards for warrant with Article 12(4) certificate. 540

21           Exclusion of matters from legal proceedings. 541

22           Exceptions to Article 21. 542

23           Offence for unauthorized disclosures. 544

CHAPTER 2  546

ACQUISITION AND DISCLOSURE OF COMMUNICATIONS DATA   546

24           Interpretation of Chapter 2. 546

25           Lawful acquisition and disclosure of communications data. 546

26           Authorizations and notices to obtain and disclose communications data. 547

27           Form and duration of authorizations and notices. 548

28           Arrangements for payments. 549

29           Persons designated to give authorizations and notices under this Chapter 550

SURVEILLANCE AND COVERT HUMAN INTELLIGENCE SOURCES  551

30           Interpretation of Part 3. 551

31           Meaning of “surveillance”. 551

32           Meaning of “directed surveillance”, “intrusive surveillance” and “covert human intelligence source”  552

33           Lawful surveillance etc. 554

34           Authorization of directed surveillance. 555

35           Authorization of covert human intelligence sources. 555

36           Designated persons and public authorities for Articles 34 and 35. 557

37           Authorization of intrusive surveillance. 558

38           Rules for grant of authorizations. 559

39           Notification of authorizations for intrusive surveillance. 559

40           General rules for grant, renewal and duration of authorizations. 559

41           Cancellation of authorizations. 560

42           Power to extend or modify authorization provisions. 561

SCRUTINY ETC. OF INVESTIGATORY POWERS  561

43           Investigatory Powers Commissioner 561

44           Co-operation with and reports by the Commissioner 562

45           Assistant Investigatory Powers Commissioners. 564

46           Investigatory Powers Tribunal 564

47           Orders allocating proceedings to the Tribunal 566

48           Exercise of the Tribunal's jurisdiction. 567

49           Tribunal procedure. 568

50           Tribunal rules. 570

51           Codes of practice. 572

52           Effect of codes of practice. 573

SUPPLEMENTAL  573

53           Powers of delegation. 573

54           Expenditure. 574

55           Power to prescribe by Order 574

56           Offences by body corporate, etc. 574

57           General saving for lawful conduct 574

58           Amendments, repeals, savings and transitional arrangements. 575

59           Citation and commencement 576

RElevant Public Authorities and Designated persons: communications data   577

Public Authorities and designated persons: surveillance  578

Part 1  578

Public Authorities and Designated Persons: directed surveillance and covert human intelligence sources  578

Part 2  579

Public Authorities and Designated Persons: directed surveillance only   579

THE TRIBUNAL  580

1             Membership of tribunal 580

2             Salaries and expenses. 580

3             Officers. 580

AMENDMENTS  581

1             Official Secrets (Jersey) Law 1952 amended. 581

2             Post Office (Jersey) Law 1969 amended. 581

3             Telecommunications (Jersey) Law 2002 amended. 581

4             Terrorism (Jersey) Law 2002 amended. 582

5             Police Procedures and Criminal Evidence (Jersey) Law 2003 amended. 582

6             Postal Services (Jersey) Law 2004. 583

 


Regulation of Investigatory Powers (Jersey) Law 2005

A LAW to regulate the interception of communications and the use of surveillance; and for connected purposes.

Adopted by the States                                                15th March 2005

Sanctioned by Order of Her Majesty in Council            7th June 2005

Registered by the Royal Court                                        8th July 2005

THE STATES, subject to the sanction of Her Most Excellent Majesty in Council, have adopted the following Law –

PART 1

INTRODUCTORY

1        Interpretation

(1)     In this Law, unless the context otherwise requires –

1949 Act” means the Wireless Telegraphy Act 1949 of the United Kingdom as extended to Jersey by the Wireless Telegraphy (Channel Islands) Order 1952;[1]

1994 Act” means the Intelligence Services Act 1994 as extended to Jersey by the Intelligence Services Act 1994 (Channel Islands) Order 1994;[2]

Agent of the Impôts” means the person appointed as such under Article 4 of the Customs and Excise (Jersey) Law 1999[3] and includes any Deputy Agent of the Impôts so appointed;

apparatus” includes any equipment, machinery or device and any wire or cable;

“Assistant Commissioner” means an Assistant Investigatory Powers Commissioner appointed under Article 45(1);

Chief Immigration Officer” means the most senior immigration officer;

Chief Officer” means the Chief Officer of the Force appointed under Article 9 of the Police Force (Jersey) Law 1974[4] and includes the Deputy Chief Officer so appointed;

civil proceedings” means any proceedings in or before any court or tribunal that are not criminal proceedings;

Commissioner” means the Investigatory Powers Commissioner appointed under Article 43(1);

Committee” means the Home Affairs Committee;

communication” includes –

(a)     (except in the definition of “postal service”) anything transmitted by means of a postal service;

(b)     anything comprising speech, music, sounds, visual images or data of any description; and

(c)     signals serving either for the impartation of anything between persons, between a person and a thing or between things or for the actuation or control of any apparatus;

crime” means conduct which constitutes one or more criminal offences or is, or corresponds to, any conduct which, if it all took place in Jersey, would constitute one or more criminal offences;

Customs and Excise” means the Agent of the Impôts and officers of the Impôts;

document” includes a map, plan, design, drawing, picture or other image;

enactment” means any enactment, whenever passed;

Force” means the States of Jersey Police Force;

“GCHQ” means the Government Communications Headquarters continued under section 3 of the 1994 Act;

Immigration and Nationality Department” means the immigration officers;

immigration officer” means an officer appointed under paragraph 1(1) of Part 1 of Schedule 2 to the Immigration Act 1971 as extended to Jersey by the Immigration (Jersey) Order 1993;[5]

interception” and cognate expressions shall be construed (so far as it is applicable) in accordance with Article 2;

interception warrant” means a warrant under Article 10;

“intelligence services” means –

(a)     the Secret Intelligence Service;

(b)     GCHQ;

(c)     the Security Service;

legal proceedings” means civil or criminal proceedings in or before any court or tribunal;

modification” includes alterations, additions and omissions, and cognate expressions shall be construed accordingly;

officer of the Impôts” shall be construed in accordance with Article 4 of the Customs and Excise (Jersey) Law 1999;[6]

person” includes any organization and any association or combination of persons;

postal item” means any letter, postcard or other such thing in writing as may be used by the sender for imparting information to the recipient, or any packet or parcel;

postal service” means any service which –

(a)     consists in the following, or in any one or more of them, namely, the collection, sorting, conveyance, distribution and delivery (whether in Jersey or elsewhere) of postal items; and

(b)     is offered or provided as a service the main purpose of which, or one of the main purposes of which, is to make available, or to facilitate, a means of transmission from place to place of postal items containing communications;

prescribed” means prescribed by Order of the Committee;

private telecommunication system” means any telecommunication system which, without itself being a public telecommunication system, is a system in relation to which the following conditions are satisfied –

(a)     it is attached, directly or indirectly and whether or not for the purposes of the communication in question, to a public telecommunication system; and

(b)     there is apparatus comprised in the system which is both located in Jersey and used (with or without other apparatus) for making the attachment to the public telecommunication system;

Proscribed Organizations Appeal Commission” has the same meaning as in the Terrorism (Jersey) Law 2002;[7]

public authority” means any public authority within the meaning of Article 7 of the Human Rights (Jersey) Law 2000,[8] other than a court or tribunal and includes –

(a)     any of the intelligence services;

(b)     the Ministry of Defence of the Government of the United Kingdom;

(c)     Her Majesty’s Forces,

and further includes, in Chapter 2 of Part 2 and in Part 4, to the extent that Part 4 applies to acts regulated, powers conferred and duties imposed by Chapter 2 of Part 2, any other public authority outside Jersey specified pursuant to Article 29;

public postal service” means any postal service which is offered or provided to, or to a substantial section of, the public in any one or more parts of Jersey;

public telecommunications service” means any telecommunications service which is offered or provided to, or to a substantial section of, the public in Jersey;

public telecommunication system” means any such parts of a telecommunication system by means of which any public telecommunications service is provided as are located in Jersey;

Secret Intelligence Service” means the service continued under section 1 of the 1994 Act;

Security Service” means the service continued by section 1 of the Security Service Act 1989 of the United Kingdom Parliament;

serious crime” means conduct which constitutes one or more offences –

(a)     which involve the use of violence, results in substantial financial gain or is conducted by a large number of persons in pursuit of a common purpose; and

(b)     for which a person who has attained the age of 21 and has no previous convictions could reasonably be expected to be sentenced to imprisonment for 3 years or more;

statutory”, in relation to any power or duty, means conferred or imposed by or under any enactment;

Technical Advisory Board” shall be construed in accordance with Article 17;

telecommunications service” means any service that consists in the provision of access to, and of facilities for making use of, any telecommunication system (whether or not one provided by the person providing the service);

telecommunication system” means any system (including the apparatus comprised in it) which exists (whether wholly or partly in Jersey or elsewhere) for the purpose of facilitating the transmission of communications by any means involving the use of electrical or electro-magnetic energy;

traffic data” has the meaning given in Article 3;

Tribunal” means the Investigatory Powers Tribunal established under Article 46(1);

wireless telegraphy” has the same meaning as in the 1949 Act and, in relation to wireless telegraphy, “interfere” has the same meaning as in that Act;

working day” means any day other than a Saturday, a Sunday, Christmas Day, Good Friday or a day which is observed as a bank holiday pursuant to the Public Holidays and Bank Holidays (Jersey) Law 1951.[9]

(2)     For the purposes of this Law detecting crime shall be taken to include –

(a)     establishing by whom, for what purpose, by what means and generally in what circumstances any crime was committed; and

(b)     the apprehension of the person by whom any crime was committed,

and any reference in this Law to preventing or detecting serious crime shall be construed accordingly, except that, in Chapter 1 of Part 2, it shall not include a reference to gathering evidence for use in any legal proceedings.

2        Meaning and location of “interception” etc.

(1)     For the purposes of this Law, but subject to the following provisions of this Article, a person intercepts a communication in the course of its transmission by means of a telecommunication system if, and only if, that person –

(a)     so modifies or interferes with the system, or its operation;

(b)     so monitors transmissions made by means of the system; or

(c)     so monitors transmissions made by wireless telegraphy to or from apparatus comprised in the system,

as to make some or all of the contents of the communication available, while being transmitted, to a person other than the sender or intended recipient of the communication.

(2)     References in this Law to the interception of a communication do not include references to the interception of any communication broadcast for general reception.

(3)     For the purposes of this Law the interception of a communication takes place in Jersey if, and only if, the modification, interference or monitoring or, in the case of a postal item, the interception is effected by conduct within Jersey and the communication is either –

(a)     intercepted in the course of its transmission by means of a public postal service or public telecommunication system; or

(b)     intercepted in the course of its transmission by means of a private telecommunication system in a case in which the sender or intended recipient of the communication is in Jersey.

(4)     References in this Law to the interception of a communication in the course of its transmission by means of a postal service or telecommunication system do not include references to –

(a)     any conduct that takes place in relation only to so much of the communication as consists in any traffic data comprised in or attached to a communication (whether by the sender or otherwise) for the purposes of any postal service or telecommunication system by means of which it is being or may be transmitted; or

(b)     any such conduct, in connection with conduct falling within sub-paragraph (a), as gives a person who is neither the sender nor the intended recipient only so much access to a communication as is necessary for the purpose of identifying traffic data so comprised or attached.

(5)     For the purposes of this Article references to the modification of a telecommunication system include references to the attachment of any apparatus to, or other modification of or interference with –

(a)     any part of the system; or

(b)     any wireless telegraphy apparatus used for making transmissions to or from apparatus comprised in the system.

(6)     For the purposes of this Article the times while a communication is being transmitted by means of a telecommunication system shall be taken to include any time when the system by means of which the communication is being, or has been, transmitted is used for storing it in a manner that enables the intended recipient to collect it or otherwise to have access to it.

(7)     For the purposes of this Article the cases in which any contents of a communication are to be taken to be made available to a person while being transmitted shall include any case in which any of the contents of the communication, while being transmitted, are diverted or recorded so as to be available to a person subsequently.

3        Meaning of “traffic data”, etc.

(1)     In this Law “traffic data”, in relation to any communication, means –

(a)     any data identifying, or purporting to identify, any person, apparatus or location to or from which the communication is or may be transmitted;

(b)     any data identifying or selecting, or purporting to identify or select, apparatus through which, or by means of which, the communication is or may be transmitted;

(c)     any data comprising signals for the actuation of apparatus used for the purposes of a telecommunication system for effecting (in whole or in part) the transmission of any communication; and

(d)     any data identifying the data or other data as data comprised in or attached to a particular communication,

but that expression includes data identifying a computer file or computer program access to which is obtained, or which is run, by means of the communication to the extent only that the file or program is identified by reference to the apparatus in which it is stored.

(2)     In this Law –

(a)     references, in relation to traffic data comprising signals for the actuation of apparatus, to a telecommunication system by means of which a communication is being or may be transmitted include references to any telecommunication system in which that apparatus is comprised; and

(b)     references to traffic data being attached to a communication include references to the data and the communication being logically associated with each other.

(3)     In this Article, “data”, in relation to a postal item, means anything written on the outside of the item.

PART 2

COMMUNICATIONS

CHAPTER 1

INTERCEPTION

4        Interpretation of Chapter 1

In this Chapter –

“certified”, in relation to an Article 12(4) certificate, means of a description certified by the certificate as a description of material the examination of which the Attorney General considers necessary;

“intercepted material”, in relation to an interception warrant, means the contents of any communications intercepted by an interception to which the warrant relates;

“interception subject”, in relation to an interception warrant, means the person about whose communications information is sought by the interception to which the warrant relates;

“international mutual assistance agreement” means an international agreement designated for the purposes of Article 5(4);

“related communications data”, in relation to a communication intercepted in the course of its transmission by means of a postal service or telecommunication system, means so much of any communications data (within the meaning of Chapter 2 of this Part) as –

(a)     is obtained by, or in connection with, the interception; and

(b)     relates to the communication or to the sender or recipient, or intended recipient, of the communication;

“Article 12(4) certificate” means any certificate issued for the purposes of Article 12(4).

5        Unlawful interception

(1)     It shall be an offence for a person intentionally and without lawful authority to intercept, at any place in Jersey, any communication in the course of its transmission by means of –

(a)     a public postal service; or

(b)     a public telecommunication system.

(2)     It shall be an offence for a person –

(a)     intentionally and without lawful authority; and

(b)     otherwise than in circumstances in which the person’s conduct is excluded by paragraph (3) from criminal liability under this paragraph,

to intercept, at any place in Jersey, any communication in the course of its transmission by means of a private telecommunication system.

(3)     The circumstances in which a person makes an interception of a communication in the course of its transmission by means of a private telecommunication system are such that the person’s conduct is excluded from criminal liability under paragraph (2) if the person has –

(a)     a right to control the operation or the use of the system; or

(b)     the express or implied consent to make the interception of another person having a right to control the operation or the use of the system.

(4)     Where Jersey is a party to an international agreement which –

(a)     relates to the provision of mutual assistance in connection with, or in the form of, the interception of communications;

(b)     requires the issue of a warrant, order or equivalent instrument in cases in which assistance is given; and

(c)     is designated for the purposes of this paragraph by an Order made by the Committee,

the Attorney General shall secure that no request for assistance in accordance with the agreement is made on behalf of a person in Jersey to the competent authorities of a country or territory outside Jersey except with lawful authority.

(5)     A person who is guilty of an offence under paragraph (1) or (2) shall be liable to imprisonment for a term of 2 years and to a fine.

(6)     No proceedings for any offence which is an offence by virtue of this Article shall be instituted except by or with the consent of the Attorney General.

6        Civil action in respect of interception

Any interception of a communication which is carried out at any place in Jersey by, or with the express or implied consent of, a person having the right to control the operation or the use of a private telecommunication system shall be actionable at the suit or instance of the sender or recipient, or intended recipient, of the communication if it is without lawful authority and is either –

(a)     an interception of that communication in the course of its transmission by means of that private system; or

(b)     an interception of that communication in the course of its transmission, by means of a public telecommunication system, to or from apparatus comprised in that private telecommunication system.

7        Lawful authority for interception

Conduct has lawful authority for the purposes of Articles 5 and 6 if, and only if –

(a)     it is authorized by or under Article 8 or 9;

(b)     it takes place in accordance with an interception warrant; or

(c)     it is in exercise, in relation to any stored communication, of any statutory power that is exercised (apart from this Article) for the purpose of obtaining information or of taking possession of any document or other property,

and conduct (whether or not prohibited by Article 5) which has lawful authority for the purposes of Articles 5 and 6 by virtue of paragraph (a) or (b) shall also be taken to be lawful for all other purposes.

8        Lawful interception without an interception warrant

(1)     Conduct by any person consisting in the interception of a communication is authorized by this Article if the communication is one which, or which that person has reasonable grounds for believing, is both –

(a)     a communication sent by a person who has consented to the interception; and

(b)     a communication the intended recipient of which has so consented.

(2)     Conduct by any person consisting in the interception of a communication is authorized by this Article if –

(a)     the communication is one sent by, or intended for, a person who has consented to the interception; and

(b)     surveillance by means of that interception has been authorized under Part 3.

(3)     Conduct consisting in the interception of a communication is authorized by this Article if –

(a)     it is conduct by or on behalf of a person who provides a postal service or a telecommunications service; and

(b)     it takes place for purposes connected with the provision or operation of that service or with the enforcement, in relation to that service, of any enactment relating to the use of postal services or telecommunications services.

(4)     Conduct by any person consisting in the interception of a communication in the course of its transmission by means of wireless telegraphy is authorized by this Article if it takes place –

(a)     with the authority of a designated person under section 5 of the 1949 Act; and

(b)     for purposes connected with –

(i)      the issue of licences under the 1949 Act,

(ii)      the prevention or detection of anything which constitutes interference with wireless telegraphy, or

(iii)     the enforcement of any enactment contained in that Act or of any enactment not so contained that relates to such interference.

9        Powers to provide for lawful interception

(1)     Conduct by any person (the “interceptor”) consisting in the interception of a communication in the course of its transmission by means of a telecommunication system is authorized by this Article if –

(a)     the interception is carried out for the purpose of obtaining information about the communications of a person who, or who the interceptor has reasonable grounds for believing, is in a country or territory outside Jersey;

(b)     the interception relates to the use of a telecommunications service provided to persons in that country or territory which is either –

(i)      a public telecommunications service, or

(ii)      a telecommunications service that would be a public telecommunications service if the persons to whom it is offered or provided were members of the public in a part of Jersey;

(c)     the person who provides that service (whether the interceptor or another person) is required by the law of that country or territory to carry out, secure or facilitate the interception in question;

(d)     the situation is one in relation to which such further conditions as may be prescribed are required to be satisfied before conduct may be treated as authorized by virtue of this paragraph; and

(e)     the conditions so prescribed are satisfied in relation to that situation.

(2)     Subject to paragraph (3), the Committee may by Order authorize any such conduct described in the Order as appears to it to constitute a legitimate practice reasonably required for the purpose, in connection with the carrying on of any business, of monitoring or keeping a record of –

(a)     communications by means of which transactions are entered into in the course of that business; or

(b)     other communications relating to that business or taking place in the course of its being carried on.

(3)     Nothing in any Order under paragraph (2) shall authorize the interception of any communication except in the course of its transmission using apparatus or services provided by or to the person carrying on the business for use wholly or partly in connection with that business.

(4)     Conduct taking place in a prison is authorized by this Article if it is conduct in exercise of any power conferred by or under any rules made under Article 26 of the Prison (Jersey) Law 1957.[10]

(5)     In this Article –

(a)     references to a business include references to any activities of any administration of the States or of a Committee of the States, of any public authority or of any person or office holder on whom functions are conferred by or under any enactment;

(b)     “prison” has the same meaning as in the Prison (Jersey) Law 1957.

10      Power to issue interception warrant

(1)     Subject to the following provisions of this Chapter, the Attorney General may issue a warrant authorizing or requiring the person to whom it is addressed, by any such conduct as may be described in the warrant, to secure any one or more of the following –

(a)     the interception in the course of their transmission by means of a postal service or telecommunication system of the communications described in the warrant;

(b)     the making, in accordance with an international mutual assistance agreement, of a request for the provision of such assistance in connection with, or in the form of, an interception of communications as may be so described;

(c)     the provision, in accordance with an international mutual assistance agreement, to the competent authorities of a country or territory outside Jersey of any such assistance in connection with, or in the form of, an interception of communications as may be so described;

(d)     the disclosure, in such manner as may be so described, of intercepted material obtained by any interception authorized or required by the warrant, and of related communications data.

(2)     The Attorney General shall not issue an interception warrant unless the Attorney General believes –

(a)     that the warrant is necessary on grounds falling within paragraph (3); and

(b)     that the conduct authorized by the warrant is proportionate to what is sought to be achieved by that conduct.

(3)     Subject to the following provisions of this Article, a warrant is necessary on grounds falling within this paragraph if it is necessary –

(a)     in the interests of national security;

(b)     for the purpose of preventing or detecting serious crime;

(c)     for the purpose of safeguarding the economic well-being of Jersey; or

(d)     for the purpose, in circumstances appearing to the Attorney General to be equivalent to those in which the Attorney General would issue a warrant by virtue of sub-paragraph (b), of giving effect to the provisions of any international mutual assistance agreement.

(4)     The matters to be taken into account in considering whether the requirements of paragraph (2) are satisfied in the case of any warrant shall include whether the information which it is thought necessary to obtain under the warrant could reasonably be obtained by other means.

(5)     A warrant shall not be considered necessary on the ground falling within paragraph (3)(c) unless the information which it is thought necessary to obtain is information relating to the acts or intentions of persons outside Jersey.

(6)     The conduct authorized by an interception warrant shall be taken to include –

(a)     all such conduct (including the interception of communications not identified by the warrant) as it is necessary to undertake in order to do what is expressly authorized or required by the warrant;

(b)     conduct for obtaining related communications data; and

(c)     conduct by any person which is conduct in pursuance of a requirement imposed by or on behalf of the person to whom the warrant is addressed to be provided with assistance with giving effect to the warrant.

11      Application for and issue of interception warrant

(1)     An interception warrant may be issued only on an application by or on behalf of –

(a)     the Chief Officer;

(b)     the Agent of the Impôts;

(c)     the Chief Immigration Officer;

(d)     the Director General of the Security Service;

(e)     the Chief of the Secret Intelligence Service;

(f)      the Director of GCHQ;

(g)     the Chief of Defence Intelligence of the Ministry of Defence of the Government of the United Kingdom;

(h)     a person who, for the purposes of any international mutual assistance agreement, is the competent authority of a country or territory outside Jersey.

(2)     An interception warrant shall not be issued except under the hand of the Attorney General.

(3)     An interception warrant must be addressed to the person falling within paragraph (1) by whom, or on whose behalf, the application for the warrant was made.

12      Contents of warrants

(1)     An interception warrant must name or describe either –

(a)     one person as the interception subject; or

(b)     a single set of premises as the premises in relation to which the interception to which the warrant relates is to take place.

(2)     The provisions of an interception warrant describing communications the interception of which is authorized or required by the warrant must comprise one or more schedules setting out the addresses, numbers, apparatus or other factors, or combination of factors, that are to be used for identifying the communications that may be or are to be intercepted.

(3)     Any factor or combination of factors set out in accordance with paragraph (2) must be one that identifies communications which are likely to be or to include –

(a)     communications from, or intended for, the person named or described in the warrant in accordance with paragraph (1); or

(b)     communications originating on, or intended for transmission to, the premises so named or described.

(4)     Paragraphs (1) and (2) shall not apply to an interception warrant if –

(a)     the description of communications to which the warrant relates confines the conduct authorized or required by the warrant to –

(i)      the interception of communications sent or received outside Jersey in the course of their transmission by means of a telecommunication system, and

(ii)      any conduct authorized in relation to any such interception by Article 10(6);

and

(b)     at the time of the issue of the warrant, a certificate applicable to the warrant has been issued by and under the hand of the Attorney General certifying –

(i)      the descriptions of intercepted material the examination of which the Attorney General considers necessary, and

(ii)      that the Attorney General considers the examination of material of those descriptions necessary as mentioned in Article 10(3)(a), (b) or (c).

13      Duration, cancellation and renewal of warrants

(1)     An interception warrant –

(a)     shall cease to have effect at the end of the relevant period; but

(b)     may be renewed, at any time before the end of that period, by an instrument under the hand of the Attorney General.

(2)     The Attorney General –

(a)     shall not renew an interception warrant under paragraph (1) unless he or she believes that the warrant continues to be necessary on grounds falling within Article 10(3); and

(b)     shall cancel an interception warrant if satisfied that the warrant is no longer necessary on grounds falling within Article 10(3).

(3)     In this Article “the relevant period” –

(a)     in relation to a renewed warrant the latest renewal of which was by an instrument endorsed under the hand of the Attorney General with a statement that the renewal is believed to be necessary on grounds falling within Article 10(3)(a) or (c), means the period of 6 months beginning with the day of the warrant's renewal; and

(b)     in any other case, means the period of 3 months beginning with the day of the warrant's issue or, in the case of a warrant that has been renewed, of its latest renewal.

14      Modification of warrants and certificates

(1)     The Attorney General may at any time –

(a)     modify the provisions of an interception warrant; or

(b)     modify an Article 12(4) certificate so as to include in the certified material any material the examination of which the Attorney General considers to be necessary as mentioned in Article 10(3)(a), (b) or (c).

(2)     If at any time the Attorney General considers that any factor set out in a schedule to an interception warrant is no longer relevant for identifying communications which, in the case of that warrant, are likely to be or to include communications falling within Article 12(3)(a) or (b), the Attorney General shall modify the warrant by the deletion of that factor.

(3)     If at any time the Attorney General considers that the material certified by an Article 12(4) certificate includes any material the examination of which is no longer necessary as mentioned in any of paragraphs (a) to (c) of Article 10(3), the Attorney General shall modify the certificate so as to exclude that material from the certified material.

(4)     Subject to paragraph (5), a warrant or certificate shall not be modified under this Article except by an instrument under the hand of the Attorney General.

(5)     Where modifications in accordance with this paragraph are expressly authorized by provision contained in the warrant, the scheduled parts of an interception warrant may, in an urgent case, be modified by an instrument under the hand of –

(a)     the person to whom the warrant is addressed; or

(b)     a person holding any such position subordinate to that person as may be identified in the provisions of the warrant.

(6)     For the purposes of this Article –

(a)     the scheduled parts of an interception warrant are any provisions of the warrant that are contained in a schedule of identifying factors comprised in the warrant for the purposes of Article 12(2); and

(b)     the modifications that are modifications of the scheduled parts of an interception warrant include the insertion of an additional such schedule in the warrant,

and references in this Article to unscheduled parts of an interception warrant, and to their modification, shall be construed accordingly.

15      Implementation of warrants

(1)     Effect may be given to an interception warrant either –

(a)     by the person to whom it is addressed; or

(b)     by that person acting through, or together with, such other persons as he or she may require (whether under paragraph (2) or otherwise) to provide assistance with giving effect to the warrant.

(2)     The person to whom an interception warrant is addressed may, for the purpose of requiring any person to provide assistance in relation to the warrant –

(a)     serve a copy of the warrant on such persons as he or she considers may be able to provide such assistance; or

(b)     make arrangements under which a copy of it is to be or may be so served.

(3)     The copy of an interception warrant that is served on any person under paragraph (2) may, to the extent authorized –

(a)     by the person to whom the warrant is addressed; or

(b)     by the arrangements made by the person to whom the warrant is addressed for the purposes of that paragraph,

omit any one or more of the schedules to the warrant.

(4)     Where a copy of an interception warrant has been served by or on behalf of the person to whom it is addressed on –

(a)     a person who provides a postal service;

(b)     a person who provides a public telecommunications service; or

(c)     a person not falling within sub-paragraph (b) who has control of the whole or any part of a telecommunication system located wholly or partly in Jersey,

it shall (subject to paragraph (5)) be the duty of that person to take all such steps for giving effect to the warrant as are notified to him or her by or on behalf of the person to whom the warrant is addressed.

(5)     A person who is under a duty by virtue of paragraph (4) to take steps for giving effect to a warrant shall not be required to take any steps which it is not reasonably practicable for that person to take.

(6)     For the purposes of paragraph (5) the steps which it is reasonably practicable for a person to take in a case in which obligations have been imposed on that person by or under Article 16 shall include every step which it would have been reasonably practicable for that person to take had that person complied with all the obligations so imposed on him or her.

(7)     A person who knowingly fails to comply with his or her duty under paragraph (4) shall be guilty of an offence and liable to imprisonment for a term of 2 years and to a fine.

(8)     A person’s duty under paragraph (4) to take steps for giving effect to a warrant shall be enforceable by civil proceedings by the Attorney General for an injunction or for any other appropriate relief.

(9)     For the purposes of this Law the provision of assistance with giving effect to an interception warrant includes any disclosure to the person to whom the warrant is addressed, or to persons acting on that person’s behalf, of intercepted material obtained by any interception authorized or required by the warrant, and of any related communications data.

16      Maintenance of interception capability

(1)     The Committee may by Order provide for the imposition on persons who are providing, or proposing to provide, public postal services or public telecommunications services of such obligations as it appears to the Committee reasonable to impose in order to secure –

(a)     that it is and remains practicable for requirements to provide assistance in relation to interception warrants to be imposed; and

(b)     that it is and remains practicable for such requirements to be complied with.

(2)     The Committee’s power to impose the obligations provided for by an Order under this Article shall be exercisable by the giving, in accordance with the Order, of a notice requiring the person who is to be subject to the obligations to take all such steps as may be specified or described in the notice.

(3)     Subject to paragraph (10), the only steps that may be specified or described in a notice given to a person under paragraph (2) are steps appearing to the Committee to be necessary for securing that the person has the practical capability of providing any assistance which that person may be required to provide in relation to relevant interception warrants.

(4)     A person shall not be liable to have an obligation imposed on him or her in accordance with an Order under this Article by reason only that the person provides, or is proposing to provide, to members of the public a telecommunications service the provision of which is or, as the case may be, will be no more than –

(a)     the means by which that person provides a service which is not a telecommunications service; or

(b)     necessarily incidental to the provision by that person of a service which is not a telecommunications service.

(5)     A person to whom a notice is given under paragraph (2) otherwise than by virtue of paragraph (6)(c)(ii) may refer the notice to the Technical Advisory Board.

(6)     Where a person refers a notice given under paragraph (2) to the Technical Advisory Board –

(a)     the person shall not be required to comply with any obligation imposed by the notice, unless the notice is given by virtue of sub-paragraph (c)(ii);

(b)     the Board shall consider the technical requirements and the financial consequences, for the person making the reference, of the notice referred to them and shall report their conclusions on those matters to that person and to the Committee; and

(c)     the Committee, after considering any report of the Board relating to the notice, may either –

(i)      withdraw the notice, or

(ii)      give a further notice under paragraph (2) confirming its effect, with or without modifications.

(7)     It shall be the duty of a person to whom a notice is given under paragraph (2) to comply with the notice; and that duty shall be enforceable by civil proceedings by the Attorney General for an injunction or for any other appropriate relief.

(8)     A notice for the purposes of paragraph (2) must specify such period as appears to the Committee to be reasonable as the period within which the steps specified or described in the notice are to be taken.

(9)     Before making an Order under this Article the Committee shall consult with –

(a)     such persons appearing to it to be likely to be subject to the obligations for which it provides;

(b)     the Technical Advisory Board;

(c)     such persons representing persons falling within sub-paragraph (a); and

(d)     such persons with statutory functions in relation to persons falling within that sub-paragraph,

as the Committee considers appropriate.

(10)    For the purposes of this Article the question whether a person has the practical capability of providing assistance in relation to relevant interception warrants shall include the question whether all such arrangements have been made as the Committee considers necessary –

(a)     with respect to the disclosure of intercepted material;

(b)     for the purpose of ensuring that security and confidentiality are maintained in relation to, and in relation to matters connected with, the provision of any such assistance; and

(c)     for the purpose of facilitating the carrying out of any functions in relation to this Chapter of the Commissioner,

but before determining for the purposes of the making of any Order, or the imposition of any obligation, under this Article what arrangements it considers necessary for the purpose mentioned in sub-paragraph (c) the Committee shall consult the Commissioner.

(11)    In this Article “relevant interception warrant” –

(a)     in relation to a person providing a public postal service, means an interception warrant relating to the interception of communications in the course of their transmission by means of that service; and

(b)     in relation to a person providing a public telecommunications service, means an interception warrant relating to the interception of communications in the course of their transmission by means of a telecommunication system used for the purposes of that service.

17      Technical Advisory Board

(1)     There shall be a Technical Advisory Board, whose members shall be appointed by the Committee.

(2)     The Committee, in appointing the members of the Technical Advisory Board, shall ensure –

(a)     that the membership of the Board includes persons likely effectively to represent the interests of the persons on whom obligations may be imposed under Article 16;

(b)     that the membership of the Board includes persons likely effectively to represent the interests of the persons by or on whose behalf applications for interception warrants may be made; and

(c)     that the Board is so constituted as to produce a balance between the representation of the interests mentioned respectively in sub-paragraphs (a) and (b).

(3)     The Committee may, if the Committee thinks fit, appoint persons as members of the Technical Advisory Board in addition to those described in paragraph (2).

18      Grants for interception costs

(1)     It shall be the duty of the States to ensure that such arrangements are in force as are necessary for securing that a person who provides –

(a)     a postal service; or

(b)     a telecommunications service,

receives such contribution as is, in the circumstances of that person's case, a fair contribution towards the costs incurred, or likely to be incurred, by that person in consequence of the matters mentioned in paragraph (2).

(2)     Those matters are –

(a)     in relation to a person providing a postal service, the issue of interception warrants relating to communications transmitted by means of that postal service;

(b)     in relation to a person providing a telecommunications service, the issue of interception warrants relating to communications transmitted by means of a telecommunication system used for the purposes of that service;

(c)     in relation to each description of person, the imposition on that person of obligations provided for by an Order under Article 16.

(3)     Contributions made pursuant to this Article shall be paid out of the annual income of the States.

19      General safeguards for intercepted material

(1)     Subject to paragraph (6), Attorney General shall ensure, in relation to all interception warrants, that such arrangements are in force as the Attorney General considers necessary for securing –

(a)     that the requirements of paragraphs (2) and (3) are satisfied in relation to the intercepted material and any related communications data; and

(b)     in the case of warrants in relation to which there are Article 12(4) certificates, that the requirements of Article 20 are also satisfied.

(2)     The requirements of this paragraph are satisfied in relation to the intercepted material and any related communications data if each of the following matters is limited to the minimum that is necessary for the authorized purposes, namely –

(a)     the number of persons to whom any of the material or data is disclosed or otherwise made available;

(b)     the extent to which any of the material or data is disclosed or otherwise made available;

(c)     the extent to which any of the material or data is copied; and

(d)     the number of copies that are made.

(3)     The requirements of this paragraph are satisfied in relation to the intercepted material and any related communications data if each copy made of any of the material or data (if not destroyed earlier) is destroyed as soon as there are no longer any grounds for retaining it as necessary for any of the authorized purposes.

(4)     For the purposes of this Article something is necessary for the authorized purposes if, and only if –

(a)     it continues to be, or is likely to become, necessary as mentioned in Article 10(3);

(b)     it is necessary for facilitating the carrying out of any of the functions under this Chapter of the Attorney General;

(c)     it is necessary for facilitating the carrying out of any functions in relation to this Part of the Commissioner or of the Tribunal; or

(d)     it is necessary to ensure that a person conducting a criminal prosecution has the information needed to determine what is required of that person by his or her duty to secure the fairness of the prosecution.

(5)     The arrangements for the time being in force under this Article for securing that the requirements of paragraph (2) are satisfied in relation to the intercepted material or any related communications data shall include such arrangements as the Attorney General considers necessary for securing that every copy of the material or data that is made is stored, for so long as it is retained, in a secure manner.

(6)     Arrangements in relation to interception warrants which are made for the purposes of paragraph (1) –

(a)     shall not be required to secure that the requirements of paragraphs (2) and (3) are satisfied in so far as they relate to any of the intercepted material or related communications data, or any copy of any such material or data, possession of which has been surrendered to any authorities of a country or territory outside Jersey; but

(b)     shall be required to secure, in the case of every such warrant, that possession of the intercepted material and data and of copies of the material or data is surrendered to authorities of a country or territory outside Jersey only if it appears to the Attorney General –

(i)      that requirements corresponding to those of paragraphs (2) and (3) will apply, to such extent (if any) as the Attorney General thinks fit, in relation to any of the intercepted material or related communications data possession of which, or of any copy of which, is surrendered to the authorities in question, and

(ii)      that restrictions are in force which would prevent, to such extent (if any) as the Attorney General thinks fit, the doing of anything in, for the purposes of or in connection with any proceedings outside Jersey which would result in such a disclosure as, by virtue of Article 21, could not be made in Jersey.

(7)     In this Article “copy”, in relation to intercepted material or related communications data, means any of the following (whether or not in documentary form) –

(a)     any copy, extract or summary of the material or data which identifies itself as the product of an interception; and

(b)     any record referring to an interception which is a record of the identities of the persons to or by whom the intercepted material was sent, or to whom the communications data relates,

and “copied” shall be construed accordingly.

20      Extra safeguards for warrant with Article 12(4) certificate

(1)     For the purposes of Article 19(1)(b) the requirements of this Article, in the case of a warrant in relation to which there is an Article 12(4) certificate, are that the intercepted material is read, looked at or listened to by the persons to whom it becomes available by virtue of the warrant to the extent only that it –

(a)     has been certified as material the examination of which is necessary as mentioned in Article 10(3)(a), (b) or (c); and

(b)     falls within paragraph (2).

(2)     Subject to paragraphs (3) and (4), intercepted material falls within this paragraph so far only as it is selected to be read, looked at or listened to otherwise than according to a factor which –

(a)     is referable to an individual who is known to be for the time being in Jersey; and

(b)     has as its purpose, or one of its purposes, the identification of material contained in communications sent by or intended for that individual.

(3)     Intercepted material falls within paragraph (2), notwithstanding that it is selected by reference to any such factor as is mentioned in sub-paragraphs (a) and (b) of that paragraph, if –

(a)     it is certified by the Attorney General for the purposes of Article 12(4) that the examination of material selected according to factors referable to the individual in question is necessary as mentioned in Article 10(3)(a), (b) or (c); and

(b)     the material relates only to communications sent during a period of not more than 3 months specified in the certificate.

(4)     Intercepted material also falls within paragraph (2), notwithstanding that it is selected by reference to any such factor as is mentioned in sub-paragraphs (a) and (b) of that paragraph, if –

(a)     the person to whom the warrant is addressed believes, on reasonable grounds, that the circumstances are such that the material would fall within that paragraph; or

(b)     the conditions set out in paragraph (5) are satisfied in relation to the selection of the material.

(5)     Those conditions are satisfied in relation to the selection of intercepted material if –

(a)     it has appeared to the person to whom the warrant is addressed that there has been such a relevant change of circumstances as, but for paragraph (4)(b), would prevent the intercepted material from falling within paragraph (2);

(b)     since it first so appeared, a written authorization to read, look at or listen to the material has been given by the Attorney General; and

(c)     the selection is made before the end of the first working day after the day on which it first so appeared to that person.

(6)     References in this Article to its appearing that there has been a relevant change of circumstances are references to its appearing either –

(a)     that the individual in question has entered Jersey; or

(b)     that a belief by the person to whom the warrant is addressed in the individual’s presence outside Jersey was in fact mistaken.

21      Exclusion of matters from legal proceedings

(1)     Subject to Article 22, no evidence shall be adduced, question asked, assertion or disclosure made or other thing done in, for the purposes of or in connection with any legal proceedings which (in any manner) –

(a)     discloses, in circumstances from which its origin in anything falling within paragraph (2) may be inferred, any of the contents of an intercepted communication or any related communications data; or

(b)     tends (apart from any such disclosure) to suggest that anything falling within paragraph (2) has or may have occurred or be going to occur.

(2)     The following fall within this paragraph –

(a)     conduct by a person falling within paragraph (3) that would be or was an offence under Article 5(1) or (2) of this Law or under Article 2 of the Interception of Communications (Jersey) Law 1993;[11]

(b)     a breach by the Attorney General of the Attorney General’s duty under Article 5(4) of this Law;

(c)     the issue of an interception warrant or of a warrant under the Interception of Communications (Jersey) Law 1993;[12]

(d)     the making of an application by any person for an interception warrant, or for a warrant under that Law;

(e)     the imposition of any requirement on any person to provide assistance with giving effect to an interception warrant.

(3)     The persons referred to in paragraph (2)(a) are –

(a)     any person to whom a warrant under this Chapter may be addressed;

(b)     any person holding office or employed in any administration of the States or of a Committee of the States;

(c)     any person holding office or employed in the Law Officers Department;

(d)     an officer of the Force or member of the Honorary Police;

(e)     an immigration officer;

(f)      any person employed by or for the purposes of the Force or the Honorary Police;

(g)     any person providing a postal service or employed for the purposes of any business of providing such a service;

(h)     any person providing a public telecommunications service or employed for the purposes of any business of providing such a service; and

(i)      any member of the intelligence services.

(4)     In this Article “intercepted communication” means any communication intercepted in the course of its transmission by means of a postal service or telecommunication system.

22      Exceptions to Article 21

(1)     Article 21(1) shall not apply in relation to –

(a)     any proceedings for a relevant offence;

(b)     any civil proceedings under Article 15(8);

(c)     any proceedings before the Tribunal;

(d)     any proceedings on an appeal for which provision is made by an order under Article 48(8);

(e)     any proceedings before the Proscribed Organizations Appeal Commission or any proceedings arising out of proceedings before that Commission.

(2)     Paragraph (1) shall not, by virtue of sub-paragraph (e), authorize the disclosure of anything to –

(a)     the applicant to the Proscribed Organizations Appeal Commission;

(b)     the organization concerned (if different);

(c)     any person designated under paragraph 6(2) of Schedule 2 to the Terrorism (Jersey) Law 2002[13] to conduct proceedings so falling on behalf of that organization; or

(d)     any person who for the purposes of any proceedings so falling (but otherwise than by virtue of an appointment under paragraph 7 of that Schedule) represents that applicant or that organization.

(3)     Article 21(1) shall not prohibit anything done in, for the purposes of, or in connection with, so much of any legal proceedings as relates to whether conduct constituting an offence under Article 5(1) or (2), 15(7) or 23 of this Law, or Article 2 of the Interception of Communications (Jersey) Law 1993[14] constitutes a proper ground for dismissal.

(4)     Article 21(1)(a) shall not prohibit the disclosure of any of the contents of a communication if the interception of that communication was lawful by virtue of Article 7(c), 8 or 9.

(5)     Where any disclosure is proposed to be or has been made on the grounds that it is authorized by paragraph (4), Article 21(1) shall not prohibit the doing of anything in, or for the purposes of, so much of any legal proceedings as relates to the question whether that disclosure is or was so authorized.

(6)     Article 21(1)(b) shall not prohibit the doing of anything that discloses any conduct of a person for which the person has been convicted of an offence under Article 5(1) or (2), 15(7) or 23 of this Law, or Article 2 of the Interception of Communications (Jersey) Law 1993.[15]

(7)     Nothing in Article 21(1) shall prohibit any such disclosure of any information that continues to be available for disclosure as is confined to –

(a)     a disclosure to a person conducting a criminal prosecution for the purpose only of enabling that person to determine what is required of that person by his or her duty to secure the fairness of the prosecution; or

(b)     a disclosure to the Bailiff in a case in which the Bailiff has ordered the disclosure to be made to the Bailiff alone.

(8)     The Bailiff shall not order a disclosure under paragraph (7)(b) except where the Bailiff is satisfied that the exceptional circumstances of the case make the disclosure essential in the interests of justice.

(9)     Subject to paragraph (10), where in any criminal proceedings –

(a)     the Bailiff orders a disclosure under paragraph (7)(b); and

(b)     in consequence of that disclosure the Bailiff is of the opinion that there are exceptional circumstances requiring him or her to do so,

the Bailiff may direct the person conducting the prosecution to make, for the purposes of the proceedings, any such admission of fact as the Bailiff thinks essential in the interests of justice.

(10)    Nothing in any direction under paragraph (9) shall authorize or require anything to be done in contravention of Article 21(1).

(11)    In this Article “relevant offence” means –

(a)     an offence under any provision of this Law;

(b)     an offence under Article 2 of the Interception of Communications (Jersey) Law 1993;[16]

(c)     an offence under section 5 of the 1949 Act;

(d)     an offence under Article 67 or 68 of the Postal Services (Jersey) Law 2004[17] or under Article 52 of the Telecommunications (Jersey) Law 2002;[18]

(e)     an offence under Article 3 or 4 of the Official Secrets (Jersey) Law 1952[19] relating to any sketch, plan, model, article, note, document or information which incorporates or relates to the contents of any intercepted communication or any related communications data or tends to suggest as mentioned in Article 21(1)(b) of this Law;

(f)      perjury committed in the course of any proceedings mentioned in paragraph (1) or (3) of this Article;

(g)     attempting or conspiring to commit, or aiding, abetting, counselling or procuring the commission of, an offence falling within any of the preceding sub-paragraphs; and

(h)     contempt of court committed in the course of, or in relation to, any proceedings mentioned in paragraph (1) or (3) of this Article.

(12)    In paragraph (11) “intercepted communication” has the same meaning as in Article 21.

23      Offence for unauthorized disclosures

(1)     Where an interception warrant has been issued or renewed, it shall be the duty of every person falling within paragraph (2) to keep secret all the matters mentioned in paragraph (3).

(2)     The persons falling within this paragraph are –

(a)     the persons specified in Article 11(1);

(b)     every person holding office or employed in an administration of the States or of a Committee of the States;

(c)     every person holding office or employed in the Law Officers Department;

(d)     every officer of the Force or member of the Honorary Police;

(e)     every immigration officer;

(f)      every person employed by or for the purposes of the Force or the Honorary Police;

(g)     persons providing postal services or employed for the purposes of any business of providing such a service;

(h)     persons providing public telecommunications services or employed for the purposes of any business of providing such a service;

(i)      persons having control of the whole or any part of a telecommunication system located wholly or partly in Jersey;

(j)      every member of the intelligence services;

(k)     every official of the Ministry of Defence of the Government of the United Kingdom.

(3)     The matters to be kept secret are –

(a)     the existence and contents of the warrant and of any Article 12(4) certificate in relation to the warrant;

(b)     the details of the issue of the warrant and of any renewal or modification of the warrant or of any such certificate;

(c)     the existence and contents of any requirement to provide assistance with giving effect to the warrant;

(d)     the steps taken in pursuance of the warrant or of any such requirement; and

(e)     everything in the intercepted material, together with any related communications data.

(4)     A person who makes a disclosure to another person of anything that the firstmentioned person is required to keep secret under this Article shall be guilty of an offence and liable to imprisonment for a term of 5 years and to a fine.

(5)     In proceedings against any person for an offence under this Article in respect of any disclosure, it shall be a defence for the accused to show that the accused could not reasonably have been expected, after first becoming aware of the matter disclosed, to take steps to prevent the disclosure.

(6)     In proceedings against any person for an offence under this Article in respect of any disclosure, it shall be a defence for the accused to show that –

(a)     the disclosure was made by or to a professional legal adviser in connection with the giving, by the adviser to any client of the adviser, of advice about the effect of provisions of this Chapter; and

(b)     the person to whom or, as the case may be, by whom it was made was the client or a representative of the client.

(7)     In proceedings against any person for an offence under this Article in respect of any disclosure, it shall be a defence for the accused to show that the disclosure was made by a professional legal adviser –

(a)     in contemplation of, or in connection with, any legal proceedings; and

(b)     for the purposes of those proceedings.

(8)     Neither paragraph (6) nor paragraph (7) applies in the case of a disclosure made with a view to furthering any criminal purpose.

(9)     In proceedings against any person for an offence under this Article in respect of any disclosure, it shall be a defence for the accused to show that the disclosure was confined to a disclosure made to the Commissioner or authorized –

(a)     by the Commissioner;

(b)     by the warrant or the person to whom the warrant is or was addressed;

(c)     by the terms of the requirement to provide assistance; or

(d)     by Article 15(9).

CHAPTER 2

ACQUISITION AND DISCLOSURE OF COMMUNICATIONS DATA

24      Interpretation of Chapter 2

In this Chapter –

communications data” means any of the following –

(a)     any traffic data comprised in or attached to a communication (whether by the sender or otherwise) for the purposes of any postal service or telecommunication system by means of which it is being or may be transmitted;

(b)     any information which includes none of the contents of a communication (apart from any information falling within paragraph (a)) and is about the use made by any person –

(i)      of any postal service or telecommunications service, or

(ii)      in connection with the provision to or use by any person of any telecommunications service, of any part of a telecommunication system;

(c)     any information not falling within paragraph (a) or (b) that is held or obtained, in relation to persons to whom he or she provides the service, by a person providing a postal service or telecommunications service;

“designated” shall be construed in accordance with Article 29(1);

“postal or telecommunications operator” means a person who provides a postal service or telecommunications service;

“relevant public authority” shall be construed in accordance with Article 29(1).

25      Lawful acquisition and disclosure of communications data

(1)     This Chapter applies to –

(a)     any conduct in relation to a postal service or telecommunication system for obtaining communications data, other than conduct consisting in the interception of communications in the course of their transmission by means of such a service or system; and

(b)     the disclosure to any person of communications data.

(2)     Conduct to which this Chapter applies shall be lawful for all purposes if –

(a)     it is conduct in which any person is authorized or required to engage by an authorization or notice granted or given under this Chapter; and

(b)     the conduct is in accordance with, or in pursuance of, the authorization or requirement.

(3)     A person shall not be subject to any civil liability in respect of any conduct of that person which –

(a)     is incidental to any conduct that is lawful by virtue of paragraph (2); and

(b)     is not itself conduct for which an authorization or warrant –

(i)      is capable of being granted under this Law, section 5 of the 1994 Act or Article 101 of the Police Procedures and Criminal Evidence (Jersey) Law 2003,[20] and

(ii)      might reasonably have been expected to have been sought in the case in question.

26      Authorizations and notices to obtain and disclose communications data

(1)     This Article applies where a person designated for the purposes of this Chapter believes that it is necessary on grounds falling within paragraph (2) to obtain any communications data.

(2)     It is necessary on grounds falling within this paragraph to obtain communications data if it is necessary –

(a)     in the interests of national security;

(b)     for the purpose of preventing or detecting crime or of preventing disorder;

(c)     in the interests of the economic well-being of Jersey;

(d)     in the interests of public safety;

(e)     for the purpose of protecting public health;

(f)      for the purpose of assessing or collecting any tax, duty, levy or other imposition, contribution or charge payable to any administration of the States or of a Committee of the States;

(g)     for the purpose, in an emergency, of preventing death or injury or any damage to a person’s physical or mental health, or of mitigating any injury or damage to a person’s physical or mental health; or

(h)     for any purpose (not falling within sub-paragraphs (a) to (g)) which is specified for the purposes of this paragraph by Regulations made by the States.

(3)     Subject to paragraph (5), a designated person may grant an authorization for persons holding offices, ranks or positions with the relevant public authority in relation to which that person is designated to engage in any conduct to which this Chapter applies.

(4)     Subject to paragraph (5), where it appears to the designated person that a postal or telecommunications operator is or may be in possession of, or be capable of obtaining, any communications data, the designated person may, by notice to the postal or telecommunications operator, require the operator –

(a)     if the operator is not already in possession of the data, to obtain the data; and

(b)     in any case, to disclose all of the data in the operator’s possession or subsequently obtained by the operator.

(5)     The designated person shall not grant an authorization under paragraph (3), or give a notice under paragraph (4), unless that person believes that obtaining the data in question by the conduct authorized or required by the authorization or notice is proportionate to what is sought to be achieved by so obtaining the data.

(6)     It shall be the duty of the postal or telecommunications operator to comply with the requirements of any notice given to the operator under paragraph (4).

(7)     A person who is under a duty by virtue of paragraph (6) shall not be required to do anything in pursuance of that duty which it is not reasonably practicable for that person to do.

(8)     The duty imposed by paragraph (6) shall be enforceable by civil proceedings by the Attorney General for an injunction, or for any other appropriate relief.

27      Form and duration of authorizations and notices

(1)     An authorization under Article 26(3) –

(a)     shall be granted in writing or (if not in writing) in a manner that produces a record of its having been granted;

(b)     shall describe the conduct to which this Chapter applies that is authorized and the communications data in relation to which it is authorized;

(c)     shall specify the grounds in Article 26(2) on which it is necessary to obtain the data; and

(d)     shall specify the office, rank or position held by the person granting the authorization.

(2)     A notice under Article 26(4) requiring communications data to be disclosed or to be obtained and disclosed –

(a)     shall be given in writing or (if not in writing) must be given in a manner that produces a record of its having been given;

(b)     shall describe the communications data to be obtained or disclosed under the notice;

(c)     shall specify the grounds in Article 26(2) on which it is necessary to obtain the data;

(d)     shall specify the office, rank or position held by the person giving it; and

(e)     shall specify the manner in which any disclosure required by the notice is to be made.

(3)     A notice under Article 26(4) shall not require the disclosure of data to any person other than –

(a)     the designated person giving the notice; or

(b)     such other person as may be specified in or otherwise identified by, or in accordance with, the provisions of the notice,

but the provisions of a notice given by a designated person other than the Attorney General shall not specify or otherwise identify a person for the purposes of sub-paragraph (b) unless the person holds an office, rank or position with the same relevant public authority as the designated person.

(4)     An authorization under Article 26(3) or notice under Article 26(4) –

(a)     shall not authorize or require any data to be obtained after the end of the period of one month beginning with the date on which the authorization is granted or the notice given; and

(b)     in the case of a notice, shall not authorize or require any disclosure after the end of that period of any data not in the possession of, or obtained by, the postal or telecommunications operator at a time during that period.

(5)     An authorization under Article 26(3) or notice under Article 26(4) may be renewed at any time before the end of the period of one month applying (in accordance with paragraph (4) or paragraph (7)) to that authorization or notice.

(6)     A renewal of an authorization under Article 26(3) or of a notice under Article 26(4) shall be by the grant or giving, in accordance with this Article, of a further authorization or notice.

(7)     Paragraph (4) shall have effect in relation to a renewed authorization or renewed notice as if the period of one month mentioned in that paragraph did not begin until the end of the period of one month applicable to the authorization or notice that is current at the time of the renewal.

(8)     A person who has given a notice under Article 26(4) shall cancel the notice if satisfied –

(a)     that it is no longer necessary on grounds falling within paragraph (2) of that Article for the requirements of the notice to be complied with; or

(b)     that the conduct required by the notice is no longer proportionate to what is sought to be achieved by obtaining communications data to which the notice relates.

(9)     The Committee may by Order provide for the person by whom any duty imposed by paragraph (8) is to be performed in a case in which it would otherwise fall on a person who is no longer available to perform it; and an Order under this paragraph may provide for the person on whom the duty is to fall to be a person appointed in accordance with the Order.

28      Arrangements for payments

(1)     The States shall ensure that such arrangements are in force as they think appropriate for requiring or authorizing, in such cases as they think fit, the making to postal and telecommunications operators of appropriate contributions towards the costs incurred by them in complying with notices under Article 26(4).

(2)     Any contributions under this Article shall be paid out of the annual income of the States.

29      Persons designated to give authorizations and notices under this Chapter

(1)     Schedule 1 shall have effect to designate persons for the purposes of this Chapter and specify the public authorities in relation to which they are designated.

(2)     The States may by Regulations –

(a)     amend Schedule 1 so as to –

(i)      remove a public authority and the person designated in relation to that authority,

(i)      subject to paragraphs (3) and (4), add a public authority and designate a person in relation to that authority,

(iii)     subject to paragraph (4), change the designated person in relation to a public authority;

(b)     impose restrictions –

(i)      on the authorizations and notices under this Chapter that may be granted or given by any individual holding an office, rank or position with a specified public authority, and

(ii)      on the circumstances in which, or the purposes for which, such authorizations may be granted or notices given by any such individual.

(3)     The States may only amend Schedule 1 so as to add a public authority outside Jersey if the authority is –

(a)     a police force of a country or territory outside the British Islands and Northern Ireland;

(b)     a public authority in the British Islands or Northern Ireland having functions which consist of or include the provision of criminal intelligence, the prevention and detection of serious crime, the investigation of crimes or the charging of offences;

(c)     a public authority of a country or territory outside the British Islands and Northern Ireland whose functions correspond to those of a police force or otherwise consist of or include the investigation of conduct contrary to the law of that country or territory, or the apprehension of persons guilty of such conduct;

(d)     a public authority with functions under any international agreement which consist of or include –

(i)      the investigation of conduct which is unlawful under the law of one or more places, prohibited by such an agreement or contrary to international law, or

(ii)      the apprehension of persons guilty of such conduct.

(4)     Only the Attorney General may be the designated person in relation to any of the intelligence services, the Ministry of Defence of the Government of the United Kingdom or Her Majesty’s Forces or any other public authority outside Jersey added to Schedule 1 pursuant to paragraph (2).

PART 3

SURVEILLANCE AND COVERT HUMAN INTELLIGENCE SOURCES

30      Interpretation of Part 3

(1)     In this Part –

“private vehicle” means (subject to paragraph (3)(a)) any vehicle which is used primarily for the private purposes of the person who owns it or of a person otherwise having the right to use it;

“residential premises” means (subject to paragraph (3)(b)) so much of any premises as is for the time being occupied or used by any person, however temporarily, for residential purposes or otherwise as living accommodation (including hotel or prison accommodation that is so occupied or used);

“surveillance device” means any apparatus designed or adapted for use in surveillance.

(2)     References in this Part to an individual holding an office or position with a public authority include references to any member, official or employee of that authority.

(3)     In paragraph (1) –

(a)     the reference to a person having the right to use a vehicle does not, in relation to a motor vehicle, include a reference to a person whose right to use the vehicle derives only from that person having paid, or undertaken to pay, for the use of the vehicle and its driver for a particular journey; and

(b)     the reference to premises occupied or used by any person for residential purposes or otherwise as living accommodation does not include a reference to so much of any premises as constitutes any common area to which that person has or is allowed access in connection with his or her use or occupation of any accommodation.

(4)     In this Article –

“premises” includes any vehicle or moveable structure and any other place whatever, whether or not occupied as land;

“vehicle” includes any vessel, aircraft or hovercraft.

31      Meaning of “surveillance”

(1)     Subject to paragraph (2), in this Part “surveillance” includes –

(a)     monitoring, observing or listening to persons, their movements, their conversations or their other activities or communications;

(b)     recording anything monitored, observed or listened to in the course of surveillance; and

(c)     surveillance by or with the assistance of a surveillance device.

(2)     References in this Part to surveillance do not include references to –

(a)     any conduct of a covert human intelligence source for obtaining or recording (whether or not using a surveillance device) any information which is disclosed in the presence of the source;

(b)     the use of a covert human intelligence source for so obtaining or recording information; or

(c)     any such entry on or interference with property or with wireless telegraphy as would be unlawful unless authorized under –

(i)      section 5 of the 1994 Act, or

(ii)      Article 101 of the Police Procedures and Criminal Evidence (Jersey) Law 2003.[21]

(3)     References in this Part to surveillance include references to the interception of a communication in the course of its transmission by means of a postal service or telecommunication system if, and only if –

(a)     the communication is one sent by or intended for a person who has consented to the interception of communications sent by or to that person; and

(b)     there is no interception warrant authorizing the interception.

32      Meaning of “directed surveillance”, “intrusive surveillance” and “covert human intelligence source”

(1)     Subject to paragraph (5), surveillance is directed for the purposes of this Part if it is covert but not intrusive and is undertaken –

(a)     for the purposes of a specific investigation or a specific operation;

(b)     in such a manner as is likely to result in the obtaining of private information about a person (whether or not one specifically identified for the purposes of the investigation or operation); and

(c)     otherwise than by way of an immediate response to events or circumstances the nature of which is such that it would not be reasonably practicable for an authorization under this Part to be sought for the carrying out of the surveillance.

(2)     Subject to paragraphs (3) to (5), surveillance is intrusive for the purposes of this Part if, and only if, it is covert surveillance that –

(a)     is carried out in relation to anything taking place on any residential premises or in any private vehicle; and

(b)     involves the presence of an individual on the premises or in the vehicle or is carried out by means of a surveillance device.

(3)     For the purposes of this Part surveillance is not intrusive to the extent that –

(a)     it is carried out by means only of a surveillance device designed or adapted principally for the purpose of providing information about the location of a vehicle; or

(b)     it is surveillance consisting in any such interception of a communication as falls within Article 31(3).

(4)     For the purposes of this Part surveillance which –

(a)     is carried out by means of a surveillance device in relation to anything taking place on any residential premises or in any private vehicle; but

(b)     is carried out without that device being present on the premises or in the vehicle,

is not intrusive unless the device is such that it consistently provides information of the same quality and detail as might be expected to be obtained from a device actually present on the premises or in the vehicle.

(5)     For the purposes of this Part surveillance which –

(a)     is carried out by means of apparatus designed or adapted for the purpose of detecting the installation or use in any residential or other premises of a television receiver (within the meaning of section 1 of the 1949 Act); and

(b)     is carried out from outside those premises exclusively for that purpose,

is neither directed nor intrusive.

(6)     In this Part –

(a)     references to the conduct of a covert human intelligence source are references to any conduct of such a source which falls within any of sub-paragraphs (a) to (c) of paragraph (7), or is incidental to anything falling within any of those paragraphs; and

(b)     references to the use of a covert human intelligence source are references to inducing, asking or assisting a person to engage in the conduct of such a source, or to obtain information by means of the conduct of such a source.

(7)     For the purposes of this Part a person is a covert human intelligence source if –

(a)     he or she establishes or maintains a personal or other relationship with a person for the covert purpose of facilitating the doing of anything falling within sub-paragraph (b) or (c);

(b)     he or she covertly uses such a relationship to obtain information or to provide access to any information to another person; or

(c)     he or she covertly discloses information obtained by the use of such a relationship, or as a consequence of the existence of such a relationship.

(8)     For the purposes of this Part the activities of a covert human intelligence source which are to be taken as activities for the benefit of a particular public authority include any conduct of that person as such a source which is in response to inducements or requests made by or on behalf of that authority.

(9)     For the purposes of this Article –

(a)     surveillance is covert if, and only if, it is carried out in a manner that is calculated to ensure that persons who are subject to the surveillance are unaware that it is or may be taking place;

(b)     a purpose is covert, in relation to the establishment or maintenance of a personal or other relationship, if and only if the relationship is conducted in a manner that is calculated to ensure that one of the parties to the relationship is unaware of the purpose; and

(c)     a relationship is used covertly, and information obtained as mentioned in paragraph (7)(c) is disclosed covertly, if and only if it is used or, as the case may be, disclosed in a manner that is calculated to ensure that one of the parties to the relationship is unaware of the use or disclosure in question.

(10)    In this Article “private information”, in relation to a person, includes any information relating to that person’s private or family life.

(11)    References in this Article, in relation to a vehicle, to the presence of a surveillance device in the vehicle include references to its being located on or under the vehicle and also include references to its being attached to it.

33      Lawful surveillance etc.

(1)     This Part applies to the following conduct –

(a)     directed surveillance;

(b)     intrusive surveillance; and

(c)     the conduct and use of covert human intelligence sources.

(2)     Conduct to which this Part applies shall be lawful for all purposes if –

(a)     an authorization under this Part confers an entitlement to engage in that conduct on the person whose conduct it is; and

(b)     that person’s conduct is in accordance with the authorization.

(3)     A person shall not be subject to any civil liability in respect of any conduct of that person which –

(a)     is incidental to any conduct that is lawful by virtue of paragraph (2); and

(b)     is not itself conduct an authorization or warrant for which –

(i)      is capable of being granted under this Law, section 5 of the 1994 Act or Article 101 of the Police Procedures and Criminal Evidence (Jersey) Law 2003,[22] and

(ii)      might reasonably have been expected to have been sought in the case in question.

(4)     The conduct that may be authorized under this Part includes conduct outside Jersey.

34      Authorization of directed surveillance

(1)     Subject to the following provisions of this Part, the persons designated for the purposes of this Article shall each have power to grant authorizations for the carrying out of directed surveillance.

(2)     A person shall not grant an authorization for the carrying out of directed surveillance unless the person believes –

(a)     that the authorization is necessary on grounds falling within paragraph (3); and

(b)     that the authorized surveillance is proportionate to what is sought to be achieved by carrying it out.

(3)     An authorization is necessary on grounds falling within this paragraph if it is necessary –

(a)     in the interests of national security;

(b)     for the purpose of preventing or detecting crime or of preventing disorder;

(c)     in the interests of the economic well-being of Jersey;

(d)     in the interests of public safety;

(e)     for the purpose of protecting public health;

(f)      for the purpose of assessing or collecting any tax, duty, levy or other imposition, contribution or charge payable to any administration of the States or of a Committee of the States; or

(g)     for any purpose (not falling within sub-paragraphs (a) to (f)) which is prescribed.

(4)     The conduct that is authorized by an authorization for the carrying out of directed surveillance is any conduct that –

(a)     consists in the carrying out of directed surveillance of any such description as is specified in the authorization; and

(b)     is carried out in the circumstances described in the authorization and for the purposes of the investigation or operation specified or described in the authorization.

35      Authorization of covert human intelligence sources

(1)     Subject to the following provisions of this Part, the persons designated for the purposes of this Article shall each have power to grant authorizations for the conduct or the use of a covert human intelligence source.

(2)     A person shall not grant an authorization for the conduct or the use of a covert human intelligence source unless the person believes –

(a)     that the authorization is necessary on grounds falling within paragraph (3);

(b)     that the authorized conduct or use is proportionate to what is sought to be achieved by that conduct or use; and

(c)     that arrangements exist for the source's case that satisfy the requirements of paragraph (5) and such other requirements as may be prescribed.

(3)     An authorization is necessary on grounds falling within this paragraph if it is necessary –

(a)     in the interests of national security;

(b)     for the purpose of preventing or detecting crime or of preventing disorder;

(c)     in the interests of the economic well-being of Jersey;

(d)     in the interests of public safety;

(e)     for the purpose of protecting public health;

(f)      for the purpose of assessing or collecting any tax, duty, levy or other imposition, contribution or charge payable any administration of the States or of a Committee of the States; or

(g)     for any purpose (not falling within sub-paragraphs (a) to (f)) which is prescribed.

(4)     The conduct that is authorized by an authorization for the conduct or the use of a covert human intelligence source is any conduct that –

(a)     is comprised in any such activities involving conduct of a covert human intelligence source, or the use of a covert human intelligence source, as are specified or described in the authorization;

(b)     consists in conduct by or in relation to the person who is so specified or described as the person to whose actions as a covert human intelligence source the authorization relates; and

(c)     is carried out for the purposes of, or in connection with, the investigation or operation so specified or described.

(5)     For the purposes of this Part there are arrangements for the source's case that satisfy the requirements of this paragraph if such arrangements are in force as are necessary for ensuring –

(a)     that there will at all times be a person holding an office, rank or position with the relevant investigating authority who will have day-to-day responsibility for dealing with the source on behalf of that authority, and for the source's security and welfare;

(b)     that there will at all times be another person holding an office, rank or position with the relevant investigating authority who will have general oversight of the use made of the source;

(c)     that there will at all times be a person holding an office, rank or position with the relevant investigating authority who will have responsibility for maintaining a record of the use made of the source;

(d)     that the records relating to the source that are maintained by the relevant investigating authority will always contain particulars of all such matters (if any) as may be prescribed; and

(e)     that records maintained by the relevant investigating authority that disclose the identity of the source will not be available to persons except to the extent that there is a need for access to them to be made available to those persons.

(6)     The Committee may by Order –

(a)     prohibit the authorization under this Article of any such conduct or uses of covert human intelligence sources as may be described in the Order; and

(b)     impose requirements, in addition to those provided for by paragraph (2), that must be satisfied before an authorization is granted under this Article for any such conduct or uses of covert human intelligence sources as may be so described.

(7)     In this Article “relevant investigating authority”, in relation to an authorization for the conduct or the use of an individual as a covert human intelligence source, means (subject to paragraph (8)) the public authority for whose benefit the activities of that individual as such a source are to take place.

(8)     In the case of any authorization for the conduct or the use of a covert human intelligence source whose activities are to be for the benefit of more than one public authority, the references in paragraph (5) to the relevant investigating authority are references to one of them (whether or not the same one in the case of each reference).

36      Designated persons and public authorities for Articles 34 and 35

(1)     Part 1 of Schedule 2 shall have effect to specify public authorities and the persons designated in relation to them for the purposes of Articles 34 and 35.

(2)     Part 2 of Schedule 2 shall have effect to specify public authorities and the persons designated in relation to them for the purposes of Article 34 only.

(3)     The States may by Regulations –

(a)     subject to paragraph (4), amend Schedule 2 so as to –

(i)      remove a public authority and the person designated in relation to that authority,

(ii)      add a public authority and designate a person in relation to that authority,

(iii)     change the person designated in relation to a public authority;

(b)     impose restrictions –

(i)      on the authorizations under Articles 34 and 35 that may be granted by any individual designated in relation to a specified public authority, and

(ii)      on the circumstances in which, or the purposes for which, such authorizations may be granted by any such individual.

(4)     Only the Attorney General may be the designated person in relation to any of the intelligence services, the Ministry of Defence of the Government of the United Kingdom or Her Majesty’s Forces.

37      Authorization of intrusive surveillance

(1)     Subject to the following provisions of this Part, the Attorney General may grant authorizations for the carrying out of intrusive surveillance on the application of –

(a)     the Chief Officer;

(b)     the Agent of the Impôts;

(c)     the Chief Immigration Officer;

(d)     any member of the intelligence services;

(e)     any official of the Ministry of Defence of the Government of the United Kingdom; or

(f)      a member of Her Majesty’s Forces.

(2)     The Attorney General shall not grant an authorization for the carrying out of intrusive surveillance unless the Attorney General believes –

(a)     that the authorization is necessary on grounds falling within paragraph (3); and

(b)     that the authorized surveillance is proportionate to what is sought to be achieved by carrying it out.

(3)     Subject to paragraphs (4) to (6), an authorization is necessary on grounds falling within this paragraph if it is necessary –

(a)     in the interests of national security;

(b)     for the purpose of preventing or detecting serious crime; or

(c)     in the interests of the economic well-being of Jersey.

(4)     The Attorney General shall not grant an authorization on the ground described in paragraph (3)(c) on the application of any person mentioned in paragraph (1)(d), (e) or (f).

(5)     The matters to be taken into account in considering whether the requirements of paragraph (2) are satisfied in the case of any authorization shall include whether the information which it is thought necessary to obtain by the authorized conduct could reasonably be obtained by other means.

(6)     The conduct that is authorized by an authorization for the carrying out of intrusive surveillance is any conduct that –

(a)     consists in the carrying out of intrusive surveillance of any such description as is specified in the authorization;

(b)     is carried out in relation to the residential premises specified or described in the authorization or in relation to the private vehicle so specified or described; and

(c)     is carried out for the purposes of, or in connection with, the investigation or operation so specified or described.

(7)     Where an order has been made under section 41(4) of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000 of the United Kingdom Parliament limiting the individuals who may apply under subsection (1) of that section to individuals of an office, rank or position prescribed in that order, an application may be made under paragraph (1)(d), (e) or (f) only by an individual of the office, rank or position so prescribed.

(8)     References in this Article to a member of Her Majesty’s Forces do not include references to any member of Her Majesty’s Forces who is a member of a police force by virtue of his or her service with the Royal Navy Regulating Branch, the Royal Military Police or the Royal Air Force Police.

38      Rules for grant of authorizations

(1)     A person, other than the Attorney General, who is a designated person for the purposes of Article 34 or 35 in respect of a specified public authority shall not grant an authorization under that Article except on an application made by a member of the same authority.

(2)     A single authorization by the Attorney General may combine an authorization under this Part and an authorization under Article 101 of the Police Procedures and Criminal Evidence (Jersey) Law 2003.[23]

39      Notification of authorizations for intrusive surveillance

(1)     The Attorney General shall from time to time and, in any event, at least every 12 months, notify the Commissioner, in writing, of authorizations for the carrying out of intrusive surveillance granted, renewed or cancelled by the Attorney General and, where an authorization was granted orally, of the grounds on which the case was believed to be urgent.

(2)     Paragraph (1) is without prejudice to the Commissioner’s general power to require the disclosure or provision of documents and information under Article 44.

40      General rules for grant, renewal and duration of authorizations

(1)     An authorization under this Part –

(a)     may be granted or renewed orally in any urgent case; and

(b)     in any other case, must be in writing.

(2)     A single authorization may combine 2 or more different authorizations under this Part; but the provisions of this Law that are applicable in the case of each of the authorizations shall apply separately in relation to the part of the combined authorization to which they are applicable.

(3)     Subject to paragraphs (4) and (8), an authorization under this Part shall cease to have effect at the end of the following period –

(a)     in the case of an authorization which –

(i)      has not been renewed and was granted orally or by a person whose entitlement to act is confined to urgent cases, or

(ii)      was last renewed orally,

the period of 72 hours beginning with the time when the grant of the authorization or, as the case may be, its latest renewal takes effect;

(b)     in a case not falling within sub-paragraph (a) in which the authorization is for the conduct or the use of a covert human intelligence source, the period of 12 months beginning with the day on which the grant of the authorization or, as the case may be, its latest renewal takes effect; and

(c)     in any case not falling within sub-paragraph (a) or (b), the period of 3 months beginning with the day on which the grant of the authorization or, as the case may be, its latest renewal takes effect.

(4)     Subject to paragraph (6), an authorization under this Part may be renewed, at any time before the time at which it ceases to have effect, by the person who would be entitled to grant a new authorization in the same terms.

(5)     Articles 34 to 39 shall have effect in relation to the renewal of an authorization under this Part as if references to the grant of an authorization included references to its renewal.

(6)     A person shall not renew an authorization for the conduct or the use of a covert human intelligence source, unless the person –

(a)     is satisfied that a review has been carried out of the matters mentioned in paragraph (7); and

(b)     has, for the purpose of deciding whether he or she should renew the authorization, considered the results of that review.

(7)     The matters mentioned in paragraph (6) are –

(a)     the use made of the source in the period since the grant or, as the case may be, latest renewal of the authorization; and

(b)     the tasks given to the source during that period and the information obtained from the conduct or the use of the source.

(8)     The Committee may by Order provide in relation to authorizations of such descriptions as may be specified in the Order that paragraph (3) is to have effect as if the period at the end of which an authorization of a description so specified is to cease to have effect were such period shorter than that provided for by that paragraph as may be fixed by or determined in accordance with that Order.

(9)     References in this Article to the time at which, or the day on which, the grant or renewal of an authorization takes effect are references –

(a)     in the case of the grant of an authorization, to the time at which or, as the case may be, day on which the authorization is granted;

(b)     in the case of the renewal of an authorization, to the time at which or, as the case may be, day on which the authorization would have ceased to have effect but for the renewal.

41      Cancellation of authorizations

(1)     The person who granted or, as the case may be, last renewed an authorization under this Part shall cancel it if –

(a)     that person is satisfied that the authorization is one in relation to which the requirements of Article 34(2), 35(2) or 37(2), as the case may be, are no longer satisfied; or

(b)     in the case of an authorization under Article 35, that person is satisfied that arrangements for the source's case that satisfy the requirements mentioned in paragraph (2)(c) of that Article no longer exist.

(2)     Where an authorization under this Part was granted or, as the case may be, last renewed –

(a)     by a person entitled to act for any other person; or

(b)     by the deputy of any other person,

that other person shall cancel the authorization if he or she is satisfied as to either of the matters mentioned in paragraph (1).

(3)     Where an authorization under this Part was granted or, as the case may be, last renewed by a person whose deputy had power to grant it, that deputy shall cancel the authorization if he or she is satisfied as to either of the matters mentioned in paragraph (1).

(4)     The Committee may by Order provide for the person by whom any duty imposed by this Article is to be performed in a case in which it would otherwise fall on a person who is no longer available to perform it.

(5)     An Order under paragraph (4) may provide for the person on whom the duty is to fall to be a person appointed in accordance with the Order.

42      Power to extend or modify authorization provisions

The States may by Regulations do one or both of the following –

(a)     apply this Part, with such modifications as they think fit, to any such surveillance that is neither directed nor intrusive as may be described in the Regulations;

(b)     provide for any description of directed surveillance to be treated for the purposes of this Part as intrusive surveillance.

PART 4

SCRUTINY ETC. OF INVESTIGATORY POWERS

43      Investigatory Powers Commissioner

(1)     The Bailiff shall appoint one of the ordinary judges of the Court of Appeal who is not the President of the Tribunal as the Investigatory Powers Commissioner to carry out the function described in this Article.

(2)     Subject to paragraph (4), the Commissioner shall keep under review –

(a)     the exercise and performance by the Attorney General of the powers and duties conferred or imposed on the Attorney General by or under Articles 5 to 15;

(b)     the exercise and performance, by the persons on whom they are conferred or imposed, of the powers and duties conferred or imposed by or under Chapter 2 of Part 2;

(c)     the exercise and performance, by the person on whom they are conferred or imposed, of the powers and duties conferred or imposed by or under Part 3;

(d)     the adequacy of the arrangements by virtue of which the duty which is imposed on the Attorney General by Article 19 are sought to be discharged.

(3)     The Commissioner shall give the Tribunal all such assistance (including the Commissioner’s opinion as to any issue falling to be determined by the Tribunal) as the Tribunal may require –

(a)     in connection with the investigation of any matter by the Tribunal; or

(b)     otherwise for the purposes of the Tribunal's consideration or determination of any matter.

(4)     The Commissioner shall hold office in accordance with the terms of his or her appointment; and there shall be paid to the Commissioner out of money provided by the States such allowances as the Finance and Economics Committee may direct.

(5)     The Committee, after consultation with the Finance and Economics Committee and the Commissioner, shall –

(a)     make such technical facilities available to the Commissioner; and

(b)     provide the Commissioner with such staff,

as are sufficient to secure that the Commissioner is able properly to carry out his or her functions.

(6)     On the coming into force of this Article the person holding office as Commissioner under Article 9 of the Interception of Communications (Jersey) Law 1993[24] shall take and hold office as Commissioner as if appointed under this Law –

(a)     for the unexpired period of that person’s term of office under the firstmentioned Law; and

(b)     otherwise, on the terms of that person’s appointment under the firstmentioned Law.

44      Co-operation with and reports by the Commissioner

(1)     It shall be the duty of –

(a)     every person holding office or employed in any administration of the States or of a Committee of the States;

(b)     every person holding office in Jersey under the Crown;

(c)     every person holding office or employed in the Law Officers Department;

(d)     every officer of the Force and member of the Honorary Police;

(e)     every member of each of the intelligence services;

(f)      every official of the Ministry of Defence of the Government of the United Kingdom;

(g)     every member of Her Majesty’s Forces;

(h)     every person employed by or for the purposes of the Force or the Honorary Police;

(i)      every person required for the purposes of Article 15 to provide assistance with giving effect to an interception warrant;

(j)      every person on whom an obligation to take any steps has been imposed under Article 16;

(k)     every person by or to whom an authorization under Article 26(3) has been granted;

(l)      every person to whom a notice under Article 26(4) has been given;

(m)    every person by or to whom an authorization under Article 34, 35 or 37 has been granted; and

(n)     every person who is or has been employed for the purposes of any business of a person falling within sub-paragraph (i), (j) or (l),

to disclose or provide to the Commissioner all such documents and information as the Commissioner may require in order to carry out the Commissioner’s functions under Article 43.

(2)     If it at any time appears to the Commissioner –

(a)     that there has been a contravention of the provisions of this Law in relation to any matter with which the Commissioner is concerned; and

(b)     that the contravention has not been the subject of a report made to the Bailiff by the Tribunal,

the Commissioner shall make a report to the Bailiff with respect to that contravention.

(3)     If it at any time it appears to the Commissioner that any arrangements by reference to which the duty imposed by Article 19 has sought to be discharged have proved inadequate in relation to any matter with which the Commissioner is concerned, the Commissioner shall make a report to the Bailiff with respect to those arrangements.

(4)     As soon as practicable after the end of each calendar year, the Commissioner shall make a report to the Bailiff with respect to the carrying out of the Commissioner’s functions.

(5)     The Commissioner may also, at any time, make any such other report to the Bailiff on any matter relating to the carrying out of the Commissioner’s functions as the Commissioner thinks fit.

(6)     The Bailiff shall cause a copy of every annual report made by the Commissioner under paragraph (4) to be laid before the States, together with a statement as to whether any matter has been excluded from that copy in pursuant to paragraph (7).

(7)     If it appears to the Bailiff, after consultation with the Commissioner, that the publication of any matter in an annual report would be contrary to the public interest or prejudicial to –

(a)     national security;

(b)     the prevention or detection of serious crime;

(c)     the economic well-being of Jersey; or

(d)     the continued discharge of the functions of any public authority whose activities include activities that are subject to review by the Commissioner,

the Bailiff may exclude that matter from the copy of the report as laid before the States.

45      Assistant Investigatory Powers Commissioners

(1)     The Bailiff may, after consultation with the Commissioner as to numbers, appoint as Assistant Investigatory Powers Commissioners such number of persons as the Bailiff considers necessary for the purpose of providing the Commissioner with assistance under this Article.

(2)     A person shall not be appointed as an Assistant Commissioner unless the person holds or has held office as –

(a)     a judge of the Royal Court;

(b)     a judge of the Crown Court in England;

(c)     a sheriff in Scotland;

(d)     a county court judge or resident magistrate in Northern Ireland;

(e)     a judge of the Royal Court of Guernsey; or

(f)      a judge of the High Court of the Isle of Man.

(3)     The Commissioner may –

(a)     require any Assistant Commissioner to provide assistance in carrying out the Commissioner’s functions under Article 43(2); and

(b)     delegate any of those functions to an Assistant Commissioner, subject to such conditions and restrictions, if any, as the Commissioner thinks fit.

(4)     The assistance that may be provided under this Article includes –

(a)     the conduct on behalf of the Commissioner of the review of any matter; and

(b)     the making of a report to the Commissioner about the matter reviewed.

(5)     An Assistant Commissioner shall be subject to the duty imposed on the Commissioner by Article 43(3).

(6)     An Assistant Commissioner shall hold office in accordance with the terms of his or her appointment, and there shall be paid to an Assistant Commissioner out of money provided by the States such allowances as the Finance and Economics Committee may direct.

46      Investigatory Powers Tribunal

(1)     There shall be an Investigatory Powers Tribunal which shall consist of 3 members appointed by the Superior Number of the Royal Court of whom one shall be an ordinary judge of the Court of Appeal, who shall be the president of the Tribunal, and 2 shall be Jurats.

(2)     Notwithstanding Article 8(1)(a) of the Human Rights (Jersey) Law 2000,[25] proceedings falling with paragraph (4) of this Article which are brought pursuant to the said Article 8 shall be brought before the Tribunal.

(3)     The jurisdiction of the Tribunal shall be –

(a)     to consider and determine any complaints made to them which, in accordance with paragraph (5), are complaints for which the Tribunal is the appropriate forum;

(b)     to consider and determine any reference to them by any person that the person has suffered detriment as a consequence of any prohibition or restriction, by virtue of Article 21, on that person’s relying in, or for the purposes of, any civil proceedings on any matter; and

(c)     to hear and determine any other such proceedings falling within paragraph (4) as may be allocated to them in accordance with provision made by the Committee by Order.

(4)     Proceedings fall within this paragraph if –

(a)     they are proceedings against any of the intelligence services in respect of any discharge of their functions within Jersey;

(b)     they are proceedings against any other person in respect of any conduct, or proposed conduct, by or on behalf of any of those services in the discharge of such functions; or

(c)     they are proceedings relating to the taking place in any challengeable circumstances of any conduct falling within paragraph (6).

(5)     The Tribunal shall be the appropriate forum for any complaint if it is a complaint by a person who is aggrieved by any conduct falling within paragraph (6) which the person believes –

(a)     to have taken place in relation to that person, to any of that person’s property, to any communications sent by or to that person, or intended for that person, or to that person’s use of any postal service, telecommunications service or telecommunication system; and

(b)     to have taken place in challengeable circumstances or to have been carried out by or on behalf of any of the intelligence services.

(6)     Subject to paragraph (7), conduct falls within this paragraph if (whenever it occurred) it is –

(a)     conduct by or on behalf of any of the intelligence services;

(b)     conduct for or in connection with the interception of communications in the course of their transmission by means of a postal service or telecommunication system;

(c)     conduct to which Chapter 2 of Part 2 applies;

(d)     conduct to which Part 3 applies;

(e)     any entry on or interference with property or any interference with wireless telegraphy.

(7)     For the purposes only of paragraph (4), nothing mentioned in paragraph (d) or (e) of paragraph (6) shall be treated as falling within that paragraph unless it is conduct by or on behalf of a person holding any office, rank or position with or employed by –

(a)     any of the intelligence services;

(b)     any of Her Majesty’s Forces;

(c)     the Force or the Honorary Police;

(d)     Customs and Excise;

(e)     the Immigration and Nationality Department.

(8)     For the purposes of this Article conduct takes place in challengeable circumstances if –

(a)     it takes place with the authority, or purported authority, of anything falling within paragraph (9); or

(b)     the circumstances are such that (whether or not there is such authority) it would not have been appropriate for the conduct to take place without it, or at least without proper consideration having been given to whether such authority should be sought,

but conduct does not take place in challengeable circumstances to the extent that it is authorized by, or takes place with the permission of, the Bailiff.

(9)     The following fall within this paragraph –

(a)     an interception warrant;

(b)     an authorization or notice under Chapter 2 of Part 2;

(c)     an authorization under Part 3;

(d)     an authorization under Article 101 of the Police Procedures and Criminal Evidence (Jersey) Law 2003;[26] or

(e)     a warrant under the Interception of Communications (Jersey) Law 1993.[27]

(10)    Schedule 3 shall have effect to make further provision regarding the members of the Tribunal and appointment of officers.

47      Orders allocating proceedings to the Tribunal

(1)     An Order under Article 46(3)(c) allocating proceedings to the Tribunal –

(a)     may provide for the Tribunal to exercise jurisdiction in relation to that matter to the exclusion of the jurisdiction of any court or tribunal; but

(b)     if it does so provide, must contain provision conferring a power on the Tribunal, in the circumstances provided for in the Order, to remit the proceedings to the court or tribunal which would have had jurisdiction apart from the Order.

(2)     In making any provision by an Order under Article 46(3)(c) the Committee shall have regard, in particular, to –

(a)     the need to secure that proceedings allocated to the Tribunal are properly heard and considered; and

(b)     the need to secure that information is not disclosed to an extent, or in a manner, that is contrary to the public interest or prejudicial to national security, the prevention or detection of serious crime, the economic well-being of Jersey or the continued discharge, within Jersey, of the functions of any of the intelligence services.

48      Exercise of the Tribunal's jurisdiction

(1)     Subject to paragraphs (4) and (5), it shall be the duty of the Tribunal –

(a)     to hear and determine any proceedings brought before them by virtue of Article 46(3)(c); and

(b)     to consider and determine any complaint or reference made to them by virtue of Article 46(3)(a) or (b).

(2)     Where the Tribunal hear any proceedings by virtue of Article 46(2), they shall apply the same principles for making their determination in those proceedings as would be applied by a court on an application for judicial review.

(3)     Where the Tribunal consider a complaint made to them by virtue of Article 46(3)(a), it shall be the duty of the Tribunal –

(a)     to investigate whether the persons against whom any allegations are made in the complaint have engaged, in relation to –

(i)      the complainant,

(ii)      any of the complainant’s property,

(iii)     any communications sent by or to the complainant, or intended for the complainant, or

(iv)     the complainant’s use of any postal service, telecommunications service or telecommunication system,

in any conduct falling within Article 46(6);

(b)     to investigate the authority (if any) for any conduct falling within Article 46(6) which they find has been so engaged in; and

(c)     in relation to the Tribunal’s findings from their investigations, to determine the complaint by applying the same principles as would be applied by a court on an application for judicial review.

(4)     The Tribunal shall not be under any duty to hear, consider or determine any proceedings, complaint or reference if it appears to them that the bringing of the proceedings or the making of the complaint or reference is frivolous or vexatious.

(5)     Except where the Tribunal, having regard to all the circumstances, are satisfied that it is equitable to do so, they shall not consider or determine any complaint made by virtue of Article 46(3)(a) if it is made more than one year after the taking place of the conduct to which it relates.

(6)     Subject to rules made under Article 50, where any proceedings have been brought before the Tribunal or any reference made to the Tribunal, they shall have power to make such interim orders, pending their final determination, as they think fit.

(7)     Subject to any provision made by rules under Article 50, the Tribunal on determining any proceedings, complaint or reference shall have power to make any such award of compensation or other order as they think fit; and, without prejudice to the power to make rules under Article 50(2)(g), the other orders that may be made by the Tribunal include –

(a)     an order quashing or cancelling any warrant or authorization; and

(b)     an order requiring the destruction of any records of information which –

(i)      has been obtained in exercise of any power conferred by a warrant or authorization, or

(ii)      is held by any public authority in relation to any person.

(8)     The Committee –

(a)     shall, by Order, make provision allowing for an appeal to the Royal Court against any exercise by the Tribunal of their jurisdiction under Article 46(3)(b) or (c); and

(b)     may, by Order, make provision for an appeal against any other determination, award, order or other decision of the Tribunal,

but a determination, award, order, award or other decision of the Tribunal, including a decision as to whether they have jurisdiction, shall not otherwise be subject to appeal or be liable to be questioned in any court.

49      Tribunal procedure

(1)     Subject to rules made under Article 50, the Tribunal shall be entitled to determine their own procedure in relation to any proceedings, complaint or reference brought before or made to them.

(2)     The Tribunal shall have power –

(a)     in connection with the investigation of any matter; or

(b)     otherwise for the purposes of the Tribunal’s consideration or determination of any matter,

to require the Commissioner to provide the Tribunal with all such assistance (including the Commissioner’s opinion as to any issue falling to be determined by the Tribunal) as the Tribunal think fit.

(3)     Where the Tribunal hear or consider any proceedings, complaint or reference relating to any matter, they shall secure that the Commissioner –

(a)     is aware that the matter is the subject of proceedings, a complaint or a reference brought before or made to the Tribunal; and

(b)     is kept informed of any determination, award, order or other decision made by the Tribunal with respect to that matter.

(4)     Where the Tribunal determine any proceedings, complaint or reference brought before or made to them, they shall give notice to the complainant which (subject to any rules made by virtue of Article 50(2)(h)) may be confined, as the case may be, to either –

(a)     a statement that they have made a determination in the complainant’s favour; or

(b)     a statement that no determination has been made in the complainant’s favour.

(5)     Where –

(a)     the Tribunal make a determination in favour of any person by whom any proceedings have been brought before the Tribunal or by whom any complaint or reference has been made to the Tribunal; and

(b)     the determination relates to any act or omission by or on behalf of the Attorney General or to conduct for which any warrant, authorization or permission was issued, granted or given by the Attorney General,

they shall make a report of their findings to the Bailiff.

(6)     It shall be the duty of the persons specified in paragraph (7) to disclose or provide to the Tribunal all such documents and information as the Tribunal may require for the purpose of enabling them –

(a)     to exercise the jurisdiction conferred on them by or under Article 46; or

(b)     otherwise to exercise or perform any power or duty conferred or imposed on them by or under this Law.

(7)     Those persons are –

(a)     every person holding office or employed in any administration of the States or of a Committee of the States;

(b)     every person employed in Jersey under the Crown;

(c)     every person holding office or employed in the Law Officers Department;

(d)     every officer of the Force or member of the Honorary Police;

(e)     every member of each of the intelligence services;

(f)      every official of the Ministry of Defence of the Government of the United Kingdom;

(g)     every person employed by or for the purposes of the Force or the Honorary Police;

(h)     every person required for the purposes of Article 15 to provide assistance with giving effect to an interception warrant;

(i)      every person on whom an obligation to take any steps has been imposed under Article 16;

(j)      every person by or to whom an authorization under Article 26(3) has been granted;

(k)     every person to whom a notice under Article 26(4) has been given;

(l)      every person by whom, or on whose application, there has been granted or given any authorization under Part 3 of this Law or under Article 101 of the Police Procedures and Criminal Evidence (Jersey) Law 2003;[28]

(m)    every person who holds or has held any office, rank or position with the same public authority as a person falling within sub-paragraph (l);

(n)     every person who has engaged in any conduct with the authority of an authorization under Article 26 or Part 3 of this Law or under Article 101 of the Police Procedures and Criminal Evidence (Jersey) Law 2003;[29]

(o)     every person who holds or has held any office, rank or position with a public authority for whose benefit any such authorization has been or may be given; and

(p)     every person who is or has been employed for the purposes of any business of a person falling within paragraph (h), (i) or (k).

(8)     In this Article, a reference to the Commissioner includes a reference to any Assistant Commissioner who, under Article 45, assisted the Commissioner in the matter or to whom the Commissioner delegated any function in respect of the matter.

50      Tribunal rules

(1)     The Bailiff may make rules regulating –

(a)     the exercise by the Tribunal of the jurisdiction conferred on them by or under Article 46; and

(b)     any matters preliminary or incidental to, or arising out of, the hearing or consideration of any proceedings, complaint or reference brought before or made to the Tribunal.

(2)     Without prejudice to the generality of paragraph (1), rules under this Article may –

(a)     enable different members of the Tribunal to carry out functions in relation to different complaints at the same time;

(b)     specify the form and manner in which proceedings are to be brought before the Tribunal or a complaint or reference is to be made to the Tribunal;

(c)     require persons bringing proceedings or making complaints or references to take such preliminary steps, and to make such disclosures, as may be specified in the rules for the purpose of facilitating a determination of whether –

(i)      the bringing of the proceedings, or

(ii)      the making of the complaint or reference,

is frivolous or vexatious;

(d)     make provision about the determination of any question as to whether a person by whom –

(i)      any proceedings have been brought before the Tribunal, or

(ii)      any complaint or reference has been made to the Tribunal,

is a person with a right to bring those proceedings or make that complaint or reference;

(e)     specify the forms of hearing or consideration to be adopted by the Tribunal in relation to particular proceedings, complaints or references (including a form that requires any proceedings brought before the Tribunal to be disposed of as if they were a complaint or reference made to the Tribunal);

(f)      specify the practice and procedure to be followed on, or in connection with, the hearing or consideration of any proceedings, complaint or reference (including, where applicable, the mode and burden of proof and the admissibility of evidence);

(g)     specify orders that may be made by the Tribunal under Article 48(6) or (7);

(h)     require information about any determination, award, order or other decision made by the Tribunal in relation to any proceedings, complaint or reference to be provided (in addition to any statement under Article 49(4)) to the person who brought the proceedings or made the complaint or reference, or to the person representing his or her interests.

(3)     Rules under this Article in relation to the hearing or consideration of any matter by the Tribunal may provide –

(a)     for a person who has brought any proceedings before or made any complaint or reference to the Tribunal to have the right to be legally represented;

(b)     for the manner in which the interests of a person who has brought any proceedings before or made any complaint or reference to the Tribunal may be represented;

(c)     for the appointment in accordance with the rules, by such person as may be determined in accordance with the rules, of a person to represent those interests in the case of any proceedings, complaint or reference.

(4)     The power to make rules under this Article includes power to make rules –

(a)     enabling or requiring the Tribunal to hear or consider any proceedings, complaint or reference without the person who brought the proceedings or made the complaint or reference having been given full particulars of the reasons for any conduct which is the subject of the proceedings, complaint or reference;

(b)     enabling or requiring the Tribunal to take any steps in exercise of their jurisdiction in the absence of any person (including the person bringing the proceedings or making the complaint or reference and any legal representative of that person);

(c)     enabling or requiring the Tribunal, where evidence is taken in the absence of the person by whom the proceedings were brought or, as the case may be, the person who made the complaint or reference, to give that person a summary of the evidence so taken;

(d)     enabling or requiring the Tribunal to exercise their jurisdiction, and to exercise and perform the powers and duties conferred or imposed on them (including, in particular, in relation to the giving of reasons), in such manner provided for in the rules as prevents or limits the disclosure of particular matters.

(5)     Rules under this Article may also include provision –

(a)     enabling powers or duties of the Tribunal that relate to matters preliminary or incidental to the hearing or consideration of any proceedings, complaint or reference to be exercised or performed by a single member of the Tribunal; and

(b)     conferring on the Tribunal such ancillary powers as the Bailiff thinks necessary for the purposes of, or in connection with, the exercise of the Tribunal’s jurisdiction, or the exercise or performance of any power or duty conferred or imposed on them.

(6)     In making rules under this Article the Bailiff shall have regard, in particular, to –

(a)     the need to secure that matters which are the subject of proceedings, complaints or references brought before or made to the Tribunal are properly heard and considered; and

(b)     the need to secure that information is not disclosed to an extent, or in a manner, that is contrary to the public interest or prejudicial to national security, the prevention or detection of serious crime, the economic well-being of Jersey or the discharge, within Jersey, of any functions of any of the intelligence services.

(7)     Rules under this Article may make provision by the application, with or without modification, of the provision from time to time contained in specified rules of court.

51      Codes of practice

(1)     The Committee may, in accordance with this Article, bring into operation one or more codes of practice relating to the exercise and performance of the powers and duties mentioned in paragraph (2).

(2)     Those powers and duties are –

(a)     those that are conferred or imposed (otherwise than on the Commissioner) by or under Parts 2 and 3 of this Law;

(b)     those that are conferred or imposed (otherwise than on the Commissioner appointed under Article 104 of the Police Procedures and Criminal Evidence (Jersey) Law 2003)[30] by or under Part 11 of that Law.[31]

(3)     When the Committee proposes to bring into operation a code of practice, it shall prepare and publish a draft of that code, shall consider any representations made to it about the draft and may modify the draft accordingly.

(4)     After the Committee has complied with paragraph (3), it may bring the code into operation by Order.

(5)     An Order bringing a code of practice into operation may contain such transitional provisions and savings as appear to the Committee to be necessary or expedient in connection with the code of practice thereby brought into operation.

(6)     The Committee may from time to time revise the whole or any part of a code of practice and bring into operation that revised code and paragraphs (3) to (5) shall apply, with appropriate modifications, in relation to that revised code as they apply to the first code brought into operation.

52      Effect of codes of practice

(1)     A person exercising or performing any power or duty in relation to which provision may be made by a code of practice under Article 51 shall, in doing so, have regard to the provisions (so far as they are applicable) of every code of practice for the time being in force under that Article.

(2)     A failure on the part of any person to comply with any provision of a code of practice for the time being in force under Article 51 shall not of itself render that person liable to any criminal or civil proceedings.

(3)     A code of practice in force at any time under Article 51 shall be admissible in evidence in any criminal or civil proceedings.

(4)     If any provision of a code of practice issued or revised under Article 51 appears to –

(a)     the court or tribunal conducting any civil or criminal proceedings;

(b)     the Tribunal;

(c)     the person carrying out the Commissioner’s functions under this Law; or

(d)     a person carrying out any functions of an Assistant Commissioner under Article 45,

to be relevant to any question arising in the proceedings, or in connection with the exercise of that jurisdiction or the carrying out of those functions, in relation to a time when it was in force, that provision of the code shall be taken into account in determining that question.

PART 5

SUPPLEMENTAL

53      Powers of delegation

(1)     The Attorney General may delegate to a Crown Advocate any power conferred on the Attorney General by this Law as a person designated to grant an authorization or give a notice under Article 26 or grant an authorization under Article 34 or 35.

(2)     The Committee may by Order –

(a)     authorize the Chief Officer, the Agent of the Impôts or the Chief Immigration Officer to delegate all or any of the powers conferred on that person by this Law as a person designated to grant an authorization or give a notice under Article 26 or grant an authorization under Article 34 or 35 to an officer in the public authority in relation to which that person is designated of a rank or seniority specified in the Order; and

(b)     impose any such conditions as it thinks fit upon the exercise of any power of delegation so conferred.

54      Expenditure

There shall be paid out of money provided by the States –

(a)     any expenditure incurred by the Attorney General for or in connection with the carrying out of the Attorney General’s functions under this Law;

(b)     any expenditure incurred by the Committee for or in connection with the carrying out of its functions under this Law; and

(c)     any increase attributable to this Law in the sums which are payable out of money so provided under any other enactment.

55      Power to prescribe by Order

The Committee may by Order prescribe anything that shall or may be prescribed under this Law.

56      Offences by body corporate, etc.

(1)     Where an offence committed by a limited liability partnership or body corporate under this Law is proved to have been committed with the consent or connivance of, or to be attributable to any neglect on the part of –

(a)     a person who is a partner of the partnership, or director, manager, secretary or other similar officer of the body corporate; or

(b)     any person purporting to act in any such capacity,

the person shall also be guilty of the offence and liable in the same manner as the partnership or body corporate to the penalty provided for the offence.

(2)     Where the affairs of a body corporate are managed by its members, paragraph (1) shall apply in relation to acts and defaults of a member in connection with the member’s functions of management as if the member were a director of the body corporate.

57      General saving for lawful conduct

Nothing in any of the provisions of this Law by virtue of which conduct of any description is or may be authorized by any warrant, authorization or notice, or by virtue of which information may be obtained in any manner, shall be construed –

(a)     as making it unlawful to engage in any conduct of that description which is not otherwise unlawful under this Law and would not be unlawful apart from this Law;

(b)     as otherwise requiring –

(i)      the issue, grant or giving of such a warrant, authorization or notice, or

(ii)      the taking of any step for or towards obtaining the authority of such a warrant, authorization or notice,

before any such conduct of that description is engaged in; or

(c)     as prejudicing any power to obtain information by any means not involving conduct that may be authorized under this Law.

58      Amendments, repeals, savings and transitional arrangements

(1)     Schedule 4 shall have effect to amend enactments.

(2)     The Interception of Communications (Jersey) Law 1993[32] is repealed.

(3)     For the avoidance of doubt it is hereby declared that nothing in this Law (except paragraph 2 of Schedule 4) affects any power conferred on the Post Office by or under any enactment to open, detain or delay any postal packet or to deliver any such packet to a person other than the person to whom it is addressed.

(4)     For the avoidance of doubt it is hereby declared that nothing in this Law affects any power conferred on a postal operator by Article 48 of the Postal Services (Jersey) Law 2004[33] or by a warrant issued under Article 76 of that Law[34] or any requirement imposed pursuant to Article 77 of that Law.[35]

(5)     Where any warrant under the Interception of Communications (Jersey) Law 1993[36] is in force under that Law at the time when the repeal by this Law of Article 3 of that Law[37] comes into force, the conduct authorized by that warrant shall be deemed for the period which –

(a)     begins with that time; and

(b)     ends with the time when that warrant would (without being renewed) have ceased to have effect under that Law,

as if it were conduct authorized by an interception warrant issued in accordance with the requirements of Chapter 1 of Part 2 of this Law.

(6)     In relation to any such warrant, any certificate issued for the purposes of Article 4(2) of the Interception of Communications (Jersey) Law 1993[38] shall have effect in relation to that period as if it were a certificate issued for the purposes of Article 12(4) of this Law.

(7)     Articles 19 and 20 of this Law shall have effect as if references to interception warrants and to Article 12(4) certificates included references, respectively, to warrants under Article 3 of the Interception of Communications (Jersey) Law 1993[39] and to certificates under Article 4(2) of that Law;[40] and references in Articles 19 and 20 of this Law to intercepted or certified material shall be construed accordingly.

59      Citation and commencement

This Law may be cited as the Regulation of Investigatory Powers (Jersey) Law 2005 and shall come into force on such day or days as the States by Act appoint and different days may be appointed for different provisions of this Law and for different purposes.

A.H. HARRIS

Deputy Greffier of the States.

 


SCHEDULE 1

(Article 29)

RElevant Public Authorities and Designated persons: communications data

Relevant public authority

Designated person

The Force

Chief Officer

Customs and Excise

Agent of the Impôts

Immigration and Nationality Department

Chief Immigration Officer

Income Tax Department

Attorney General

Any of the Parishes

Attorney General

Any of the intelligence services

Attorney General

 


SCHEDULE 2

(Article 36)

Public Authorities and designated persons: surveillance

Part 1

(Article 36(1))

Public Authorities and Designated Persons: directed surveillance and covert human intelligence sources

Public authority

Designated person

The Force

Chief Officer

Customs and Excise

Agent of the Impôts

Immigration and Nationality Department

Chief Immigration Officer

Any of the intelligence services

Attorney General

Ministry of Defence of the Government of the United Kingdom

Attorney General

Income Tax Department

Attorney General

Agriculture and Fisheries Department

Attorney General

Environment and Public Services Department

Attorney General

Housing Department

Attorney General

Employment and Social Security Department

Attorney General

Health and Social Services Department

Attorney General

Jersey Financial Services Commission

Attorney General

Jersey Competition Regulatory Authority

Attorney General

Any of the Parishes

Attorney General


Part 2

(Article 36(2))

Public Authorities and Designated Persons: directed surveillance only

Public authority

Designated person

 

 

 


SCHEDULE 3

(Article 46(10))

THE TRIBUNAL

1        Membership of tribunal

(1)     A member of the Tribunal shall vacate office at the end of the period of 5 years beginning with the day of the member’s appointment, but shall be eligible for reappointment.

(2)     A member of the Tribunal may be relieved of office by the Royal Court at the member’s own request.

2        Salaries and expenses

There shall be paid to the members and officers of the Tribunal from money provided by the States such remuneration, allowances and expenses as the Finance and Economics Committee determine.

3        Officers

(1)     The Finance and Economics Committee may, after consultation with the Tribunal, provide the Tribunal with such officers as it thinks necessary for the proper discharge of the Tribunal’s functions.

(2)     The Tribunal may authorize any officer provided under this paragraph to obtain any documents or information on the Tribunal’s behalf.


SCHEDULE 4

(Article 58(1))

AMENDMENTS

1        Official Secrets (Jersey) Law 1952 amended

Article 12 of the Official Secrets (Jersey) Law 1952[41] shall be repealed.

2        Post Office (Jersey) Law 1969 amended

In the Post Office (Jersey) Law 1969 at the end of the proviso to Article 34[42] there shall be added the words “or under the authority of an interception warrant under Article 10 of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers (Jersey) Law 2005[43]”.

3        Telecommunications (Jersey) Law 2002 amended

In the Telecommunications (Jersey) Law 2002 –

(a)     for Article 52(2) to (5)[44] there shall be substituted the following paragraph –

“(2)    Paragraph (1) shall not apply to any disclosure made –

(a)     in accordance with the order of any court or for the purposes of any criminal proceedings;

(b)     in accordance with any warrant, authorization or notice issued, granted or given under any provision of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers (Jersey) Law 2005;

(c)     in compliance with any requirement imposed (apart from that Law) in consequence of the exercise by any person of any power conferred by or under any enactment exercisable by that person for the purpose of obtaining any document or other information; or

(d)     in pursuance of any duty under the Regulation of Investigatory Powers (Jersey) Law 2005 or under Part 11 of the Police Procedures and Criminal Evidence (Jersey) Law 2003[45] to provide information or produce any document to the Investigatory Powers Commissioner appointed or the Investigatory Powers Commissioner established under the Regulation of Investigatory Powers (Jersey) Law 2005.”;

(b)     in Schedule 1, the amendments and repeals specified in relation to the Interception of Communications (Jersey) Law 1993[46] shall be deleted.

4        Terrorism (Jersey) Law 2002 amended

In Schedule 2 to the Terrorism (Jersey) Law 2002[47] –

(a)     in paragraphs 6(3) and 7(4), for the words “In paragraphs 5 and 8,” there shall be substituted the words “In paragraph 5,”;

(b)     paragraph 8 shall be repealed.

5        Police Procedures and Criminal Evidence (Jersey) Law 2003 amended

(1)     In this paragraph, the “Law” means the Police Procedures and Criminal Evidence (Jersey) Law 2003.[48]

(2)     In Article 101 of the Law[49] –

(a)     in paragraph (1), after the words “Attorney General” there shall be inserted the words “, on an application made by a person mentioned in paragraph (1A),”;

(b)     after paragraph (1) there shall be inserted the following paragraph –

“(1A) An application for an authorization under this Part may only be made by –

(a)     the Chief Officer;

(b)     the Agent of the Impôts;

(c)     the Chief Immigration Officer;

(d)     any member of the intelligence services;

(e)     any official of the Ministry of Defence of the Government of the United Kingdom; or

(f)      a member of Her Majesty’s Forces.”;

(c)     for paragraph (4) there shall be substituted the following paragraphs –

“(4)    The Committee may by Order –

(a)     authorize the Chief Officer, the Agent of the Impôts or the Chief Immigration Officer to delegate the power, under paragraph (1A), to make an application under this Article to, respectively, a member of the Force, an officer of the Impôts or an immigration officer of a rank or seniority specified in the Order; and

(b)     impose any such conditions as it thinks fit upon the exercise of any power of delegation so conferred.

(5)     In this Article –

‘Chief Immigration Officer’ and ‘immigration officer’ have the same meaning as the Regulation of Investigatory Powers (Jersey) Law 2005;

‘intelligence services’ has the same meaning as in the Regulation of Investigatory Powers (Jersey) Law 2005;

‘serious crime’ means conduct which constitutes one or more offences –

(a)     which involve the use of violence, results in substantial financial gain or is conducted by a large number of persons in pursuit of a common purpose; or

(b)     for which a person who has attained the age of 21 and has no previous convictions could reasonably be expected to be sentenced to imprisonment for 3 years or more,

and references to a member of Her Majesty’s Forces do not include references to any member of Her Majesty’s Forces who is a member of a police force by virtue of his or her service with the Royal Navy Regulating Branch, the Royal Military Police or the Royal Air Force Police.”.

(3)     In Article 104 of the Law[50] –

(a)     in paragraph (5), for the words “the security of the British Islands or to the detection of crime” there shall be substituted the words “any of the purposes for which authorizations may be given or granted under this Part of this Law or Part 3 of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers (Jersey) Law 2005”; and

(b)     after paragraph (5) there shall be added the following paragraph –

“(6)    The Commissioner shall give the Investigatory Powers Tribunal established under Article 46(1) of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers (Jersey) Law 2005 all such assistance (including the Commissioner’s opinion as to any issue falling to be determined by that Tribunal) as that Tribunal may require –

(a)     in connection with the investigation of any matter by that Tribunal; or

(b)     otherwise for the purposes of that Tribunal’s consideration or determination of any matter.”.

6        Postal Services (Jersey) Law 2004

(1)     In this paragraph the “Law” means the Postal Services (Jersey) Law 2004.[51]

(2)     In Article 47(2) of the Law[52] there shall be inserted after sub-paragraph (a) the following sub-paragraphs –

“(aa)  a power arising under the Customs and Excise (Jersey) Law 1999[53] or the Regulation of Investigatory Powers (Jersey) Law 2005;

(ab)    a power exercised in a prison arising in rules made pursuant to Article 26 of the Prison (Jersey) Law 1957;[54]”.

(3)     Article 49 of the Law[55] shall be repealed.

(4)     In Article 67(4) of the Law[56] for the words “the Interception of Communications (Jersey) Law 1993[57]” there shall be substituted the words “the Regulation of Investigatory Powers (Jersey) Law 2005”.

(5)     In Article 68(6) of the Law[58] after the words “Part 9,” there shall be inserted the words “the Regulation of Investigatory Powers (Jersey) Law 2005,”.

(6)     For paragraph (3) of Article 69[59] there shall be substituted the following paragraph –

“(3)    Paragraph (1)(a) and (b) do not apply to any disclosure made in obedience to any warrant, authorization or notice issued under Part 2 of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers (Jersey) Law 2005 or required as referred to in Article 44 of that Law.”.

(7)     Article 69(4) of the Law[60] shall be repealed.

(8)     Paragraph 3 of Schedule 1 to the Law[61] shall be repealed.

 


 



[1] Tome VIII, page 165, Volume 1990-1991, pages 389 and 844, Volume 1996-1997, page 587 and Volume 2003, pages 11, 339, 621 and 659.

[2] Volume 1994-1995, page 203.

[3] Volume 1999, page 552.

[4] Volume 1973-1974, page 379, Volume 1986-1987, page 82 and Volume 1998, page 603.

[5] Volume 1992-1993, page 347.

[6] Volume 1999, page 552.

[7] Volume 2002, page 657.

[8] Volume 2000, page 668.

[9] Tome VIII, page 9 and Volume 2003, page 123.

[10] Tome VIII, page 657, Volume 1994-1995, page 61 and Volume 1996-1997, page 801.

[11] Volume 1992-1993, page 223.

[12] Volume 1992-1993, page 219 and Volume 2002, page 85.

[13] Volume 2002, page 714.

[14] Volume 1992-1993, page 223.

[15] Volume 1992-1993, page 223.

[16] Volume 1992-1993, page 223.

[17] Volume 2004, pages 994 and 995.

[18] Volume 2002, page 65.

[19] Tome VIII, pages 55 and 57.

[20] Volume 2003, page 98.

[21] Volume 2003, page 98.

[22] Volume 2003, page 98.

[23] Volume 2003, page 98.

[24] Volume 1992-1993, page 231.

[25] Volume 2000, page 670.

[26] Volume 2003, page 98.

[27] Volume 1992-1993, page 219 and Volume 2002, page 85.

[28] Volume 2003, page 98.

[29] Volume 2003, page 98.

[30] Volume 2003, page 100.

[31] Volume 2003, page 98.

[32] Volume 1992-1993, page 219.

[33] Volume 2004, page 984.

[34] Volume 2004, page 1000.

[35] Volume 2004, page 1000.

[36] Volume 1992-1993, page 219.

[37] Volume 1992-1993, page 224.

[38] Volume 1992-1993, page 225.

[39] Volume 1992-1993, page 224.

[40] Volume 1992-1993, page 225.

[41] Tome VIII, page 62.

[42] Volume 1968-1969, page 462.

[43] Volume 2005, page 517.

[44] Volume 2002, pages 65 and 66.

[45] Volume 2003, page 98.

[46] Volume 1992-1993, page 219.

[47] Volume 2002, page 711.

[48] Volume 2003, page 13 and Volume 2004, page 945.

[49] Volume 2003, page 98.

[50] Volume 2003, page 100.

[51] Volume 2004, page 949.

[52] Volume 2004, page 983.

[53] Volume 1999, page 537, Volume 2001, pages 11 and 146, Volume 2002, page 429, Volume 2003, pages 228 and 355 and Volume 2004, pages 747 and 752.

[54] Tome VIII, page 671 and Volume 1994-1995, page 67.

[55] Volume 2004, page 984.

[56] Volume 2004, page 994.

[57] Volume 1992-1993, page 219 and Volume 2002, page 85.

[58] Volume 2004, page 995.

[59] Volume 2004, page 996.

[60] Volume 2004, page 996.

[61] Volume 2004, page 1007.


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