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INDEPENDENT COMMISSION AGAINST CORRUPTION ACT 1988 - SECT 11
Duty to notify Commission of possible corrupt conduct
(1) This section applies to the following persons: (a) the Ombudsman,
(b) the
Commissioner of Police,
(c) the principal officer of a public authority,
(d)
an officer who constitutes a public authority,
(e) a Minister of the Crown.
(2) A person to whom this section applies is under a duty to report to the
Commission any matter that the person suspects on reasonable grounds concerns
or may concern corrupt conduct.
(2A) Despite subsection (2), the Commissioner
of Police is not under a duty to report to the Commission any matter that
concerns or may concern corrupt conduct of a police officer or administrative
officer (within the meaning of the Police Integrity Commission Act 1996 )
unless the Commissioner of Police suspects on reasonable grounds that the
matter also concerns or may concern corrupt conduct of another
public official.
(2B) Despite subsection (2), the Commissioner for the New
South Wales Crime Commission (
"the Crime Commissioner") is not under a duty to report to the Commission any
matter that concerns or may concern corrupt conduct of a Crime Commission
officer (within the meaning of the Police Integrity Commission Act 1996 )
unless the Crime Commissioner suspects on reasonable grounds that the matter
also concerns or may concern corrupt conduct of another public official.
(3)
The Commission may issue guidelines as to what matters need or need not be
reported.
(3A) A Minister of the Crown who is under a duty under this section
to report a matter may (despite subsection (2)) report the matter either to
the Commission or to the head of any agency responsible to the Minister.
(4)
This section has effect despite any duty of secrecy or other restriction on
disclosure.
(5) The regulations may prescribe who is the principal officer of
a public authority, but in the absence of regulations applying in relation to
a particular public authority, the principal officer is the person who is the
head of the authority, its most senior officer or the person normally entitled
to preside at its meetings.
(6) The regulations may prescribe the principal
officer of a separate office within a public authority as the principal
officer of the public authority in relation to matters concerning the separate
office.
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