Will Shakespear
mumbo magic
- Joined
- Mar 4, 2006
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- 2013
October 15, 2008 12:00am
PEOPLE would no longer be able to claim being drunk as a defence or a mitigating factor to a crime in NSW, and would face tougher sentences if intoxicated under tough new laws.
The proposal to go before State Cabinet is an attempt to strike at the soaring incidence of alcohol-related violence across Sydney.
It would include a mandatory 2am close of all pubs, clubs and bottle shops.
24-hour pubs to have their day?
The aggressive changes to criminal and liquor laws, contained in a secret Cabinet minute obtained by The Daily Telegraph, remove intoxication as a defence or a mitigating factor in crime - particularly assaults.
It would become an "aggravating factor" in sentencing.
Home delivery of alcohol would be banned unless approved by special licence, in a bid to stamp out under-age drinking parties.
Tele readers demand pubs close early
Under-18s caught intoxicated would have driving licences suspended or have their application for licences delayed by up to 12 months.
The changes, likely to upset the hotel and club industry, include a demerit-point system akin to driving licences for pubs and clubs, which would face being shut for accumulated breaches of the licensing laws.
The proposals, drafted with the help of Police Commissioner Andrew Scipione, are contained in a special Cabinet minute that is due to go before Premier Nathan Rees within weeks.
It is understood the initiatives have already been approved by a special Cabinet sub-committee, set up by former premier Morris Iemma in May, to tackle alcohol-related crime.
Mr Scipione flagged changes earlier this week when he vowed in The Daily Telegraph to close down problem hotels after figures showed alcohol related assaults double every year in NSW.
"It is incongruous that the criminal law still regards intoxication as a factor that can lessen culpability for violent anti-social behaviour," the Cabinet minute states.
The 11-point plan also includes drink marshals in pubs and mandatory CCTV for late-trading premises.
http://www.news.com.au/dailytelegraph/story/0,22049,24498322-5001021,00.html
PEOPLE would no longer be able to claim being drunk as a defence or a mitigating factor to a crime in NSW, and would face tougher sentences if intoxicated under tough new laws.
The proposal to go before State Cabinet is an attempt to strike at the soaring incidence of alcohol-related violence across Sydney.
It would include a mandatory 2am close of all pubs, clubs and bottle shops.
24-hour pubs to have their day?
The aggressive changes to criminal and liquor laws, contained in a secret Cabinet minute obtained by The Daily Telegraph, remove intoxication as a defence or a mitigating factor in crime - particularly assaults.
It would become an "aggravating factor" in sentencing.
Home delivery of alcohol would be banned unless approved by special licence, in a bid to stamp out under-age drinking parties.
Tele readers demand pubs close early
Under-18s caught intoxicated would have driving licences suspended or have their application for licences delayed by up to 12 months.
The changes, likely to upset the hotel and club industry, include a demerit-point system akin to driving licences for pubs and clubs, which would face being shut for accumulated breaches of the licensing laws.
The proposals, drafted with the help of Police Commissioner Andrew Scipione, are contained in a special Cabinet minute that is due to go before Premier Nathan Rees within weeks.
It is understood the initiatives have already been approved by a special Cabinet sub-committee, set up by former premier Morris Iemma in May, to tackle alcohol-related crime.
Mr Scipione flagged changes earlier this week when he vowed in The Daily Telegraph to close down problem hotels after figures showed alcohol related assaults double every year in NSW.
"It is incongruous that the criminal law still regards intoxication as a factor that can lessen culpability for violent anti-social behaviour," the Cabinet minute states.
The 11-point plan also includes drink marshals in pubs and mandatory CCTV for late-trading premises.
http://www.news.com.au/dailytelegraph/story/0,22049,24498322-5001021,00.html