Citizenship Act, ss 34(2)(c) and (2): retrospective only; deterrence a permissible consideration?

Federal Court. Were the tests in ss 34(2)(c) and 34(2) of the Australian Citizenship Act 2007 (Cth) retrospective only, with the assessment of risk of reoffending being of little or no relevance? In such tests, is it generally permissible for decision-makers "to have regard to such deterrence as a factor in the protection of the integrity of the naturalisation process, provided that it is not associated with a substantial purpose of pursuing retribution for or denunciation of the specific conduct engaged in by the person whose citizenship is revoked"?

Student: GTE and group hearings

Can it be said that, whether an applicant is a genuine applicant for entry and stay as a student is reached by reason only of the particular criteria in cll 500.212(a), (b) and (c)? Do the words in cl 500.212(a) concern only with how long a visa applicant intends to stay in Australia? In assessing whether an applicant "is a genuine applicant for entry and stay as a student", must applicants satisfy each of cll 500.212(a), (b) and (c)? Are some of the factors in Direction No 69 also relevant to cl 500.212(c)? Did the group introduction process at the start of the Tribunal hearing amount to a denial of procedural fairness? Should a litigant be expected to put on an appeal before being entitled to settled reasons from the court below?

Weight ascribed to cll 9.2 and 9.4.1 reduced by ‘choice’ of removal?

Federal Court. Did cl 9.2 of Direction 90 assume removal from Australia? Was cl 9.4.1 capable of requiring consideration of removal or indefinite detention? Was it "illogical, irrational or otherwise legally unreasonable for the Tribunal to reduce the weight which it would otherwise have given to the other considerations in cll 9.2 and 9.4.1 because, in the applicant’s current circumstances, the Tribunal found that the only way in which he could be removed to South Sudan was at his own request"?

Can RMAs be responsible for consequences of 3rd-party forgery?

Q1 to the OMARA: assuming that it was not the Agent who forged the sponsor's signature and that he was not aware of the forgery, did he nevertheless facilitate the forgery by lack of diligence? Q2: assuming that the Agent's copying of the letterhead from the sponsor's website into nomination documents without the sponsor's knowledge did not involve dishonesty, was that nevertheless a misleading act? Q3: did the metadata on the Agent's file notes indicate to OMARA that those notes were not contemporaneous?

Genuine, yet a bogus document?

Federal Circuit Court. Can a document that itself is genuine meet the definition of a 'bogus document' by having been fraudulently obtained?

Intersection between s 39(1) of AAT Act and s 500(6L) of Migration Act

Federal Court (Full Court). Was the obligation under s 39(1) of the AAT Act to ensure procedural fairness higher than that provided by the common law? Must the content of a “reasonable opportunity” in s 39(1) of the AAT Act be construed in light of the terms of s 500(6L) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth)?

AAT bound to accept unchallenged expert’s opinion?

Federal Court. Is the Tribunal bound to uncritically accept an expert's opinion? If not, is it nevertheless bound to do so if the expert's opinion was adduced before the Tribunal by a non-citizen and the Minister was a party who did not adduce any evidence to contradict that opinion?

The interplay between ss 476A(2) and 196(4)

Federal Court. Under s 196(4) of the Migration Act, if a person is detained as a result of a visa cancellation under provisions such as s 501, "the detention is to continue unless a court finally determines that the detention is unlawful, or that the person detained is not an unlawful non-citizen". Interpreting s 196(4) in isolation, a court would have no power to make a non-final (i.e. interlocutory) order for the release of a person to whom that provision applies. However, s 476A(2) provides that, where the FCA has jurisdiction in relation to a matter, that jurisdiction is the same as the High Court's. Does s 476A(2) give the FCA the power to make an interlocutory order for the release of a person to whom s 196(4) applies?

Child’s best interests to be considered in the case of lengthy detention?

Federal Court. In the context of a decision under s 501CA(4) of the Migration Act 1958 (Cth), was there an obligation on the Tribunal arising from Direction 90 to "consider the likely effect on minor children in Australia if the applicant were to remain in immigration detention for a lengthy period of time"?

Minister capitulated during judicial review?

Federal Court. Should it be inferred that the reason why the Minister determined the visa application shortly after the judicial review application was filed is that he capitulated and recognised that the Applicant would succeed in his claim to a writ of mandamus, with the result that the Respondents should pay the Applicant's costs incurred until the time of the visa grant?