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Visa bungle lets ex-detainee off breach charges

May 24, 2024

Friday 24 May 2024
Paul Garvey
The Australian


The majority of the 10 former immigration detainees who had charges against  them dropped after a visa bungle had allegedly committed multiple offences.
 
 The Australian has obtained a copy of the list of Australian Federal Police  charges that had to be abandoned in March after an error was discovered in  the visas issued to the 152 detainees freed from indefinite detention in the  wake of a High Court decision.
 
 The document shows one of the individuals had been charged with 10 separate  counts of breaching curfew, while another three had also been charged with  contravening bail conditions after being arrested multiple times for curfew  breaches. Six of the 10 faced more than one charge.
 
 The charges were all laid between December 8 and March 5.
 
 Each curfew breach carries a maximum penalty of five years' jail and a  $93,900 fine, and a minimum mandatory sentence of one year's jail.
 
 It was previously revealed all breach-related charges against the 10 had to  be dropped after commonwealth lawyers stumbled upon technical issues with the  detainees' visas. All 152 visas had to be reissued in March, with Immigration  Minister Andrew Giles saying the issue dated back to the creation of the visa  class in 2013.
 
 At least two of the 10 who had charges dropped have allegedly reoffended  since. Kuwait-born Majid Jamshidi Doukoshkan, a declared drug trafficker, was  arrested last month after he was one of three men who burgled and bashed an  elderly couple in the Perth suburb of Girrawheen.
 
 He had also been convicted of one count of trespass and one count of driving  without a licence in the weeks between having the curfew charges dropped and  allegedly joining in the Girrawheen burglary.
 
 Abdelmoez Mohamed Elawad faced court in Melbourne this week on some 16  charges, including assaulting an emergency worker and multiple failures to  adhere to a bridging visa and electronic monitoring. Elawad had been given  bail after being charged with breaching visa conditions three days before and  on two occasions after he allegedly stole groceries and threatened a police  officer with a knife.
 
 The details of the charges against the 10 former detainees were provided in  response to a query from opposition home affairs spokesman James Paterson at  a recent Senate estimates hearing. "Just when you think Andrew Giles'  incompetence can't get worse, we learn his failure to issue correct visas has  meant serious recidivist criminals have got off consequence free,"  Senator Paterson told The Australian.
 
 "It is a disgrace that people accused of multiple visa breaches have  walked free to reoffend against Australians because the Albanese government  can't get the basics right." When the visa issue first emerged in March,  Mr Giles said it dated back more than a decade and had been swiftly resolved.
 
 "I can assure everyone that the issues around community safety haven't  been compromised because continuous monitoring has been maintained. We've  acted quickly to regrant those visas," he said.
 
 The issue means only one former detainee to date has been sentenced over  curfew breaches.
 
 Burundi-born Kimbengere Gosoge this week was handed a suspended one-year jail  term for each of six visa-related charges against him. He will serve that  time only if he commits another offence in the next two years.
 
 During sentencing, it was revealed that since his release in November he had  been convicted of stealing, possessing methamphetamine, and trespass. He is  also accused of committing an aggravated burglary this year.
 
 The Albanese government is also facing criticism over the changes it made to  the way visa cancellations are assessed by the Administrative Appeals  Tribunal.
 
 'Just when you think Andrew Giles' incompetence can't get worse . ' JAMES  PATERSON OPPOSITION HOME AFFAIRS SPOKESMAN

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