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If the evidence is undeniable, then no, if it was my son doing such a heinous thing, I'd be on for him copping the proper punishment.
Nope
'In most Australian states and territories, it is illegal to record a private conversation without the consent of all parties involved. This is commonly referred to as “two-party consent.”'
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Is it Legal to Record Your Partner in Australia? Family Law Rules and Privacy Rights Explained | Bennett Carroll Solicitors
Wondering if it's legal to record your partner in Australia? Learn about Australian privacy laws, family law rules, and when recordings might be used in court. Know your rights before pressing "record." Bennett Carroll Solicitors - Brisbane, Gold Coast & Sunshine Coast.www.bcglaw.com.au
'But the reality is that it is normally against the law to record a phone call without the other person’s consent.'
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Is it legal to record a phone call in Australia?
The rules relating to recording telephone calls in different parts of the nation.www.sydneycriminallawyers.com.au
'Under the Telecommunications (Interception) Act 1979 (Cth), it is generally illegal to record phone conversations without all parties’ consent.'
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Can A Secret Recording Be Used As Evidence In Australia?
Explore 'Can a Secret Recording Be Used as Evidence?' Understand its legality, admissibility in court, and the complexities of Australian law.justicefamilylawyers.com.au
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Hear hear!Exactly this. "Being a father" or "supporting your son" is not the equivalent of defending them to the end, in spite of the victim and the evidence. Supporting TS to learn from their mistakes. Supporting TS to take responsibility. Supporting TS through the difficult many years he is going to be incarcerated, and his life subsequent to parole.
Not ignoring the victim, and making stupid public statements as today essentially indicating they will fight it to the bitter end in denial.
I'm not the expert. The High Court Justices supposedly are. People are denigrating SOS for stating his son's innocence & not accepting the verdict. Well there are appeals processes still to play out as juries do get verdicts wrong as I was highlighting by another high profile case. Perhaps he should've made no statement until then. People would then complain about his silence. A no win situation either way you look at it.You’re the expert, you tell me. Thanks for that one example.
I honestly don't think he has another option, psychologically, than to live in denial.Hear hear!
Support can be providing emotional support and learnings etc.
They were my exact thoughts that I posted three days ago until a mod deleted it!
Any idea what Tom’s looking at?
2, 5, 10, 15 years?
In many countries (maybe not Oz) it is illegal to record phone conversations without consent from the other party. So if that recording is provided as evidence in court, the defendant can sue the other party for breaking the law to obtain evidence illegally.It's not illegal if it's to protect your own legal interests . Which seems to be their case here.
And what do you mean by the silvagnis could "sue"??.
"Sue" who and for what?
No I don’t think you’re reading too much into it! You raise a very valid point and probably the reason he is in this predicament. The family pride themselves on being important and wealthy. The culture of the Melbourne elite. Plus the name of Carlton Football Club is at stake.I agree. Probably just a "no comment" was appropriate for today in the circumstances.
Others will probably think this is trivial or I'm being overly sensitive or reading to much into it but to me this a pattern of behaviour.
It looks like they moved absolutely heaven and earth to get the suppression order (a KC went to the Supreme Crt over this) and then today the words he used were "clear his name".
This all strikes me as a bit offish. Seems like the main focus is on the "name" and "reputation" rather than dealing with actual human beings.
Thats not how it works.In many countries (maybe not Oz) it is illegal to record phone conversations without consent from the other party. So if that recording is provided as evidence in court, the defendant can sue the other party for breaking the law to obtain evidence illegally.
Exactly this. "Being a father" or "supporting your son" is not the equivalent of defending them to the end, in spite of the victim and the evidence. Supporting TS to learn from their mistakes. Supporting TS to take responsibility. Supporting TS through the difficult many years he is going to be incarcerated, and his life subsequent to parole.
Not ignoring the victim, and making stupid public statements as today essentially indicating they will fight it to the bitter end in denial.
Thats not how it works.
If evidence is unlawfully obtained then the defence (and the judge) make sure it's not admitted and certainly not presented in open crt.
There are plenty of stages that have to happen before evidence finds it way to a jury.
So nobody is "suing" anyone here.
The defence would have plenty of opportunities to vet and filter evidence along the way.
Who gives a crap about other countries legislation? The only legislation that matters is that in Australia and in this case specifically the legislation in Victoria.In many countries (maybe not Oz) it is illegal to record phone conversations without consent from the other party. So if that recording is provided as evidence in court, the defendant can sue the other party for breaking the law to obtain evidence illegally.
I mean you are right. Juries aren't always right.I'm not the expert. The High Court Justices supposedly are. People are denigrating SOS for stating his son's innocence & not accepting the verdict. Well there are appeals processes still to play out as juries do get verdicts wrong as I was highlighting by another high profile case. Perhaps he should've made no statement until then. People would then complain about his silence. A no win situation either way you look at it.
Then they're fools.What if they genuinely believe their son is innocent?
Then just say something neutral like we are disappointed with the verdict and will talk to our lawyers when we have had time to process the shock.What if they genuinely believe their son is innocent?
So you are championing the execution / burning at the stake of SOS & his wife who are not guilty of any crime?I'll clarify.
SOS and his wife.
Barristers are being advised on how to keep high-profile clients accused of serious crimes out of the spotlight with a how-to guide outlining tactics for obtaining suppression orders and seeking favourable treatment from police. The instructional document, circulated among the state’s leading barristers and obtained by this masthead, provides advice on the best time to apply for a gag order and exactly what to ask psychiatrists to include in reports for those based on a risk of self-harm or deteriorating mental health.
Jason Bosland, an associate professor at the University of Melbourne who has published material on cases including suppression orders made in the trial of the late Cardinal George Pell, said the state had seen a “massive increase” in mental safety suppression order applications over the past 12 months.“It is a real problem,” he said. “If you are an applicant who can afford to get psychiatric reports to say, ‘I’ve assessed the person and any publicity could lead to disastrous consequences’, you’ve got a guaranteed order. It’s not acceptable.”
The Silvagni's will always be linked with Carlton first & foremostI was fairly done with SOS and the Silvagni family before. Now I am glad that they are away from the club and, hopefully, won't be back.