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Children's court Web Site
First mention
This is the first time that a matter is listed
in the Children's Court. On that date the matter
can finish as a plea of guilty or be adjourned.
If you are pleading not guilty the matter will
be adjourned to a contest mention or straight
to a contested hearing / plea of not guilty.
Further mention
This
is the second or subsequent listing of your matter
in the Children's Court. As with a first mention
the matter can finish as a plea of guilty or be
adjourned. If you are pleading not guilty the
matter will be adjourned to a contest mention
or straight to a contested hearing / plea of not
guilty.
Contest mention
A
contest mention in the Children's Court is a step
that is used to resolve matters that are going
to be a contested hearing / plea of not guilty.
The informant is expected to attend as are you
and your lawyer. Your lawyer will have read the
police brief, got instructions from you about
what you want to happen and be able to advise
the Magistrate what the issues in the case are.
The prosecutor and your lawyer
will discuss whether the matter can be resolved
before you get into Court. Charges are often withdrawn
at contest mention as the Police may realize that
they can not prove them or that what they are
alleging did not happen.
The Magistrate will
often give a sentence indication in a contest
mention in the Children's Court. This is where
they will indicate to you what penalty you will
get if you plead guilty at that stage and save
the Court the further time of other hearings of
your matter. You are in no way obliged to plead
guilty and the Magistrate who hears the contest
mention is not meant to hear the contested hearing.
Often the Magistrate will give
a common sense evaluation of the strengths and
weaknesses of the evidence against you.
At this stage you lawyer will
indicate how many witnesses will be called (if
any) and
whether you are disputing specific pieces of police
evidence, such as a record of the interview the
Police had with you.
If the matter resolved to a plea
of guilty it will either be heard on that same
day or adjourned off to another date if you need
to provide reports or references etc.
If
the matter does not resolve at contest mention
it then goes to what is called a contested hearing
or a plea of not guilty to be heard at a later
date in the Children's Court.
Contested hearing or a plea of not guilty
in the Children's Court
All these terms mean the same
thing. They are essentially the same process as
a trial is in the higher courts. Witnesses can
be called by prosecution and defence, they tell
their version of events and then a decision is
made as to whether the charges have been proved
against you. In the Magistrates' Court there are
no juries and so the matter is decided by a Magistrate.
If the Magistrate finds you not
guilty there is a discretion to award you payment
of your costs. It is not something that you should
rely on as happening as there are a number of
factors that a Magistrate can take into account
to not order payment of your costs.
Guilty plea in the Children's Court
Is
where a plea of guilty is entered and then submissions
are made on your behalf by your lawyer. Obviously
the more positive things that can be put on your
behalf the better result you will get. It is important
to get character
references from your work and references
from people who know you well and can talk about
your positive characteristics.
Consolidated plea
A
consolidated plea (a “consolidation”)
in the Children's Court is when more than one
separate sets of charges is heard as a plea of
guilty on the same date.
Sentencing
Is where the matter is adjourned
for the Magistrate to decide what penalty they
will impose. If sentencing is put off for quite
a long time it is referred to as a deferral of
sentencing.
Appeal from the Children's Court
If
you, or your lawyers think the decision against
you was wrong, or too harsh you can appeal from
the Children's Court to the County Court.
You have 30 days from the date
of the Magistrate making a final sentencing order
against you to file an appeal. If you are late
in filing an appeal you can put yourself in a
position where your appeal will not be heard.
You must fill out the paperwork at the Children's
Court for an appeal.
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