Going to Court? Book Your Free First Appointment

Causing an Article to be Carried by a Postal or Similar Service Intending to Make it Easier to Procure a Child to Engage in Sexual Activity With Another Person

Causing an article to be carried by a postal or similar service intending to make it easier to procure a child to engage in sexual activity with another person is an offence under section 471.25A(3) of the Criminal Code Act 1995 (Cth), which carries a maximum penalty of 15 years in prison.

To establish the offence, the prosecution must prove beyond reasonable doubt that:

  1. You caused an article to be carried by a postal or similar service to another person (‘the recipient’)
  2. You did so intending to make it easier to procure a person (‘the child’) to engage in sexual activity with another person (‘the participant’)
  3. The child was under 16 years of age, or you believed him or her to be under that age
  4. The participant was under 18 years of age, or you believed him or her to be under that age, and
  5. You intended the sexual activity to take place in your or the participant’s presence.

To ‘procure’ is to encourage, entice, recruit or induce, whether by threats, promises or otherwise.

‘Sexual activity’ includes sexual intercourse, sexual touching and other acts of a sexual nature.

You are not guilty of the offence if you establish to the court on the balance of probabilities that you believed the recipient to be at least 16 years of age, or the participant to be least 18 years of age

For the purpose of establishing your belief about age, any representation made to you that the recipient or participant was under, of or over a certain age is proof that you believed he or she was, or they were, of the represented age unless there is evidence to the contrary.

When determining your belief about age, the court may consider a range of matters including:

  1. The recipient’s or participant’s appearance
  2. Any medical or other scientific opinion
  3. Any document that is or appears to be an official or medical record from outside Australia, and
  4. Any document that appears to be a copy of such a record.

It is immaterial that the recipient was a fictitious person representing themselves as a real person.

You may be found guilty even if it was impossible for the sexual activity to take place.

You are not guilty if you attempted but failed to convey the article to the recipient or participant.

Duress and necessity are defences to the charge.

What Our Clients Say SEE ALL

  • ★★★★★

    Her ability to navigate complex legal matters with confidence and competence sets her apart

    I want to express my sincere gratitude for the exceptional legal representation provided by Rachel…

  • ★★★★★

    Genuinely changed my life!

    Tandy genuinely changed my life! Would recommend her to anyone.

  • ★★★★★

    Her genuine care and support made all the difference

    Ash is an outstanding lawyer whose expertise in the law is truely commendable. She effortlessly…

  • ★★★★★

    I got off with no jail time which surprised alot of people including myself

    This Review is specifically for Jayden Murdoch who is a highly skilled and knowledgeable lawyer…

Going to Court? Call For Your Free First Appointment

Main Menu

Follow Us

Ask Our AI Assistant

Disclaimer: Response is AI generated general advice only and should not be relied upon without consulting a lawyer.

Saved Articles & Pages

APPOINTMENT BOOKING FORM

Preferred date for conference
Briefly describe your situation:
Do you have a court date?

Your Review & Rating * mandatory fields

Review Text *
Rating (optional)