The 2017 Australian National Audit Office (ANAO) review of Border Force .......
- Some personal searches of passengers at international airports examined by the ANAO were unlawful or inappropriate, indicating weaknesses in the control framework.........
Under section 3.5 of the report is the following:
- The ANAO examined internal records relating to 69 personal searches undertaken at Australian airports during 2015–16. The test results in Table 3.2 demonstrate the detention officer was unauthorised for five (12 per cent) of the 42 external, internal medical or body scan searches in the sample, which means these searches were unlawful. With regard to certification, 20 (29 per cent) of the 69 searches sampled involved at least one uncertified officer, meaning these were inappropriate searches. All body scan operators in the sample were authorised.
Between 12 and 29 per cent of the searches were unlawful.
MelT, you posted about that ANAO report and have consistently used it in this thread to support whatever arguments. And as per the below excerpts from some of your posts, you consistently carried on with the statistics from that report.
I found it difficult to believe what was being alleged, and so I actually read the report, which I am sure not many others have time to do. And lo and behold, it made sense, but it was a vastly different picture to what you are portraying here.
That ANAO audit was NOT examining anything to do with the actual way or reason that the searches were conducted. It had NOTHING to do with the accuracy of intel or selection of targets, or anything like that. Nor anything to do with how the actual searches were conducted. It only looked at internal training and certification/authorization requirements of the officers involved each time - administrative stuff. And it was doing so reviewing stuff from the first year of operation of the new Border Force combined departments.
When you started quoting that report, you kept using the term "inappropriate searches", without ever disclosing what that term meant, in the true context of the ANAO report. And quite understandably, other readers of your post seem to have taken that term in common usage. So for the record, I will explain it. The searches that were termed "inappropriate" were ones where there had been any officer present who whose training was not "up to date". Specifically they have to have their training certification current, which requires refresher training every two years. And even though this is a breach of internal training policies, the ANAO states in it's footnotes:
" 4.33 In most cases, uncertified officers had previously undertaken the s219 Detention and Search training but their certification had lapsed, usually only by a few weeks or months. While it is unlikely that the knowledge and skills of an officer who undertook training one year and eleven months ago differ significantly from an officer who undertook training two years and one month ago, the level of non-compliance with this policy requirement indicates internal controls are currently inadequate."
Hardly breath-taking stuff! And IMHO a very different story to the one you have painted. And the "unlawful" searches were deemed that in the sense that the Department had not made the broad authorisations to the individual staff members involved - nothing to do with the actual circumstances of the specific searches - so because of that they could be deemed "potentially unlawful".
Yet you have used that report to make such claims as it showing officers go on phishing exercises and abuse their powers?? And that they suggest that the rate of "false positives" is too high?? That there is a strong possibility that the search that started this thread was unnecessary or not conducted properly?? (quotes below)
I will give you the benefit of doubt and assume you only skim-read that report, or just saw the stats and made an assumption of what the terms "innappropriate" and "unlawful" meant. But you need to be careful - as per the last quote below, you have people now believing something that they misunderstand.
Kaelo - you just need to see the findings of the National Audit office to see the number of searches that were either unlawful (10 per cent) or inappropriate (almost one third).
Those are significant numbers. Not just 'collateral', or 'no system is perfect'..........
.......No one has said you need to have 'all the evidence'. But at the same time we shouldn't accept that officers can go on a phishing exercise. That can open the process to abuse, as has demonstrated by the National Audit office.
The findings of the National Audit office speak for themselves. Almost a third of searches were inappropriate. More than 10 per cent were unlawful. I.......
.. ....
This is where the results of the National Audit Office come in. .... we know that 12% of searches were unlawful and almost 1 in 3 were inappropriate. These are important because it may suggest the 'margin of error' - false positives if you like - are far too high......
........ The bottom line is that with up to one third of searches being innappropriate and ten percent being unlawful, there is a strong possibility that this search either wasn't necessary, or was not conducted properly. ......
So, it's that bad? 30% of searches are inappropriate. Sad.