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section heading icon     witness protection

This page considers questions about witness protection schemes.

It covers -

subsection heading icon     introduction

As the preceding page of this guide noted, protection of witnesses (and of judges, lawyers and juries) against intimidation is a fundamental to an effective legal system. Individuals will not engage with that system if they believe that they - or those around them, such as family members - will be injured or even killed.

Murder of informants (and those suspected of being informants) has a long history, captured in the aphorism that "dead men tell no tales". It is evident in commercial crime, such as that involving drug trafficking, and in other offences such as terrorism or ethnic cleansing in Africa, the Middle East, South America and the Balkans.

Law enforcement agencies have responded by providing witnesses with short term physical protection (eg accommodation in so-called safe houses, provision of guards and screening of communications to prevent intimidation). The cost can be considerable: the Victorian government for example reported that 24/7 security for two witnesses in the 1983 'Operation Aries' cost some $4.5 million.

For major crime they have also resorted to witness protection schemes that involve -

  • waiving penalties (or simply agreeing not to prosecute) informants of significant value
  • providing those informants and their families or other witnesses with a new identity.

That new identity typically involves provision of official identity documents in a new name ('rebirthing' that features officially-sanctioned resume fraud) and relocation to another city, state or even nation to impede efforts at retribution. It may involve a stipend that allows the witness (and family member) to maintain a standard of living, assistance with accommodation and job searching.

The extensiveness of that assistance depends on the perceived value of the witness and the efficiency (or merely budget) of the particular agency.

Witnesses have thus commented that on occasion some people are left high and dry, whether through ineptitude or because the informant was no longer of value to the law enforcement agency. Observers frequently note that people are more likely to gain 'deep' protection' if they have been associated with major offences: a minor gunman will gain less protection than a senior figure in organised crime or a terrorist group who promises to denounce his confederates and who manages the disclosure in a way that maintains his value.

Rebirthing has proved to be controversial on the basis that some offenders do not change their nature merely by being given a new name, address and fictitious personal history. One complaint in the US and Canada, for example, is that criminals have been provided with fake identities in return for provision of information (some of which has proved to be fictitious or of dubious value) and have then engaged in various offences - including rape and murder - using the cover provided by that new identity. Elsewhere there has been criticism that governments have rebirthed criminals and exported those individuals to other countries, which are unaware of their past and unable to determine whether the offender is a risk.

Risdon Slate notes the 1997 comment by the US Marshals Service that the recidivism rate for protected witnesses with prior criminal histories who "were later arrested and charged with crimes is less than 23 percent", ie roughly a quarter of people in the particular scheme went on to break the law.

In Canada recent controversy has involved witness Richard Young, alleged to have provided false information to the RCMP (which would invalidate the protection under the national Witness Protection Program Act) and later convicted of murder. Federal politicians found out about the case through media reports; because Young is a protected witness no details can be published or released.

Although witness protection schemes came to prominence after the mid-1960s, a precedent is provided by initiatives such as the US government's Operation Paperclip, which famously rebirthed or merely sheltered Nazi scientists and intelligence operatives (some of whom were guilty of war crimes) during the 1940s through 1960s.

subsection heading icon     Australia

In Australia the salient legislation is the Witness Protection Act 1994 (Cth). Consistent with the division of federal and state/territory government responsibilities discussed here, the WPA is concerned with offences under national law.

The Act provides a statutory basis for provision of protection to people who -

  • have given or agreed to give evidence on behalf of the Crown in criminal or prescribed proceedings and persons who have
    otherwise given or agreed to give evidence in relation to a criminal offence
  • have made a statement in relation to an offence or
  • may require protection and assistance for any other reason

and are perceived to be in danger by reason of that testimony or statement. It includes protection for persons who are related to or associated with those people.

Section 22 of the Act creates offences relating to divulging information without lawful authority about Commonwealth participants in the WPA scheme. It also creates offences that apply to participants in the event that they disclose information related to the scheme.

As of 2006 there were complementary state/territory schemes -

  • Australian Capital Territory - Witness Protection Act 1996
  • New South Wales - Witness Protection Act 1995
  • Northern Territory - Witness Protection (Northern Territory) Act 2002
  • Queensland - Witness Protection Act 2000
  • South Australia - Witness Protection Act 1996
  • Tasmania - Witness Protection Act 2000
  • Victoria - Witness Protection Act 1999
  • Western Australia - Witness Protection (Western Australia) Act 1996 | here

As of 2006 the formal cost of the federal witness protection scheme was around $1 million, down from $2.6 million several years ago, and covered 39 people. (The figure does not include protection officer salaries. The reported cost in Queensland (for 136 people) was $4.3 million. Victoria appears to cover upwards of 73 witnesses and 89 dependents.

The federal WPA enables inclusion, at the request of a another nation, of foreign nationals or residents who "may need to live outside their country of origin pending or following a trial".

Information about the operation of the Australian schemes is sketchy, although insights are provided by recent disputes. In 2007 an informant in the case against slain Melbourne crime figure Mario Condello went to the state Supreme Court to prevent himself and his wife being removed from witness protection by the Victoria Police on the grounds he was no longer at risk and his behaviour was unacceptable. The original deal featured overseas relocation and financial measures worth around $1 million. His claims were rejected by the Court.

National Crime Authority witness 'Mr Gray' and his wife sued for damages (including a $127,457 income tax bill for benefits of around $45,000 a year) after spending seven years on the NSW program, claiming promises that they would be "looked after". They were removed from the program in 1998, alleging that they were penniless and forced to live off the charity after having enjoyed a more affluent lifestyle prior to participation. They were awarded $400,000 compensation in 2002, reduced by the NSW Court of Appeal in 2003.

subsection heading icon     elsewhere

Development of the Australian regime was strongly influenced by witness protection schemes in the US, in particular the Federal Witness Security Program (WPP) established in 1970.

The authors of the WPP envisaged that that up to 50 people per year would require protection but by 1997 some 20 to 25 people per month were being added, along with dependents. The latter typically included 2.5 family members per witness but in some instances has included extended families of 15 to 30 people. As of 1997 some 16,000 individuals had been assisted under the WPP, with a reported 17,100 by late 2004.

Witness protection schemes are in operation in Canada, Eire, South Africa, Portugal, Netherlands, the Philippines and New Zealand.

subsection heading icon     studies

Points of entry to the academic and professional literature include Risdon Slate's 1997 'The Federal Witness Protection Program: Its Evolution and Continuing Growing Pains' in 16 Criminal Justice Ethics 2, Witsec: Inside the Federal Witness Protection Program (New York: Bantam 2003) by Pete Early & Gerald Schur, the detailed National Institute of Justice study Preventing Gang- and Drug-Related Witness Intimidation (PDF) and Nicholas Fyfe & Heather McKay's 2000 'Desperately Seeking Safety: Witnesses' Experiences of Intimidation, Protection and Relocation' in 40 British Journal of Criminology 4.

Other works of particular value include Fyfe & James Sheptycki's 2006 'International Trends in the Facilitation of Witness Co-operation in Organized Crime Cases' in 3 European Journal of Criminology 3, Fyfe's Protecting Intimidated Witnesses (Aldershot: Ashgate 2001), Fred Montanino's 1990 'Protecting Organised Crime Witnesses In The United States' in 14 International Journal of Comparative & Applied Criminal Justice 1, Gerald Wood's 1986 'Police Informants in Canada: The Law and Reality' in 50 Saskatchewan Law Review 2, Rod Settle's Police Informers: Negotiation and Power (Leichhardt: Federation Press 1991) and the 2001 briefing paper (PDF) on Legal Issues & Witness Protection in Criminal Issues by Mark Mackarel, Fiona Raitt & Susan Moody for the Scottish legislature.

For government perspectives see the 1998 Witness Protection Report by the Australian Parliamentary Joint Committee on the National Crime Authority and 2000 Witnesses For The Prosecution: Protected Witnesses In the National Crime Authority report by the same committee, Douglas Kash's upbeat 'Hiding In Plain Sight: A peek into the Witness Security Program' in the May 2004 FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin, 2005 report by the Office of the Inspector General on the United States Marshals Service Administration of the Witness Security Program.

The Australian Federal Police's annual Protected Witness Program report for 2005-6 is online (PDF).

Most state parliaments and police ministries have published reports on their schemes, albeit difficult to assess given the opacity of much information. Examples are the 1997 Review of the Western Australian Police Witness Protection Program report, the 2005 Victorian Office of Police Integrity Review of the Victoria Police Witness Protection Program report (PDF) and 1993 Martin report Review of Witness Security Program in relation to Victoria Police's 'Witsec' programme.

For 'Paperclip' see Clarence Lasby's Operation Paperclip (New York: Atheneum 1971) and Uki Goni's The Real Odessa (London: Granta 2002).



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version of March 2007
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