Abstract

The proper role of the prosecutor, contrary to popular perception, is not that of a partisan persecutor bent on securing the conviction of an accused person but rather that of a quasi-judicial 'minister of justice' whose detached function is to seek justice and to ensure fairness. This view of the prosecutor's role can be traced back at least to the early 1800s and continues to command firm support in both Australia and England. In considering the development of the role of the prosecutor it is instructive to consider the crucial function performed by the prosecution in the disclosure of potentially significant material in its possession; whether this is evidence upon which the prosecution is choosing to rely at trial or so-called unused material. In this article I will trace the development of the principles relating to disclosure in both England and Australia from the time when the prosecutor was entitled to act as a partisan advocate to the operation for much of the 20th century of the informal 'Old Boys Act' approach to disclosure to the modern insistence on candour culminating in the landmark decisions in England in the 1990s and of the High Court of Australia in R v Mallard in 2005. The fundamental theme that emerges in relation to the issue of disclosure is that the prosecutor must act as the frank minister of justice. There is no place in the modem criminal process either for the prosecutor to act as the partisan advocate or to rely on the informal 'Gentlemen's Club' approach to disclosure. It is clear that the operation of the law in England regarding disclosure has given rise to significant practical and theoretical problems and that it would therefore be wise to be wary before importing the English model to Australia. However demanding and problematic as the prosecutor's duties of disclosure may be, I would argue that in this area, 'The prosecutor must act as a minister of justice, presenting the prosecution evidence fairly, making full disclosure of relevant material and ever conscious that prosecution must not become persecution.

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