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Thomas v Mowbray, was a decision handed of the High Court of Australia on 2 August 2007 concerning the constitutional validity of "interim control orders" under the Commonwealth Criminal Code. The case was brought by Joseph Terrence Thomas (referred to as "Jihad" Jack Thomas by the media), where he sought to challenge the interim control order that had been placed on him by a Federal Magistrate. The High Court ruled, by a 5:2 majority, that interim control orders were constitutional.

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  • Thomas v Mowbray (en)
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  • Thomas v Mowbray, was a decision handed of the High Court of Australia on 2 August 2007 concerning the constitutional validity of "interim control orders" under the Commonwealth Criminal Code. The case was brought by Joseph Terrence Thomas (referred to as "Jihad" Jack Thomas by the media), where he sought to challenge the interim control order that had been placed on him by a Federal Magistrate. The High Court ruled, by a 5:2 majority, that interim control orders were constitutional. (en)
name
  • Thomas v Mowbray (en)
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  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Coat_of_Arms_of_Australia.svg
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  • Joseph Terrence Thomas; Plaintiff v Graham Mowbray, Federal Magistrate & Ors; Defendants (en)
judges
  • Gleeson CJ, Gummow, Kirby, Hayne, Callinan, Heydon and Crennan JJ (en)
has abstract
  • Thomas v Mowbray, was a decision handed of the High Court of Australia on 2 August 2007 concerning the constitutional validity of "interim control orders" under the Commonwealth Criminal Code. The case was brought by Joseph Terrence Thomas (referred to as "Jihad" Jack Thomas by the media), where he sought to challenge the interim control order that had been placed on him by a Federal Magistrate. The High Court ruled, by a 5:2 majority, that interim control orders were constitutional. (en)
date decided
opinions
  • Subdivision B of Division 104 of the Commonwealth Criminal Code, which allows for the making of "interim control orders", is a valid law of the Commonwealth (en)
prior actions
  • None (en)
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