Police Powers
In this section
- Arrest
- Arrest Without a Warrant (VIC)
- Can Police Search Your Phone Without a Warrant? (VIC)
- Fingerprinting (VIC)
- Forensic Procedures: Intimate and Non-Intimate Samples (VIC)
- Police Interviews
- Personal Searches (VIC)
- Police Arrest Powers (VIC)
- Police Powers and Young People (VIC)
- When Police Can Enter Private Premises (VIC)
- Police Questioning
- Your Rights When Approached by Police (VIC)
- Search Warrants (VIC)
- When Can Police Use a Taser? (VIC)
Victorian police have broad powers but these are limited by legal safeguards to protect the rights of citizens. Police powers include the power to arrest and detain a person in certain circumstances, the power to carry out a search and to seize items and the power to take fingerprints and DNA evidence. When exercising these powers, police must follow the procedures set out in the Victoria Police Act 2013.
Victorian police also have the power to invite a suspect to participate in an interview about alleged offending. However, police must inform the suspect that they do not have to participate and that anything they say can be used as evidence against them. Police are not allowed to question a person when they are sick, injured, intoxicated or do not understand their rights. They are not allowed to proceed with an interview after a suspect has said they do not want to be interviewed.
If police act in a way that goes beyond the powers conferred on them by legislation, they may be acting unlawfully. This may mean that the evidence that they obtain, while acting improperly, is deemed to be inadmissible in any proceedings that result from the investigation. This section of the site contains information about Victorian police powers.
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