Substantial criminal record
The most common ground. Any single sentence of 12 months or more imprisonment, including suspended sentences. Multiple sentences can be cumulated to reach the 12-month threshold.
It applies to visa holders with criminal records, to people the Minister believes are not of good character, and to people whose presence in Australia is seen as a risk. The consequences include indefinite detention and removal from Australia. Fast specialist legal representation is essential. Handled by Prateek Maan, Immigration Lawyer.
A visa holder fails the character test in several defined circumstances. The most common is a substantial criminal record.
The most common ground. Any single sentence of 12 months or more imprisonment, including suspended sentences. Multiple sentences can be cumulated to reach the 12-month threshold.
Broader tests capturing association with organised groups, conduct overseas that would have been an offence in Australia, and other circumstances affecting character. More discretionary.
An Interpol notice, suspected involvement in various serious conduct, or in various other defined circumstances set out in the Migration Act.
Who made the decision determines your appeal rights. Some decisions go to the ART. Some go straight to Federal Court.
Delegates of the Minister (Department officers) make most Section 501 decisions. These have ART review rights within 9 days.
The Minister can personally cancel under Section 501(3) and 501(3A). Under 501(3A), there is no ART review. Federal Court judicial review is the only path.
For visa holders serving a full-time custodial sentence of 12+ months, mandatory cancellation under Section 501(3A) applies. Revocation requests can be made within 28 days.
After mandatory cancellation, a revocation request can be made. The request is usually due within 28 days. It involves detailed submissions addressing the character concerns and compelling circumstances supporting revocation.
Ministerial Directions (currently Direction 99, with Direction 110 applying to later cases) guide decision-makers. Appeal submissions must address each primary consideration directly with evidence.
Protection of the Australian community from criminal or other serious conduct. The first primary consideration under the Directions.
The strength, nature, and duration of ties to Australia. Best interests of minor children in Australia. Both primary considerations.
Expectations of the Australian community. International non-refoulement obligations. Both directly relevant under the Directions.
Cancellations can result in indefinite immigration detention and removal to a country the person may have left decades ago. Australian long-term residents, including people who arrived as children and hold permanent visas, have been removed under Section 501. This is one reason these matters are the most legally complex and most consequential part of migration law.
For any Section 501 matter, same-day consultation with Prateek Maan. For clients in detention, we work around the clock.