Minister for Justice Helen McEntee has appointed a group of six experts, headed by former Court of Appeal judge Mr Justice Michael Peart (pictured), to review the .
The acts, which date from 1939 to 1998, set out a range of offences relating to the security of the state, and include powers of search, arrest and detention relating to those offences. In addition, the Special Criminal Court, which sits without a jury, was established by the 1939 act.
The Department of Justice said the group would examine all aspects of the legislation, taking into account 鈥渢he current threat posed by domestic and international terrorism and organised crime鈥.
The other members of the group are:
Minister McEntee said she would be asking for an interim report from the group within three months, along with an indication of how long it would take to complete its work.
She said that while the Offences Against the State Acts and the Special Criminal Court had served the state well, it was important to occasionally review how key legislation operated.
In its 2018 report, the Commission on the Future of Policing in Ireland recommended a 鈥渃omprehensive and robust review鈥 of the legislative framework within which police and other agencies operate in the area of national security.
The last review of the legislation was published in August 2002 by a committee under the chairmanship of former Supreme Court judge, the late Mr Justice Anthony Hederman.