Mr TEHAN (Wannon) (14:16): My question is to the Minister for Immigration, Citizenship and Multicultural Affairs. What circumstances would cause the minister to release from immigration detention into the community an Austrian citizen who pleaded guilty to poisoning people? The SPEAKER: I'll hear from the Leader of the House. Mr Burke: That entire question was framed as a hypothetical. There's an explicit ruling against questions being hypothetical, and that question was nothing but. The SPEAKER: Standing order 100(d)(vii) does indicate that questions should be ruled out of order with hypothetical matter, so I'm going to ask the member just to rephrase that question slightly to make sure that it is within the standing orders. That's not just repeating the same question with one word changed; it's just making sure that it's a directly responsible decision that the minister has responsibility for, not an expression of opinion or a hypothetical situation. Mr TEHAN: My question is for the minister for immigration. In a previous answer, he's referred to releasing from detention an Austrian who had pleaded guilty to poisoning people. Under what circumstances would the minister release such a person from detention?