I appreciate it, because it tells me where you want to go.
The short answer is yes, but you've actually alluded to something else. You've talked about being subject to a fair-minded judge looking at the assessment report. The assessment report, in that context, almost becomes immaterial, because the assessment report is filed--that's how you get into the hearing--and if in fact the individual is looking at the third predicate offence, then the presumption kicks in regardless of what that assessment report happens to say. So the answer is yes, it does remove the right to silence.