The Criminal Justice Process

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The Criminal Justice Process Mark Telford

description

Powerpoint on an introduction to the Criminal Justice Process. To be used in LLB Criminal Law programmes.

Transcript of The Criminal Justice Process

Page 1: The Criminal Justice Process

The Criminal Justice Process

Mark Telford

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Crime Control and Due Process

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Herbert Packer, The Limits of the Criminal Sanction, 1968, Stanford University Press.

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Crime Control Due Process

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Crime Control Model

Aims & objectives

• The purpose of criminal justice is to ensure security and freedom for citizens

• Through the repression of criminal conduct

• By efficiently producing a high rate of detection, conviction and punishment of offenders

• Efficient exoneration of the factually innocent (though accepts that tolerable levels of efficiency will mean that some mistakes happen)

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Crime Control Model

Mechanisms

• Trust in police to reliably determine factual innocence or guilt

• Trust in pre-trial informal administrative procedures and decision making rather than courts

• No necessary exclusion of evidence obtained through improper means

• Speedy, uniform and routine procedures

• Minimal opportunity for challenge

• Mass production of guilty pleas

• Resembles assembly-line conveyor belt in operation

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Crime Control Due Process

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Crime Control ModelDirty Harry - Do you feel lucky?

24’s Jack Bauer

Jude Dredd

‘I am the law’

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Due Process Model

Aims and Objectives

• Maintaining a scepticism about the efficacy of the criminal sanction

• ‘The aim of the process is at least as much to protect the factually innocent as it is to convict the factually guilty’

• Upholding the primacy of the individual

• Giving high priority to the protection of civil liberties as an end in itself

• Placing limits upon the use (and abuse) of official power

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Due Process Model

Mechanisms

• Distrust of reliability of police adjudication

• Demands finding of formalised ‘legal guilt’

• Presumption of innocence

• Exclusion of evidence obtained through improper means

• A right to legal advice and representation

• Many opportunities for appeal and redress

• Resembles an obstacle course in operation

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Crime Control Due Process

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Due Process Model

Atticus Finch in ‘To Kill a Mocking Bird’

‘I want the truth!’ A Few

Good Men

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Police Stop and Search

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Stop and Search• Background – The Confait Affair

• Royal Commission on Criminal Procedure, 1981 (The Phillips Commission)

• Police and Criminal Evidence Act (PACE) 1984

• Associated Codes of Practice

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PACE 1984, section 1 (+Code A)• Stop and search powers

• ‘reasonable suspicion’

• any person carrying stolen items or other prohibited items (e.g. an offensive weapon)

• requires ‘objective basis’ for reasonable suspicion

• not personal factors alone

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Objective Criteria for ‘reasonable suspicion’• ‘information received’ on someone

• someone ‘acting covertly or warily’

• someone ‘carrying a certain type of article at an unusual time or place’ where there have been relevant crimes recently

• Contrast the legal position with policing working practices

• Terrorism Act 2000, section 44 (Gillan & Quinton v. UK)

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Detention and interrogation in the police station

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PACE 1984 – Detention only:

• Authorised by specialist ‘custody officer’

• in order to charge the suspect

• where there is insufficient evidence to charge the suspect, in order to secure that extra evidence but only where ‘necessary’

• anyone at a police station should either be free to leave at will, or be under arrest.

• Time Limits (24, 36 or, with court order, 96 hours)

• Contrast ‘law in books’ with ‘law in action’

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Access to Legal Advice- PACE 1984• S. 58(1) A person arrested…shall be entitled, if he so

requests, to consult a solicitor privately at any time…

• S.58 (4) If a person makes such a request, he must be permitted to consult a solicitor as soon as is practicable

suspect must be informed (and given written notice) by the custody officer of his right to see a lawyer and that this will be free of charge

Contrast ‘law in books’ with ‘law in action’

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Right to legal advice?• some suspects are simply not informed of their

rights

• some suspects’ requests are denied, ignored, or simply not acted upon

• the police use various tactics to attempt to dissuade suspects from seeking advice and to persuade them to cancel their requests

• Many suspects have negative attitudes towards defence solicitors