1 / 21

Investigation and Prosecution of Corruption cases: Lessons learned

Investigation and Prosecution of Corruption cases: Lessons learned. Concluding Remarks By Dr. A.Y. Shehu DG, GIABA On Law Enforcement Theme at the Global Forum V Held in Johannesburg South Africa 2 – 5 th April 2007. Why Investigate and prosecute Corruption. To enforce the rule of law

mandyb
Download Presentation

Investigation and Prosecution of Corruption cases: Lessons learned

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Investigation and Prosecution of Corruption cases: Lessons learned Concluding Remarks By Dr. A.Y. Shehu DG, GIABA On Law Enforcement Theme at the Global Forum V Held in Johannesburg South Africa 2 – 5th April 2007

  2. Why Investigate and prosecute Corruption • To enforce the rule of law • Deprive offenders’ liberty • To destabilize criminal networks • To deprive criminals of assets –confiscation • Deterrence • Correction

  3. Strategic considerations • How well has the case been investigated? • What are the chances for success? • What is each defendant’s position? • What assets are involved, where and in what form? • What resources are available? • Hire outside counsel for big cases? • Select fewer cases – excellent preparation

  4. Strategic considerations - cont • What charges to proffer? Right statute, correct date, right defendant, right papers served on time, etc • Are all statements signed & served? • Original exhibits ready for inspection by the court? • Does the evidence prove the elements of the offence (s)? • Have you studied the relevant statutes and case law?

  5. Strategic considerations - cont • Are all your witnesses ready & briefed? • Do they have any special needs, e.g. anonymity, interpreter, visual, etc • Your mode of dress suitable? • Observe the right etiquette • Know your case in and out • Anticipate your opponent’s position

  6. Investigation vs Prosecution • A successful prosecution is a function of good investigation • There should be a professional team of investigators and prosecutors working in harmony for a common goal

  7. Investigators vs Prosecutors 2 • Strengthening the capacity of investigators to specialize in different aspects of investigation: • Financial investigation • Interrogation • Surveillance • Computer forensic/accounts analysis • Under-cover operations • Sources and case management

  8. Why confiscation is priority • A proactive strategy to defeat OC – so: • Develop countermeasures againstasset forfeiture • Confiscation laws complex- highly litigated • Lack of asset recovery strategy • Inadequate expertise – civil lawyers may be employed • Confiscation should be integrated with general law enforcement work • Sensitize judiciary on confiscation issues

  9. Non-conviction based confiscation • How feasible? • The UNCAC art.51-59 on asset recovery • Victim needs • Requires a lower/civil standard of proof – balance of probability • Freezing orders faster to obtain in civil courts • Wider array of potential defendants to target

  10. Limitations • Complex legal issues may arise • Could be expensive – hiring of civil lawyers and forensic accountants • State may lose sovereignty if it subject itself to civil jurisdiction • Counter claim arise

  11. Obstacles to Investigation and prosecution • Dual criminality rule – determining offences • Corruption-OC-ML Nexus • Burden of proof • Codes of penal procedures – types/scope of evidence admissible • International legal assistance • Immunities/impeachment procedures

  12. International cooperation • Transfer of criminal proceedings • Mutual legal assistance • Judicial cooperation

  13. International Cooperation • Extradition – through MLA for: • Taking of evidence/statement • Effecting service of judicial documents • Executing searches, seizures and freezing • Examining objects and sites • Providing information, evidentiary items, & expert evaluations, • Providing original or certified copies of records • Identifying/tracing of proceeds of crime • Facilitating voluntary appearance of persons in requesting state • Recovery and return of assets

  14. International cooperation depends on • International, including regional instruments/treaties • Political relations b/w states -reciprocity • Emerging good practices • Technical assistance/capacity

  15. International legal instruments • The UN Convention against Transnational Organized Crime (TAC) 2000 • The UN Convention against Corruption (UNCAC) 2003 • The AU Convention against Corruption 2003 • The ECOWAS Protocol on Corrupt Practices, etc.

  16. Pre-conditions for successful Investigation and prosecution • Strong political will to deal with E & FC • Comprehensive law with dissuasive sanctions • Rule of law • Integrity of institutions/individuals • Adequate resources • Mutual legal assistance framework • Managing the risks

  17. Pre-requisites • Professionalism – competent/skilled staff • Good knowledge of the law • Independence – resist influence • Coordination/cooperation with other organs • Resourcefulness/initiative • International cooperation

  18. The way forward • Independence of enforcement agency • Strong and timely financial support • Wide investigative powers • Capacity building – professionalism • Attractive remuneration • Adequate/credible witness protection programme

  19. The way forward - cont • Sufficient ICT – data management • A credible, efficient & effective CJS • Mazimize leverage beyond entry-point by addressing cross cutting issues • Consistency • Sustainability

  20. Conclusion • Technology/globalization – big challenge • Criminals are adaptable • Justice is a credible deterrence • It is a reflection of effective rule of law • Technical assistance critical • Capacity of prosecutor – a quality control

  21. Thank you for your attention For further details: Dr. AY SHEHU GIABA Secretariat Sacre Coeur 3 Pyrotechnie x VDN Villa No. 101 BP. 32400, Dakar, Ponty, Senegal. Tel:+221-824-1752/869-1040 Fax:+221-824-1745/869-1041 E-Mail: ayshehu@giaba-westafrica.org Website: www.giaba-westafrica.org

More Related