1 / 25

Defence Rights during the Phase of Police Interrogation in the EU

Defence Rights during the Phase of Police Interrogation in the EU. Taru Spronken. iiiRG Conference and Masterclass 3-5 July 2013 Maastricht University. ECtHR STRASBOURG. European Convention of Human Rights standards – Right to Silence.

cheng
Download Presentation

Defence Rights during the Phase of Police Interrogation in the EU

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. Defence Rights during the Phase of Police Interrogation in the EU Taru Spronken iiiRG Conference and Masterclass 3-5 July 2013 Maastricht University

  2. ECtHR STRASBOURG

  3. European Convention of Human Rights standards – Right to Silence • The right to silence is a fundamental feature of the right to fair trial, and lies at the heart of the notion of a fair trial – but can be restricted for good cause • Information about the right should be given when it arises (probable cause/suspicion)Zaichenko v Russia ECtHR 18 February 2010 No 39660/02

  4. European Convention of Human Rights standards – legal assistance • Suspect has a right to have lawyer present during interrogation Mader v Croatia ECtHR 21 June 2011 No. 56185/07 • Limited case-law on what the lawyer may or should do in interrogations, but: • Lawyer’s task is to ensure respect for right of suspect not to self-incriminate Salduz v Turkey ECtHR GC 27 November 2008 No. 36391/02 • Suspect entitled to the complete range of interventions inherent in legal assistance Dayanan v France ECtHR 13 October 2009 No. 7377/03

  5. ECJ LUXEMBOURG

  6. STOCKHOLM PROGRAMME 2009 Measure A: Translation and Interpretation. Measure B: Information on Rights and Information about the Charges. Measure C: Legal Advice and Legal Aid. Measure D: Communication with Relatives, Employers and Consular Authorities. Measure E: Special Safeguards for Suspected or Accused Persons who are Vulnerable. Measure F: A Green Paper on Pre-Trial Detention.

  7. Three studies and one on the way 2007 2010 2010 2013 Inside police custody empirical study

  8. Common problems suspects rights in the EU • Practices that circumvent the right to silence • Overuse of pre-trial detention, and lengthy periods in pre-trial detention • Failure to guarantee in practice the right to legal assistance at the investigative stage • Failure to guarantee the right to information as to charge

  9. Legal assistance Identified problems: • lack of procedures and structures to ensure timely assistance • limits on choice of lawyer • lack of, or ineffective, enforcement mechanisms • variable, and sometimes poor, quality and no quality assurance mechanisms • structural and cultural factors that disadvantage the defence

  10. Legal aid Without legal aid, most suspects and defendants will not have legal assistance. • complicated, unclear and/or slow application methods • inadequate remuneration • appointment mechanisms that threaten independence With consequences for – • availability • access • quality

  11. Legal assistance during police interrogation in the Netherlands

  12. 60 years of debate • Caution is sufficient • No right to consult lawyer before or during interrogation

  13. Schiedam Park Murder 22 June 2000

  14. Experiment in Amsterdam and Rotterdam 1 juli 2008-1 juli 2010 Protocol • 30 minutes consultation before interrogation • Position in interrogation room • No eye contact • No time out • Lawyer should remain passive and can only interfere in case of undue pressure

  15. 27 November 2008 Salduz v. Turkey ECtHR 27 November 2008

  16. Principles Salduz-doctrine • Art. 6 ECHR is applicable in pre trial criminal proceedings • the right to legal assistance is a fundamental aspect of fair trial • Access to legal assistance should be provided from the first police interrogation • rationale legal assistance: • Protection against undue pressure • Right not to incriminate oneself • Exceptions only in very limited situations

  17. Important sanction: exclusion of evidence Par. 55 The rights of the defence will in principle be irretrievably prejudiced when incriminating statements made during police interrogation without access to a lawyer are used for a conviction.

  18. Debate after Salduz Interpretation of: “access to a lawyer” “assistance during interrogation”

  19. Regulation NL after Salduz judgment as from 1 april 2010 • Right to consultation before interrogation (30 minutes) • Assistance during police interrogation only for juveniles

  20. Legislative proposal NL april 2011 • Duty to inform suspect of rights • Right to consult lawyer during 30 min. previous to first interrogation if suspect is detained at the police station. • Free legal assistance in case of suspicion of crimes that can be punished with more than 4 years of imprisonment • Lawyer may be present during police interrogation in case of suspicion of crimes punished with ≥ 6 year imprisonment + all juveniles • Waiver of rights • Presence of lawyer may be refused if interests of investigation so require.

  21. EU Directive on the right of access to a lawyer text adopted 28 May 2013 • Legal assistance irrespective of deprivation of liberty • Before and during all interrogations

  22. 2013 Inside police custody empirical study • Four EU jurisdictions – France, Scotland, the Netherlands and England and Wales • Three procedural rights - interpretation and translation, right to information and the Letter of Rights, right to legal assistance • Observation and interviews lawyers and police in eight field sites accross the four jurisdictions during 2-5 months. • Developing training guidelines for lawyers and police officers • Recommendations for legislative and policy changes to ensure better enforcement of EU directives

  23. The value of mixed training Example: * Disclosure * Interventions during interrogation

More Related