6.5. The Dutch model
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Hivatkozások
Válaszd ki a számodra megfelelő hivatkozásformátumot:
Harvard
Bérces Viktor (2024): Evidence in Criminal Proceedings. : Akadémiai Kiadó.
https://doi.org/10.1556/9789636640477 Letöltve: https://mersz.hu/dokumentum/m1199eicp__81/#m1199eicp_79_p1 (2024. 11. 21.)
Chicago
Bérces Viktor. 2024. Evidence in Criminal Proceedings. : Akadémiai Kiadó. https://doi.org/10.1556/9789636640477 (Letöltve: 2024. 11. 21. https://mersz.hu/dokumentum/m1199eicp__81/#m1199eicp_79_p1)
APA
Bérces V. (2024). Evidence in Criminal Proceedings. Akadémiai Kiadó. https://doi.org/10.1556/9789636640477. (Letöltve: 2024. 11. 21. https://mersz.hu/dokumentum/m1199eicp__81/#m1199eicp_79_p1)
In the Netherlands, misdemeanours and petty offences are decided by a single judge, while more serious offences are judged by a three-member panel. Inquisitorial features clearly predominate in the procedures. This is mainly due to the rules governing the trial, which are characterised by the following features:
Jegyzet elhelyezéséhez, kérjük, lépj be.!
Hivatkozások
Válaszd ki a számodra megfelelő hivatkozásformátumot:
Harvard
Bérces Viktor (2024): Evidence in Criminal Proceedings. : Akadémiai Kiadó.
https://doi.org/10.1556/9789636640477 Letöltve: https://mersz.hu/dokumentum/m1199eicp__81/#m1199eicp_79_p2 (2024. 11. 21.)
Chicago
Bérces Viktor. 2024. Evidence in Criminal Proceedings. : Akadémiai Kiadó. https://doi.org/10.1556/9789636640477 (Letöltve: 2024. 11. 21. https://mersz.hu/dokumentum/m1199eicp__81/#m1199eicp_79_p2)
APA
Bérces V. (2024). Evidence in Criminal Proceedings. Akadémiai Kiadó. https://doi.org/10.1556/9789636640477. (Letöltve: 2024. 11. 21. https://mersz.hu/dokumentum/m1199eicp__81/#m1199eicp_79_p2)
- “one-stage” proceedings, during which all the relevant records are presented at the outset – including information about the accused’s previous life;
- the rule indicating the “presumption of guilt” of the accused, that he has the right to make a statement, but not the obligation to take an oath;
- there is no “cross-examination”: the court asks the questions first and then gives the prosecutor or the defence the opportunity to ask them;
- the courts can also assess evidence obtained illegally, where appropriate;
- witnesses are summoned by the prosecution or the court; if the defence submits a request to examine a person as a witness, it must give detailed reasons for its statement or submission;
- court decisions are not based on witness testimonies but on the case file (minutes); the primary aim is to establish the material truth, from which the judge must seek to exclude all subjects;
- there is no such thing as a “plea bargain”: in order to obtain a conviction, the prosecutor must in any case bring the case to trial, where the evidence is fully assessed by the court even if the accused has confessed; the function of the trial is therefore primarily to determine the circumstances of sentencing, not criminal responsibility;
- no one can be convicted on the basis of a single piece of evidence (e.g. a confession or DNA match), at least two pieces of evidence are required for a conviction, and it is also regulated by law that convictions based solely on the testimony of anonymous witnesses cannot be convicted.1
1 K. Bárd (2011) ibid. 33.