Wednesday, April 3, 2019
Discrimination for Terrorism Offence Suspects
Discrimination for  act of  disquietudeism Offence SuspectsTitle The case for discriminatory treatment of persons  loucheed of   panicism offences- a re see study to test the adequacy of the current adjective safeguards that  ar in  view in the UK to  hold dear terror suspects from  horrors of  im move equal  handle and br distri furtherivelyes of  mankind   duty-hand(a)s  regulation.AbstractThis  publisher provides a literature  re test of the latest research which has been conducted in the UK on the  collectcapable  append fester  justifiedlys of terror suspects, with a view to determining (i) how susceptible such suspects argon, in practice, to  outcry of their  efficacious  mightys by the Police,  credentials Services and  flagitious Justice  governing body and, (ii) to what extent it is justified to introduce a framework of enhanced  adjectival  security to mitigate their inherent vulnerabilities.The Structure of the PaperIn chapter 1 of this  reputation, the  purpose,  levelhea   ded basis and  legitimate  constitution of  delinquent  act upon  volition be examined. In  offendicular, the  source will examine the historical  training of the  efficacious  regulation, its  constitution as a adjective safeguard and its  wakeless basis as a constitutional and/or human right.In chapter 2 of this paper, the  originator will examine the  evil  arbitrator mechanisms in  tush to deal with terror suspects, from initial arrest to  lamentable prosecution, with a view to determining the extent to which terror suspects   be (potentially)  more  insecure to the risks of procedural un collect  touch,  inwardly the  wrong justice  body, than non-terror suspects.In chapter 3 of this paper, the  precedent will identify those risk factors which  argon un overturnable, such as the  issue security and  another(prenominal) requirements for evidential opacity and those which  atomic number 18 historically reported but which  give way no direct relationship with the nature of the cri   me  world investigated.In chapter 4 of this paper, the author will critically evaluate the adequacy of the existing procedural safeguards which are in place to protect terror suspects from abuse of   over repayable(p)  play.In chapter 5 of this paper, the author will (tentatively) propose a framework of enhanced procedural safeguards specifically designed to protect terror suspects from abuses of due  service.Initial Terminology timidity suspect- A person who has been arrested on suspicion of being  discredited of a criminal offence which pertains to terrorist activity.Non-terror suspect- A person who has been arrested on suspicion of being  un equityful of a criminal offence, unrelated to terrorism.Due  outgrowth- Due process of  right.Undue process- This musical phrase refers to an instance where due process has not been adhered to, i.e. an abuse of due process.In this chapter, the concept,   court of justice-ordered basis and  sanctioned nature of due process will be examined. In    particular,  reacts to the   veilest  enquires will be provided1. What are the origins of due process in England and Wales?2. What is due process?3. What are the philosophical and/or theoretical justifications for the existence of due process?4. What is the legal basis for the existence of due process?5. Can due process be  looked as being constitutional, at  justice? Why is this question relevant to the current  delve?1. What are the origins of due process in England and Wales?It is beyond the  electron orbit of this paper to engage in an in-depth historical  summary of the development of the concept of due process. However, it is  all  authorized(p) that we glean an  chthonicstanding of the age of the concept, so that we can appropriately contextualize its importance  inwardly the debates of this paper. For this reason, and out of interest, the author will provide a (very) brief summary of the origins of due process in EnglandIn the United Kingdom, the concept of due process has    its origins in Chapter 9 of the Magna Carta of 12151, which  verbalise No free man shall be  taken or imprisoned or disseised of his Freehold, or Liberties, or free Customs, or be out fair played, or exiled, or  either other wise destroyed, nor will we go upon him nor send upon him, except by the lawful judgement of his peers or by the law of the land.Analysts  throw off fucussed on varying elements of this passage from which to  fare the concept of due process. Galligan (2006) p171 provides a useful summary of the main analyses The important part is the exception, especially the words by the law of the land (legem terrae). On first  construeing it  efficiency seem that the significant words are judgement of his peers, since they suggest a foundation for trial by jury.  control panel trials, however are a long way into the future and have different origins. The more likely  signification of the expression judgement of his peers is the right of a noble to be judged by his equals, whi   ch in turn carries  well-nigh suggestion of a  plum trial. This certainly has procedural connotations, but the search for a fuller sense of due process is usually direct at the words the law of the land That idea is vague  exuberant to  domiciliate different meanings, and certainly it is not improbable to suggest, as   almostwhat have, that it contains at least the kernel of due process.It is interesting to note that the phrase due process or, more correctly stated, due process of law, was not coined until 1354, in King Edward III of Englands statutory rendition of the Magna Carta2, which stated No man of what state or condition he be, shall be put out of his lands or tenements nor taken, nor disinherited, nor put to death, without he be brought to  resolvent by due process of law.3  permit us  this instant turn to  compute what is mean by due process of the law.2. What is due process?In the United Kingdom, due process refers to the procedural concept that  each person, who is in a    position where one or more of his or her  defend interests are being deprived4, is entitled to be treated fairly by the procedure of the law to ensure that the deprivation in question is justified.  at that place are six  full(a) aspects of procedural due process which are often cited (1)  name (2) Hearing (3) Impartiality (4) Counsel (5) Evidence and, (6) Decision.  allow us discuss each of these procedural requirements in turn(1) NoticeUnder procedural due process, an  one-on-one is entitled to be  abandoned adequate notice of  whatever prospective criminal law  transactions in which he or she will be summoned as a suspect. This is to give the defendant sufficient  clip to seek advice in regard to his or her available legal options.(2) HearingUnder this aspect of procedural due fairness, before the property or the liberty of an  person is deprived from him or her, he or she is entitled to demand a  interview at which his or her case will be  projectd and a  finale reached in regar   d to whether the prospective deprivation is justified. Galligan (1996) p349-350 provides a  brief description of the main virtues of up place the hearing  article of belief A virtue of the hearing principle is that it  throws to better decisions and actions, better that is, in the sense that the facts are  contumacious accurately, the law applied properly, and   all(prenominal) discretionary judgements reasonably made. This is so for a  crook of reasons. One is that the person whose situation is under scrutiny, whose past actions or  donation  share are in  sheer, will often be able to provide information about the situation which is not otherwise  substantially available Another reason is that the person affected by a decision  whitethorn be able to raise other considerations,  apart(predicate) from purely factual matters, which help to shape the decision and perhaps, in that way, contribute to a better outcome.(3) ImpartialityThis aspect of procedural due process states that the     court of decision-makers in a legal hearing  essential be made up of persons who are wholly impartial towards the defendant, i.e. they must not have any predispositions towards the defendant. The purpose of this procedural requirement is to ensure that any decisions reached by a hearing tribunal are establish upon the facts at hand rather than any extraneous and/or irrelevant considerations. Where for example, a decision-maker has had previous personal or business dealings with the defendant,  then(prenominal) he or she should, in the interests of procedural due process, resign himself from the hearing of that defendants case, as he cannot be considered impartial. There are many other examples of circumstances under which a decision-maker  strength not be deemed impartial, but the  public rule is that the impartiality of a decision-maker who is pre-disposed towards a defendant prior to the criminal hearing being held must be considered compromised.(4) CounselUnder the  precept of pr   ocedural due process, a defendant is entitled to be  disposed(p) free access to legal re impersonateation if he or she is ineffectual to afford or unwilling to provide his or her  stimulate representation. The  precept for this aspect of procedural due process is self-evident It would be grossly inequitable to allow a defendants property or liberty to be deprived from him or her without being able to present his or her  exoneration in its best light and most effective legal form- without legal representation it is likely that a defendant will be  futile to meet this requirement of fairness.(5) EvidenceIn  ready to ensure that a defendant is able to present the most effective case at a criminal hearing, it is not  solo imperative that he or she has access to all of the evidence that the prosecution will be  quest to rely upon but  withal imperative that he or she or his or her legal representatives are given an opportunity to conduct their own investigations to acquire evidence which    will assist the case for the defence. For one example, a defendant  may wish to instruct the services of an expert  testify to refute the accuracy of DNA tests which were conducted by the police on behalf of the prosecuting authority. An  silvern summary of this procedural requirement has been provided by the Pennsylvania General  convocation (2006) p45 Especially in cases where a decision rests on questions of fact, it may be necessary to provide an individual not only with the ability to  lodge and cross-examine adverse witnesses, but  too the opportunity for discovery, i.e., investigation and accumulating evidence, in order to give him or her a chance to show that the facts upon which the proposed deprivation is based are untrue.(6) DecisionThis aspect of procedural due process demands that upon  arrive at a decision which adversely affects a defendant, for example a decision depriving him or her of his or her property and/or liberty, the decision-making body must not only provi   de the reasoning for their decision (the ratio descendi) but must identify which pieces of evidence they relied upon to reach their final conclusions.3. What are the philosophical and/or theoretical justifications for the existence of due process?The importance of the existence of  unvarying procedures to any legal system cannot be underestimated. As Galligan (1996) p5 notes Without procedures, law and legal institutions would fail in their purposes. And since law is  two necessary and desirable in achieving social goals, procedures are also necessary and must be seen as equal partners in that enterprise. For whatever the context, whether the judicial trial, the administrative decision, or any other form of legal process, procedures are necessary to ensure that the issue is channelled to its right conclusion. Whether the object is to apply a legal standard to the facts, to  solve discretion according to the correct matters, or to settle a  affray by bringing the parties together, pr   ocedures have a vital part to play. Let us explore some of these contentions in more detail.One of the  primeval theoretical bases for the insistence of maintaining due process  at bottom a legal system is the Rule of Law. While it is beyond the scope of this paper to engage with the multitude of different definitions and propositions which have been promulgated under the  comprehensive of this phrase, it should be  mention that one of the basic (and universal) tenets of the Rule of Law is that individual freedoms and liberties should be protected from the  severalises abuse of its constitutional powers. As Urabe (1990) p61 notes The core of the Rule of Law, which has been supported consistently as a  original principle of the English and American constitutions, is that governmental power be  qualify strictly by law in order to protect individual freedom or liberty. The law exists to protect individual rights and liberties both in substance and procedure.Lon Fullers  construeing of    the Rule of Law provides some further insight into the theoretical justifications for due process. As Raitio (1003) p143 notes Fuller  call for that laws should be prospective in application, they should be published and they should comprise  iron out  customary rules, which are neither too individualized nor too general and vague. There should be reasonable constancy and consistency among laws, i.e. laws should not be changing all the time, they must not contradict each other and they must not require citizens to do the impossible. The conduct of legal officials has to be congruent with the laws, as laid down, which in turn requires that the officials owe the same respect to the same laws as the citizens.5 On this basis, one of the  of import justifications for the existence of due process is to ensure legal certainty in the way that the procedure of the law is applied and followed. By ensuring that procedure  body consistent, not only can individuals be more certain that they are    receiving a fair trial, for example, but they will be more cognizant when their rights are being infringed, and can take the necessary remedial actions, accordingly. forwards we move on to examine the various legal bases for modern due process, a  a couple of(prenominal) words should be said about the concept of fairness and why it is important to ensure that the law is applied via fair procedures. While the answer to this question cannot seem anything other than intuitive, it is nevertheless important to break the question down and answer it from a jurisprudential  forecast of view- after all, if we cannot support this fundamental assumption  by dint of reason and logic, then it will be difficult later in this paper to support the introduction of a discriminatory framework of enhanced legal protection for terror suspects on the basis that the current regime is, in places, unfair.Embedded within the concept of fairness is the concept of justice. It is beyond the scope of this paper    to engage with the full range of conceptualizations of justice that have been promoted by the various authors in this field. However, it should be noted that present in  both conceptualization of justice are the concepts of shamed and not-guilty, and it is with these concepts that this author would like now to engage.As we have seen throughout this  segment, one of the main aims of due process is to ensure that an individual whos property or liberty is under threat (as a result of legal action being brought against him), is able to have access to all the resources he requires to be able to present his defence to a fair and impartial tribunal, who will make a decision based upon the evidence presented and the relevant applicable laws. One might be forgiven for thinking that the only aim of due process in this context is to protect the individual. However, this is not the case It is in the interests of society as a whole, and citizens as a collective, that justice be achieved in each    and every case. If the law is seen as being applied within a forum which is unjust, then citizens (as a group) will lose respect for the law, and may engage in criminal activities which otherwise they may have desisted from.In order to maintain the public respect for the law, it is important that public scandals involving abuses of due process are unplowed to a minimum, and the best way to avoid such scandals is to try and ensure that instances of such abuse are kept to a minimum6. In light of the fact that property and liberty are held as being of such high value within our society, it is also important to ensure that these are only taken away from a defendant where there is no reasonable doubt that the criminal justice system is justified in so depriving that person. As Sir William Blackstone famously stated in 1765 It is better to let ten guilty men go free than to punish one innocent man. It is for this reason that the  effect of proof in criminal law  legal proceeding has been    set so high, and also why the principle of homo praesumitur bonus donec probetur malus7 has been referred to as the  halcyon thread of the criminal law Throughout the web of the English criminal law one golden thread is always to be seenthat it is the  job of the prosecution to prove the prisoners guilt subject to what I have already said as to the defence of insanity and subject also to any statutory exception.8St hithertos (2006) summarizes this debate and the benefits of the current position in the following  terms Which is fairer, (a) a system of rules so strict that even a few innocent people get unfairly punished or, (b) a system not so strict that even a few guilty people go unfairly unpunished? Due process of law holds that the second answer is more correct, for many reasons. On a  pragmatical level, theres less of a danger to the whole legal system. If your system is convicting a few innocent, chances are its railroading many of the guilty, so youve got two problems on your    hands  those who are falsely imprisoned and those who have a stronger habeas  star claim. If your system is letting a few guilty slip through, chances are that those lucky evil-doers might change their ways, or in any case, law enforcement or informal methods of social control can pick up the slack.While this argument has instant intuitive appeal, it must be noted that the enquiries involved in reaching, for example, Blackstones ratio, require no investigation into the nature of the crimes that the guilty have been unfairly acquitted of. If, for example, the 10 criminals are guilty of conspiracy to commit mass genocide and also possess  productive faith-based motivations which are unlikely to be quashed by a lucky  flee, then is it really justifiable to acquit these criminals in favour of protect the property and/or liberty of one innocent person? This debate strikes at the very heart of the matter with which this paper is primarily  come to namely, whether or not it is fair to all   ow the due process rights of terror suspects to be ab utilise and whether or not special measures ought to be introduced to protect these individuals, who (it must be remembered) have yet to be found guilty by a fair and impartial Court of law of any criminal law offences.Let us reserve judgement on these difficult questions until later in this paper, when we have had a chance to  fully examine the risks that terror suspects face at the hands of the State, and the risks that the State potentially faces at the hands of terror suspects.4. What is the legal basis for the existence of due process?The legal sources for procedural due process are various.  more or less are specific, in that they prescribe a certain procedure to be applied within a certain set of circumstances9 and, some are general, in that they provide what might be described as broad yet fundamental human rights.Let us commence with an  mental testing of one of the most commonly cited legal sources for a general right t   o due process namely,  obligate 6 of the European  figure on  human being Rights, as enshrined into UK law by the Human Rights  subprogram 1998. name 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights purports to provide the human right to a fair trial. In order to understand the scope and limits of this right, let us commence with an examination of the wording of this  oblige. Article 6 states1. In the determination of his civil rights and obligations or of any criminal  outpouring against him, everyone is entitled to a fair and public hearing within a reasonable time by an independent and impartial tribunal established by law. Judgment shall be pronounced publicly but the press and public may be excluded from all or part of the trial in the interest of morals, public order or national security in a democratic society, where the interests of juveniles or the protection of the  hole-and-corner(a) life of the parties so require, or to the extent strictly necessary in the opinion of the cou   rt in special circumstances where publicity would  damage the interests of justice. 2. Everyone charged with a criminal offence shall be presumed innocent until  prove guilty according to law. 3. Everyone charged with a criminal offence has the following minimum rights (a) to be informed  make a motionly, in a language which he understands and in detail, of the nature and cause of the accusation against him (b) to have adequate time and facilities for the preparation of his defence (c) to defend himself in person or through legal  helper of his own choosing or, if he has not sufficient  core to pay for legal assistance, to be given it free when the interests of justice so require (d) to examine or have examined witnesses against him and to obtain the attendance and examination of witnesses on his behalf under the same conditions as witnesses against him (e) to have the free assistance of an interpreter if he cannot understand or speak the language used in court.The words and phrases    which have been highlighted above represent those elements of Article 6 which provide a legal basis for one or more aspects of procedural due process. The majority of these have been discussed in detail  front in this Chapter For example, the right to notice10, the right to a hearing11, the right to an impartial tribunal12, the right to counsel13, the right to examine the evidence against him and perform his own investigations14, the right to hear the ratio descendi of the decision handed down against him15 and the right to  make merry the benefits of the  article of belief of homo praesumitur bonus donec probetur malus16.As we can see, Article 6 provides a general legal basis for each of the aspects of procedural due process which we have identified earlier in this paper. That having been said, this is not the only legal source which provides such a basis. For example, many preparations of the Police and  cruel Evidence  minute 1984 provide similar rules of due process17.It should    also be noted that there are common law sources for some of the rights of due process. For example, there is a common law right to silence which is derived from the principle of homo praesumitur bonus donec probetur malus if a person is innocent until  be guilty and there is insufficient evidence to satisfy the criminal law burden of proof requirements, then it is unacceptable to insist that a defendant incriminates himself or faces a criminal law penalty. This right still exists in English common law, but has been somewhat compromised by the enactment of the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 which now allows prosecutors to infer meaning from a defendants silence. This legal development has been heavily criticized by authors such as Hammerton (2001), who notes An innocent defendant may fail to answer questions in custody or refuse to testify in court for all sorts of reasons. They may regard the police as corrupt and that answering the questions would give the police infor   mation that can be used against them. They may believe that if they answer the questions, they or someone they care about might be put in danger from the people who did commit the crime. In short drawing inferences from a defendants silence in custody or in court involves speculation on the motives behind their silence, not  solidity reasoning that their silence indicates guilt.5. Can due process be regarded as being constitutional, at law?The reason that this enquiry has been included within this chapter is to determine to what extent it is legally valid to allow due process to be circumvented via legislation. After all, if it is possible to argue that due process is a fundamental constitutional right, then unless the legislation which provides the legal basis for that right is repealed or modified, then it may be possible to argue that any conflicting non-constitutional legislative  trainings are unenforceable.As we have seen in the preceding  role of this chapter, one of the lega   l bases for the right for criminal suspects to enjoy due process is Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights. This article has been incorporated into UK law by the Human Rights Act 1998.Section 3(1) of this Act states (1) So far as it is possible to do so,  primitive legislation and subordinate legislation must be read and given effect in a way which is compatible with the Convention rights. Therefore, where a piece of legislation purports to allow a criminal suspect/defendants due process rights to be circumvented or mistreated, if a Court of law is able to reinterpret that legislation in a way which does not lead to the infringement of that right, then it must do so18. However, where that legislation cannot be so reinterpreted, the only remedy available to a Court of Law is the ability to be able to issue a  answer of repulsion under section 4 of the 1998 Act which states, inter alia (2) If the court is satisfied that the provision is incompatible with a Convention rig   ht, it may make a declaration of that  incompatibility (4) If the court is satisfied (a) that the provision is incompatible with a Convention right, and (b) that (disregarding any possibility of revocation) the  uncreated legislation concerned prevents removal of the incompatibility, it may make a declaration of that incompatibilityHowever, this remedy is really a wolf in sheeps clothing, because section 4(6) of the Human Rights Act 1998 makes it very clear that a declaration of incompatibility (a) does not affect the validity, continuing operation or enforcement of the provision in respect of which it is given and (b) is not binding on the parties to the proceedings in which it is made. This means that a criminal defendant who has had his due process rights abused by the state, in pursuance of legislation which purports to allow that particular abuse, has no form of redress in the domestic Courts, because even if a declaration of incompatibility is granted, it does not affect the v   alidity, continuing operation or enforcement of the provision in respect of which it is given and, it is not binding on the parties to the proceedings in which it is made.Additionally, a declaration of incompatibility does not place any pressing duty on the Government to re-write the offending legislative provision, so such a declaration will not even ensure that the abuse in question is not repeated in regard to other criminal suspects/ defendants. That having been said the Legislative is usually prompt at remedying legislative provisions which have been declared incompatible. For example in the case of R (on the application of H) v  intellectual Health  follow-up Tribunal for the North and East London Region  The Secretary of the State for Health CA March 2001 EWCA Civ 415 it was held that section 2 of the Mental Health Act 1983 is incompatible with Article 5(4) of the European Convention on Human Rights because it does not require a Mental Health Review Tribunal to  hammock a pat   ient where it could not be proven that the detainees mental wellness warranted detention. The offending provision was repealed in November of that same year by enacting the Mental Health Act 1983 (Remedial Order) 2001.In regard to those legal sources discussed earlier which also provide for certain due process rights, because these sources are not contained within the Human Rights Act, but rather within the common law and primary non-constitutional legislation, these can be repealed or supplanted by the enactment of contrary primary legislation.N.B. On a separate note It will be remembered, the  feud which was caused in the United Kingdom when it was discovered that terror suspects were being held without charge in Belmarsh Prison for periods of up to 3 years19. The legal basis for holding prisoners in this way was provided by section 23 of the Anti-terrorism, Crime and Security Act 2001. However, in 200520, this section of legislation was held to be incompatible with Article 5 of t   he Human Rights Act 1998 and the European Convention on Human Rights21. These prisoners were subsequently released, their detentions being replaced with Control Orders. In light of the fact that terror suspects no longer face a significant threat from section 23 of the Anti-terrorism, Crime and Security Act 2001, the author of this paper has decided to exclude all further discussion of this source of abuse of due process. While there remains an argument that the imposition of Control Orders on terror suspects also infringe their Article 5 human rights, the author has chosen to exclude discussion of this debate from this paper as this paper is more concerned with abuses of due process suffered while being detained, both pre- and post-charge.In this chapter, we will perform a structures literature review in order to glean a deeper insight into the way that terror suspects in the UK are actually treated by the criminal justice system. From our  thirdhand analysis of case studies, inter   views and anecdotal evidence, we will seek to provide an answer to the following question To what extent are terror suspects more vulnerable to the risk of procedural undue process, within the criminal justice system, than non-terror suspects.In this Chapter we will refrain from engaging with an analysis of the framework of provisions which have been introduced, primarily under the Terrorism Act 2000, to protect terror suspects from abuses of due process. While this analysis is very important, at this stage, such an analysis would only be able to reveal whether or not the current fram  
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