Japan to reconsider handcuffs and ropes for court defendants

Japan's Supreme Court has instructed courts nationwide to reconsider the use of handcuffs and waist ropes on defendants entering courtrooms for criminal trials. Detained defendants currently wear these restraints to prevent flight, but new measures aim to shield them from spectators' view. Existing rules will still apply for those deemed flight risks.

The Supreme Court has directed courts across Japan to review the practice of using handcuffs and waist ropes on defendants as they enter courtrooms for criminal trials, according to informed sources on Tuesday. These restraints are typically worn by detained defendants until the judge arrives, aimed at preventing any escape attempts.

In lay judge trials, which involve public participation, the restraints are removed to avoid prejudicing perceptions of guilt. However, courtroom spectators can still catch sight of defendants in restraints. Under the proposed new guidelines, courts would remove the handcuffs and ropes behind partitions near the courtroom entrances, on the judge's orders. Additional steps would ensure that spectators do not see restrained defendants when they exit.

The existing protocol remains in place for defendants assessed as flight risks.

This development follows a 2019 request from the Japan Federation of Bar Associations to eliminate the use of such restraints during entry and exit from courtrooms. The Supreme Court's guidance could lead to more humane practices in judicial proceedings.

Relaterede artikler

Realistic illustration of Ábalos and Koldo García entering Soto del Real prison under police escort in corruption case.
Billede genereret af AI

Judge sends Ábalos and Koldo García to preventive prison over flight risk

Rapporteret af AI Billede genereret af AI

Supreme Court magistrate Leopoldo Puente has ordered preventive detention without bail for former minister José Luis Ábalos and his ex-advisor Koldo García in the masks plot case. The ruling cites an 'extreme' flight risk ahead of trial and strong evidence of crimes like criminal organization and bribery. Both have entered Soto del Real prison, making Ábalos the first sitting deputy imprisoned.

The Osaka District Court dismissed a request from three death-row inmates to ban executions by hanging, ruling that such a challenge is inappropriate through administrative litigation. The inmates argued that hanging violates an international treaty prohibiting cruel punishments. Presiding Judge Noriko Yokota stated that criminal judgments in Japan presuppose hanging as the method of execution.

Rapporteret af AI

Den tyske dommerforening støtter den planlagte minimumstraf på fem år for brug af knockout-dråber ved voldtægter eller røverier, men finder det utilstrækkeligt. Foreningen opfordrer til bedre udstyr til politi og ret til at forbedre beskyttelsen mod seksuelle og voldelige forbrydelser. Forbundsdirektør Sven Rebehn understreger, at risikoen for dom afskrækker potentielle gerningsmænd mere end højere straffe.

A federal judge in Chicago will consider on Wednesday whether to order interim release for hundreds of people arrested in recent immigration operations, after advocates alleged U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement violated a 2022 consent decree limiting warrantless arrests.

Rapporteret af AI

Den tyske justitsminister Stefanie Hubig har fremlagt et lovforslag for at aflaste administrative domstole og fremskynde procedurerne. Den tyske dommerforening welcomer retningen, men kritiserer planer som utilstrækkelige og kræver mere personale. En ny bølge af asylsager intensiverer presset på domstolene.

The Seoul High Court on Friday sentenced former Supreme Court Chief Justice Yang Sung-tae to six months in prison, suspended for one year, for abusing power through wrongful interference in trials. This reverses a lower court acquittal on all 47 charges related to judicial power abuse. Prosecutors accused Yang of using trials as bargaining chips with the Park Geun-hye administration to advance his bid for a new appeals court.

Rapporteret af AI Faktatjekket

U.S. District Judge Beryl A. Howell has ruled that immigration officers in the District of Columbia must have probable cause before carrying out warrantless arrests, a decision that reins in aggressive enforcement tactics and pointedly questions a recent Supreme Court order that expanded immigration ‘roving patrols’ elsewhere.

 

 

 

Dette websted bruger cookies

Vi bruger cookies til analyse for at forbedre vores side. Læs vores privatlivspolitik for mere information.
Afvis