Letter of rights for criminal suspects

Published: 23 July 2010 y., Friday

Temidė
Commission introduces legislation requiring EU countries to inform suspects of their rights in writing on arrest. The proposal follows recent legislation entitling suspects to translation and interpretation services.

Part of an effort to set EU-wide standards for criminal proceedings, the draft law proposed this week would require the statement to be written in simple everyday language, and translated if need be.

Twelve EU countries already use these so-called letters of rights. Others only provide information orally or in a written form that people who are not legal professionals may find hard to understand. Many countries don’t supply the information unless the suspect asks for it.

The proposal includes a sample statement in 22 EU languages. Countries are free, however, to choose the exact wording themselves.

Justice commissioner Viviane Reding says the law would ensure that “everybody, everywhere in the EU is made aware of their rights.” In particular, it would give Europeans more peace of mind when they travel abroad.

Hundreds of thousands of EU citizens cross national borders every day. Some 47% of Germans, 34% of British and 16% of Italians holiday in other EU countries.

The draft law is just the second step in a planned series of proposals aimed at setting common EU standards for criminal proceedings.

More than 8 million criminal proceedings take place in the EU every year. EU treaties set out which rights suspects are entitled to, but until now countries have been free to decide how to uphold them.

Over the next few years the EU plans to build a comprehensive body of law, exercising new powers under the Lisbon treaty. As a result of the treaty, the EU can now adopt measures to improve and strengthen individual rights.

Earlier this year, the commission introduced legislation obliging EU countries to provide translation and interpretation services for suspects. That bill is now well on the way to becoming law.

Two proposals in the pipeline for next year concern the right to a lawyer and to speak with relatives, employers and consular officials.

 

Šaltinis: ec.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

US strikes at Mexico drug ring

Wednesday's sweep in California, Maryland and Minnesota brought to 751 the total number of arrests under the Drug Enforcement Administration's "Operation XCellerator." more »

$9 million global ATM hack opens questions about growing cybercrime

In November, authorities uncovered a global ATM scam that allegedly netted more than $9 million. more »

Man shot dead in Caribbean clashes

A month of protests on the French Caribbean island of Guadeloupe escalating with widespread rioting. more »

Managing asylum together

Office would promote EU asylum cooperation, run training programmes and share information. more »

Migrants die as boat capsizes

21 North African drew while attempting to sail to the Spanish Canary Islands. more »

Need help? Dial 112

Would you know what number to call if you had an accident at work or at school? What if you were on holiday abroad? more »

Family trip ends in crash horror

Rescue teams have now pulled the wreckage of the crashed turboprop charter plane from the murky Manacapuru river in Brazil's Amazon jungle. more »

Party over for 'swinging' Briton

The party is over for 54-year-old Briton, Christian Richards and his Thai wife. more »

Sexual abuse of children: MEPs want to criminalise “grooming” on the Internet

“Grooming” and paedophile chat rooms on the Internet should be criminalised, sex crimes should be subject to an extraterritorial legislation, the EP says in a report adopted in Strasbourg. more »

MEPs debate sanctions against employers of undeclared workers

Tuesday morning MEPs will debate new legislation that will punish employers who employ illegal immigrants. more »