Monday, January 25, 2016

Another judicial protest filed over statements issued to the police without legal assistance

A man currently behind bars for drug-related offences has filed a judicial protest decrying his "illegal arrest" because he had been convicted solely on the basis of a statement he had released during his interrogation without legal assistance. The protest, filed this morning by lawyers Jason Azzopardi and Kris Busietta on behalf of 40-year-old Trevor Bonnici, comes just 13 days after a court ordered the Commissioner of Police and the Attorney General to pay €3,500 in compensation to a man convicted of cocaine trafficking on the strength of a statement he had made without the assistance of a lawyer. This judgment had in turn been delivered a few days after the European Court of Fundamental Human Rights had harshly criticised Malta for allowing this practice in the past. Mr Bonnici had given his statement after he was arrested in 2004. The right to legal assistance of one's choosing during interrogation was only enshrined in Maltese law in 2010. "It is clear that the plaintiff is serving time and is being denied his freedom following a sentence through which our courts have breached his fundamental human rights," the judicial protest reads. "Each passing day means that the State...

from timesofmalta.com http://ift.tt/1VkB1Cl
via IFTTT

No comments:

Post a Comment