並列篇名 |
Sentence, Appeal and Judicial Review Issues Associated with Citizen Participation in Crim-inal Trial (Saiban-In Seido)—An Analysis of Japan’s Supreme Court, First Petty Bench, Decision on July 24, 2014 |
英文摘要 |
The appeals system is aimed to provide judicial remedy, and is vi-tal to the judiciary for the upholding of justice and conduct of fair trials. Intrinsic to the overall evidence structure is understanding whether the fact/legal issues of dispute made by the prosecuting and defending law-yers in the trial are clarified to find truth. Fact-finding and punishment are best served by citizen participation in criminal trials, reflecting the practice at the trial stage of combining substantive law and procedural law. Strict evaluations of sentencing factors, recordings of court pro-ceedings, and regulations on what constitutes evidence will aid the ap-peals court in reviewing the choice of punishment and sentencing, and even the scope of fines. Punishments should correspond to the content of each specific case and its evidence, allowing discretion at appellate levels, and should be subject to the quality, quantity, and content of such evidence so that a clear assessment of responsibility can be made. The judicial review of penalty should be considered through the rule of deliberation/sentence at appellate levels, and the analysis of deliberation documents concerning the member size of courts that vote on issues proposed by prosecuting and defending lawyers, subject to the High Court and Supreme Court. Justifiable review sentencing and issue dis-cussion-votes required by deliberation/sentencing norms should be im-plemented so that the punishments will suit the offences proved during the fact-trial phase. |