英文摘要 |
The Corroborative Rule is refers to, when the defendant’s confessions or other suspicious testimony become the only unfavorable evidence for defendant bearing the crime, jury cannot only base on the evidence to sentence the defendant as guilt, and there must be other evidences to reinforce the probative force of the evidence. In the modern system of discretionary evaluation of evidence, the law generally does not regulate the probative force of evidence, and entrusting to discretion of judge. However, the discretionary evaluation inevitably has judges’ subjective uncertainty, and easily leads to misjudgment, so there must be appropriate limitations to discretionary evaluation. The Corroborative Rule is the restraint mechanism for discretionary evidence, and it is significance and positive in preventing misjudgment and curbing the illegal collection of evidence. In addition to special legislative policy considerations, the Corroborative Rule provides for additional substantiating corroborative evidentiary requirements which are primarily used to guarantee the credibility of suspicious testimony. In regard to suspicious testimony, the legal provisions requiring corroborating evidence stem from concern that the credibility of the testimony is suspicious enough as to affect the correctness of the judgment, and because the existing evidentiary systems cannot appropriately test the authenticity of the testimony, so the Government provides that suspicious testimony lacks probative force to substantiate the entire facts to be proven, and hence must be restricted by the requirement of producing other independent corroborating evidence. In Taiwan’s statutory law regarding corroboration of Confessions and Accomplice Confessions, the two purposes of requiring corroboration are to further substantiate the credibility of the confession, and to avoid excessive dependence on obtaining confessions in practice, and thus in regard to corroboration substantiating the confession, additional evidence should highlight facts outside the scope of the confession, seeking other witnesses and evidence in corroboration. Thus, in respect of corroborating confessions, the scope of corroboration must satisfy proving the objective elements of the crime as well as substantiating the identity of the defendant; while in terms of proof, the corroborating evidence shall be considered as corroborative evidence only when it possesses independent probative force, and not merely through reliance on the confession(s). As for accomplice confessions, in principle, they should also be interpreted in like manner to the defendant confession, and not be permitted mutual corroboration as a result solely from the multiplicity of confessions, otherwise it is impossible to achieve the evidentiary jurisprudential objectives sought by the Corroborative Rule. In regard to the extra-statutory Corroborative Rule, in respect to the testimony of the victim and any secret witnesses, this study proposes that the purpose of the Corroborative rule is limited to corroborating the reliability of the evidence, and hence adopts a lenient approach to the operational aspects of such corroboration, such that in terms of the scope of corroboration it shall be sufficient to obtain the substantive statement, and as to the extent of corroboration it shall be sufficient to obtain any relative statement; while in regard to corroborating testimony affecting “apparently criminal organizations”, besides ensuring corroboration of the reliability of the evidence, there remains the need to ensure minimization of illegal extraction of evidence by the authorities, thus, in terms of the Corroborative rule, analogous application of Article 156 Paragraph 2 of the Criminal Procedural Law which provides for additional evidentiary corroboration of accomplice confessions, should be adopted, and interpreted ,strictly applied. |