Retrieve Improperly Obtained Evidence In Anglo-American And Continental Law Executed By Dimitrios Giannoulopoulos Rendered As Print
is the first book to offer an extensive cosmopolitan, crosscultural insight into the perennial controversy over the use of improperly obtained evidence in criminal trials.
It challenges the conventional view that exclusionary rules are idiosyncratic of AngloAmerican law, and highlights the 'constitutionalisation' and 'internationalisation' of criminal evidence and procedure as a cause of rapprochement or divergence beyond the AngloAmerican and Continental law divide.
Analysis focuses on confessional evidence and evidence obtained by search and seizure, telephone interceptions and other means of electronic surveillance, The laws of England and Wales, France, Greece and the United States are systematically compared and contrasted throughout this study, but, where appropriate, analysis extends to other AngloAmerican and Continental legal systems.
The book reviews exclusionary rules visàvis the operation of judicial discretion, and explores the normative justifications that underpin them, It attempts to reinvigorate the idea of excluding evidence to protect constitutional or human rights the rights thesis, arguing that there is significant scope for AngloAmerican and Continental legal systems to place a renewed emphasis on it, particularly in relation to confessional evidence obtained in violation of custodial interrogation rights we can locate an emerging rapprochement, and unique potential for European Court of Human Rights jurisprudence to build consensus in this respect.
In marked contrast, remaining divergence with regard to evidence obtained by privacy violations means there is little momentum to adopt
a reinvigorated rights thesis more widely.
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