Dictionary Definition
prosecution
Noun
1 the institution and conduct of legal
proceedings against a defendant for criminal behavior [syn:
criminal
prosecution] [ant: defense]
2 the lawyers acting for the state to put the
case against the defendant [ant: defense]
3 the continuance of something begun with a view
to its completion [syn: pursuance]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
/ˌpɹɑ.səˈkju.ʃən/Noun
- The act of prosecuting a scheme or endeavor. e.g. The prosecution of the war fell to Winston Churchill.
- The institution of legal proceedings (particularly criminal) against a person.
- The prosecuting party. e.g. For the prosecution, Mr Standfast and for the Defense Mr Backpedal
Extensive Definition
The prosecutor is the chief legal representative
of the prosecution in countries with either the common law
adversarial
system or the civil
law inquisitorial
system. The prosecution is the legal party responsible for
presenting the case against an individual suspected of breaking the
law in a criminal
trial.
Common law jurisdictions
Prosecutors are typically lawyers who possess a law degree and are recognized as legal professionals by the court in which they intend to represent the state (that is, they have been admitted to the bar).They usually only become involved in a criminal
case once charges need to
be laid. They are typically employed by an office of the government
with safeguards in place to ensure such an office can successfully
pursue the prosecution of government officials. Often multiple
offices exist in a single country due to the various legal jurisdictions that
exist.
Being backed by the power of the state,
prosecutors are usually subject to special professional
responsibility rules in addition to those binding all lawyers.
For example, in the United
States, Rule 3.8 of the
ABA Model Rules of Professional Conduct requires prosecutors to
"make timely disclosure to the defense of all evidence or
information ... that tends to negate the guilt of the accused or
mitigates the offense."
Directors of Public Prosecutions
In Australia, Canada, England and Wales, Hong Kong, Northern Ireland, Southern Ireland and South Africa the head of the prosecuting authority is typically known as the Director of Public Prosecutions and is appointed, not elected. A DPP may be subject to varying degrees of control by the Attorney General, usually by a formal written directive which must be published.In Australia at least, in the case of very
serious matters, the DPP will be asked by the police during the
course of the investigation to advise them on sufficiency of
evidence and may well be asked, if he or she thinks it proper, to
prepare an application to the relevant court for search, listening
device or telecommunications interception warrants
More recent constitutions, such as
South Africa's or Fiji's
tend to guarantee the independence and impartiality of the
DPP.
India
In India, a Public Prosecutor represents the state in court.United States
In the United States the director of any such offices may be known by any of several names depending on the legal jurisdiction.The terms County Attorney, Prosecuting Attorney
(in Michigan, Indiana, and
West
Virginia), County Prosecutor, State Attorney, State's
Attorney, State Prosecutor, Commonwealth's
Attorney (in Virginia and Kentucky), District
Attorney, District Attorney General (in Tennessee), City
Attorney, City Prosecutor, and Circuit Attorney (in Missouri) are
all titles of prosecutors in various state courts.
State prosecutor may be either appointed or elected. United
States Attorneys represent the
federal government in
federal court, in both civil and criminal cases.
These offices should not be confused with
Corporation
Counsel, who typically handles only civil matters involving
monetary damages, and does not handle criminal prosecutions.
Scotland
Though Scots law is a mixed system, its civil law jurisdiction indicates its civil law heritage. Here all prosecutions are carried out by Procurators Fiscal and Advocates Depute on behalf of the Lord Advocate, and, in theory, they can direct investigations by the police. In very serious cases a Procurator Fiscal, Advocate Depute or even the Lord Advocate may take charge of a police investigation. It is at the discretion of the Procurator Fiscal, Advocate Depute or Lord Advocate to take a prosecution to court and to decide on whether to prosecute it under solemn procedure or summary procedure. Other remedies are open to a prosecutor in Scotland, including fiscal fines and non-court based interventions such as rehabilitation and social work. All prosecutions are handled within the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service. Procurators fiscal will usually refer cases involving minors to Children's Hearings, which are not courts of law, but a panel of lay members empowered to act in the interests of the child.Civil law jurisdictions
Prosecutors are typically civil servants who possess a university degree in law and additional training in the administration of justice. In some countries, such as France, they belong to the same corps of civil servants as the judges.Brazil
In Brazil, the public prosecutors form a body of autonomous magistrates - the Ministério Público - working both at the federal and state level. The procuradores da República - federal prosecutors - are divided in three ranks, according to the jurisdiction of the courts before which they officiate, thus the "procuradores da República" (federal prosecutors) officiate before single judges and lower courts, "procuradores regionais da República" (prosecutors who officiate before federal appellate courts)and "subprocuradores gerais da República" (prosecutors who officiate before the superior federal courts). The Procurador Geral da República heads the federal body and tries cases before the Supremo Tribunal Federal (STF), Brazil's highest court, in charge of judicial review and the judgment of criminal offenses perpetrated by federal legislators, members of the cabinet and the President of Brazil. At the state level, the career is usually divided in "promotores de Justiça substitutos" (substitute state prosecutors), "promotores de Justiça" (state prosecutors), which officiate before the lower courts, and "procuradores de Justiça" (prosecutors officiating before the states' court of appeals). There are also military prosecutors whose career, although linked to the federal prosecutors, is divided in a manner similar to state prosecutors. In Brazil the prosecutors' main job is to promote justice, as such they have the duty of not only trying criminal cases, but, if during the trial they become convinced of a defendant's innocence, requesting the judge to acquit him. The prosecutor's office has always the last word on whether criminal offenses will or will not be charged, with the exception of those rare cases in which Brazilian law allows for private prosecution. In such cases, the prosecutor will officiate as custos legis, being responsible to ensure that justice is indeed carried out. Although empowered by law to do so, prosecutors conduct criminal investigations only in major cases, usually envolving police or public officials' wrongdoings. Also, they are in charge of supervising police work and directing the police in their investigations. The power of individual prosecutors to hold criminal investigations is still controversial and, although massively supported by judges, prosecutors and the general population, it is being contested before the Supremo Tribunal Federal. Beside their criminal duties, Brazilian prosecutors are among those authorized by the Brazilian constitution to bring action against private individuals, commercial enterprises and the federal, state and municipal governments, in the defense of minorities, the environment, consumers and the civil society in general.France
In France, the
prosecutor, or Procureur de la République (or Procureur Général in
an Appeal Court
or Avocat Général in the
Court of Cassation) is assisted by deputies (substituts). He
opens preliminary
enquiries, and if necessary asks for the nomination of an
investigating
magistrate (a Juge d'Instruction'') to lead a judiciary
information. In the case of an information led by a judge, the
prosecutor does not lead the enquiries, but simply lays down the
scope of the crimes that the judge and law enforcement forces
investigate upon; he may, like defense attorneys, request or
suggest further enquiries. During a criminal
trial, the prosecutor has to lay the case in front of the trier
of fact (judges or
jury). He generally
suggests a certain sentence, which the court has no obligation to
follow — the court may decide on a higher or lower sentence. The
procureur has also some other duties regarding more generally the
administration of justice.
Germany
In Germany, the
Staatsanwalt
(literally 'state attorney') does not just have the "professional
responsibility" (as mentioned above) not to withhold exculpatory
information, but is required by law to actively determine such
circumstances.
Japan
In Japan, public
prosecutors are professional officials who have considerable powers
of investigation, prosecution, superintendence of criminal
execution and so on. Prosecutors can direct police for
investigation purposes and sometimes investigate directly. Only
prosecutors can prosecute criminals in principle and prosecutors
can decide to prosecute or not. High-ranking officials of the
Ministry of Justice are largely prosecutors.
Poland
The highest ranking prosecutor office in Poland is the Public Prosecutor General. Below him is the National Public Prosecutor's Office and Chief Military Prosecutor Office.Socialist law jurisdictions
A Public
Procurator is an office used in Socialist
judicial systems that in some ways correspond to that of a
public prosecutor in other legal systems, but with more far
reaching responsibilities such as handling investigations otherwise
performed by branches of the police. Conversely the policing
systems in socialist countries, such as the Militsiya of the
Soviet
Union, were not aimed at fulfilling the same roles as police
forces in Western
democracies.
Soviet Union
In the Soviet
Union, the highest functionary of the Office of the Public
Procurator was known as "Public Procurator" from 1936. After 1946
the office was called
Procurator General of the USSR.
People's Republic of China
A Public Procurator is a position in the People's Republic of China, analogous to both detective and public prosecutor. Legally they are bound by Public Procurators' Law of the People's Republic of China. According to Article 6 The functions and duties of public procurators are as follows:- Supervise the enforcement of laws according to law
- Public prosecution on behalf of the State
- Investigate criminal cases directly accepted by the People's Procuratorates as provided by law
- Other functions and duties as provided by law
Institutional independence
In many countries, the prosecutor's administration is directly subordinate to the executive branch (e.g the US Attorney General is a member of the President's cabinet). This relationship theoretically and in some cases practically leads to situations where the public accuser will either falsely charge people (in Putin's Russia) or refuse to charge arrested persons at all (to keep them in protracted legal limbo as in the case of Guantanamo Bay Camp X-ray), if that serves political aims. Many thinkers feel such outcomes are incompatible with basic human rights and constitutional ideals.In a smaller number of countries, the hierarchy
of prosecutors are installed with the same - such as Brazil - or nearly
the same liberties the judges traditionally enjoy. They are only
responsible to the parliament and the chief prosecutor is usually
elected for a long period (seven years typically) or even a
lifetime. In terms of political theory, this would mean the
independent prosecution becomes the fourth column in the
architecture of power separation, besides the legislative, executive
and judicial
branches.
In practice, such establishment often results in
heated political debates, as new governments regularly accuse the
reigning chief prosecutor of being "informally grateful" to the
political opposition (i.e. the former parliamentary majority which
elected him/her for a period extending multiple parliamentary
cycles). In Hungary, the new
government created the method of "private accusing" in 2003 as a
response, meaning person(s) or a private entity can directly
petition the courts to hold trial against someone they feel is
guilty of a crime, should the prosecutor refuse to indict him/her.
If a reviewing judge agrees with the private accusing, a judge
selected from another court district will hold the trial and force
a prosecutor to represent the charges. Such creations may hurt the
scheme of separation
of powers more than they remedy problems of alleged or existing
bias. In Brazil there is a similar provision which transfers the
power to prosecute to the crime victim if, and only if, the
prosecutor in charge of the case fails to make a decision to file
or drop the charges in the deadline established by the penal
procedure code. Although contested by some, this provision is often
thought of as a welcomed form of public control of the prosecutor's
office activities.
Bibliography
- MAZZILLI, Hugo Nigro.Regime Juridico do Ministério Público 5ª edição, São Paulo: Saraiva, 2001.
- Raoul Muhm, Gian Carlo Caselli (Hrsg.) :
Die Rolle des Staatsanwaltes Erfahrungen in
Europa - Il ruolo del Pubblico Ministero Esperienze in Europa - Le
role du Magistrat du Parquet Expériences en Europe - The role of
the Public Prosecutor Experiences in Europe - Vecchiarelli Editore
Manziana (Roma) 2005 ISBN 88-8247-156-X
- Raoul Muhm : The role of the Public Prosecutor in Germany
in : The Irish Jurist | Volume XXXVIII | New
Series 2003, The Law Faculty, University College, Dublin http://www.larchivio.org/xoom/raoulirish.htm
- Erick MAUREL "Paroles de procureur" ( ed.GALLIMARD 2008 - PARIS - ISBN-13: 978-2070119776 )
External links
- www.prosecutor.info indexes almost 2,900 prosecutor web sites throughout the USA and other countries.
- www.ProsecutorTips.com Free trial advocacy tips for prosecutors and trial
EUROPE
M.E.D.E.L European association of judges and public prosecutors CCPEConsultative council of European prosecutorsprosecution in Bulgarian: Прокурор
prosecution in Danish: Anklager
prosecution in German: Staatsanwalt
prosecution in Persian: دادستان
prosecution in French: Procureur
prosecution in Indonesian: Jaksa
prosecution in Italian: Pubblico ministero
prosecution in Japanese: 検察官
prosecution in Dutch: Openbaar aanklager
prosecution in Norwegian: aktor
prosecution in Norwegian Nynorsk: aktor
prosecution in Polish: Prokurator
prosecution in Russian: прокурор
prosecution in Simple English: Prosecutor
prosecution in Swedish: Åklagare
prosecution in Thai: อัยการ
prosecution in Chinese: 檢察官
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
accusal, accusation, accusing, action, allegation, allegement, arraignment, bill of
particulars, blame,
bringing of charges, bringing to book, carrying out, case, cause, cause in court, charge, chase, complaint, completion, count, delation, denouncement, denunciation, discharge, dogging, effectuation, enforcement, execution, follow, follow-up, following, fulfillment, hue and cry,
hunting, impeachment, implication, imputation, indictment, information, innuendo, insinuation, judicial
process, lawsuit, laying
of charges, legal action, legal case, legal proceedings, legal
process, legal remedy, litigation, observance, plaint, proceedings, pursuance, pursuing, pursuit, quest, reproach, searching, seeking, shadowing, stalking, suit, suit at law, taxing, tracking, tracking down,
trailing, transaction, true bill,
unspoken accusation, veiled accusation