In dubio pro reo: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 13:16, 20 October 2019
The principle of "in dubio pro reo" (Latin for "[when] in doubt, for the accused") means that a defendant may not be convicted by the court when doubts about his or her guilt remain.
The rule of lenity is the doctrine that ambiguity should be resolved in favor of the more lenient punishment.
To resolve all doubts in favor of the accused is in consonance with the principle of presumption of innocence.
Origin
The main principle in the sentence was part of Aristotle's interpretation of the law and shaped the Roman law: Favorabiliores rei potius quam actores habentur (Digest of Justinian I, D.50.17.125); in English: "The condition of the defendant is to be favored rather than that of the plaintiff." However, it was not spelled out word for word until the Milanese jurist Egidio Bossi (1487–1546) related it in his treatises.
National peculiarities
In German law, the principle is not normalized, but is derived from Article 103(2) GG, Article 6 ECHR, as well as § 261 Code of Criminal Procedure. The principle has constitutional status. The common use of the phrase in the German legal tradition was documented in 1631 by Friedrich Spee von Langenfeld.
In Canadian law, the leading case establishing how to decide criminal cases where the guilt of the accused depends on contradictory witness accounts is R. v. W.(D.) (1991).
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