Other

#93-2Law No. 93-2 of January 4, 1993 Reforming Criminal Procedure

🇫🇷France··Other·Medium Impact·View source ↗

AI-generated summary for informational purposes only. Not legal advice. See the original source for the authoritative text.

🇬🇧 English

This law introduces significant reforms to the French criminal procedure. It mandates stricter control over the detention periods during police custody and requires that certain amendments be documented in police records. The law also empowers individuals in legal proceedings, allowing them to request hearings and file motions for their legal rights. Additionally, it ensures state responsibility for legal costs in criminal cases.

AI-generated summary. May contain errors. Refer to official sources for legal decisions.

Key Changes

  • Tightens controls on detention periods during police custody.
  • Empowers individuals to request hearings during legal proceedings.
  • Mandates state responsibility for legal costs in criminal cases.

Obligations

What this law requires

high

Police and gendarmerie facilities must maintain a special register documenting mentions and signatures required by Articles 63-1 and 64 for all persons held in police custody

Police stations and gendarmerie facilities
operational
high

Judicial police officers must inform the investigating judge when placing a person in custody during rogatory commission execution and must present the person to the judge within 24 hours

Judicial police officers
operational
high

Investigating judges must issue a written and reasoned order within one month if refusing a party's written request for hearing, interrogation, witness examination, confrontation, or document production

Investigating judges
operational
high

Investigating judges must hear an examined person (personne mise en examen) within 15 days of receiving their written request for hearing if more than three months have passed since their last appearance

Investigating judges
operational
medium

Investigating judges must order publication of no-case-found decisions (non-lieu) in whole or part, or publication of an informational communiqué, in designated media upon request by the concerned person

Investigating judges
disclosure

Affected Parties

Individuals in police custodyLegal professionals

Tags

criminal procedure,detention rules,legal costs