Contents
Volume 66 Number 3 2002
ISSN: 0022-0183 eISSN: 1740-5580
Show list with all abstracts • Links to other issues
Index
iii
Cases
v
Divisional Court
Medical reasons for failure to provide a specimen of blood
197
Local authority's power to prosecute road traffic offences
199
Statutory presumption that breath analysis machine is reliable
201
Police power to remove masks from demonstrators
204
Limit to offence of aggravated trespass to land
207
Supplying motor vehicle in unroadworthy condition
209
Appropriate sentence for juvenile crime involving sex and violence
211
Custodial sentence for mainly summary offences
214
Outer House (Scotland)
Are prison disciplinary proceedings criminal proceedings?
217
Court of Appeal
Tax evasion: civil and criminal consequences
219
Are disciplinary proceedings criminal proceedings?
221
Discount for indication of intent to plead guilty before venue is determined
222
Police rights over property seized as stolen goods
224
Claim for false imprisonment after accepting caution from police
227
Racially aggravated language
229
House of Lords
Appeal on fresh evidence
232
Evidence: interception of communications
235
Privy Council
Provocation and onus of proof
239
European Court of Human Rights
Terrorist suspects and detention
243
Surveillance, private life and the right to a fair trial
246
Articles
Identification evidence: rule, principle, discretion and reform of Code D following Forbes
Andrew Roberts
250
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JCL 66 (2002) 250
Identification evidence: rule, principle, discretion and reform of Code D following Forbes
Andrew Roberts
This article was written prior to the publication of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 (Codes of Practice) (Temporary Modifications to Code D) Order 2002, which came into force on 1 April 2002. It concerns paragraph D2.3 of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984, Codes of Practice, now replaced by the temporary provisions, which sets out the circumstances in which the police were required to conduct an identification parade. It is suggested that the rule in paragraph D2.3 was not sufficiently flexible to perform the function required of it. The attempts of the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords to provide guidance on the application of this inadequately drafted provision in the cases of Popat and Forbes are subjected to critical analysis. An outline proposal for reform is put forward. It is suggested that Code D ought to be replaced by specific statutory provision addressing the issue of admissibility. The aim of this legislation would be to provide a more flexible and sophisticated rule for determining the circumstances in which a parade ought to be held than provided by the present regulatory scheme and at the same time provide a statutory framework for the exercise of discretion in determining the admissibility of eyewitness identification evidence. While the temporary provisions have introduced some flexibility into determining the question of whether or not a parade or video identification ought to be held, they have not resolved the points of general concern raised in this article. It is submitted that the case for reform of the type outlined in this article is all the more pressing.
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Cyber crime: a growing problem
Rita Esen
269
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JCL 66 (2002) 269
Cyber crime: a growing problem
Rita Esen
The openness of the global network has given rise to a need to protect Internet users against criminal activities online. The escalating incidents of cyber crime have moved lawmakers in different systems to focus on these new and growing problems as they seek to put in place legal procedures and frameworks to combat Internet-related offences. The global nature of cyber crime has moved various governments and international organisations to promulgate laws and adopt international agreements that will combat Internet crimes. These steps are being taken to give Internet users confidence by ensuring certainty in the legal requirements relating to the use of the global network.
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Book Review
284
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Links to other issues
Volume 65 (2001) : 1 2 3 4 5 6
Volume 66 (2002) : 1 2 3 4 5 6
Volume 67 (2003) : 1 2 3 4 5 6
Volume 68 (2004) : 1 2 3 4 5 6
Volume 69 (2005) : 1 2 3 4 5 6
Volume 70 (2006) : 1 2 3 4 5 6
Volume 71 (2007) : 1 2 3 4 5 6
Volume 72 (2008) : 1 2 3 4 5 6
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