anglolawyer
Banned
Thanks. I'll look those up. I would be surprised if anybody thought these rights were 'absolute'. The word used by the ECHR in its own guidance is 'fundamental'. I argued a few posts above that it would have to be shown, at the very least, that deprivation of this fundamental right was reasonably necessary to the furtherance of an investigation and that this could not be shown here.As for the ECHR, the cases Salduz versus Turkey (2008), established that the right of a person under arrest to confer with a defence lawyer immediately must not be intended as absolute; there are various possibilities where other needs may force a delay.
The Simons versus Belgium case (2012) was considered inadmissible on this principle.
Italian procedure: Art. 104 c.p.p (used by Mignini) provides for the possibility to delay the right of immediate counsel for up to 5 days, and jurisprudence establishes what the "exceptional circumstances" are (danger of jeopardizing investigation). The justice comittee of Low Chamber of Italian parliament deemed the law compatible with ECHR standards. Found compatible with HR statute and Constitution by Constitutional Court too.
A further point is that the ensuing course of the proceedings did not reduce or eliminate the prejudice arising from the police misconduct. On the contrary, the prejudice was exploited to the max with the calunnia charge and the various devices by which the judges were made aware of the 'confessions'. In a jury trial here, the jury would have known nothing about them and there would have been no risk of prejudice from such knowledge (which does not mean no prejudice at all) but in Italy:
1 the confessions were immediately made public, for no conceivably proper reason
2 the same tribunal heard the calunnia charge and was thereby informed of the confessions
3 ditto the parallel civil claim by Patrick, which had no place in a criminal proceeding.