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Rights granted in Scottish criminal proceedings From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The legal system in Scotland grants certain rights to persons accused in criminal proceedings.
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At all times the accused has the right to retain a copy of the complaint document. The complaint document is marked CITATION and is sent out by the procurator fiscal, the Scottish body responsible for prosecutions.
The purpose of a precognition interview is to establish what a witness will say in response to prosecution and defence questions at trial. The accused may ask for Police Scotland officers to be precognosced.[1]
People who would be helpful for the defence of trial may be requested to provide a precognition interview via the defence solicitor.[2]
The accused has the right to ask the defence solicitor to call defence witnesses to trial.
Some solicitors will email the crown witness statements in full. Other solicitors might provide summary versions of these statements.
The accused may serve a statement of uncontroversial evidence on the procurator fiscal and the court. A defence solicitor can undertake this on the accused behalf. If the procurator fiscal does not respond the evidence in the statement is taken as proven for the purposes of the trial.[3]
If a defence solicitor does not provide legal advice or refuses to undertake requested precognitions, the accused has a right to change solicitors.
If a solicitor refuses to undertake precognition interviews for the defence of the case the accused has a right to complain to the Scottish Legal Complaints Commission.[4]
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