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The decision to prosecute

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Also known as: adjective law, legal procedure, legal proceeding
Also called:
adjective law
Key People:
Gnaeus Flavius

A formal accusation is universally regarded as an indispensable prerequisite for a criminal trial. It is typically the public prosecutor who, on the basis of the results of the investigation, determines whether to file a complaint and for which offense to bring charges.

Private prosecution

Private citizens, such as the victim of the offense, are not generally permitted to institute a criminal action, though the law on this point differs among jurisdictions. In the United States private criminal complaints are practically impossible. In England anyone can institute criminal proceedings for most offenses, but the director of public prosecutions can take over and discontinue prosecution at any time. In Germany citizens can prosecute only for certain minor offenses such as libel and assault. In France victims of crime can combine criminal prosecution with civil claims for damages.

In many countries victims can prevent prosecution for certain offenses—e.g., assault, libel, and some sexual offenses—by not filing a special request for public prosecution.

Grand jury

In the federal system of the United States, and in about half of the state systems, charges are brought not by the public prosecutor but by the grand jury, a group of 12 to 23 citizens selected by lot. The grand jury also has investigative authority, and it is to serve as a protective shield against unwarranted prosecution. In practice, however, grand juries are usually dominated by the public prosecutors, who are responsible for presenting the evidence to them.

Prosecutorial discretion

In all legal systems the prosecutor should bring an accusation only if he thinks that the available evidence, discounted by probable defense evidence, is so strong that the defendant is likely to be convicted after trial. In some countries, such as Italy, the prosecutor is required by law to bring charges whenever there is sufficient evidence for conviction. In other jurisdictions—for example, in the United States, France, and Japan—the public prosecutor has discretion as to whether to file a formal accusation; in effect, this means that he can informally grant clemency to an offender who would certainly be convicted in court. In still other countries, such as Germany, prosecutorial discretion applies only to minor offenses, whereas prosecution of serious crimes is mandatory. To the extent the prosecutor has discretion, he can make the decision not to prosecute dependent upon certain conditions—e.g., that the offender pay restitution to the victim.

Plea bargaining

In some countries, such as the United States and Spain, the prosecutor’s discretion extends to determining the crime with which the defendant is to be charged. Hence, in a case of armed robbery, the U.S. prosecutor may charge the suspect with armed robbery, simple robbery, assault, simple theft, or any combination of these offenses. All of these offenses carry quite different penalties, and normally the prosecutor charges the most serious offense that can be sustained by the evidence. However, since the cooperation of the defendant, especially in offering a plea of guilty, drastically shortens or simplifies the trial, prosecutors in some countries reduce charges on the condition that the defendant not contest the accusation in court. Especially in the United States, this creates a system of “plea bargaining,” in which defense attorneys negotiate with prosecutors the charges (and resulting penalties) most acceptable to their clients. Similar transactions, though sometimes performed discreetly because of their dubious legality, occur in many other jurisdictions.