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Unquestioned testimony: how the diminution of live testimony threatens the accused’s right to be present during international criminal trials

Wheeler, Caleb H. 2020. Unquestioned testimony: how the diminution of live testimony threatens the accused’s right to be present during international criminal trials. Cornell International Law Journal 52 (3) , pp. 546-590.

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Abstract

It is generally recognized that international criminal law provides the accused with a right to be present at trial. There are two components of that right which make it meaningful: first, as a right it can only be dero- gated from through an affirmative waiver made by the accused; and sec- ond, it requires more than the mere presence of the accused in the courtroom— it also demands that he or she be able to understand and par- ticipate in the proceedings. The second component of the right, that the accused be able to participate in proceedings, is increasingly threatened by evidentiary rules that restrict the accused’s ability to cross-examine the wit- nesses who are testifying against them. This infringement creates a real danger that evidence that has not been properly tested will serve as the basis for guilty verdicts, thus increasing the likelihood of unsafe convictions. This Article aims to examine the phenomenon of evidentiary rules that impact the accused’s right to be present. It will do this in two substantive parts. First, it will demonstrate that the accused has a right to be present at trial in international law, define that right, contextualize the right in terms of the larger right to a fair trial, and discuss how the accused, at least in evidentiary matters, has a greater interest in fairness than the prosecu- tion. Second, the Article will examine three different evidentiary practices used at international criminal justice institutions that have the tendency to limit the accused’s ability to participate in trial and, in turn, his or her right to be present. This Article concludes that some, but not all, of these practices do represent a meaningful limitation on the accused’s right to be present and should be used sparingly so as to avoid causing any harm to the accused’s fair trial rights.

Item Type: Article
Date Type: Publication
Status: Published
Schools: Law
Subjects: K Law > K Law (General)
K Law > KZ Law of Nations
ISSN: 0010-8812
Last Modified: 06 Apr 2022 10:45
URI: https://orca.cardiff.ac.uk/id/eprint/146903

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