Lecture 7
Lecture 7
Lecture 7
Jason Law
Content
• Crime Prevention and Investigation
• Policing in HK
• Prosecution
• Prosecution policies
• Group Presentation
Law Enforcement in HK
• DOES NOT MEAN Police alone!
• “Peelian principles”
Sir Robert Peel’s 9 principles of policing
• Prevent crime and disorder
• Powers are dependent upon public approval of police actions
• Must secure the willing co-operation of the public
• Co-operation of public diminishes proportionately to the use of physical force
• Demonstrate absolute impartial service to the law
• Use of force only when persuasion, advice and warning insufficient
• Maintain a relationship with the public à police are the public and public are the
police
• Direct their action strictly towards their functions à X judiciary
• Test of police efficiency is the absence of crime and disorder, not visible police
actions
Police’s Authority in HK
• Police Force Ordinance, Cap. 232
• https://www.elegislation.gov.hk/hk/cap232!en-zh-Hant-HK
• Can be prosecuted for unlawful acts done during the course of duty
• E.g. HKSAR v Chui Yun Woo HCMA 1144/2006 – fabricating witness statements in a
traffic accidents à using false instrument
• HKSAR v Sin Kam Wah [2005] 2 HKLRD 375 – received prostitution services for
tipping off à misconduct in pubic office
• With warrant
• Mag to issue a warrant for arrest
• The arrestee shall be informed of the reasons for arrest and the rights he/she
enjoys! (Pol. 153)
• Citizen’s arrest
• S. 101 and 101A, Criminal Procedure Ord.
Police Powers (Arrest)
• S. 51, PFO: as soon as a person has been arrested, he should be
delivered forthwith to the police officer in charge of the police station
(Duty Officer (值日官) – Station sergeant(警署警長) to which he has
been taken
Police Powers
• Questioning of a Suspect
• Not obliged to answer any questions unless statutes required e.g. proof of
identity; giving driver’s identity; NSL
• 48 hours?
Police Powers
• Identification parades
• No statutes in HK (voluntary participation)
• ID parade book
• All Courts:
• Government counsel / Public Prosecutors (檢控官)
• Solicitors and barristers in private practice à counsel-on-fiat (控方外聘檢控官)
Ethical Role of Prosecutor
• Officers of the Court à duty to the court, must not mislead
• Achieve Justice, not guilty
• Public interest:
• Surrounding circumstances?
• How serious was it?
• Practical effects?
• Attitude of the victim?
• Others being affected?
• Would consequences (penalty) of prosecution be disproportionate to seriousness of the
offence?
• Bind-over
• Plea bargain
Decision to Prosecute
• Assessing Strength of Prosecution Evidence
• P should evaluate:
• Confession (招認)?
• Witnesses telling lies or exaggerating?
• Is memory being faulty?
• Hostile or friendly to D?
• Motive for telling more or less than the whole truth? E.g. monetary disputes, maid in HK
• Availability to give evidence?
• Reliability of witnesses? E.g. gangsters
• Substantial matters for D to attack credibility of PW?
• Multiple Ds à evidence against each?
Decision to Prosecute
• Public Interest Criteria
• Evidence sufficient à does public interest require a prosecution?
• “It is for the secretary for justice alone to decide whether or not
prosecutions shall be instituted in any particular case or class of case,
and his responsibility to control and conduct them”
• Highly discretionary!
• Message to citizens: what should not be done and what will happen
(deterrence)
Criminal Law Enforcement
• Punishment + Rehabilitation
• Moral education
Prevention
• Situational prevention
• E.g. CCTV, improved lighting à make crimes harder to commit
• Developmental prevention
• Young persons’ education à reduce risk
• Community prevention
• Creation of community self-help crime prevention organisations
• Situational prevention in community
Harm Reduction
• Utilitarianism (功利主義)
• Jeremy Bentham
• No suffering should be imposed in the name of crime
Prevention
• Only when suffering of offenders < happiness of others
• Minimize costs
• E.g. allow drugs, prostitution and guns but require e.g. registration
And regular checks à reduce harms associated
• Minimization, not elimination!
Regulation
• Mostly in business and traffic offences
• Who can do certain acts and what procedures he or she has to follow
Criminalization
• Making a certain act a criminal offence in reply to public’s expectation
or social changes e.g. improvement in technology
• Cyber-crime, deepfakes
• https://www.info.gov.hk/gia/general/202110/08/P2021100700545.htm?fontS
ize=1
Decriminalization
• Eliminating crime by definition à acts no longer a crime
• HK in the future?
• E.g. Euthanasia (安樂死)
• https://www.info.gov.hk/gia/general/201612/14/P2016121400657.htm?fontSize=1
• Uber
Non-intervention
• To do nothing
• She chose and utilized Nazi law instead of a sense of justice to bring
death or imprisonment of her husband
Good Law v Bad Law
Hart-fuller debate
• Issue: whether wife should be punished??