Abstract
German criminal procedure law places great emphasis upon judgements made pursuant to the “substantive truth.” Therefore, exclusion of evidence tends to be an anomaly as it compels the trial court to disregard certain evidence, which implies that the court must base its judgement on something less than the whole truth. German law does provide for the exclusion of evidence in some situations, but its effect is limited to preventing the trial court from explicitly relying on the inadmissible evidence as a basis for the judgement. That said, in most cases the judges nevertheless remain aware of the excluded evidence. Under German law there is absolute protection of conversations between individuals in intimate relationships as a result of the protection of core privacy. If such conversations are captured and stored during surveillance they cannot be used unless related to past or future crimes. If evidence is obtained by violating this law, the approach of most German courts is to weigh the individual privacy interests against the interests of the justice system in having access to all available information. If the violation was intentional, however, the evidence is typically excluded. Section 136a of the German Code of Criminal Procedure provides that statements obtained through the use of prohibited means of interrogation, such as force, threats, and illicit promises, cannot be used as evidence.
You have full access to this open access chapter, Download chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
1 Introduction
Exclusion of evidence creates a dilemma. On the one hand, there exists a great systemic interest in basing the judgement in criminal cases on true and complete facts; a finding of guilt or innocence should not be made on the basis of inaccurate factual assumptions.Footnote 1 This fundamental interest in determining the relevant facts leads to an intensive search for the truth, first by the agents of criminal law enforcement, then by the trial court. The goal, in all legal systems, is to assemble all relevant evidence and to enable the factfinders to base their judgement on information that is as complete as possible.
On the other hand, there are instances in which the use of individual pieces of evidence in court appears to be unfair or even counterproductive. A piece of evidence may in fact impede the goal of truth-finding, e.g., when a document has been forged or a confession has been brought about by torture. More frequently, the goal of finding the truth competes with other interests, most importantly the interest in conducting fair proceedings. The ideal of a fair trial requires that the agents of the state comply with all rules designed to protect the suspect’s procedural rights, such as his right to remain silent and his right to be free from arbitrary searches and seizures. If the suspect’s rights have not been respected, it appears unfair to employ, for proving his guilt, an item that the agents of the state should not have obtained at all, or should not have obtained under the particular circumstances. In that situation, there exists a conflict between the goal of a fair trial and the judicial system’s interest in collecting and using all relevant information for the sake of finding the truth.
The German response to such conflicts is determined, to a large extent, by the German legal system’s traditional reliance on the inquisitorial system, which places on the trial court the responsibility for collecting and evaluating the evidence as well as for finding the facts relevant to the judgement. According to § 244 sec. 2 German Code of Criminal Procedure (CCP), the trial court, in particular the presiding judge, is responsible for deciding what evidence will be presented at the trial. The prosecution as well as the defense may propose additional pieces of evidence, but the court decides on the relevance and admissibility of the proposed evidence (§ 244 secs. 3–6 CCP). The court is in any event free to introduce evidence that neither party has proposed.
2 General Framework for Establishing Facts in Criminal Proceedings
The German procedural system places great emphasis on the determination of the “substantive truth” as a basis for a just and fair outcome of any criminal case.Footnote 2 The criminal process is conceived as a sequence of two independent efforts to find the truth; first by the prosecutor and the police, then by the trial court. As soon as the suspicion of a criminal offense becomes known to him, the prosecutor is obliged to investigate the matter (§ 160 sec. 1 CCP). The police are likewise mandated with investigating criminal offenses and with taking all measures necessary to avoid the loss of evidence (§ 163 sec. 1 CCP). When an indictment has been filed, it is the trial judge who must collect all evidence necessary for establishing the facts relevant for the determination of guilt or innocence (§ 244 sec. 2 CCP). In order to prevent the court’s truth-finding process from being predetermined by the prosecutor’s investigation, the court may base its judgement only on what has been said and done at the public trial (§ 261 CCP, so-called principle of immediacy); moreover, live witness testimony must not be replaced by the introduction of protocols of prior interrogations of the witness or by similar documents at the trial (§ 250 CCP).
2.1 Legal Framework and Relevant Actors
2.1.1 General Rules
2.1.1.1 Law Determining Duties in Criminal Investigations
Although the Code of Criminal Procedure does not explicitly mention the “search for truth” as a goal of the process, it contains several provisions which confer obligations on prosecutors and judges to collect relevant evidence (see 2 above). Importantly, the Federal Constitutional Court has declared that the criminal process has the purpose of making certain that no punishment is imposed without a determination of the defendant’s guilt, and that it is therefore necessary for the trial court to determine the true facts before it may convict a person.Footnote 3 According to this decision, the principle of truth-finding is an element of German constitutional law, ultimately linked to the protection of the dignity of the person (Art. 1 Basic Law).
The Code of Criminal Procedure does not explicitly state that a conviction requires proof of the defendant’s guilt beyond reasonable doubt. Instead, § 261 CCP provides that the court renders the judgement in accordance with its free conviction, based on the evidence presented at the trial. This legal rule is in line with the inquisitorial principle, according to which no “party” in the criminal process bears a burden of proof. But there can be no doubt that the court’s conviction must be based on a rational evaluation of the available evidence, and that the defendant must not be convicted if the judge entertains a reasonable doubt of his guilt.Footnote 4 § 244 sec. 2 and § 261 CCP presuppose that the trial court has pursued all reasonable avenues of inquiry before it renders the judgement. As mentioned above, the trial court must, according to the inquisitorial principle, take the initiative in investigating the relevant facts and must hear all relevant evidence.
On the other hand, the principle that the judgement is to be based on the “free” conviction of the court (§ 261 CCP) implies that there exist no formal rules that would oblige the court to hear a certain type or amount of evidence. For example, the court may rely on the testimony of a single witness if that testimony is convincing and is not put into serious doubt by a plausible statement of the defendant. German law does not have a corroboration rule; hence a single witness’s testimony can be sufficient for convicting the defendant. The “free conviction” principle also applies to statements of the defendant: if the defendant makes a statement in open court,Footnote 5 explaining in detail how he committed the offense, the court may determine that this statement is sufficient for finding the defendant guilty, and may dispense with calling witnesses or hearing other evidence. The fact that the court is free to base its judgement on a single piece of evidence has led to the practice of “confession bargaining”, which the legislature in 2009 has introduced into the Code of Criminal Procedure (§ 257c CCP). According to that practice, the trial judges and the defense can negotiate a lenient sentence in exchange for the defendant making a confession in open court to the crime charged. Although the law provides that the court still retains the obligation to diligently search for the truth,Footnote 6 trial courts often accept the defendant’s confession as a sufficient basis for finding him guilty and for sentencing him to a penalty previously agreed upon.
2.1.1.2 Law Securing a Fair Trial
The Code of Criminal Procedure, which dates from 1877, does not explicitly mention the guarantee of a fair trial. The right to a fair trial is nevertheless safeguarded under German law. The European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) has in 1952 been transformed into (sub-constitutional) statutory domestic law.Footnote 7 The right to a fair hearing guaranteed in Art. 6 (1) ECHR is thus applicable in Germany, and German courts are obliged to take the relevant jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) into consideration when applying domestic law.Footnote 8 Moreover, the Federal Constitutional Court has repeatedly declared that the right to a fair trial is part of the constitutional concept of Rechtsstaat (a state based on the rule of law) as guaranteed in Articles 20 sec. 3 and 28 sec. 1 Basic LawFootnote 9; the right to a fair trial thus has constitutional status. It is an open question, however, to what extent specific rights beyond those conferred by statutory law can be directly deduced from the fair trial principle.Footnote 10 For example, the rights of a suspect to remain silent, to confront adverse witnesses, to have access to counsel even during the first stages of an investigation, and to be free from entrapment by state agents have been based on the right to a fair trial.Footnote 11
The Code of Criminal Procedure also contains specific rights commonly associated with the general right to a fair trial. For example, according to § 136 sec. 1 CCP anyone questioned as a suspect has the right to remain silent and to be informed of that right before the start of an interrogation; he also has the right to consult with a lawyer and to have the lawyer present during the interrogation (§§ 163a sec. 4, 168c sec. 1 CCP). § 148 CCP guarantees suspects the right of unsupervised contacts with a defense lawyer even if they are held in pretrial detention.
The presumption of innocence is enshrined in Art. 6 sec. 2 ECHR and has been transformed into domestic law through adoption of the ECHR in 1952. There has been some debate as to the consequences of the presumption of innocence for procedural law, specifically whether the “beyond a reasonable doubt” standard for conviction is part of the presumption of innocence and whether the reach of the presumption extends beyond the criminal process.Footnote 12
2.1.1.3 Other Individual Rights with Relevance for the Criminal Process
The Constitution (Basic Law) provides for several individual (basic) rights which can have an impact on the criminal process. For example, Art. 104 Basic Law guarantees the freedom of movement, which may be restricted only by decision of a judge. As a consequence, a person may be held by the police without a judicial warrant only until the end of the day following arrest, and pretrial detention requires a judicial order (Art. 104 sec. 2 and 3 Basic Law, §§ 112, 128 CCP).
Art. 10 sec. 1 Basic Law states that the secrecy of the mail and of telecommunications is inviolable. This constitutional guarantee is subject to restriction by specific statutory law, but the general constitutional protection limits the state’s authority to implement wiretaps and mail inspections. Consequently, wiretaps may be installed only for the purpose of investigating certain serious criminal offenses, and may be ordered only by a judge (§§ 100a and 100e sec. 1 CCP). Similarly, the constitutional protection of the home (Art. 13 Basic Law) restricts the possibility of conducting searches as well as of audio and video surveillance of homes for the purposes of a criminal investigation. Art. 13 sec. 3 Basic Law provides that technical devices for the audio surveillance of a home may be installed only upon judicial warrant and only with respect to serious crime. § 100c and § 100e CCP have transformed this general authority into a specific regulation concerning audio surveillance of homes. Since the Constitution does not mention the possibility of video surveillance of homes, such surveillance is impermissible for investigation purposes.Footnote 13
Art. 1 sec. 1 Basic Law declares that the dignity of the person is inviolable and that the state must respect and protect human dignity. Courts have drawn several conclusions from this general principle for the criminal procedure context. For example, examinations of a person’s body, which are generally permissible for investigation purposes (§ 81a CCP), must not be conducted in a way that violates human dignity; the forced induction of vomiting in order to produce evidence of drug dealing is therefore constitutionally impermissible.Footnote 14 Another consequence of the supreme value of human dignity in the German legal system is the far-reaching guarantee of a right to privacy. This right has been developed by the Federal Constitutional Court from a combination of the protection of human dignity and the right to develop one’s personality, as guaranteed in Art. 2 sec. 1 CCP.Footnote 15 Importantly, the Federal Constitutional Court recognizes a core sphere of privacy which the state must not enter. One aspect of this sphere is the communication between spouses and persons in a similar intimate relationship, unless their conversation concerns the past or future commission of criminal offenses.Footnote 16 The absolute protection of the core sphere of privacy limits the state’s authority to conduct wiretaps and audio surveillance of homes; if protected communication has been captured by legitimate surveillance measures, this communication must not be used as evidence (§ 100d CCP).Footnote 17 This may apply, for example, to a suspect’s soliloquy recorded through use of a hidden microphone,Footnote 18 or to a diary that a suspect has kept.Footnote 19
2.1.1.4 Law Balancing the Search for Evidence and Infringements of Individual Rights
German law does not have any general rule for the resolution of conflicts between the protection of individual rights and the search for the truth. As has been pointed out above, there are some instances in which statutory law provides for the exclusion of evidence obtained in violation of privacy rights. In another area, § 136a sec. 3 CCP demands the exclusion of statements of suspects and witnesses if these statements have been obtained through the use of prohibited methods of interrogation (see below). But, given the importance of truth-finding in Germany’s inquisitorial system, German law remains reluctant to dispense with relevant information because of the way in which this information has been obtained. For the same reason, factual doubts about the legality of state agents’ conduct in obtaining evidence will not necessarily be resolved in favour of the suspect; on the contrary, there is an unwritten presumption that state agents abide by the law; and the courts will base their decisions on that presumption unless they have clear evidence to the contrary.Footnote 20
2.1.2 Establishing Facts—Stages and Rules
The criminal process can roughly be divided into four stages. At the investigation stage, the prosecutor’s office, with the assistance of the police, seeks to determine whether an initial suspicion of criminal wrongdoing is well-founded, and collects evidence as a basis for the decision whether to bring charges against one or more individuals (§ 160 secs. 1 and 2 CCP). When the prosecution has filed a formal accusation (Anklage) with the trial court, the case enters into the second stage, the so-called intermediary procedure (Zwischenverfahren). These proceedings are normally conducted in writing, but the court may hold a hearing (§ 202a CCP) and take evidence (§ 202 CCP).Footnote 21 The trial court then determines, on the basis of the prosecutor’s findings and possibly of its own (limited) investigation, whether there exists sufficient evidence for holding a public trial of the person(s) named in the accusation (see §§ 199–211 CCP). The court also examines the legal correctness of the charges raised in the indictment and may change the legal appreciation of the facts charged (§§ 206, 207 sec. 2 CCP).
If the trial court finds that there is sufficient suspicion that the defendant has committed a crime, it holds a public trial in the presence of the defendant (§§ 226–275 CCP). At the end of the trial and after deliberations of the judges, the presiding judge announces the court’s judgement. If the defendant has been convicted, the judge also pronounces the sentence. When the judgement has been rendered, the case may enter into the appeals stage. In Germany, both the defendant and the prosecutor can appeal a judgement that goes against their interests. The appeal against the judgement of a local court (Amtsgericht) can lead to a new trial (Berufung; §§ 312–331 CCP); if the trial was held in district court, the losing party may file an appeal on the law (Revision). This appeal is successful if the trial court misapplied the relevant substantive law and/or committed a procedural fault that could have had an impact on the outcome of the case (conviction or sentence) (§§ 337, 338 CCP).
2.1.3 Establishing Facts—Actors and Accountability
At the pretrial stage, the responsibility for fact-finding is divided between the prosecutor’s office and the police. The prosecutor is charged with investigating the matter once an initial suspicion has arisen (§ 160 CCP). The prosecutor has the authority to undertake investigatory measures of any kind (§ 161 sec. 1 CCP), in particular to summon and interrogate witnesses and experts (§ 161a CCP). However, with respect to certain investigatory acts that infringe upon basic individual rights (e.g., searches and seizures), authorization by a judge is required. The police have a dual function in the pretrial investigation: on the one hand, they are obliged to carry out investigatory acts upon request of the prosecutor (§ 161 sec. 1, 3rd sent. CCP); on the other hand, they are authorized to investigate criminal offenses and to take all measures immediately necessary to avoid the loss of evidence (§ 163 sec. 1 CCP). According to the law, the police are obliged to transmit their findings to the prosecutor “without delay” (§ 163 sec. 2, 1st sent. CCP). But in practice this requirement is not observed strictly: police often complete the investigation of routine matters on their own and send the file to the prosecutor’s office only when they deem the case cleared.
As soon as the court has accepted a case for trial, the legal responsibility for fact-finding moves from the prosecutor to the court, in particular the presiding judge. It is the presiding judge who is in charge of summoning the defendant and witnesses as well as of obtaining other evidence to be presented at the trial (§§ 214, 216, 221 CCP), and he is ultimately responsible for the completeness of the fact-finding process (§ 244 sec. 2 CCP). The defendant (and his lawyer) as well as the prosecutor have the right to demand the taking of further evidence by making a formal motion naming the witness or other item of evidence and the facts expected to be proved (Beweisantrag).Footnote 22 With respect to witnesses, the court may reject such a motion only if the proposed testimony would be redundant or evidently irrelevant (§ 244 sec. 3 CCP). As mentioned above, the prosecution does not carry a formal burden of proof; but in practice, the prosecutor will make sure that the court has available all the evidence the prosecutor deems necessary for proper fact-finding. The defendant and his lawyer may also summon witnesses and may introduce them at the trial (§ 220 CCP); but the court can refuse to hear these witnesses if their testimony would be redundant or evidently irrelevant (§ 245 sec. 1 CCP). Importantly, the defendant, his lawyer, and the prosecutor have the right to ask questions of any witness or expert witness after the presiding judge and the other judges have concluded their interrogation (§ 240 sec. 2 CCP). The presiding judge may reject individual questions only if they are irrelevant or impermissible (§ 241 sec. 2 CCP), but he cannot generally curtail the parties’ right to ask questions unless the party clearly abuses that right.Footnote 23
In sum, fact-finding at the trial is a collective effort dominated by the presiding judge. The interests of the persons involved do not always concur, however. Whereas the court and the prosecutor seek to establish the truth, the defendant may have a strong interest in hiding the truth. The German procedural system tolerates that countervailing interest to the extent that the defendant is not penalized for telling lies in court. But the defendant must not forge documents or induce witnesses to give false testimony.
2.1.4 Establishing Facts—Institutional Safeguards
The pretrial investigation is conducted unilaterally by the prosecutor and the police. The investigation can be conducted in secret, without the knowledge of the suspect; there is no formal announcement to the suspect that he has become the object of a criminal investigation. The prosecutor is obliged to provide the suspect with the opportunity to present his side of the case only before the conclusion of the investigation (§ 163a sec. 1 CCP); The investigation should not be partisan, however. According to § 160 sec. 2 CCP, the public prosecutor shall investigate not only circumstances incriminating the suspect but also those possibly exonerating him. At least in the early phase of a criminal investigation, the prosecutor and the police are likely to abide by this rule, because they have no interest in filing an accusation that will not hold up at trial.
Irrespective of the inquisitorial structure of the pretrial process, the defense has (limited) participation rights. For example, the suspect may request the prosecutor to take exonerating evidence; yet, the prosecutor must honour that request only if he thinks that the evidence suggested by the suspect is of relevance (§ 163a sec. 2 CCP).Footnote 24 The defense lawyer has a right to attend (and to ask questions at) any interrogation of the suspect by a judge, a prosecutor, or the police (§§ 168c sec. 1, 163a sec. 3, 4 CCP). If a judge interrogates a witness,Footnote 25 both the suspect and the defense lawyer have a right to be present and ask questions (§ 168c sec. 2 CCP). The suspect and the defense lawyer are free to conduct their own investigation and to collect evidence to be offered at the trial; however, they cannot oblige any witness or other person to make a statement or otherwise cooperate with them. If the defense lawyer wishes, for example, that premises be searched he must file a request with the prosecutor, who in turn would have to seek a judicial search warrant if he agrees with the defense lawyer’s request.
Although the prosecutorial investigation is not public, the defense lawyer has a general right to inspect the prosecutor’s file. According to § 147 CCP, defense counsel may request to inspect the prosecution file at any time; the prosecutor may, however, withhold disclosure of certain sensitive parts of the file until the investigation has been concluded.Footnote 26 There is no reciprocal duty on the part of the defense to grant the prosecutor access to the results of their own investigation.
2.2 Social Relevance of Truth and Individual Rights in Criminal Trials
2.2.1 Relevance of Determining the Truth
The great importance of determining the truth for the German system of criminal procedure has been described in the Introduction (above). “Determining the truth” is not exclusively focused on obtaining confessions, however. Given the fact that scientific or documentary evidence in combination with witness and expert testimony is often sufficient to establish the relevant facts, the German system is not dependent on making the suspect confess. Procedure law clearly respects the suspect’s right to remain silent (cf. § 136 sec. 1 CCP), and the courts have made certain that no adverse inferences may be drawn from a suspect’s decision not to make a statement.Footnote 27 Moreover, the suspect must specifically be informed of his right to remain silent; if that information was not given, any statement the suspect makes cannot be used as evidence without his consent.Footnote 28
There is no general information available on the satisfaction of the German public with the functioning of the criminal justice system, especially with respect to the relationship between truth-determination and the protection of individual rights. Print media reporting on criminal trials frequently mention the fact that the defendant has chosen to remain silent, but they normally do so without negative comment.
2.2.2 Presentation of “Facts” Respectively “Fact-Finding” And/Or “Truth” to the Public
Although the pretrial investigation is not public, media reporting before trial is not prohibited.Footnote 29 Ethical rules for the press discourage the media from disclosing the full name of a suspect or defendant unless he is a publicly known person, and media also should not portray a person as “guilty” before the court has rendered the verdict. But such limitations apart, the media are free to report on crime and on the criminal process, and they often do so. Reporters receive their information mainly from press releases or press conferences of the prosecutor’s office and possibly of the defense lawyer. The question whether a suspect in a spectacular case has made a confession to the police or prosecutor will normally be communicated to the media and will promptly be reported.
Trials of adults are open to the public and the media, except that the public can be excluded for certain parts of the trial in order to protect the privacy of witnesses, victims or defendants (§§ 171b, 172 Gerichtsverfassungsgesetz (Court Organisation Act)). Sound and video recordings as well as live reporting from criminal trials are prohibited (§ 169 2nd sent. Gerichtsverfassungsgesetz).
2.2.3 Public Discussion of Miscarriages of Justice
Miscarriages of justice are relatively rarely discussed in Germany. The Code of Criminal Procedure provides for a special procedure to re-try terminated cases if new evidence is presented that casts doubt on the correctness of the judgement (Wiederaufnahme, §§ 359-373a CCP). Such re-trials are not frequent. There have been a number of spectacular cases in which persons convicted of murder were later found to be innocent,Footnote 30 but these cases have not indicated systemic problems concerning the process of truth-finding.
3 Limitations of Fact-Finding in Criminal Proceedings
3.1 General Rules on Taking Evidence (Admissibility of Evidence)
3.1.1 Legal Framework
3.1.1.1 Legal Framework for Taking Evidence and Admissibility of Evidence
The Code of Criminal Procedure does not contain a systematic set of rules on evidence law. There are few general provisions regulating the acquisition of evidence at the pretrial stage. According to §§ 160 sec. 1 and 163 sec. 1 CCP, the prosecutor and the police may conduct investigations of any kind, subject to specific statutory restrictions. Such restrictions are mostly geared toward the protection of the constitutional basic rights of persons subject to an investigation. For example, the Code of Criminal Procedure provides for testimonial privileges aiming at protecting family relationships (§ 52 CCP) and the confidentiality of professional communications with, e.g., lawyers and physicians (§ 53 CCP). Restrictions apply on the search of a building or a person (§§ 102–107 CCP), secret surveillance of communications (§§ 99–101 CCP), and on obtaining information through the use of undercover police agents (§§ 110a–110c CCP). In many of these instances, there exist substantive limitations (e.g., a measure may be taken only for the investigation of certain serious offenses) as well as procedural requirements (e.g., a judicial warrant is needed). This area, which is characterized by the tension between the interest in an efficient search for the truth and the need to protect various individual interests, seems to be in constant flux. Sometimes changes in the law are triggered by technological developments,Footnote 31 sometimes they reflect a change in the normative balance between the interests involved.Footnote 32
At the trial, only four types of evidence are available for the proof of a person’s guilt: witness testimony, expert testimony, documents, and real evidence. The trial court is free to choose among available items of evidence, except that the testimony of a witness must not be replaced by using as documentary evidence the protocol of his interrogation before trial (§ 250 2nd sent. CCP). The general guideline for the taking of evidence at the trial is the court’s responsibility for determining the truth: according to § 244 sec. 2 CCP, the court shall extend the taking of evidence to all facts and items of evidence that are necessary for the court’s decision. This rule shows the inquisitorial heritage of German law, and it has been in the Code of Criminal Procedure since its adoption in 1877.
In the German inquisitorial system, exclusion of evidence appears as an anomaly because it prevents the trial court from establishing the facts on which its judgement is to be based. Since the German system is, at least theoretically, not party oriented, the loss of a piece of incriminating evidence does not hurt the prosecutor or the police but affects the court’s truth-finding process. If evidence is excluded, the judges, who are responsible for determining the truth, have to bear the consequences of another actor’s procedural fault. No wonder, then, that both the German legislature and the courts are reluctant to accept broad rules of excluding illegally obtained evidence. The Federal Constitutional Court has indeed argued that it is an important element of the system of criminal justice to find the truth and that therefore exclusion of relevant evidence must remain an exception.Footnote 33
The first legal provision explicitly demanding the exclusion of illegally obtained evidence (§ 136a sec. 3 CCP; see below at 3.2) was introduced in 1950. Its adoption was a reaction to the abuses, including torture, prevalent in interrogations during the National-Socialist era. The exclusion of evidence obtained through physical force, threats and other forbidden methods was introduced not so much because of the unreliability of statements resulting from such methods but in order to protect the dignity of the persons interrogated and the general principle of a state based on the rule of law (Rechtsstaat).Footnote 34 Other explicit exclusionary rules were introduced after 2000 in order to protect core privacy rights in connection with the surveillance of conversations and telecommunications (§ 100e CCP) as well as the confidential relationship between a suspect and his lawyer (§ 160a sec. 1, 2nd sent. CCP). These rules provide for the mandatory exclusion of “core private” evidence obtained, although the measure (wiretap, surveillance of live conversations) as such was perfectly legal.
There is no statutory rule demanding the exclusion of evidence derived from inadmissible statements or communications.
3.1.1.2 Practice and Jurisprudence
With regard to the exclusion of tainted evidence, German courts do not accept the principle that unlawfully obtained evidence is inadmissible. Rather, the illegal source of evidence is said to create a conflict between the need to vindicate the rights of the affected individual (which favors excluding the evidence) and the interest of criminal justice in determining the truth and rendering decisions based on broad information (which favors admitting the evidence).Footnote 35 The courts balance these competing interests in each individual case and thus determine whether the evidence should be admitted in spite of the unlawful way in which it was obtained.Footnote 36 Factors relevant in the weighing process are, among others, the purpose of the rule that had been violated,Footnote 37 the gravity of the violation, in particular the question whether the state agent knowingly violated a procedural rule, the seriousness of the crime charged, and the importance of the evidence for finding the truth.Footnote 38 Many academics are critical of the courts’ pragmatic and unpredictable case law. But even those who favor a more exclusion-friendly approach would require that the procedural fault had an impact on the availability of the piece of evidence in question; for that reason, many authors have proposed to borrow the United States Supreme Court’s “hypothetical clean path” doctrine,Footnote 39 permitting the use of evidence if it would have (or: could have) become available even without the procedural fault.Footnote 40
German courts do not normally discuss the “justification” of exclusionary rules, except by indicating that they enhance the respect for the individual rights that had been violated in obtaining the evidence. It is for that reason that the Federal Court of Justice as well as the Federal Constitutional Court favor exclusion of illegally obtained evidence if the procedural rule that had been violated is meant to safeguard the basis of the defendant’s procedural position.Footnote 41
3.1.1.3 Consequences of a Violation of Exclusionary Rules
If a statute declares that certain evidence must not be used (“verwertet”),Footnote 42 neither the prosecutor nor the court are permitted to rely on that evidence in their decision-making; in particular, the court’s judgement must not refer to this evidence.Footnote 43 The evidence must not be introduced at the trial in any way; for example, an expert witness is precluded from referring to that evidence in his statement. But a prohibition of “using” the item as evidence does not rule out that an investigator takes clues from the item for further investigation.Footnote 44 For example, if a suspect makes a coerced statement in which he refers to other persons who allegedly committed the offense together with him, the “exclusion” of the statement by § 136a sec. 3 CCP does not block further police investigation into the identity of these persons, and the police may also interrogate them.Footnote 45 A more comprehensive prohibition is indicated by the term “verwendet”Footnote 46 (meaning: employed): If the item in question must not be “verwendet” by law enforcement, any use is prohibited, including basing further investigative measures on the information the item contains.Footnote 47
A prohibition of using a piece of evidence does not normally mean that the members of the trial court (which consists of a single professional judge or a mixed panel of professional and lay judges) do not become aware of the evidence in question. If the relevant evidence (for example, a statement of the suspect or of a witness) is included in the prosecutor’s case file, the professional judges see this item before trial because the prosecutor sends them his file along with the formal accusation.Footnote 48 If evidence is introduced at trial and is subsequently determined to be inadmissible, even the lay judges will have seen or heard the statement in question. “Exclusion” thus means only that the court must not base its judgement on the evidence in question. Judges are, in other words, supposed by law to “forget about” inadmissible evidence when deliberating on the judgement and when giving their (oral and written) reasons for the verdict and sentence. It is an open question to what extent judges (and especially lay judges) are capable of performing that psychological acrobatics.
If the trial court has admitted evidence that should have been excluded, the convicted defendant may base an appeal on legal grounds (Revision, § 337 CCP) on this fault. The appeal will be successful if it is possible that the judgement would have been different if the court had disregarded the evidence in question. In the memorandum supporting the appeal, the defendant must explain that his lawyer had objected to the introduction of the evidence at the trial.Footnote 49
3.1.2 Debate on Exclusionary Rules
There is presently no public debate on this issue.
3.1.3 Institutional Arrangements Securing Individual Rights
In many instances, the Code of Criminal Procedure provides that suspects, defendants and witnesses shall be informed about their rights. As has been mentioned before, this applies to the suspect’s right to remain silent and to obtain the assistance of a lawyer (§ 136 sec. 1, 2nd sent. CCP). Other examples are a suspect’s rights after he has been detained (§ 114b CCP) and a witness’s right not to incriminate himself (§ 55 sec. 2 CCP). Detained persons can also demand to be examined by a physician (§ 114b sec. 2 no. 5 CCP). Generally, these rights are protected by judicial surveillance, either by a right to appeal directly to a judge (as with detained suspects, § 119a CCP) or by basing a motion for reviewing the judgement (Revision) on the alleged procedural fault.
3.2 Evidence Obtained by Torture
In the German procedural system, the use of torture, force and threats is strictly prohibited. § 136a Code of Criminal Procedure (CCP) explicitly protects the suspect’s (and any witness’sFootnote 50) autonomy with regard to making or not making statements to the court, the prosecutor, or the police. § 136a sec. 1 CCP lists certain means that may not be used in any interrogation, namely
-
physical abuse
-
psychological torment
-
invasive measures
-
mind-altering medication, drugs or hypnosis
-
illegal constraint
-
deprivation of rest or sleep
-
threats with impermissible measures
-
promises of improper benefits
-
deceit.
These means are prohibited because they tend to overbear the individual’s will, but they are prohibited regardless of whether they actually have this effect in the individual case. The means listed must not be applied even with the consent of the interrogated person.
The prohibition of the means listed relates only to “interrogations”. The Federal Court of Justice has defined an interrogation as a situation where an agent of the state openly confronts a person and requests information.Footnote 51 The legal protection of a person’s free will in connection with an “interrogation” thus does not apply to spontaneous utterances, even to a police officer,Footnote 52 or to conversations among acquaintances.Footnote 53 According to the courts, there exists no “interrogation” if an undercover agent or a police informer seeks to elicit information from a suspect without disclosing his police affiliation.Footnote 54 Yet the prohibition of the methods listed in § 136a CCP has been extended to these persons if their activity had been initiated by a police officer or other state agent.Footnote 55
3.2.1 Definitions of Torture and Inhuman Treatment
§ 136a CCP does not employ the term “torture” (Folter) among the forbidden means of interrogation. But any case of physical torture is necessarily included in the broader term “physical abuse” (Misshandlung), which has been held to include any significant impairment of a person’s physical well-being, such as bodily injury, beatings, excessive noise or light, and frequent interruption of sleep.Footnote 56
Art. 104 sec. 1, 2nd sent. of the German Constitution of 1949 provides that persons in (state) custody must not be subjected to mental or physical abuse (Misshandlung). Again, the constitution does not use the term “torture” but employs a rather extensive concept of abuse, which has been interpreted broadly by courts and writers.Footnote 57
Since Germany has ratified the European Convention on Human Rights and has transformed it into domestic law,Footnote 58 the prohibition of torture and inhuman and degrading treatment in Art. 3 ECHR is directly applicable in Germany. German courts generally follow the definition that these terms have been given by the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR). According to the ECtHR, torture is a more serious infringement of the victim’s bodily integrity than inhuman treatment. It depends on the individual case whether maltreatment has reached the level of torture; relevant factors are the nature and context of the maltreatment, its duration, its physical and mental effect on the victim, and also the age, gender and physical condition of the victim.Footnote 59 In a judgement concerning the application of international criminal law, the German Federal Court of Justice (Bundesgerichtshof) has defined torture in the sense of the 4th Geneva Convention as any intentional infliction of severe physical or mental pain by organs of the state or with their acquiescence.Footnote 60
In connection with the case of Gäfgen,Footnote 61 German jurists in the early 2000s engaged in a debate on possible limits of the prohibition of torture, especially whether torture could be used as a means to save innocent lives. The majority of authors and courts have maintained the absolute ban on torture, arguing that the dignity of the person protected by Art. 1 Basic Law could not be infringed even where human lives are at stake.Footnote 62
3.2.2 Definition of Privilege Against Self-incrimination
German statutory law neither defines nor explicitly protects a suspect’s right to remain silent. The Code of Criminal Procedure mentions this right only indirectly by requiring that a suspect, at his first interrogation, shall be informed of the fact that “according to the law”Footnote 63 he is free to respond to the allegation of guilt or not to say anything with regard to the subject matter (§ 136 sec. 1, 2nd sent. CCP). Similarly, a witness may decline to respond to any question if the answer would lead to the risk that he or one of his relatives could be prosecuted for a criminal offense or an administrative infraction (§ 55 sec. 1 CCP). The privilege implies that a suspect’s (or his relative’s) silence must not be used as evidence of his guilt.Footnote 64
These provisions of statutory law implicitly show that Germany recognizes any person’s right to decline any active contribution to his or her own prosecution. The Federal Constitutional Court has held that the privilege against self-incrimination follows from the constitutional principle that Germany is a state based on the rule of law (Rechtsstaatsprinzip; see Art. 20 sec. 3 and Art. 28 sec. 1 Basic Law).Footnote 65 The exact constitutional basis of the privilege against self-incrimination is difficult to identify; the Federal Constitutional Court and many authors regard the principle as based on the dignity of the person as protected in Art. 1 Basic Law.Footnote 66
According to German case law and doctrine, the privilege against self-incrimination is not limited to verbal statements but extends to any form of activity, including participation in psychological or physical tests and providing handwriting samples, even just blowing into a breathalyzer.Footnote 67 It is not quite clear against what kind of official inducements to speak or cooperate the privilege protects. Without doubt, agents of the state must not use force or threats of force in order to make a person actively incriminate himself.Footnote 68 But according to the majority view, deceit is a permissible method of obtaining a person’s active cooperation.Footnote 69
Suspects, defendants and witnesses must be informed of the privilege as it applies to them (§§ 55 sec. 2, 136 sec. 1, 2nd sent., 243 sec. 5 CCP). It is irrelevant whether the suspect or witness already is aware of his right to remain silent.Footnote 70 According to the Federal Court of Justice, an undercover police agent talking with a suspect in order to elicit information need not tell the suspect that he has a right to remain silent, because that would undermine the usefulness of undercover police investigations.Footnote 71
3.2.3 Exclusionary Rules for Evidence Obtained by Torture
3.2.3.1 Procedure
There are no special rules in German criminal procedure with respect to weeding out before trial evidence that has been obtained by torture. In theory at least, the public prosecutor’s office conducts the pretrial proceedings (§§ 160 sec. 1, 161 sec. 1 CCP). If the police use torture and this becomes known to the prosecutor, he must refrain from using any statement obtained through torture for the further investigation (§ 136a Sec. 3 CCP; see below). In fact, however, prosecutors rarely participate actively in the investigation but leave it largely to the police. Prosecutors typically review the police file only when the police consider the investigation terminated, with the case ready for dismissal or for indictment. The prosecutor may then send the case back to the police, however, for further investigation if he thinks that not all relevant facts have been elucidated or that critical evidence would be inadmissible in court.
When the prosecutor has filed a formal accusation, the trial court—sitting without lay judges—reviews the file of the investigation and decides whether there is sufficient evidence available to make the accused stand trial on the charges (§ 199 CCP; see above). At this stage of the proceedings, the trial court will also consider whether evidence proposed by the prosecution is admissible at trial. If critical evidence (e.g., a confession of the accused) is inadmissible, the court may decide that the remaining evidence will probably not be sufficient for conviction, and may on that ground refuse to open trial proceedings. Although German law does not provide for a hearing on the admissibility of evidence, such issues can be discussed either during the intermediary phase or at a special hearing held by the court before trial (§ 212 CCP). As has been noted above, the trial court is solely responsible for deciding what evidence is to be presented at trial (§ 244 sec. 2 CCP).
If evidence (e.g., a witness statement) has been presented at the trial, according to the Federal Court of Justice it will be presumed that the defense consents to its use unless the defendant’s lawyerFootnote 72 explicitly objects as soon as the evidence has been introduced.Footnote 73 This means that defense counsel must immediately raise any doubts he may have as to the admissibility of any evidence.
3.2.3.2 Exclusionary Rules in Public Debate
Cases of police torture are not at the center of public debate in Germany. It is unknown to what extent non-lawyers are aware of the rules on inadmissibility of statements obtained by torture. In the Gäfgen case, opinions were divided on whether the relatively mild threat of applying painful force to the suspect was justified in order to save the victim’s life.Footnote 74 In any event, the public was less than enthusiastic about the fact that Mr. Gäfgen received a substantial sum of money for pain and suffering in that context.Footnote 75
3.2.4 Institutional Arrangements Securing the Ban on Torture
One means to prevent torture is the presence of a defense lawyer in torture-prone situations, especially during police interrogations. § 137 CCP provides that anyone may avail himself of the assistance of a lawyer at all stages of criminal proceedings. Since 2017, the defense lawyer has the right to be present at any interrogation of the suspect (§ 163a sec. 3 and 4 in connection with § 168c sec. 1 CCP). Yet, the suspect must normally pay his lawyer’s fee, and if he is too poor the state will not necessarily appoint a free lawyer for him.Footnote 76
There are no special procedures available for bringing cases of torture to the attention of courts. Anyone may file a criminal complaint (for assault—§ 223 Penal Code—or for coercing testimony—§ 343 Penal Code) or a civil suit for damages (§§ 823, 839 Civil Code) against the offending officer. The issue may also be raised in the context of the criminal proceedings against the tortured person as an objection to the use of evidence under § 136a sec. 3 CCP.
Germany has installed a national agency for the prevention of torture, as demanded by Arts. 17–23 of the Optional Protocol of 2002 to the U.N. Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment.Footnote 77 The independent national agency for the prevention of torture consists of sub-agencies with competence for Federal and State institutions. Its ten members have the right to visit closed institutions, and they prepare annual reports for the Federal and State governments and parliaments. Germany has not so far installed independent institutions to which individual complaints of torture and degrading treatment can be directed; the Federal government deems it sufficient that inmates can send petitions to the Federal or State legislatures.Footnote 78
3.2.5 Exclusion of Evidence and Other Remedies Following a Breach of the Ban on Torture
There has been some debate as to whether the use of torture so vitiates a criminal proceeding that it must be terminated without a conviction.Footnote 79 The courts have, however, rejected that proposition, arguing that a dismissal of the case might infringe upon the protection of third parties; moreover, dismissal might hurt the important constitutional interest in prosecuting and convicting criminal offenders,Footnote 80 failing to provide satisfaction through punishment.Footnote 81
With regard to torture, § 136a sec. 3, 2nd sent. CCP clearly provides that statements elicited from a suspect or witness by the forbidden means listed in § 136a secs. 1 and 2 CCP (see above) are inadmissible as evidence.Footnote 82 Such statements have to be excluded even if the declarant consents to their use (§ 136a sec. 3, 2nd sent. CCP).Footnote 83 If an illicit method of interrogation as listed in § 136a secs. 1 and 2 CCP was used, it will normally be assumed (and does not require proof) that the statement was actually caused by employing the forbidden method; exclusion does therefore not require a positive showing that the statement was in fact involuntary or was brought about by the illicit means.Footnote 84
Tainted statements must not be introduced even in an indirect way, for example, by asking a witness of the interrogation what the person had said; nor is it permissible for an expert witness to base his expert opinion on a coerced statement.Footnote 85
According to the Federal Court of Justice, violations of Art. 136a CCP can be proved and disproved by any means.Footnote 86 There is no technical burden of proof either on the defendant or on the prosecutor. But the courts presume the “regularity of the criminal process”. This means that evidence will not be excluded if the court cannot determine whether or not a violation of § 136a CCP occurred.Footnote 87 While it is true that the principle in dubio pro reo is not directly applicable here, because the question of whether a violation of § 136a CCP occurred is not directly related to the defendant’s guilt, the majority of commentators reject the view that it is in fact the defendant who has to prove that he had been maltreated. They claim that the burden of proving that there was no violation of § 136a CCP shifts to the state as soon as the defendant has made a plausible initial showing that a violation may have occurred.Footnote 88
There is broad agreement that the exclusion of evidence in this situation not only serves the truth-finding process by eliminating evidence of inherently doubtful reliability,Footnote 89 but that the rule of exclusion is rooted in the Constitution. Opinions differ, however, as to the exact constitutional principle that is applicable. Some authors regard the exclusion of evidence obtained through torture as a corollary of the protection of human dignityFootnote 90: others emphasize the integrity of judicial proceedings that would be compromised if such evidence were employed by the court.Footnote 91 German doctrine places little weight on the deterrent effect that exclusion of coerced evidence may have on illegal police practicesFootnote 92; but the Federal Court of Justice has emphasized that exclusion is to make certain that police do not intentionally neglect the legal requirements.Footnote 93
The ECtHR likewise demands exclusion of any evidence produced by torture.Footnote 94 It has found violations of Art. 3 ECHR where the results of torture or inhuman treatment were the sole or decisive evidence on which the judgement was based.Footnote 95
3.2.6 Admissibility of Indirect Evidence (“Fruits of the Poisonous Tree”) in Cases of Torture
It is unclear whether the use of torture precludes not only the admission of statements made by the tortured person but also the use of evidence discovered as a result of such statements.Footnote 96 The general German debate on how to deal with “fruits of the poisonous tree” resonates here. German courts do not categorically exclude evidence derived from violations of individual procedural rights.Footnote 97 As noted above, The Federal Constitutional Court has argued that exclusion of relevant evidence must remain an exception.Footnote 98 Moreover, it has been said that exclusion of any derivative evidence would have the effect that one procedural fault could entirely disrupt the criminal process.Footnote 99 Some authors think, however, that a violation of § 136a CCP should invariably foreclose the admission of any evidence derived from the statement made by the declarant.Footnote 100 An argument in favor of this view is that § 136a CCP sec. 3, 2nd sent. CCP declares that “statements” (Aussagen) that have been brought about by forbidden means must not be “used”—and it is one way of “using” such statements for law enforcement to base further inquiries on them.Footnote 101 Moreover, limiting inadmissibility to the coerced statement itself would virtually invite the police to apply forbidden means in the hope of obtaining further leads which then could be used as evidence. The German courts, by contrast, extend their general skepticism about excluding derivative evidence to the situation of a violation of § 136a CCP. They make admissibility depend on a weighing of the conflicting interests of law enforcement on the one side and individual rights on the other (see above).Footnote 102
According to the ECtHR judgement in Gäfgen v. Germany, use of evidence derived from torture or degrading treatment as a rule violates Art. 3 ECHR.Footnote 103
3.3 Exclusion of Illegally Obtained Evidence—Cases of Undue Coercion
§ 136a CCP does not distinguish between cases of torture and of other undue physical or mental coercion. What has been said above about the procedural consequences of torture therefore applies as well to other (lesser) forms of physical abuse or mental torment.
3.3.1 Institutional Arrangements Securing the Right to Remain Silent
Procedural safeguards for the protection of the right to remain silent are similar to those protecting against torture: suspects have a general right to consult with a lawyer before they submit to questioning by the police or other law enforcement personnel. Suspects must explicitly be informed of the right to consult with a lawyer prior to any interrogation, and they must be assisted in obtaining access to a lawyer (§ 136 sec. 1, 2nd and 3rd sent. CCP).Footnote 104 The defense lawyer has the right to be present during any interrogation of a suspect and can advise his client of the proper use of his right to remain silent (§§ 168c sec. 1, 163a sec. 3, 2nd sent., sec. 4 3rd sent. CCP).
3.3.2 Exclusionary Rules for Evidence Obtained in Violation of the Privilege Against Self-incrimination
If the requisite information on the right not to incriminate oneself (§§ 55 sec. 2, 136 sec. 1, 2nd sent. CCP) was not provided, the declarant’s statement cannot be used as evidence against him.Footnote 105 In a case concerning the admissibility of unwarned self-incriminating statements, the Federal Court of Justice has affirmed the principle that the court should seek the truth, but should not do so at any cost.Footnote 106 The Court held that any (even unintentional) omission of the required information about the right to silence jeopardizes the suspect’s ability to intelligently decide whether to remain silent; the suspect’s statements therefore are presumed to be involuntary.Footnote 107 Yet the Court recognized an exception if it can be proved that the suspect was in fact aware of his right to remain silent.Footnote 108 Furthermore, the defendant can consent to the use of his prior unwarned statement at trial, thus rendering it admissible.Footnote 109
If the information about the privilege was not provided, the suspect may nevertheless be interrogated again at a later date, either by the same interrogator or by a different person. In order for any statement made at this latter date to be admissible as evidence, the suspect needs to be told (a) that he is free to speak or to remain silent, and (b) that his prior (unwarned) statement cannot be used as evidence.Footnote 110 It is not clear, however, whether a statement made in the second interrogation may be used if the second part of the warning was not given. Some authors think that, without the complete warning, the second statement is inadmissible because the interrogated person is likely to think that the earlier statement is good evidence and that it therefore does not matter whether he repeats it.Footnote 111 The Federal Court of Justice, on the other hand, favors a “weighing” solution: the trial court is to decide whether the importance of the statement for finding the truth outweighs the seriousness of the violation of the suspect’s rights. The latter is unlikely to be the case where the second interrogator intentionally omitted to provide the requisite information.Footnote 112
With regard to evidence derived from unwarned statements, the Federal Court of Justice is likely to admit such evidence given its general reluctance to exclude “fruits of the poisoned tree”.Footnote 113 In conformity with its treatment of other violations of the defendant’s procedural rights, the Federal Court of Justice can be expected to prefer the so-called sentencing solution, i.e. denying any impact on the process but granting the convicted defendant a reduction of the deserved sentence as a compensation for the violation of his rights.Footnote 114
3.3.3 Remedies Following Violations of Exclusionary Rules
As with violations of § 136a CCP, the principle in dubio pro reo is said not to apply to the question whether the suspect’s right to silence had been observed at all times. If the trial court is not convinced that a violation occurred, it will admit the evidence in question.
As for the evidentiary consequences of undue coercion, see supra on § 136a CCP.
4 Statistics
Statistical evidence on the application of exclusionary rules is not available.
5 Conclusion
In summary, one can say that Germany still pursues the ideal of finding the truth in the criminal process and places great emphasis on this goal. Although the protection of human rights is seen as part of the constitutional principle of Rechtsstaatlichkeit, and although human dignity has been accorded the highest rank in the German constitutional hierarchy, the exclusion of evidence is regarded as an anomaly. There are only few instances of mandatory exclusion. Some of them concern the protection of core privacy (§§ 100a sec. 4 and 100c sec. 5 CCP), and some are to safeguard the integrity of interrogations (especially § 136a sec. 3 CCP, but also judge-made rules such as the exclusion of a suspect’s statements if information on the right to remain silent and the right to a lawyer had not been providedFootnote 115). In most other instances of the violation of individual rights, German courts engage in a balancing process, excluding relevant evidence only if there is no overriding interest in using the evidence for determining the truth. Moreover, exclusion of evidence generally covers only evidence that has been directly obtained through a violation of procedural rules; derivative evidence is generally accepted, with few exceptions.
Institutional mechanisms for ensuring respect for human rights in the context of the criminal process are limited. The most important tools are the obligation of interrogators to inform suspects and witnesses of their respective rights, and a suspect’s right to have the assistance of a lawyer.Footnote 116 Yet, it should be noted that not every suspect can receive the services of a lawyer free of charge (cf. § 140 CCP).
With regard to the balance between truth-finding and protection of human rights, the trend in Germany is toward cautiously extending the scope of exclusionary rules, especially in cases where a state agent intentionally or arbitrarily violated a procedural rule protecting the rights of the suspect. This trend has been initiated and fuelled by the jurisprudence of the ECtHR and the German Federal Constitutional Court, sometimes against the persistent opposition of the criminal courts.
It is an open question whether exclusion of tainted evidence is actually effective in discouraging rule violations. It is difficult to find out to what extent and in what areas police and prosecutors may tend to disregard the restrictions on collecting evidence that procedural law provides. From the published case law, it appears that searches and examinations of the body are more susceptible to rule violations than interrogations; but there may exist a dark figure of unknown size in either area. Given the remoteness of police activities in investigating crime from actual trials, and the relative scarcity of trials (in relation to written procedures and consensual dispositions), it is unlikely that exclusion of evidence has a strong educative or deterrent effect on individual police officers who may have committed a procedural fault in the early stages of an investigation. On the other hand, the inquisitorial tradition is still strong in Germany, and that tradition is inimical to any effort of purposely manipulating the factual basis of the court’s judgement.
Alternative ways of curbing disregard of individual procedural rights by police and prosecutors are limited to the usual mechanisms of imposing individual responsibility through disciplinary and (depending on the factual situation) criminal law. There is a functioning disciplinary system of police forces in place, but it seems that it is more geared toward combating police violence and corruption than toward suppressing the use of illicit investigatory measures.
Academic writers as well as the defense bar tend to support increased reliance on the exclusion of evidence and a general strengthening of tools for guaranteeing respect for human rights. But the influence of both groups on law reform is very limited. At this time, the emphasis of official “reform” measures is on increasing the speed, economy, and “efficiency” of the criminal process.Footnote 117 Exclusion of evidence does not seem to be a welcome instrument for achieving these goals.
Notes
- 1.
See Stuckenberg, 2016 at 695 et seq., with further references.
- 2.
- 3.
BVerfG, Judgement of 19 March 2013 – 2 BvR 2628/10, 2 BvR 2883/10, 2 BvR 2155/11 (=Entscheidungen des Bundesverfassungsgerichts (BVerfGE) 133, 168, 199).
- 4.
See Sander in Löwe/Rosenberg, 2007 at § 261 notes 103 et seq., with further references.
- 5.
According to § 243 sec. 5 deutsche Strafprozessordnung (StPO), officially translated as German Code of Criminal Procedure (CCP) of 7 April 1987 (Status as of 17 August 2017), available online at <https://www.gesetze-im-internet.de/stpo/BJNR006290950.html>, accessed 1 November 2018, at the beginning of the trial the defendant is invited to respond to the accusation. The defendant, of course, retains the right to remain silent.
- 6.
§ 257c sec. 1, 2nd sent. in connection with § 244 sec. 2 CCP.
- 7.
Bundesgesetzblatt II 1952 at 685.
- 8.
BVerfG, Decision of 14 October 2004 - 2 BvR 1481/04 (=BVerfGE 111, 307).
- 9.
BVerfG, Decision of 3 June 1969 - 1 BvL 7/68 (=BVerfGE 26, 66, 71); Decision of 8 October 1974 - 2 BvR 747/73 (=38, 105, 111); Decision of 26 May 1981 - 2 BvR 215/81 (=57, 250, 274).
- 10.
- 11.
BGH, Decision of 27 February 1992 - 5 StR 190/91(=BGHSt 38, 214, 220); Judgement of 18 November 1999 - 1 StR 221/99 (=45, 321, 335); Judgement of 25 July 2000 - 1 StR 169/00 (=46, 93, 100).
- 12.
- 13.
See Meyer-Goßner/Schmitt, 2016 at § 100c note 2.
- 14.
See BGH, Judgement of 29 April 2010 - 5 StR 18/10 (=BGHSt 55, 121, 135); Judgement of 20 June 2012 - 5 StR 536/11 (=NJW 2012, 2453); see also ECtHR, Jalloh v. Germany, case no. 54810/00, Judgement of 11 July 2006.
- 15.
See, e.g., BVerfG, Judgement of 16 January 1957 - 1 BvR 253 56 (=BVerfGE 6, 32, 41); Decision of 8 March 1972 - 2 BvR 28/71 (=32, 373, 378–79); Decision of 31 January 1973 - 2 BvR 454/71 (=34, 238, 245); Decision of 26 April 1994 - 1 BvR 1689/88 (=90, 255, 260 et seq.); Judgement of 3 March 2004 - 1 BvR 2378/98 u. 1 BvR 1084/99 (=109, 279, 313); Judgement of 27 July 2005 - 1 BvR 668/04 (=113, 348, 390–91). For an overview, see Roxin/Schünemann, 2014 at 184–85.
- 16.
See BVerfG Judgement of 3 March 2004 - 1 BvR 2378/98 u. 1 BvR 1084/99 (=BVerfGE 109, 279, 323–333).
- 17.
A similar exclusionary rule applies to communications between the suspect and his defense lawyer (§ 160a sec. 1 2nd sent. CCP). In this instance, it is not the right to privacy but the protection of the integrity of the defense that prompts the exclusion.
- 18.
BGH, Judgement of 10 August 2005 - 1 StR 140/05 (=BGHSt 50, 206); Judgement of 22 December 2011 - 2 StR 509/10 (=NStZ 2012, 277).
- 19.
BVerfG Decision of 14 September 1989 - 2 BvR 1062/87 (=BVerfGE 80, 367).
- 20.
BGH, Judgement of 28 June 1961 - 2 StR 154/61 (=BGHSt 16, 164); OLG Hamburg, Decision of 14 June 2005 - IV-1/04 (=NJW 2005, 2326). For criticism of this rule, see Gless in Löwe/Rosenberg 2007 at § 136a note 78. See below for a discussion with respect to allegations of torture.
- 21.
In practice, this option is very rarely used.
- 22.
For details, see § 244 sec. 3 – 6 CCP. The victim of an offense has the same right to move for taking additional evidence if the victim has joined the accusation as an auxiliary prosecutor (Nebenkläger) (§ 397 3rd sent. CCP).
- 23.
Meyer-Goßner/Schmitt, 2016 at § 241 note 6.
- 24.
The prosecutor’s decision not to take the requested evidence is not subject to judicial review; see Kölbel in Münchener Kommentar, 2016 at § 163a note 48.
- 25.
The prosecutor may request a judge to interrogate individual suspects and witnesses or conduct other acts of investigation in the course of pretrial proceedings (§ 162 CCP). The results of judicial interrogations can be introduced as evidence at the trial under less restrictive conditions than the protocols of police or prosecutorial interrogations (§§ 251, 254 CCP).
- 26.
For details, see § 147 sec. 2, 3 and 6 CCP.
- 27.
See, e.g., BGH, Decision of 29 August 1974 - 4 StR 171/74 (=BGHSt 25, 365, 368); Judgement of 26 October 1983 - 3 StR 251/83 (=32, 140, 144). For details, see Gless in Löwe/Rosenberg, 2007 at § 136 note 36.
- 28.
BGH, Decision of 27 February 1992 - 5 StR 190/91 (=BGHSt 38, 214, 220).
- 29.
For a brief discussion of media publicity (and many further references), see Roxin/Schünemann, 2014 at 109–11.
- 30.
See, e.g., Oberlandesgericht Frankfurt am Main, Decision of 4 December 1995 – 1 Ws 160/95, (1996) 16 Strafverteidiger, 138–41; Schwenn, 2010.
- 31.
See, e.g., § 100i CCP, introduced in 2002, regulating the determination of the identification number and location of a mobile phone.
- 32.
For example, the possibility of installing hidden microphones in private homes for surveillance purposes was severely restricted in 2005, following a ruling of the Federal Constitutional Court (BVerfG, Judgement of 3 March 2004 - 1 BvR 2378/98 u. 1 BvR 1084/99 (=BVerfGE 109, 279)) that the prior version of the law had neglected the necessary protection of core privacy.
- 33.
BVerfG, Decision of 9 November 2010 - 2 BvR 2101/09 (=NJW 2011, 2417, 2418-19).
- 34.
Gless in Löwe/Rosenberg, 2007 at § 136a note 1.
- 35.
BVerfG (1. Kammer des Zweiten Senats), Decision of 9 November 2010 - 2 BvR 2101/09 (=NJW 2011, 2417, 2418); BGH, Decision of 21 January 1958 - GSSt 4/57 (=BGHSt 11, 213, 214); Decision of 27 February 1992 - 5 StR 190/91 (=38, 214, 219); Kudlich in Münchener Kommentar, 2014 at Einleitung notes 454–55; Meyer-Goßner/Schmitt, 2016 at Einleitung note 55.
- 36.
See BGH, Decision of 27 February 1992 - 5 StR 190/91 (=BGHSt 38, 214, 219).
- 37.
For example, § 81a sec. 1, 2nd sent. CCP provides that certain intrusive examinations of a person’s body may only be performed by a licensed physician. The purpose of this rule is to protect the examinee’s health. It would therefore make little sense to exclude the result of an examination conducted by a nurse, since its relevance for the criminal process is in no way affected by the violation of the “licensed physician” rule. See BGH, Decision of 17 March 1971 - 3 StR 189/70 (=BGHSt 24, 125, 128).
- 38.
For an overview of relevant factors and various academic theories on the subject see Kudlich in Münchener Kommentar, 2014 at Einleitung notes 449–94.
- 39.
See Nix v. Williams, 467 US 431 (1984).
- 40.
- 41.
BGH, Decision of 27 February 1992 - 5 StR 190/91 (=BGHSt 38, 214, 220); BVerfG, Decision of 16 March 2006 - 2 BvR 954/02 (=NJW 2006, 2684).
- 42.
This is the term used in § 136a sec. 3, 2nd sent. CCP and in § 100d sec. 2 CCP (concerning “core” private conversations).
- 43.
Kudlich in Münchener Kommentar, 2014 at Einleitung note 449.
- 44.
Roxin/Schünemann, 2014 at 187.
- 45.
BGH, Judgement of 24 August 1983 - 3 StR 136/83 (=BGHSt 32, 68, 70).
- 46.
See, e.g., § 160a sec. 1, 2nd sent. CCP (concerning conversations between the suspect or defendant and his lawyer).
- 47.
Kölbel in Münchener Kommentar, 2016 at § 160a note 14.
- 48.
The lay judges do not see the prosecutor’s file.
- 49.
BGH, Decision of 27 February 1992 - 5 StR 190/91 (=BGHSt 38, 214, 225-26); BGH, Decision of 11 September 2007 - 1 StR 273/07 (=NJW 2007, 3587).
- 50.
§ 69 sec. 3 declares that § 136a CCP is applicable as well to the interrogation of any witness.
- 51.
BGH, Decision of 13 May 1996 - GSSt 1/96 (=BGHSt 42, 139, 145).
- 52.
BGH, Decision of 9 June 2009 - 4 StR 170/09 (=NJW 2009, 3589). But see BGH, Judgement of 27 June 2013 – 3 StR 435/12 (=BGHSt 58, 301, 305-08): Suspect’s spontaneous utterance after he had unsuccessfully asked to speak to a lawyer triggered further judicial questioning; use of the suspect’s ensuing statement was held to violate the privilege against self-incrimination and the right to counsel.
- 53.
- 54.
BGH, Decision of 13 May 1996 - GSSt 1/96 (= BGHSt 42, 139, 145-48).
- 55.
See BGH, Judgement of 26 July 2007 - 3 StR 104/07 (=BGHSt 52, 11, 18-21); Decision of 18 May 2010 - 5 StR 51/10 (=55, 138); Gless in Löwe/Rosenberg, 2007 at § 136a note 4; Meyer-Goßner/Schmitt, 2016 at § 110c note 3, § 136a note 3.
- 56.
- 57.
See BGH, Judgement of 3 May 1960 - 1 StR 131/60 (=BGHSt 14, 269, 271); Schulze-Fielitz in Dreier, 2013 at Art. 104 note 61.
- 58.
See the notification of 15 December 1953 (Bundesgesetzblatt 1954 II 14). Germany has also ratified the European Convention against Torture and Inhuman and Degrading Treatment of 1987 (Bundesgesetzblatt 1989 II 946).
- 59.
ECtHR, Ireland v. UK, case no. 5310/71, Judgement of 18 January 1978, § 162; Asalya v. Turkey, case no. 43875/09, Judgement of 15 April 2014, § 47.
- 60.
BGH, Judgement of 21 February 2001 - 3 StR 372/00 (=BGHSt 46, 292, 302-303).
- 61.
See ECtHR, Gäfgen v. Germany, case no. 22978/05, Judgement of 30 June 2008; Judgement (Grand Chamber) of 1 June 2010, §§ 165-166. For a comment, see Weigend, 2011 at 325. See also ECtHR, Harutyunyan v. Armenia, case no. 36549/03, Judgement of 28 June 2007, § 63; Cesnieks v. Latvia, case no. 9278/06, Judgement of 11 February 2014, § 65.
- 62.
- 63.
Curiously, § 136 sec. 1 CCP refers to a written law (Gesetz) which, as such, does not exist. Germany did however ratify the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which protects the privilege in Art. 14 (3) (g).
- 64.
BGH, Decision of 29 August 1974 - 4 StR 171/74 (=BGHSt 25, 365, 368); Judgement of 2 April 1987 - 4 StR 46/87 (=34, 324, 326); Judgement of 26 May 1992 - 5 StR 122/92 (=38, 302, 305). If the suspect makes a statement but declines to respond to further questions, this fact may be used with respect to the credibility of his statements; see BGH, Judgement of 3 December 1965 - 4 StR 573/65 (=BGHSt 20, 298); Meyer-Goßner/Schmitt, 2016 at § 261 note 17.
- 65.
BVerfG, Decision of 8 October 1974 - 2 BvR 747/73 (=BVerfGE 38, 105, 113); Decision of 13 January 1981 - 1 BvR 116/77 (=56, 37, 43); Judgement of 3 March 2004 - 1 BvR 2378/98 u. 1 BvR 1084/99 (=109, 279, 324).
- 66.
- 67.
BGH, Judgement of 9 April 1986 - 3 StR 551/85 (=BGHSt 34, 39, 46); Judgement of 24 February 1994 - 4 StR 317/93 (=40, 66, 71-72); Judgement of 21 January 2004 - 1 StR 364/03 (=BGHSt 49, 56); Roxin, 1995 at 466; Rogall in Systematischer Kommentar, 2016 before §133 notes 73, 146–50. For a critical assessment, see Verrel, 2001.
- 68.
BGH, Judgement of 26 July 2007 - 3 StR 104/07 (=BGHSt 52, 11, 17-18); Rogall in Systematischer Kommentar, 2016 before §133 notes 79–81.
- 69.
BGH, Decision of 13 May 1996 - GSSt 1/96 (=BGHSt 42, 139, 153); Decision of 31 March 2011 - 3 StR 400/10 (=NStZ 2011, 596). But see, contra, Wolfslast, 1987 at 104; Ransiek, 1990 at 54-58; Roxin, 1997. In BGH, Judgement of 26 July 2007 - 3 StR 104/07 (=BGHSt 52, 11, 18), the Federal Court of Justice in 2007 explicitly left open whether it will continue its restrictive interpretation of the privilege against self-incrimination.
- 70.
BGH, Decision of 27 February 1992 - 5 StR 190/91 (=BGHSt 38, 214, 224). See also Judgement of 12 October 1993 - 1 StR 475/93 (=BGHSt 39, 349) (if suspect, due to mental incapacity, was unable to understand the information, his statement may be used only with his consent).
- 71.
BGH, Decision of 13 May 1996 - GSSt 1/96 (=BGHSt 42, 139, 145). See the criticism of Roxin, 1995 at 466.
- 72.
Or the defendant himself, if he has no lawyer and had been specifically informed by the judge that he must object to the use of the evidence.
- 73.
BGH, Decision of 27 February 1992 - 5 StR 190/91 (= BGHSt 38, 214, 226); Judgement of 12 January 1996 - 5 StR 756/94 (=BGHSt 42, 15, 22); see also BVerfG, Decision of 7 December 2011 - 2 BvR 2500/09 (=NJW 2012, 907, 911) (holding this decision constitutional). For criticism, see Fezer, 1997 at 58; Heinrich, 2000, 398.
- 74.
See the compromise judgement of Landgericht Frankfurt in the criminal case against the police officer who had uttered the threat of torture (convicting the defendant of coercion but imposing an extremely lenient sentence), LG Frankfurt am Main, Decision of 9 April 2003 – 5/22 Ks 3490 Js 230118/02, (2003) 23 Strafverteidiger, 325-27.
- 75.
See the comments under <http://www.focus.de/panorama/welt/verurteilter-kindsmoerder-neues-verfahren-wegen-entschaedigung-fuer-gaefgen_aid_808457.html>, accessed 1 November 2018.
- 76.
§ 140 CCP describes the situations when a lawyer has to be provided for a suspect or defendant. One such situation exists when the suspect has been taken into pretrial custody (§ 140 sec. 1 no. 4 CCP). Pretrial custody however requires a judicial order and is to be distinguished from mere provisional arrest, which does not trigger the right to have a lawyer appointed.
- 77.
Resolution of the UN General Assembly on the Optional Protocol to the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, UN Doc A/RES/57/199 of 9 January 2003.
- 78.
- 79.
For an overview and discussion see Julius in Heidelberger Kommentar, 2012 at § 206a notes 8–15.
- 80.
The Federal Constitutional Court has held this interest to be part of the principle of Rechtsstaatlichkeit (a state based on the rule of law); see BVerfG, Decision of 15 January 2009 - 2 BvR 2044/07 (=BVerfGE 122, 248, 273); Judgement of 19 March 2013 – 2 BvR 2628/10, 2 BvR 2883/10, 2 BvR 2155/11 (=133, 168, 200-201); BVerfG, Decision of 18 December 2014 – 2 BvR 209, 240, 262/14 (=StV 2015, 413, 415).
- 81.
See BGH, Judgement of 18 November 1999 - 1 StR 221/99 (=BGHSt 45, 321, 333-34); Judgement of 11 December 2013 - 5 StR 240/13 (=NStZ 2014, 277, 280).
- 82.
It is a matter of controversy whether the inadmissibility of coerced statements also applies to evidence that favors the defense; see Gless in Löwe/Rosenberg, 2007 at § 136a note 71; Roxin, 2009 at 113; Wohlers, 2012 at 391; Diemer in Karlsruher Kommentar, 2013 at § 136a note 37; Roxin/Schünemann, 2014 at 173.
- 83.
This rule does, of course, not preclude the declarant from making the same statement again in court. Such a statement is admissible if the declarant had been informed that his prior statement is inadmissible.
- 84.
BGH, Judgement of 24 March 1959 - 5 StR 27/59 (=BGHSt 13, 60, 61).
- 85.
- 86.
BGH, Judgement of 28 June 1961 - 2 StR 154/61 (=BGHSt 16, 164, 166-67); Judgement of 21 July 1994 - 1 StR 83/94 (=NJW 1994, 2904, 2905); but see contra Gless in Löwe/Rosenberg, 2007 at § 136a note 77; Eisenberg, 2015 at note 707.
- 87.
BGH, Judgement of 28 June 1961 - 2 StR 154/61 (=BGHSt 16, 164, 167); Decision of 7 June 1983 - 5 StR 409/81 (=BGHSt 31, 395); Rogall in Systematischer Kommentar, 2016 at § 136a note 101.
- 88.
- 89.
BGH, Judgement of 14 June 1960 - 1 StR 683/59 (=BGHSt 14, 358); Judgement of 21 February 1964 - 4 StR 519/63 (=19, 325, 329-30); Krack, 2002 at 124.
- 90.
- 91.
- 92.
- 93.
BGH, Judgement of 18 April 2007 - 5 StR 546/06 (=BGHSt 51, 285, 296).
- 94.
ECtHR, Harutyunyan v. Armenia, case no. 36549/03, Judgement of 28 June 2007, § 63; Gäfgen v. Germany, case no. 22978/05, Judgement (Grand Chamber) of 1 June 2010, §§ 165-166; Cesnieks v. Latvia, case no. 9278/06, Judgement of 11 February 2014, § 65.
- 95.
ECtHR, Jalloh v. Germany, case no. 54810/00, Judgement of 11 July 2006, § 107; Gäfgen v. Germany, case no. 22978/05; Judgement (Grand Chamber) of 1 June 2010, § 178; El Haski v. Belgium, case no. 649/08, Judgement of 25 September 2012, § 85.
- 96.
For a detailed analysis, see Rogall in Systematischer Kommentar, 2016 at § 136a notes 108-126.
- 97.
See BGH, Judgement of 28 April 1987 - 5 StR 666/86 (=BGHSt 34, 362, 364).
- 98.
BVerfG, Decision of 9 November 2010 - 2 BvR 2101/09 (=NJW 2011, 2417, 2418-19).
- 99.
BGH, Judgement of 22 February 1978 - 2 StR 334/77 (=BGHSt 27, 355, 358); Judgement of 24 August 1983 - 3 StR 136/83 (=32, 68, 70-71).
- 100.
- 101.
Ransiek, 2015, at 957–958. See, however, above as to the distinction between use (Verwertung) and employment (Verwendung) of evidence in German law and doctrine.
- 102.
BGH, Judgement of 22 February 1978 - 2 StR 334/77 (=BGHSt 27, 355, 358); Judgement of 18 April 1980 - 2 StR 731/79 (=29, 244, 249) (concerning illicit wiretapping); Judgement of 24 August 1983 - 3 StR 136/83 (=32, 68, 71); Judgement of 28 April 1987 - 5 StR 666/86 (=34, 362, 364); Decision of 7 March 2006 - 1 StR 316/05 (=51, 1, 8). Accord, Gless in Löwe/Rosenberg, 2007 at § 136a notes 75–76; Rogall in Systematischer Kommentar, 2016 at § 136a notes 1112–13.
- 103.
ECtHR, Gäfgen v. Germany, case no. 22978/05, Judgement (Grand Chamber) of 1 June 2010, § 178.
- 104.
If the information was not given, any statement of the suspect is inadmissible as evidence; BGH, Judgement of 22 November 2001 - 1 StR 220/01 (=BGHSt 47, 172).
- 105.
BGH, Decision of 27 February 1992 - 5 StR 190/91 (=BGHSt 38, 214) (concerning defendant); Oberlandesgericht Celle of 7 February 2001 - 32 Ss 101/00 (=NStZ 2002, 386). According to a controversial decision of the Federal Court of Justice, the self-incriminating statement of an unwarned witness can be used as evidence against the defendant (but not against the witness); BGH, Decision of 21 January 1958 - GSSt 4/57 (=BGHSt 11, 213).
- 106.
BGH, Decision of 27 February 1992 - 5 StR 190/91 (=BGHSt 38, 214).
- 107.
BGH, Decision of 27 February 1992 - 5 StR 190/91 (=BGHSt 38, 214, 220-22).
- 108.
BGH, Decision of 27 February 1992 - 5 StR 190/91 (=BGHSt 38, 214, 224-25); Judgement of 12 January 1996 - 5 StR 756/94 (=BGHSt 42, 15, 22). The Court explained that knowledge of the right to remain silent can be assumed when the suspect makes a statement in the presence of counsel, but that knowledge cannot be inferred from the fact that the suspect had previously been prosecuted or convicted.
- 109.
Gless in Löwe/Rosenberg, 2007 at § 136 note 81.
- 110.
BGH, Judgement of 18 December 2008 - 4 StR 455/08 (=BGHSt 53, 112) (overruling Judgement of 31 May 1990 - 4 StR 112/90 (=BGHSt 37, 48, 53)).
- 111.
- 112.
BGH, Judgement of 3 July 2007 - 1 StR 3/07 (=StV 2007, 450, 452); Judgement of 18 December 2008 - 4 StR 455/08 (=BGHSt 53, 112, 114).
- 113.
BGH, Judgement of 28 April 1987 - 5 StR 666/86 (=BGHSt 34, 362, 369).
- 114.
See, e.g., BGH, Judgement of 18 November 1999 - 1 StR 221/99 (=BGHSt 45, 321, 339) (for a case of entrapment).
- 115.
BGH, Decision of 27 February 1992 - 5 StR 190/91 (=BGHSt 38, 214); Judgement of 22 November 2001 - 1 StR 220/01 (=BGHSt 47, 172).
- 116.
Witnesses also have a right to have a lawyer present during their interrogation (§ 68b CCP).
- 117.
See the 2017 amendments to the Code of Criminal Procedure enacted through the Law for the more efficient and practical organisation of the criminal process (Gesetz zur effektiveren und praxistauglicheren Ausgestaltung des Strafverfahrens) of 17 August 2017, Bundesgesetzblatt 2017 I, 3202.
References
Books
Beulke, Werner, Strafprozessrecht 13th ed., Heidelberg 2016. [Beulke, 2016]
Bosch, Nikolaus, Aspekte des nemo-tenetur-Prinzips aus verfassungsrechtlicher und strafprozessualer Sicht, Berlin 1998. [Bosch, 1998]
Eisenberg, Ulrich, Beweisrecht der StPO 9th ed., München 2015. [Eisenberg, 2015]
Kühne, Hans-Heiner, Strafprozessrecht. Eine systematische Darstellung des deutschen und europäischen Strafverfahrensrechts 8th ed., Heidelberg 2010. [Kühne, 2010]
Ransiek, Andreas, Die Rechte des Beschuldigten in der Polizeivernehmung, Heidelberg 1990. [Ransiek, 1990]
Roxin, Claus/Schünemann, Bernd, Strafverfahrensrecht 28th ed., München 2014. [Roxin/Schünemann, 2014]
Rzepka, Dorothea, Zur Fairness im deutschen Strafverfahren, Frankfurt am Main 2000. [Rzepka, 2000]
Stuckenberg, Carl-Friedrich, Untersuchungen zur Unschuldsvermutung, Berlin 1998. [Stuckenberg, 1998]
Verrel, Thorsten, Die Selbstbelastungsfreiheit im Strafverfahren, München 2001. [Verrel, 2001]
Volk, Klaus, Grundkurs StPO 7th ed., München 2010. [Volk, 2010]
Journal Articles
Amelung, Knut, ‘Die Verwertbarkeit rechtswidrig gewonnener Beweismittel zugunsten des Angeklagten und deren Grenzen’, (1999) 14 StrafverteidigerForum, 181–86. [Amelung, 1999]
Beulke, Werner, ‘Die Vernehmung des Beschuldigten – Einige Anmerkungen aus der Sicht der Prozeßrechtswissenschaft’, (1990) 10 Strafverteidiger, 180–84. [Beulke, 1990]
Beulke, Werner, ‘Hypothetische Kausalverläufe im Strafverfahren bei rechtswidrigem Vorgehen von Ermittlungsorganen’, (1991) 103 Zeitschrift für die gesamte Strafrechtswissenschaft, 657–80. [Beulke, 1991]
Brugger, Winfried, ‘Vom unbedingten Verbot der Folter zum bedingten Recht auf Folter?’, (2000) 55 Juristenzeitung, 165–72; [Brugger, 2000]
Erb, Volker, ‘Notwehr als Menschenrecht - Zugleich eine Kritik der Entscheidung des LG Frankfurt am Main im Fall Daschner’, (2005) 25 Neue Zeitschrift für Strafrecht, 593–602; [Erb, 2005]
Fezer, Gerhard, ‘Anmerkung zu BGH, Beschluß vom 20.12.1995 – 5 StR 445/95. Fortwirkungen des Einsatzes verbotener Vernehmungsmethoden, Anforderungen an Revisionsbegründung’, (1997) 17 Strafverteidiger, 57–59. [Fezer, 1997]
Gless, Sabine/Wennekers, Jan, ‘Anmerkung zu BGH, Urt. v. 18.12.2008 – 4 StR 455/08. Zu den Voraussetzungen einer qualifizierten Belehrung und eines darauf gründenden Verwertungsverbotes’, (2009) 2009 Juristische Rundschau, 380–85. [Gless/Wennekers, 2009]
Hamm, Rainer, ‘Schluss der Debatte über Ausnahmen vom Folterverbot’, (2003) 56 Neue Juristische Wochenschrift, 946-47. [Hamm, 2003]
Heinrich, Bernd, ‘Rügepflichten in der Hauptverhandlung und Disponibilität strafverfahrensrechtlicher Vorschriften’, (2000) 112 Zeitschrift für die gesamte Strafrechtswissenschaft, 398–428. [Heinrich, 2000]
Herzberg, Rolf Dietrich, ‘Folter und Menschenwürde’, (2005) 60 Juristenzeitung, 321–27. [Herzberg, 2005]
Hilgendorf, Eric, ‘Folter im Rechtsstaat?’, (2004) 59 Juristenzeitung, 331–39. [Hilgendorf, 2004]
Hüls, Silke, ‘Der Richtervorbehalt – seine Bedeutung für das Strafverfahren und die Folgen von Verstößen’, (2009) 4 Zeitschrift für internationale Strafrechtsdogmatik, 160–69. [Hüls, 2009]
Jahn, Matthias, ‘Anmerkung zu BGH, Urteil vom 18. 12. 2008 - 4 StR 455/08. Beweisverbot und qualifizierte’ Belehrung’, (2009) 49 Juristische Schulung, 468–70. [Jahn, 2009]
Krack, Ralf, ‘Der Normzweck des § 136a StPO’, (2002) 22 Neue Zeitschrift für Strafrecht, 120–24. [Krack, 2002]
Merten, Jan O., ‘Folterverbot und Grundrechtsdogmatik. Zugleich ein Beitrag zur aktuellen Diskussion um die Menschenwürde’, (2003) 2003 Juristische Rundschau, 404–08. [Merten, 2003]
Müssig, Bernd, ‘Beweisverbote im Legitimationszusammenhang von Strafrechtstheorie und Strafverfahren’, (1999) 146 Goltdammer’s Archiv für Strafrecht, 119–42. [Müssig, 1999]
Neuhaus, Ralf, ‘Zur Fernwirkung von Beweisverwertungsverboten’, (1990) 43 Neue Juristische Wochenschrift, 1221–22. [Neuhaus, 1990]
Neuhaus, Ralf, ‘Zur Notwendigkeit der qualifizierten Beschuldigtenbelehrung. Zugleich Anmerkung zu LG Dortmund NStZ 1997, 356’, (1997) 17 Neue Zeitschrift für Strafrecht, 312–16. [Neuhaus, 1997]
Paul, Tobias, ‘Unselbständige Beweisverwertungsverbote in der Rechtsprechung’, (2013) 33 Neue Zeitschrift für Strafrecht, 489–97. [Paul, 2013]
Roxin, Claus, ‘Anmerkung zu BGH, Beschl. v. 5.8.2008 – 3 StR 45/08. Verwertung einer einem Beweisverbot unterliegenden Aussage mit Zustimmung des Betroffenen’, (2009) 29 Strafverteidiger, 113–15. [Roxin, 2009]
Roxin, Claus, ‘Nemo tenetur: die Rechtsprechung am Scheideweg’, (1995) 15 Neue Zeitschrift für Strafrecht, 465–69. [Roxin, 1995]
Roxin, Claus, ‚Zum Hörfallen-Beschluß des Großen Senats für Strafsachen‘ (1997) 17 Neue Zeitschrift für Strafrecht, 18–21 [Roxin, 1997]
Saliger, Frank, ‘Absolutes im Strafprozess? Über das Folterverbot, seine Verletzung und die Folgen seiner Verletzung’, (2004) 116 Zeitschrift für die gesamte Strafrechtswissenschaft, 35–65. [Saliger, 2004]
Schwenn, Johann, ‘Fehlurteile und ihre Ursachen – die Wiederaufnahme im Verfahren wegen sexuellen Missbrauchs’, (2010) 30 Strafverteidiger, 705–11. [Schwenn, 2010]
Stuckenberg, Carl-Friedrich, ‘Schuldprinzip und Wahrheitserforschung: Bemerkungen zum Verhältnis von materiellem Recht und Prozessrecht’, (2016) 163 Goltdammer’s Archiv für Strafrecht, 689–701. [Stuckenberg, 2016]
Weigend, Thomas, ‘Assuming that the Defendant Is Not Guilty: The Presumption of Innocence in the German System of Criminal Justice’, (2014) 8 Criminal Law and Philosophy, 285–99. [Weigend, 2014]
Weigend, Thomas, ‘Folterverbot im Strafverfahren’, (2011) 31 Strafverteidiger, 325–29. [Weigend, 2011]
Wittreck, Fabian, ‘Menschenwürde und Folterverbot – Zum Dogma von der ausnahmslosen Unabwägbarkeit des Art. 1 Abs. 1 GG’, (2003) 56 Die Öffentliche Verwaltung, 873–83. [Wittreck, 2003]
Wohlers, Wolfgang, ‘BGH v. 22. 12. 2011 – 2 StR 509/10. Verwertbarkeit eines in einem Kraftfahrzeug mittels akustischer Überwachung aufgezeichneten Selbstgesprächs’, (2012) 2012 Juristische Rundschau, 386–91. [Wohlers, 2012]
Wolfslast, Gabriele, ‘Beweisführung durch heimliche Tonbandaufzeichnung - Besprechung des BGH-Urteils vom 9. 4. 1986 - 3 StR 551/85’, (1987) 7 Neue Zeitschrift für Strafrecht, 103–6. [Wolfslast, 1987]
Contributions to Edited Volumes and Annotated Law
Dreier, Horst (ed.), Grundgesetz Kommentar 3rd ed., Tübingen 2013. [Author in Dreier, 2013]
Erb, Volker et al. (eds.), Löwe/Rosenberg. Die Strafprozessordnung und das Gerichtsverfassungsgesetz. StPO Band 4: §§ 112-150 26th ed., Berlin 2007; Band 6/2: §§ 256-295, 26th ed., Berlin 2013 [Author in Löwe/Rosenberg, 2007/2013]
Gercke, Björn et al. (eds.), Heidelberger Kommentar. Strafprozessordnung 5th ed., Heidelberg 2012. [Author in Heidelberger Kommentar, 2012]
Hannich, Rolf (ed.), Karlsruher Kommentar. Strafprozessordnung 7th ed., München 2013. [Author in Karlsruher Kommentar, 2013]
Kudlich, Hans (ed.), Münchener Kommentar. Strafprozessordnung. StPO Band 1: §§ 1-150 StPO, München 2014. [Author in Münchener Kommentar, 2014]
Meyer-Goßner, Lutz/ Schmitt, Bertram, Strafprozessordnung (StPO), Kommentar. Gerichtsverfassungsgesetz, Nebengesetze und ergänzende Bestimmungen 59th ed., München 2016. [Meyer-Goßner/Schmitt, 2016]
Ransiek, Andreas, ‘Rechtswidrige Ermittlungen und die Fernwirkung von Beweisverwertungsverboten’, in: Fahl, Christian et al. (eds.), Ein menschengerechtes Strafrecht als Lebensaufgabe. Festschrift für Werner Beulke zum 70. Geburtstag, Heidelberg 2015, 949–61. [Ransiek, 2015]
Schneider, Hartmut (ed.), Münchener Kommentar. Strafprozessordnung. StPO Band 2: §§ 151-332 StPO, München 2016. [Author in Münchener Kommentar, 2016]
Wohlers, Wolfgang, ‘Fernwirkung - zur normativen Begrenzung der sachlichen Reichweite von Verwertungsverboten’, in: Zöller, Mark A. et al. (eds.), Gesamte Strafrechtswissenschaft in internationaler Dimension. Festschrift für Jürgen Wolter, Berlin 2013, 1181–1201. [Wohlers, 2013]
Wolter, Jürgen (ed.), Systematischer Kommentar. Strafprozessordnung. StPO Band 2: §§ 94-136a StPO 5th ed., Köln 2016. [Author in Systematischer Kommentar, 2016]
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Open Access This chapter is licensed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license and indicate if changes were made.
The images or other third party material in this chapter are included in the chapter's Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the chapter's Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder.
Copyright information
© 2019 The Author(s)
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Weigend, T. (2019). The Potential to Secure a Fair Trial Through Evidence Exclusion: A German Perspective. In: Gless, S., Richter, T. (eds) Do Exclusionary Rules Ensure a Fair Trial?. Ius Gentium: Comparative Perspectives on Law and Justice, vol 74. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-12520-2_3
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-12520-2_3
Published:
Publisher Name: Springer, Cham
Print ISBN: 978-3-030-12519-6
Online ISBN: 978-3-030-12520-2
eBook Packages: Law and CriminologyLaw and Criminology (R0)