The constitutional duty of the Irish state ‘to defend and vindicate the personal rights of the citizen’ is the basis of a strict rule excluding unconstitutionally obtained evidence. Although English courts recognise a similar duty to ‘vindicate human rights and the rule of law’, their powers to exclude evidence or stay proceedings for abuse of process are extremely flexible and discretionary. In both jurisdictions, there has been particular controversy over the application of these powers to covert recordings that breach legal professional privilege. This paper argues that the duty to vindicate rights and the rule of law underpins both the exclusion of unlawfully obtained evidence and the punishment of offenders. It requires a balancing exe...
This research deciphers the European Court’s standing on the dictum of excluding illegally obtained ...
Cicero's famous words Omnes Legum servi sumus ut liberi esse possimus have stood the test of time. J...
The right to silence, or the privilege against self-incrimination, has long been recognised as an im...
"Common law courts have differed on whether and to what extent an exclusionary rule should be used a...
This commentary updates the paper ‘Excluding evidence (or staying proceedings) to vindicate rights i...
Introduction: The law on the admissibility of improperly obtained evidence in Ireland was first auth...
Ireland as a common law jurisdiction operates an adversarial system. Ireland has a written Constitut...
In the arena of improperly obtained evidence the Irish courts have, for some time, operated one of t...
In April 2015 the Irish Supreme Court held, in DPP v JC [2015] IESC 31, that the rather strict exclu...
This thesis provides a comprehensive overview of the presumption of innocence in Irish law. It argue...
This is the first book to offer an extensive cosmopolitan, cross-cultural insight into the perennial...
It has been held that the right of silence is implicit in the right to a fair trial expressed in the...
In contrast with England and Wales, where there is a discretion to exclude improperly obtained evide...
The 2015 Irish Supreme Court case of DPP v JC has been described as ‘the most astounding judgment ev...
Police procedures and practices in the investigation of crime are shaped by many things. One particu...
This research deciphers the European Court’s standing on the dictum of excluding illegally obtained ...
Cicero's famous words Omnes Legum servi sumus ut liberi esse possimus have stood the test of time. J...
The right to silence, or the privilege against self-incrimination, has long been recognised as an im...
"Common law courts have differed on whether and to what extent an exclusionary rule should be used a...
This commentary updates the paper ‘Excluding evidence (or staying proceedings) to vindicate rights i...
Introduction: The law on the admissibility of improperly obtained evidence in Ireland was first auth...
Ireland as a common law jurisdiction operates an adversarial system. Ireland has a written Constitut...
In the arena of improperly obtained evidence the Irish courts have, for some time, operated one of t...
In April 2015 the Irish Supreme Court held, in DPP v JC [2015] IESC 31, that the rather strict exclu...
This thesis provides a comprehensive overview of the presumption of innocence in Irish law. It argue...
This is the first book to offer an extensive cosmopolitan, cross-cultural insight into the perennial...
It has been held that the right of silence is implicit in the right to a fair trial expressed in the...
In contrast with England and Wales, where there is a discretion to exclude improperly obtained evide...
The 2015 Irish Supreme Court case of DPP v JC has been described as ‘the most astounding judgment ev...
Police procedures and practices in the investigation of crime are shaped by many things. One particu...
This research deciphers the European Court’s standing on the dictum of excluding illegally obtained ...
Cicero's famous words Omnes Legum servi sumus ut liberi esse possimus have stood the test of time. J...
The right to silence, or the privilege against self-incrimination, has long been recognised as an im...