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Editorials | Issues | February 2008
Mexican Chamber Approves Legal Reforms E. Eduardo Castillo - Associated Press go to original
| | Changing from an inquisitorial system, like the one Mexico has today, to an adversarial system based on oral trials, as are used in the American justice system, will provide much greater transparency, much more agility in the administration of justice. - President Felipe Calderon | | | | Mexico City - Mexican lawmakers overwhelmingly approved a sweeping judicial reform that would introduce public, oral trials and guarantee the presumption of innocence, after deleting a proposal to allow police to search homes without warrants.
President Felipe Calderon praised the measure, which would replace closed-door proceedings where judges rely on written evidence with U.S.-style open trials based on arguments presented by prosecutors and defense lawyers.
"Changing from an inquisitorial system, like the one Mexico has today, to an adversarial system based on oral trials, as are used in the American justice system, will provide much greater transparency, much more agility in the administration of justice," Calderon told a meeting of the American Chamber of Commerce.
The bill would also allow recorded phone calls to be used as evidence in criminal cases, if at least one of the conversation's participants agrees.
Mexico's lower house and Senate approved the measure last year, but minor changes required new votes by both houses. The Chamber of Deputies passed it by a 462-6 vote Tuesday with two abstentions and it now goes back to the Senate, which had approved the warrantless search proposal. Then, the constitutional amendment must be approved by at least 17 of Mexico's 31 states.
Several top law enforcement officials lamented the deletion of a clause in last year's original proposal, which would have allowed police to enter homes without a warrant if they believed lives were in danger or if a crime was being committed inside.
Prosecutors said the warrantless searches were necessary in cases where kidnappers had been located and immediate action was needed to free victims before they were harmed. But human rights groups harshly criticized the measure, and legislators agreed to drop it.
The reform creates a new class of judges to rule more quickly on warrant requests, and provides a firmer legal footing for house arrest, which prosecutors often use to buy time to build a case against organized crime suspects.
Although the reforms do not create a jury trial system — only judges will continue to hear cases and decide on convictions — they establish public oral trials, already in place in some states, nationwide.
Qualified public defenders will now also represent suspects, replacing "advocates" who often lack law degrees. And for the first time in history, the presumption of innocence will be guaranteed in Mexico's constitution. |
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