Bộ luật tố tụng hình sự 2015 - Criminal Procedure Code 2015 - English
Bộ luật tố tụng hình sự 2015 - Criminal Procedure Code 2015 - English
Bộ luật tố tụng hình sự 2015 - Criminal Procedure Code 2015 - English
PART ONE
GENERAL
Chapter I
SCOPE OF REGULATION, OBJECTIVES AND EFFECT OF THE
CRIMINAL PROCEDURE CODE
Article 1. Scope of regulation
Criminal procedure code prescribes the procedures and formalities for lodging
and processing of criminal information, filing of charges, investigation, prosecution,
adjudication, and certain courses of action for the enforcement of criminal judgments.
Furthermore, the Law regulates the missions, authority and liaisons of authorities and
individuals given authority to institute proceedings (referred to as competent
procedural authorities and persons), the rights and duties of entities engaging in
proceedings, other authorities and entities, and international cooperation in criminal
procedure.
Article 2. Objectives of the Criminal procedure code
Criminal procedure code is intended to expose and settle every criminal act in
precise, just and timely manners, to preclude, protest and combat crime for omission of
no infractions, to protect guiltless people from unjust conviction, to uphold justice, to
defend human rights and citizenship rights, to conserve socialism, to secure the
Government's benefits, to protect the legitimate rights and interests of organizations
and individuals, to educate people to consciously conform to the laws.
Article 3. Effect of Criminal procedure code
1. Criminal procedure code governs every activity of criminal procedures in
territories of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam.
2. International agreements, which the Socialist Republic of Vietnam has signed,
or the principles of reciprocity shall govern the criminal procedure against aliens
committing offences in territories of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam.
If diplomatic or consular immunity is conferred on an alien according to the laws
of Vietnam, international treaties, which the Socialist Republic of Vietnam observes,
or international practices, such international treaties or practices shall prevail. If
relevant international treaties or practices do not exist, matters shall be resolved
through diplomacy.
Article 4. Terminology
1. In this Law, words and phrases below are construed as follows:
a) Authorities given authority to institute legal proceedings (referred to as
competent procedural authorities) indicate presiding authorities and those assigned to
carry out certain activities of investigation.
b) Individuals given authority to institute proceedings (referred to as authorized
procedural persons) include presiding officers and those assigned to carry out certain
activities of investigation.
c) Participants in legal proceedings refer to persons, authorities, and
organizations participating in legal proceedings according to this Law.
d) Criminal information includes denouncement, provision of criminal
information, entities' requisitions for charges, perpetrators' confessions, and criminal
information directly gathered by competent procedural authorities.
dd) Accused persons include those arrest, detainees, suspects, defendants.
e) Kindred of persons engaging in or commission to institute proceedings is
composed of individuals having relationships with persons participating or authorized
to conduct proceedings. Such individuals include spouse, biological and adoptive
parents, parents in law, biological and adopted children, paternal and maternal
grandparents, biological siblings, maternal and paternal great grandparents, biological
uncles and aunts, biological nephews and nieces.
g) Litigants include civil plaintiffs, civil defendants and persons incurring
interests and duties from a criminal lawsuit.
h) Confession means that a perpetrator voluntarily gives statements on his
offences to authorities prior to the happening of such offences or after the exposure of
the perpetrator.
i) Surrender refers to a perpetrator, after exposed, voluntarily turning himself in
and giving statements on his offences to competent authorities.
k) Coercive delivery refers to competent authorities’ compulsion of the
attendance of persons who are held in emergency custody, apprehended or temporarily
detained, or suspects and defendants at a place of investigation, prosecution or
adjudication.
l) Forced escort refers to competent authorities’ coercive taking of witness
testifiers, persons denounced or facing requisitions for charges to a place of
investigation, prosecution or adjudication, or crime victims refusing to undergo expert
examinations.
m) Full record of identity refers to the document summarizing a suspect’s profile,
identity with photos of three postures and two thumbprints, made and retained by
competent authorities.
n) Basic record of identity refers to the document summarizing a suspect’s profile
with all fingerprints, made and retained by competent authorities.
o) Serious breach of legal proceedings means that authorities and persons given
authority to institute proceedings have not executed or have implemented improperly
and inadequately the formalities and procedures, as defined by this Law, have
infringed severely the legitimate rights and benefits of entities engaging in
proceedings, and have influenced the identification of equitable and comprehensive
truths of a lawsuit.
2. In this Law, the following abbreviations apply to phrases below:
a) Police investigation authorities in districts, communes, provincial cities and
centrally-affiliated cities’ metropolis are referred to as district investigation authorities.
b) Police investigation authorities in provinces and centrally-affiliated cities are
referred to as provincial-level investigation authorities.
c) Military investigation authorities in military zones and equivalents are referred
to as military investigation authorities of military zone.
d) People’s Procuracy in districts, communes, provincial cities and centrally-
affiliated cities’ metropolis is referred to as district People’s Procuracy.
dd) People’s Procuracy in provinces and centrally-affiliated cities is referred to as
provincial-level People’s Procuracy.
e) Military procuracy in military zones and equivalents are referred to as Military
procuracy of military zone.
g) People’s Courts in districts, communes, provincial cities, centrally-affiliated
cities’ metropolis are referred to as district People’s Courts.
h) People’s Courts in provinces and centrally-affiliated cities are referred to as
provincial-level People’s Courts.
i) Military Courts in military zones and equivalents are referred to as military
Courts of military zone.
Article 5. Responsibilities of governmental authorities and entities in
precluding and combating crime
1. Governmental authorities, as per the range of their responsibilities, must adopt
measures to forestall crime and cooperate with competent procedural authorities for
the preventive fight against crime.
Governmental authorities must regularly inspect the performance of functions
and assignments, detect and handle violations of laws in timely manner and make
prompt reports to investigation authorities and Procuracy about every criminal act
happening inside such authorities and sectors under their management. Moreover, state
authorities must propound and adduce relevant documents to investigation authorities
and Procuracy for the latters' inspection and filing of charges against perpetrators of
criminal acts.
Heads of governmental authorities must be held liable for providing investigation
authorities and Procuracy with false or no information on criminal acts committed
inside their premises and sectors under their management.
2. Entities are entitled to and responsible for exposing, denouncing, reporting,
and combating crime.
3. Competent procedural authorities are responsible for supporting governmental
authorities and entities to fight against crime.
4. Governmental authorities and entities are responsible for fulfilling requests
and supporting authorities and persons given authority to institute proceedings to
accomplish their missions.
5. Inspectorate and governmental audit agencies are responsible for cooperating
with competent procedural authorities in exposing and tackling crime. Upon detecting
signs of criminal activities, governmental authorities must promptly propound relevant
documents and items to investigation authorities and Procuracy for inspection and
filing of criminal charges.
6. Every action of obstructing competent procedural authorities and persons’
completion of duties is inhibited.
Article 6. Exposure and correction of justifications and factors for crime
1. Competent procedural authorities, when taking criminal proceedings, are
responsible for uncovering reasons and elements leading to crime and proposing
concerned entities to enforce measures of correction and preclusion.
2. Concerned entities must fulfill such requests by competent procedural
authorities. In 15 days upon receiving requests, concerned parties must respond in
writing to such propositions by competent procedural authorities.
Chapter II
FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES
Article 7. Upkeep of socialist law enforcement regarding criminal
procedures
Every activity of criminal procedures must abide by this Law. The processing of
criminal information, filing of charges, investigation, prosecution and adjudication
shall abide only by the grounds, procedures and formalities as defined by this Law.
Article 8. Veneration and protection of human rights and individuals’
legitimate rights and interests.
Competent procedural authorities and persons, when instituting legal proceedings
within their duties and authority, must respect and protect human rights and
individuals’ legitimate rights and interests. Measures imposed, whose validity and
requisite are regularly inspected, shall be removed or altered if violating laws or
deemed unessential.
Article 9. Conservation of legal equality
Criminal procedure occurs on the principle under which all people are subject to
the same laws of justice, regardless of race, gender, belief, religion, social class and
status. Every person committing crime is treated under the law.
Every juridical person is equal before the law, regardless of its form of ownership
and economic class.
Article 10. Sustainment of bodily integrity
Every person is entitled to inviolability of the physical body. No person is
arrested without a Court’s warrant or Procuracy's decision or approval, except for acts
in flagrante.
Emergency custody, arrest, temporary detainment or detention must abide by this
Law. Torture, extortion of deposition, corporal punishment or any treatments violating
a person’s body, life and health are inhibited.
Article 11. Protection of individuals’ life, health, honor, dignity and
belongings and juridical persons’ reputation and property
Life, health, honor, dignity and belongings of every person are protected by the
laws.
The laws penalize all unlawful violations of a person's life, health, honor, dignity
and belongings and a juridical person’s fame, reputation and property.
Vietnamese citizens cannot be deported or handed to another government.
Article 12. Alimentation of inviolability of residence, privacy, personal
secrecy, family secrets, safety and confidentiality of personal mail, telephone and
telegraph
No person can illegally violates others’ residence, privacy, personal secrecy,
family secrets, safety and confidentiality of mail, telephone, telegraph and other forms
of personal communication.
Search of residence, search and seizure or temporary confiscation of mails,
phones, telegraphs, electronic data and other forms of private communication must
abide by this Law.
Article 13. Presumption of innocence
A accused person is deemed innocent until his guilt is evidenced according to the
procedures and formalities as defined in this Law and a Court passes a valid
conviction.
If grounds for conviction, as per the procedures and formalities in this Law, do
not suffice, competent procedural authorities and persons shall adjudge the accused
person to be not guilty.
Article 14. Double jeopardy
A person is not charged, investigated, prosecuted or tried on an act, for which a
Court's effective conviction has been passed, unless that person commits another act
jeopardizing the society and deemed criminal by the Criminal Code.
Article 15. Determination of facts in a lawsuit
Competent procedural authorities are held liable for proving guilt. A accused
person is entitled to but is not obliged to prove his innocence.
Competent procedural authorities, within their duties and authority, must use
legitimate measures to determine the facts of a lawsuit in unbiased, thorough and
complete ways, to clarify the evidences of guilt and innocence, aggravation and
mitigation of criminal liabilities of the accused person.
Article 16. Guarantee of right of defense for accused persons and protection
of legal rights and benefits of defendants and litigants
A accused person is entitled to defend himself or be defended by a lawyer or
another person.
Competent procedural authorities and persons are responsible for informing
accused persons, defendants and litigants of all of their rights of defense, legitimate
rights and benefits according to this Law. Moreover, competent procedural authorities
and persons shall provide explanations and guarantee the implementation of all of such
rights and benefits.
Article 17. Responsibilities of authorities and persons given authority to
institute proceedings
Competent procedural authorities and persons, when instituting proceedings,
must strictly conform to the laws and shall be held liable for their actions and
decisions.
An individual violating legal regulations on emergency custody of people, arrest,
imprisonment, custody, charge, investigation, prosecution, adjudication, sentence
enforcement, by nature and level of such violations, shall be disciplined or face
criminal charges according to the laws.
Article 18. Responsibilities for filing of charges and handling of criminal
cases
Competent procedural authorities, when detecting signs of criminal activities, are
responsible for filing charges and lawsuits within their duties and authority and for
taking measures as defined by this Law to ascertain criminals and penalize persons and
juridical persons found guilty.
Filing of charges and lawsuits shall only conform to the grounds, procedures and
formalities as defined by this Law.
Article 19. Legal compliance in investigative activities
Investigation authorities and authorities assigned to perform certain activities of
investigation must observe the laws when conducting investigation as per this Law.
Every activity of investigation must attend to truths and occur in unbiased,
thorough and complete ways to swiftly and precisely uncover all guilty acts and
indicate evidences of guilt and innocence, aggravation and mitigation of criminal
liabilities, reasons, conditions for crime and other facts essential to handle the cases.
Article 20. Responsibilities for exercising the right of prosecution and
overseeing legal compliance in criminal procedure
The procuracy exercises the right of prosecution and oversees legal compliance
in criminal procedure, renders decisions on conviction, expose violations of laws to
have all guilty acts, persons and juridical persons committing crime and violating laws
exposed and penalized in timely and stringent manners. It must assure that charges,
investigation, prosecution, adjudication and sentence enforcement apply to the exact
entities precisely for what they commit according to the laws. It must assure that
omission of crime and criminals or misjudgment does not occur.
Article 21. Assurance of impartiality of persons given authority to institute
or engaging in legal proceedings
Persons given authority to institute proceedings, interpreters, translators, expert
witnesses, valuators and witnesses are not permitted to engage in proceedings if they
may not be impartial, for any reasons, to carry out duties.
Article 22. Trial participated by lay assessors
A trial participated by lay assessors occurs in a Court of first instance, unless
summary procedures are implemented according to this Law.
Article 23. Independence of Judge and lay assessors and sole compliance to
the laws
Judge and lay assessors adjudicate independently and comply solely with the
laws. Authorities and entities are forbidden to interfere the adjudication by Judge and
lay assessors.
Authorities and entities interfering the adjudication by Judge and lay assessors in
any manners shall be disciplined, face administrative fines or criminal charges, by
nature and level of their violations, according to the laws.
Article 24. Collective adjudication
A Court tries collectively and renders decisions under majority rule, except for
summary procedures according to this Law.
Article 25. Timely, just and public trial
A Court holds trials in timely manner by the regulated deadline and upholds
fairness.
A Court tries publicly and every person is entitled to attend the trial, unless
otherwise stated in this Law. For special cases involved in state secrets, national
traditions, protection of persons aged below 18 or personal privacy as per litigants’
rational requests, a Court may try in closed session but must pronounce its judgments
publicly.
Article 26. Assurance of oral arguments in adjudication process
During the charges, investigation, prosecution, adjudication, investigators,
prosecutors, persons authorized to institute proceedings, defendants, defense counsels
and other persons participating in proceedings are equally entitled to present and
evaluate evidences and make requests for clarification of objective truths of the
lawsuit.
Documents and evidences from the case file, brought to The procuracy to the
Court for trial, must be sufficient and legitimate. All relevant persons, as defined by
this Law, must attend a criminal Court. Absence must be because of force majeure or
objective obstacles or other situations according to this Law. The Court is responsible
for supporting prosecutors, defendants, defense counsels and other participants in legal
proceedings to exercise all of their rights and duties and provoke oral arguments in
democratic and equal manners before the Court.
All evidences of guilt and innocence, aggravation and mitigation of criminal
liabilities, citation of Points, Sections or Articles in the Criminal Code for
determination of defendants’ crimes, sentences, compensations, and handling of proofs
and other facts essential to the lawsuit must done, argued and specified in court.
The Court’s judgments and rulings must be subject to the inspection and
assessment of evidences and oral arguments in court.
Article 27. Affirmation of first-instance and appellate procedure
1. Trial by first-instance and appellate Courts is affirmed.
A first-instance Court’s judgments or rulings may be appealed according to this
Law. A first-instance Court's judgments or rulings, if not appealed by the deadline as
defined in this Law, shall come into effect.
A first-instance Court's judgments, if appealed, shall be reheard by an appellate
Court. The appellate Court’s judgments or rulings shall come into force.
2. A Court’s effective judgments or rulings, if such is found to make a serious
error of law or new facts emerge as per this Law, shall be reviewed through the
procedures of cassation or reopening, respectively.
Article 28. Warranty of the effect of Court’s judgments and rulings
1. Authorities and entities must observed a Court's judgments or rulings, after
given legal effect. Concerned authorities’ and entities’ compliance must be exercised
in grave manner.
2. Authorities and entities, under their missions, authority and duties, are
responsible for cooperating, supporting and fulfilling requests from authorities and
entities liable for enforcing a Court's judgments and rulings.
Article 29. Spoken and written language for criminal procedure
Vietnamese is the spoken and written language for criminal procedure.
Participants in proceedings are permitted to speak and write in their native languages,
in the mandatory presence of a translator.
Article 30. Civil matters in criminal cases
Civil matters in criminal cases are resolved during the settlement of criminal
cases. If a criminal lawsuit deals with damage claims backed by insufficient evidences
and causing little effect on the settlement of such case, civil matters may be separated
and settled through civil procedure.
Article 31. Guarantee of compensations for crime victims in criminal cases
1. Persons held in emergency custody, arrested, temporarily detained or held in
detention, charged, investigated, prosecuted, tried and sentenced incorrectly or
illegally shall be compensated for physical and spiritual damage and restoration of
dignity.
The government is held liable for compensating persons, held in emergency
custody, arrested, temporarily detained or held in detention, charged, investigated,
prosecuted, tried and sentenced incorrectly or illegally by competent procedural
authorities and persons, damage and recovery of dignity and interests.
2. Other persons suffering from damage caused by competent procedural
authorities and persons are entitled to the Government’s compensations.
Article 32. Guarantee of rights of complaint and denouncement in criminal
procedure
Individuals are permitted to file complaints or denouncement, while
organizations are allowed to file complaints, against violations of legal regulations on
criminal procedure by competent procedural authorities and persons or personnel of
such entities.
Competent authorities and persons must receive, hear and settle complaints and
denouncements in timely and lawful manners. Results of their hearings and solutions
shall be given in writing to persons and organizations filing accusations or complaints.
Procedures, formalities and authority for the settlement of complaints and
accusations are governed by this Law.
It is inhibited to take vengeance on persons filing complaints or accusations or to
abuse rights of complaint and denouncement to vilify others.
Article 33. Inspection and supervision of criminal procedure
1. Competent procedural authorities and persons must regularly inspect the
activities of criminal procedure within their powers and manage units receiving,
handling criminal information, pressing charges, conducting investigations,
prosecuting, adjudicating and enforcing sentences.
2. Governmental authorities, Committee of Vietnam Fatherland Front and its
members units, and elective representatives of people are sanctioned to supervise
competent procedural authorities and persons’ activities and settlement of complaints
and denouncement.
If competent procedural authorities and persons are found to violate laws,
governmental authorities and elective people’s representatives can propose and the
Committee of Vietnam Fatherland Front can propose competent procedural authorities
to consider and resolve such matters according to this Law. Competent procedural
authorities must analyze, handle and respond to the said propositions and request as
per the laws.
Chapter III
AUTHORITIES AND PERSONS AUTHORIZED TO INSTITUTE
PROCEEDINGS
Article 34. Presiding authorities and presiding officers
1. Presiding authorities are:
a) Investigation authorities;
b) Procuracy;
c) Courts.
2. Presiding officers are:
a) Heads and vice heads of investigation authorities and investigators and
investigation officers;
b) Heads and vice heads of The procuracy, procurators and checkers;
c) Court presidents, Vice court presidents, judges, lay assessors, Court clerks,
verifiers.
Article 35. Authorities and persons assigned to perform certain activities of
investigation
1. The authorities assigned to perform certain activities of investigation are:
a) Border protection force’s units;
b) Customs authorities;
c) Forest ranger’s units;
d) Maritime police force’s units;
dd) Fisheries resources surveillances units;
e) People’s police force’s units assigned to perform certain activities of
investigation (referred to as units assigned to investigate);
g) Other units in the People’s Army, as assigned to perform certain activities of
investigation.
Authorities assigned to perform certain activities of investigation in this Section
are stipulated in the Law on the organization of criminal investigation authorities.
2. The persons assigned to perform certain activities of investigation are:
a) Personnel of the Border protection force, as assigned to performed certain
activities of investigation, include heads and vice heads of Border reconnaissance
department, Drug and crime department; heads and vice heads of Special service
against drug and crime; captains and vice captains of Border protection units in
provinces and centrally-affiliated cities; commanding officers and deputies in Border
protection posts; commanders and deputies of Border protection units at border gates;
b) Personnel of Customs authorities, as assigned to perform certain activities of
investigation, are heads and vice heads of Anti-smuggling and investigation
department; heads and vice heads of Post clearance audit department; heads and vice
heads of provincial and inter-provincial Departments of customs and those in
centrally-affiliated cities; heads and ice heads of Customs departments at border gates;
c) Personnel of Forest ranger, as assigned to perform certain activities of
investigation, include heads and vice heads of Forest protection department, heads and
vice heads of Forest ranger departments; heads and vice heads of Forest ranger
stations;
d) Personnel of Maritime police force, as assigned to perform certain activities of
investigation, include commanders, vice commanders, zone commanders and vice
zone commanders of Maritime police force; heads and vice heads of Specialized and
legal department; heads and vice heads of Special service of drug enforcement; heads
and vice heads of Naval battalions, Naval flotilla; captains and deputies of Maritime
police force’s special task units;
dd) Personnel of Fisheries resources surveillances, as assigned to perform
activities of investigation, include heads and vice heads of Bureau of fisheries
resources surveillances, heads and vice heads of zonal Bureaus of fisheries resources
surveillances;
e) Personnel of other units of People's Police force, as assigned to perform
certain activities of investigation, include directors and vice directors of Fire Police;
heads, vice heads, managers and vice managers of People's Police force’s units
assigned to investigate; warders and vice warders of prisons according to the Law on
the organization of criminal investigation authorities;
g) Personnel of other units of People’s Army, as assigned to perform certain
activities of investigation include warders and vice warders of prisons; heads of
independent regiment units and similar ones.
h) Investigation officers in the authorities and units as defined in Section 1 of this
Article.
Article 36. Duties, authority and responsibilities of Heads and vice heads of
Investigation authorities
1. Heads of investigation authorities bear the following duties and power:
a) Organize and direct the processing of criminal information, charges and
investigation by investigation authorities;
b) Make decisions on the appointment or replacement of vice heads of
investigation authorities and units handling criminal information, inspect criminal
charges and investigation done by vice heads, make decisions on amendments or
abolishment of unfounded and illegal decisions made by vice heads.
c) Make decisions on the appointment or replacement of investigators and
investigation officers, inspect the processing of criminal information, criminal charges
and investigation done by investigators or investigation officers, and make decisions
on amendments or invalidation of unsubstantiated and unlawful decisions made by
investigators.
d) Handle complaints and accusations within the powers of investigation
authorities.
The head of the investigation authority, upon his absence, delegates a vice head
to carry out the head’s missions and power. Vice heads are held liable before the Head
for the assignments.
2. Heads of investigation authorities, when instituting criminal proceedings, bear
the following duties and power:
a) Make decisions on suspending the processing of denunciations, criminal
information disclosed and requisitions for charges (referred to as denunciations,
information and requisitions); decisions on pressing or not filing charges, amendments
or alterations of decisions on filing lawsuits or charges against suspects; decisions on
combining or dividing lawsuits; decisions on mandating investigations;
b) Make decisions on implementing, changing or terminating preventive
measures, coercive actions, and means for special investigation and proceedings
according to this Law;
c) Make decisions on issuing and annulling warrants on arrest, search, seizure,
impoundment and handling of evidences;
d) Make decisions on requests, addition or repetition of expert examinations,
burial excavation, experimental investigation, change or request for replacement of
expert witnesses. Request valuation, revaluation of property and change of valuators.
dd) Directly inspect and verify criminal information and carry out investigation
measures;
e) Draw conclusions on investigations;
g) Make decisions on suspending or terminating or resuming investigations into
cases or against suspects;
h) Make orders and decisions and perform other activities of legal proceedings
within the powers of investigation authorities.
3. Vice heads of investigation authorities, when mandated to file charges or
investigate criminal cases, bear the duties and power as stated in Section 1 and Section
2 of this Article, save Point b, Section 1 of this Article. Vice heads of investigation
authorities cannot handle complaints or accusations against their actions and decisions.
4. Heads and vice heads of investigation authorities shall be held liable for their
actions and decisions. Heads and vice heads of investigation authorities cannot
mandate investigators to carry out their duties and power.
Article 37. Duties, authority and responsibilities of investigators
1. Investigators, as assigned to file charges and investigate criminal cases, have
the following duties and authority:
a) Directly inspect, verify and document criminal information;
b) Document criminal cases;
c) Request or recommend the designation and replacement of defense counsels,
interpreters and translators;
d) Summon and interrogate suspects; convene denouncers, informants, persons
denounced or facing position of charges, legal representatives of juridical persons to
obtain their statements; take statements from persons held in emergency custody,
arrested, temporarily detained; convoke witness testifiers, crime victims and plaintiffs
for their statements;
dd) Make decisions on delivering by force persons held in emergency custody,
arrested, temporarily detained, suspects; escorting by force witness testifiers, persons
denounced or charged, crime victims; make decisions on transferring persons under 18
to entities responsible for supervision; decide changes of supervisors of perpetrators
under 18;
e) Enforce emergency custody orders, decisions or orders of arrest, temporary
detainment or detention, search, seizure, withholding, distrainment of property,
freezing of accounts, handling of evidences;
g) Search crime scenes, unearth and dissect corpses, examine traces on bodies,
confront persons involved, facilitate identifications, conduct experimental
investigations;
h) Perform other duties and authority of legal proceedings within the powers of
investigation authorities as per assignments by the head according to this Law.
2. Investigators shall be held liable under the laws and before the head and vice
heads of the investigation authority for their actions and decisions.
Article 38. Duties, authority and responsibilities of Investigation officers of
investigation authorities
1. Investigation officers, as per assignments given by Investigators, perform the
following duties and authority:
a) Record statements and interrogation in writing and make other written records
upon investigators’ inspection and verification of criminal information and criminal
investigation;
b) Deliver and convey orders, decisions and other documents on proceedings as
per this Law;
c) Support investigators to prepare documents on criminal information, case files
and perform other activities of legal proceedings.
2. Investigation officers are held liable under the laws and before the head, vice
heads, investigators for their actions.
Article 39. Duties, authority and responsibilities of chiefs, deputies,
investigation officers, in Border protection force, Customs, Forest ranger,
Maritime police force and Fisheries Surveillance, on assignments of certain
activities of investigation.
1. Chiefs of units assigned to investigate as per Points a, b, c, and dd, Section 2,
Article 35 of this Law bear the following duties and authority:
a) Direct the processing of intra vires criminal information, charges and criminal
investigation;
b) Decide the appointment or replacement of deputies and investigation officers
for the handling of criminal information, charges and investigation;
c) Inspect deputies’ and investigation officers’ processing of criminal
information, charges and investigation;
d) Decide changes and abrogation of unproven and illicit decisions made by
deputies and investigation officers;
dd) Make decisions on handing over persons under 18, who face accusations, to
their representative for supervision.
The chief, upon his absence, mandates a deputy to perform his duties and
authority. The deputy is held liable before the chief for the duties assigned. Chiefs and
deputies are not permitted to mandate investigation officers to perform their duties and
authority.
2. When conducting criminal proceedings against perpetrators of misdemeanors
in flagrante and having clear evidences and culprits' profile, the persons as defined in
Points a, b, c, d and dd, Section 2, Article 35 of this Law bear the following duties and
authority:
a) Collect evidences, documents and items from concerned individuals to check
and verify criminal information;
b) Decide to suspend the processing of denunciations, criminal information
disclosed; requisitions for charges, decisions on filing or not pressing charges,
amendments to decisions on filing lawsuits; decisions on pressing charges or
amendments to decisions of filing charges against suspects;
c) Directly organize and command the examinations of the scenes;
d) Make decisions on requisitioning expert examinations, valuation or on search,
seizure, impoundment and maintenance of evidences and materials directly related to
the lawsuits;
dd) Summon and interrogate suspects; convene crime victims and litigants for
statements; convoke denouncers, informants, persons denounced or facing requisitions
for charges for extraction of statements; call in witness testifiers for statements; take
statements from persons held in emergency custody;
e) Decide to implement preventive and coercive measures as per this Law;
g) Conclude investigations, propose charges or conclusions from investigations
and decide to terminate or suspend or resume investigations.
3. When instituting criminal proceedings against perpetrators of ordinary, drastic
and exorbitant felonies or complicated misdemeanors, the persons as defined in Points
a, b, c, d and dd, Section 2, Article 35 of this Law bear the following duties and
authority:
a) Collect evidences, documents and items from concerned people to inspect and
verify criminal information;
b) Decide to suspend the processing of accusations and criminal information
disclosed, propose charges, decide to file or not press charges, alter decisions on filing
charges;
c) Decide to search, seize, temporarily withhold and maintain evidences and
documents directly related to the lawsuits;
d) Convene witness testifiers, crime victims and litigants for statements.
4. Investigation officers have the following duties and authority:
a) Document criminal information, extract statements from concerned persons to
inspect and verify criminal information;
b) Prepare criminal case files;
c) Interrogate suspects; obtain statements from denouncers, informants, persons
denounced or facing requisitions for charges, persons held in emergency custody,
arrested or temporarily detained, witness testifiers, crime victims, litigants;
d) Investigate the scenes, enforce warrants of search, seizure, impoundment and
maintenance of evidences and documents directly related to the cases.
5. Chiefs, deputies and investigation officers of border protection force, customs,
forest ranger, maritime police force, fisheries resources surveillances, when assigned
to carry out certain activities of investigation within their responsibilities, shall be held
liable for their actions and decisions. Chiefs and deputies are not permitted to mandate
investigation officers to perform their duties and authority.
Article 40. Duties, authority and responsibilities of chiefs, deputies and
investigation officers of other units in People’s Police Force and People’s Army
on assignments of certain activities of investigation
1. Chiefs of units assigned to investigate as per Point e and Point g, Section 2,
Article 35 of this Law bear the following duties and authority:
a) Direct intra vires activities of charge filing and criminal investigation;
b) Decide to appoint or replace deputies and investigation officers for filing of
charges and criminal investigation;
c) Inspect deputies' and investigation officers' processing of criminal information,
pressing of charges and criminal investigation;
d) Decide to redress or annul baseless and illegitimate decisions made by
deputies and investigation officers.
A deputy, upon the absence of the chief, shall be mandated to perform the chief’s
duties and authority and assume liabilities before the chief for the duties mandated.
2. When instituting criminal proceedings, the persons as defined in Point e and
Point g, Section 2, Article 35 of this Law bear the following duties and authority:
a) Collect evidences, documents and items from concerned persons to check and
attest criminal information;
b) Decide to suspend the processing of criminal information; decide to press or
not to file charges, amend decisions on charge filing;
c) Direct and command the examination of crime scenes;
d) Decide to search, seize, temporarily withhold and maintain evidences and
documents related directly to the cases;
dd) Summon denouncers, informants, persons denounced or facing requisitions
for charges, witness testifiers, crime victims and litigants for statements.
3. Investigation officers have the following duties and authority:
a) Document criminal information, acquire statements from relevant persons to
inspect and verify criminal information;
b) Prepare criminal case files;
c) Gather statements from denouncers, informants, persons denounced or facing
requisitions for charges, witness testifiers, defendants and litigants;
d) Investigate crime scenes, enforce orders of search, seizure, impoundment and
maintenance of evidences and documents related directly to the lawsuits;
dd) Convey and send orders, decisions and other documents on legal proceedings
as per this Law.
4. Chiefs, deputies and investigation officers of units of people's police force and
People’s Army, when assigned to perform certain activities of investigation within
their responsibilities, must assume liabilities for their actions and decisions. Chiefs and
deputies are not permitted to mandate investigation officers to perform their duties and
authority.
Article 41. Duties, authority and responsibilities of Heads and Vice heads of
The procuracy
1. Heads of The procuracy bear the following duties and authority:
a) Directly organize and command the activities of exercising rights of
prosecution and manage legal compliance of criminal procedure;
b) Decide to appoint or replace vice heads of The procuracy, inspect vice heads’
activities of exercising rights of prosecution and manage legal compliance of criminal
procedure, decide to redress or annul groundless and lawless decisions made by vice
heads;
c) Decide to appoint or replace procurators and checkers, inspect and manage
procurators’ and checkers’ activities of exercising rights of prosecution and legal
compliance in criminal proceedings, decide to redress or vacate unfounded and illegal
decisions made by procurators;
d) Decide to remove, terminate or annul unproven and illicit decisions made by
an inferior Procuracy;
dd) Handle complaints and accusations within the powers of The procuracy.
The head of The procuracy, upon his absence, mandates a vice head to perform
his duties and authority and assume liabilities before the head for the duties mandated.
2. When exercising rights of prosecution and managing legal compliance in
criminal proceedings, the head of The procuracy bears the following duties and
authority:
a) Request investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate (referred to
as investigation authorities and units assigned) to process criminal information, press
charges or amend decisions on filing criminal lawsuits or charges against suspects;
decide to press or not to file charges, redress decisions on filing criminal lawsuits or
charges against defendants as per this Law;
b) Decide to suspend the handling of criminal information; decide to file or not to
press charges, amend decisions on filing lawsuits; decide to press charges against
suspects and amend such decisions; decide to join or separate cases;
c) Decide to enforce, alter or terminate preventive and coercive measures, and
special investigation methods and proceedings; decide to extend the inspection and
verification of criminal information, detention, investigation, temporary imprisonment,
prosecution;
d) Decide to search, seize, temporarily withhold, and handle evidences;
dd) Decide the request, addition or repetition of expert examination, experimental
investigation; change or demand to replace expert witnesses. Request valuation, re-
valuation, and demand to change valuators;
e) Request heads of investigation authorities, chiefs of units assigned to
investigate to change investigators and investigation officers;
g) Approve or disapprove decisions and orders made by investigation authorities
and units assigned to investigate;
h) Decide to abrogate unproven and unlawful decisions and orders made by
investigation authorities and units assigned to carry out certain activities of
investigation;
i) Settle disputes over the authority to handle criminal information, file charges,
conduct investigation; and decide to transfer cases;
k) Decide to enforce or terminate obligatory medical treatment measures;
l) Decide to implement summary procedures; or terminate such decisions;
m) Decide to press charges against suspects and return documents to further or
reset investigations;
n) Request the restoration of investigation works, decide to adjourn or dismiss
charges or lawsuits against suspects; decide to annul the decision to suspend the
processing of criminal information; decide to resume investigations of cases or
defendants and to retake cases and lawsuits against suspects;
o) Make appeals through appellate Courts, reopening and cassation procedures
against a Court’s judgments and rulings as per this Law;
p) Exercise the right to express proposition as per the laws;
q) Issue decisions and orders, and carry out other activities of prosecution within
the powers of The procuracy.
3. Vice heads of The procuracy, when assigned to exercise rights of prosecution
and manage legal compliance in criminal proceedings, bear the following rights and
duties as per Section 1 and Section 2 of this Article, except for Point b, Section 1 of
this Article. Vice heads of The procuracy is not permitted to handle complaints and
accusations against their own actions and decisions.
4. The head and vice heads of The procuracy shall be held liable for their actions
and decisions. The head and vice heads of The procuracy cannot mandate procurators
to perform their duties and authority.
Article 42. Duties, authority and responsibilities of Procurators
1. Procurators, when assigned to exercise rights of prosecution and manage legal
compliance in criminal proceedings, have the following duties and authority:
a) Administer competent entities' handling of criminal information;
b) Directly manage and prepare documents on criminal information;
c) Administer the processing of criminal information and charges, implement
preventive and coercive measures; administer the competent investigation entities’
documentation of criminal information and lawsuits; manage activities of prosecution
and investigation done by investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate;
d) Directly administer scene investigation, autopsy, confrontation, identification,
voice recognition, experimental investigation and search;
dd) Administer the temporary suspension and resumption of the processing of
criminal information; suspension, adjournment, resumption and closure of
investigations;
e) Propose requirements for investigation and request investigation authorities to
issue or terminate wanted notices against suspects;
g) Summon and interrogate suspects, convene denouncers, informants, persons
denounced or facing requisitions for charges, juridical persons’ legal representatives,
witness testifiers, litigants for statements; extract statements from persons held in
emergency custody;
h) Make decisions on the coercive delivery of arrestees, suspects; and on the
forced escort of witness testifiers, persons denounced or facing requisitions for
charges, crime victims; on the entrustment of persons under 18 to authorities and
entities in charge of supervision; on the replacement of supervisors of perpetrators
under 18;
i) Directly perform certain activities of investigation as per this Law;
k) Request the replacement of persons authorized to institute legal proceedings;
request and propose the appointment or replacement of defense counsels; request the
appointment and replacement of translators and interpreters;
l) Institute legal proceedings in court; announce charges or decisions on
prosecution through summary procedures, and other decisions by The procuracy on
pressing charges against suspects; conduct interrogation, present evidences,
documents, items, impeachment, arguments and viewpoints regarding the settlement of
the cases and conference sessions;
m) Administer legal compliance of the Court's adjudication and participants in
legal proceedings; supervise the Court's judgments, rulings and other documents of
legal procedure;
n) Supervise the enforcement of the Court’s judgments and rulings;
o) Exercise rights to express requests and proposition as per the laws;
p) Perform other duties and authority of prosecution within the powers of The
procuracy as per the assignments by the head of The procuracy as per this Law.
2. Procurators shall be held liable under the laws and before the head and vice
heads of The procuracy for their decisions and actions.
Article 43. Duties, authority and responsibilities of Checkers
1. Checkers perform the duties and exercise power below as per the assignments
from the procurators:
a) Make written records of statements and interrogation and other records of
criminal proceedings;
b) Deliver and convey orders, decisions and other documents of legal procedure
as per this Law;
c) Support procurators to prepare documents on administration and processing of
criminal information, and to perform other activities of legal procedure.
2. Checkers shall be held liable under the laws and before the head, vice heads
and checkers of The procuracy for their actions.
Article 44. Duties, authority and responsibilities of Court president and Vice
court president
1. The court president bears the following duties and authority:
a) Directly organize the adjudication of criminal cases; make decisions on the
settlement of disputes over the jurisdiction;
b) Decide to assign Vice court presidents, judges, lay assessors to hear criminal
cases; to assign Court clerks to institute legal proceedings on criminal cases; to assign
verifiers to verify criminal case files;
c) Decide to replace judges, lay assessors and Court clerks prior to the start of a
trial;
d) Decide the enforcement of criminal sentences;
dd) Decide to postpone jail sentences;
e) Decide to suspend prison sentences;
g) Decide to expunge criminal records;
h) Handle complaints and accusations within the powers of the Court.
The court president, upon his absence, must mandate a vice presiding judge to
carry out the judge's duties and power. Vice court president shall be held liable before
The court president on the duties mandated.
2. When hearing criminal cases, The court president bears the following duties
and authority:
a) Decide to enforce, alter or terminate measures for handling of evidences and
detention;
b) Decide to implement or terminate civil commitment;
c) Decide to enable and deactivate summary procedures;
d) Propose and make appeal for cassation procedures against the Court‘s
judgments and rulings in effect;
dd) Decide and perform other activities of legal proceedings within the Court’s
powers;
e) Engage in other activities of legal proceedings as per this Law.
3. Vice court presidents, when assigned to hear criminal cases, bear the duties
and authority as defined in Section 1 and Section 2 of this Article, save Point b,
Section 1 of this Article. Vice court presidents are not permitted to settle complaints or
accusations against their actions and decisions.
4. The court president and Vice court presidents are held liable under the laws for
their actions and decisions. The court president and Vice court presidents are not
permitted to mandate judges to carry out their duties and powers.
Article 45. Duties, authority and responsibilities of Judge
1. A judge, when assigned to hear criminal cases, bears the following duties and
authority:
a) Examine case files prior to the start of a trial;
b) Hear cases;
c) Engage in other activities of legal procedure and vote on matters within the
powers of the Trial panel;
d) Transact other activities of legal procedure within the Court’s powers as per
The court president’s assignments.
2. The presiding judge has the duties and powers as stipulated in Section 1 of this
Article and below:
a) Decide to implement, alter and abort preventive and coercive measures, save
those for detention;
b) Decide to return case files for further investigation;
c) Decide to have cases heard; to dismiss or adjourn lawsuits;
d) Manage the hearing of cases, oral arguments in court;
dd) Decide to have expert examinations started newly or afresh or extended, to
perform experimental investigations; to change or have expert witnesses replaced; to
order valuation or have valuators changed;
e) Order or requisition the appointment or change of defense counsels; change of
supervisors for perpetrators under 18; request the appointment and replacement of
translators and interpreters;
g) Decide to summon witness testifiers to the Court;
h) Engage in other duties and powers of legal procedure within the Court’s
powers as per The court president’s assignments according to this Law.
3. Judges shall be held liable under the laws for their actions and decisions.
Article 46. Duties, authority and responsibilities of lay assessors
1. The lay assessors on assignments to hear criminal cases bears the following
duties and authority:
a) Examine case files prior to the start of a trial;
b) Hear cases;
c) Engage in activities of legal procedure and vote on the Trial panel’s intra vires
matters.
2. The lay assessors shall be held liable under the laws for their actions and
decisions.
Article 47. Duties, authority and responsibilities of Court clerk
1. Court clerks on assignments to handle criminal proceedings have the following
duties and authority:
a) Verify the presence of persons receiving the Court’s subpoena; and specify
excuses of those absent;
b) Announce the Court’s rules;
c) Report to the Trial panel about the list of persons convened and absent;
d) Record the Court’s proceedings in writing;
dd) Perform other activities of legal proceedings within the Court’s powers as per
the assignments by The court president.
2. Court clerks are held liable under the laws and before the judge for their
actions.
Article 48. Duties, authority and responsibilities of Verifier
1. Verifies on assignment to engage in criminal proceedings have the following
duties and authority:
a) Examine files of lawsuits on which a Court has passed sentences in binding
force, as per the assignments by The court president or Vice court presidents;
b) Conclude activities of verification and report to the tribunal president or Vice
court presidents;
c) Verifiers facilitate The court president’s enforcement of sentences within the
Court's powers and other assignments from The court president or Vice court
presidents.
2. Verifiers shall be held liable under the laws and before The court president and
Vice court presidents for their actions.
Article 49. Disapproval or replacement of persons given authority to
institute legal proceedings
Persons given authority to institute legal procedure must refuse to engage in
proceedings or submit to replacement in the following events:
1. They are crime victims, litigants, or delegates, relatives of crime victims,
litigants, suspects or defendants;
2. They have acted as defense counsels, witness testifiers, verifiers, valuators,
interpreters or translators in the lawsuits;
3. Clear grounds of their potential bias at work are found.
Article 50. Individuals authorized to change persons given authority to
institute legal proceedings.
1. Procurators.
2. Detainees, suspects, defendants, crime victims, civil plaintiffs, civil defendants
and their representatives.
3. Defense counsels and protectors of legitimate rights and benefits for crime
victims, civil plaintiffs and defendants.
Article 51. Replacement of investigators and investigation officers
1. Investigators and investigation officers must decline to engage in legal
proceedings or submit to replacement in the following events:
a) As per stipulations in Article 49 of this Law;
b) They have engaged in legal proceedings of the lawsuit as procurators,
checkers, judges, lay assessors, verifiers or Court clerks.
2. The head or vice heads of the investigation authority shall decide the
replacement of investigators and investigation officers.
If the replaced investigator is the head of the investigation authority according to
Section 1 of this Article, the superior investigation authority shall directly investigate
the case.
Article 52. Replacement of Procurators and Checkers
1. Procurators and checkers must reject their engagement in legal proceedings or
submit to replacement in the following events:
a) As per Article 49 of this Law;
b) They have engaged in legal proceedings in the lawsuit as investigators,
investigation officers, judges, lay assessors, verifiers or Court clerks.
2. The head or vice heads of The procuracy assigned to settle lawsuits shall
decide the replacement of procurators at equal level of hierarchy prior to the start of a
trial.
If the replaced procurator is the head of The procuracy, the head of the superior
Procuracy shall give direct decisions on relevant matters.
If a procurator must be changed during the Court's proceedings, the Trial panel
shall suspend the trial.
Article 53. Replacement of Judge and lay assessors
1. Judges and lay assessors must repudiate their hearing of trials or submit to
replacement in the following events:
a) As per Article 49 of this Law;
b) They appear in the same trial panel and biologically related to each other;
c) They have heard cases in first-instance or appellate Courts or engaged in legal
proceedings in such Courts as investigators, investigation officers, procurators,
checkers, verifiers or Court clerks.
2. The court president or Vice court presidents assigned to settle the lawsuit shall
decide the replacement of judges and lay assessors prior to the start of the trial.
If the replaced judge is The court president, the president of the immediate
superior Court shall decide relevant matters.
The Trial panel decides the replacement of the judge or lay assessors by voting in
the lay assessors’ room prior to the stage of interrogation. The lay assessors consider
opinions of the lay assessors to be replaced and make decisions under majority rule.
If the judge or lay assessors are changed during the Court's proceedings, the Trial
panel shall suspend the trial.
Article 54. Replacement of Court clerks
1. Court clerks must demur to engage in legal proceedings or submit to
replacement in the following events:
a) As per Article 49 of this Law;
b) They have engaged in legal proceedings of the lawsuit as procurators,
checkers, investigators, investigation officers, judges, lay assessors, verifiers or Court
clerks.
2. The tribunal president or Vice court presidents assigned to settle lawsuits shall
decide to replace Court clerks prior to the start of the trial.
The Trial panel decides the replacement of Court clerks during the Court's
proceedings.
If Court clerks in court must be changed, the Trial panel shall suspend the trial.
Chapter IV
PARTICIPANTS IN LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
Article 55. Participants in legal proceedings
1. Denouncers, informants and individuals proposing charges.
2. Persons denunciated or facing requisitions for charges.
3. Persons held in emergency custody.
4. Arrestees.
5. Temporary detainees.
6. Suspects.
7. Defendants.
8. Crime victims.
9. Civil plaintiffs.
10. Civil defendants.
11. Individuals bearing duties and interests from the lawsuits.
12. Witness testifiers.
13. Witnesses.
14. Expert witnesses.
15. Valuators.
16. Interpreters and translators.
17. Defense counsels.
18. Protectors of legitimate rights and benefits of crime victims and litigants.
19. Protectors of lawful rights and benefits of persons denunciated or facing
requisitions for charges.
20. Legal representatives of juridical persons committing crime and other
delegates as per this Law.
Article 56. Denouncers, informants and individuals proposing charges
1. Denouncers, informants and entities reporting crime or proposing charges are
entitled to:
a) Request competent authorities to maintain confidentiality of denunciation,
crime reports, propose charges, to protect their life, health, honor, dignity, prestige,
property, legitimate rights and benefits and kindred from existing menaces;
b) Be informed of the final settlement of denunciations, information and
requisitions;
c) Complain about competent procedural authorities and persons’ decisions and
legal procedure of receiving and handling accusations, criminal information and
requisitions for charges.
2. Entities as defined in Section 1 of this Article must present themselves at the
requests for authorities empowered to handle criminal information, and must present
facts to their knowledge in honesty.
Article 57. Persons denunciated or facing requisitions for charges
1. Persons denunciated or facing requisitions for charges are entitled to:
a) Be informed of their acts denounced or against which charges are proposed;
b) Be informed and explained about their rights and duties according to this
Article;
c) Give statements and opinions;
d) Present evidences, documents, items and requests;
dd) Confer on relevant evidences, documents and items and ask authorized
procedural persons to inspect and evaluate such;
e) Defend or have their legitimate rights and benefits defended;
g) Be informed of the final settlement of accusations and requisitions for charges;
h) Complain about competent procedural authorities and persons’ decisions and
legal procedure.
2. Persons denounced or facing requisitions for charges must appear at the
requests for authorities empowered to handle accusations and requisitions for charges.
Article 58. Persons held in emergency custody and arrestees
1. Persons held in emergency custody or arrested for criminal acts in flagrante
and wanted notices are entitled to:
a) Hear and obtain the warrants of emergency custody, emergency arrest, written
approvals of emergency custody and wanted notices;
b) Be informed of reasons of their temporary detainment and arrest;
c) Be informed and explained about their rights and duties as per this Law;
d) Give statements and opinions, and have no obligation to testify against
themselves or admit to guilt;
dd) Present evidences, documents, items and requests;
e) Confer on relevant evidences, documents and items and request authorized
procedural persons to inspect and evaluate such;
g) Defend themselves or be defended;
h) Complain about competent procedural authorities and persons’ decisions and
legal procedure on detainment and arrest.
2. Persons held in emergency custody and arrestees bear the duty to conform to
detainment orders and arrest warrants and requests by entities authorized to detain and
arrest people according to this Law.
Article 59. Temporary detainees
1. Temporary detainees are held in emergency captivity or arrested for criminal
acts in flagrante or wanted notices or those confessing or surrendering and facing
existing orders of temporary detainment.
2. Temporary detainees are entitled to:
a) Be informed of reasons, obtain decisions and written extension of temporary
detainment, written approvals of temporary detainment and other decisions of legal
procedure according to this Law;
b) Be informed and explained about their duties and rights as per this Article;
c) Give statements and opinions, and have no obligation to testify against
themselves or admit to guilt;
d) Defend themselves or be defended;
dd) Present evidences, documents, items and request;
e) Confer on relevant evidences, documents and items and request authorized
procedural persons to verify and assess such;
g) File complaints about competent procedural authorities and persons’ decisions
and legal procedure on temporary detainment.
3. Temporary detainees are liable for conforming to this Law and the Law on
temporary detainment and detention.
Article 60. Suspects
1. Suspects are physical persons or juridical persons facing criminal charges. The
rights and duties of juridical persons as suspects are executed by their legal
representatives according to this Law.
2. Suspects are entitled to:
a) Be informed of reasons for charges against them;
b) Be informed or explained about their rights and duties as per this Article;
c) Acquire decisions on charges against suspects and amendments to such
decisions; written approvals of such decisions or amendments; decisions on
enforcement, change or termination of preventive and coercive measures; final reports
of investigation; decisions on suspension and suspension of investigations; decisions
of suspension and suspension of lawsuits; charges, decisions on prosecution and other
decisions on legal proceedings according to this Law;
d) Give statements and opinions and bear no obligation to testify against
themselves or admit to guilt;
dd) Present evidences, documents, items and requests;
e) Confer on relevant evidences, documents and items and request authorized
procedural persons to check and evaluate such;
g) Requisition expert examinations, valuation; changes of authorized procedural
persons, expert witnesses, valuators, interpreters and translators;
h) Defend themselves or be defended;
j) Read and write digital documents or copies of such regarding charges and
vindication or other copies related to their defense, upon requests, after the end of
investigations;
k) Complain about authorized procedural persons’ decisions and actions of legal
procedure.
3. Suspects bear these duties:
a) Be present as per subpoenas by persons given authority to institute legal
proceedings. If suspects are absent due to any but not force majeure or objective
obstacles, they may be delivered by force. Fugitives shall be sought;
b) Comply with competent procedural authorities and persons’ decisions and
requests.
4. Minister of Public Security leads and cooperates with the head of the Supreme
People’s Procuracy, Court president of the Supreme People’s Court and Minister of
Defense to regulate details of sequence, formalities, time limit and location for
suspects’ reading and writing of digital documents and copies of such regarding
charges, vindication or other copies regarding suspects' pleading, if requested,
according to Point i, Section 2 of this Article.
Article 61. Defendants
1. Defendants are physical persons or juridical persons tried as per a Court’s
decision. The rights and duties of defendants as suspects are executed by their legal
representatives according to this Law.
2. Defendants are entitled to:
a) Obtain decisions on hearing of lawsuits; decisions on enforcement, change or
termination of preventive and coercive measures; decisions on case suspension;
judgments, Court's rulings and other decisions on legal proceedings as per this Law;
b) Attend the trial;
c) Be informed and explained about their rights and duties as per this Article;
d) Petition for expert examinations, valuation, change of authorized procedural
persons, expert witnesses, valuators, interpreters, translators, summoning of witness
testifiers, crime victims, individuals having duties and interests from the lawsuit,
expert witnesses, valuators, other participants in legal proceedings and authorized
procedural persons to the Court;
dd) Present evidences, documents, items and requests;
e) Confer on relevant evidences, documents, items and request authorized
procedural persons to inspect and assess such;
g) Defend themselves or be defended;
h) Give statements and opinions, bear no obligation to testify against themselves
or admit to guilt;
i) Inquire and request Court presidents to question courtroom participants with
the Court president’s consent; engage in oral arguments in court;
k) Give final statement prior to the deliberation of judgments;
l) Read the Court's report and request amendments to the Court's report;
m) Appeal against the Court’ judgments and rulings;
n) Complain about competent procedural authorities and persons’ decisions and
legal proceedings;
o) Other rights as per the laws.
3. Defendants bear these duties:
a) Appear as per the Court’s subpoena. b) If defendants are absent due to any but
not force majeure or objective obstacles, they shall be delivered by force. Fugitives
shall be sought;
b) Conform to the Court’s decisions and requests.
Article 62. Crime victims
1. Crime victims are physical persons suffering from direct damage to physical
body, mentality and property, or organizations whose property and reputation are
impaired or threatened.
2. Crime victims or their legal representatives are entitled to:
a) Be informed and explained about their rights and duties as per this Article;
b) Present evidences, documents, items and requests;
c) Confer on relevant evidences, documents and items and request authorized
procedural persons to inspect and evaluate such;
d) Requisition expert examinations and valuation as per the laws;
dd) Be informed of results of investigations and lawsuits;
e) Request the change of authorized procedural persons, expert witnesses,
valuators, interpreters and translators;
g) Recommend punitive measures, compensation level and guarantees of
compensation;
h) Attend the trial; provide opinions, request Court president to question
defendants and attendees in court; engage in oral arguments in court to defend their
legitimate rights and benefits; read the Court’s reports;
i) Defend or have their legitimate rights and benefits defended;
k) Engage in other activities of legal procedure as per this Law;
l) Request competent procedural authorities to protect their life, health, honor,
dignity, property, legitimate rights and benefits, kindred against menaces;
m) Appeal against the Court’s judgments and rulings;
n) Complain about competent procedural authorities and persons’ decisions and
legal proceedings;
o) Other rights as per the laws.
3. If a lawsuit is brought at the requests for crime victims, they or their legal
representatives shall state accusations in court.
4. Crime victims bear these duties:
a) Be present as per authorized procedural persons’ subpoena. If they are absent
due to any but not force majeure or objective obstacles, they may be escorted by force;
b) Abide by competent procedural authorities and persons' decisions and request.
5. If an entity is murdered, missing, bereaved of legal capacity, its representative
shall execute its rights and duties as per this Law.
Organizations as crime victims, if divided, separated, consolidated or merged,
shall have their rights and duties as per this Article possessed by their legal
representatives or entities inheriting such duties and rights.
Article 63. Civil plaintiffs
1. Civil plaintiffs are persons and organizations suffering from damage caused by
criminal acts and filing damage claim.
2. Civil plaintiffs or their legal representatives are entitled to:
a) Be informed and explained about their rights and duties as per this Article;
b) Present evidences, documents, items and request;
c) Confer on relevant evidences, documents and items and request authorized
procedural persons to check and evaluate such;
d) Be informed of results of investigations and lawsuits;
dd) Requisition expert examinations and valuation as per the laws;
e) Request changes of authorized procedural persons, expert witnesses, valuators,
interpreters and translators;
g) Recommend level and guarantee measures of compensation;
h) Attend the trial; provide opinions, request Court presidents to question
attendees in court; engage in oral arguments in court to defend plaintiffs' legitimate
rights and benefits; read the Court’s reports;
i) Defend or have their legitimate rights and benefits defended;
k) Complain about competent procedural authorities and persons’ decisions and
legal proceedings;
l) Appeal against the Court’s judgments and rulings on compensations;
m) Other rights as per the laws.
3. Civil plaintiffs bear these duties:
a) Appear as per authorized procedural persons’ subpoena;
b) Present facts for damage claims in honesty;
c) Comply with competent procedural authorities and persons’ decisions and
requests.
Article 64. Civil defendants
1. Civil defendants are persons and organizations incurring liabilities for
compensations as per the laws.
2. Civil defendants or their legal representatives are entitled to:
a) Be informed and explained about their rights and duties as per this Article;
b) Accept or reject all or parts of civil plaintiffs’ claims;
c) Present evidences, documents, items and requests;
d) Confer on relevant evidences, documents and items and request authorized
procedural persons to inspect and assess such;
dd) Requisition expert examinations and valuation as per the laws;
e) Be informed of results of investigations and lawsuits in connection with
damage claims;
g) Request change of authorized procedural persons, expert witnesses, valuators,
interpreters and translators;
h) Attend the trial; provide opinions, request the Court president to question
attendees in court; engage in oral arguments to protect defendants’ legitimate rights
and benefits; read the Court’s reports;
i) Defend or have their legitimate rights and benefits defended;
k) Complain about competent procedural authorities and persons’ decisions and
legal proceedings;
l) Appeal against the Court’s judgments and rulings on compensations;
m) Other rights as per the laws.
3. Civil defendants bear these duties:
a) Be present as per authorized procedural persons’ subpoena;
b) Present facts related to compensations in honesty;
c) Conform to competent procedural authorities and persons’ decisions and
requests.
Article 65. Parties with interests and duties related to the lawsuit
1. Parties with interests and duties in connection with the lawsuit are individuals
and organizations holding benefits and duties pertaining to criminal lawsuits.
2. Parties with interest and duties relating to the lawsuit or their representatives
are entitled to:
a) Be informed and explained about their rights and duties as per this Article;
b) Present evidences, documents, items and requests;
c) Requisition expert examinations and valuation as per the laws;
d) Attend the trial; provide opinions, request the Court president to question
attendees in court; engage in oral arguments in court to defend their legitimate rights
and benefits; read the Court's reports;
dd) Defend or have their legitimate rights and benefits defended;
e) Confer on relevant evidences, documents and items and request authorized
procedural persons to verify and assess such;
g) Appeal against the Court's judgments and rulings on matters directly
pertaining to their benefits and duties;
h) Complain about competent procedural authorities and persons’ decisions and
legal proceedings;
i) Other rights as per the laws.
3. Parties with interests and duties relating to the lawsuit bear these duties:
a) Appear as per authorized procedural persons’ subpoena;
b) Present facts pertaining to their rights and duties in honesty;
c) Abide by competent procedural authorities and persons’ decisions and
requests.
Article 66. Witness testifiers
1. Witness testifiers possess knowledge of facts relating to the crime and lawsuit
and receive competent procedural authorities' subpoena to testify.
2. The following persons cannot testify:
a) Defense counsels of accused persons;
b) Persons not conscious of facts pertaining to criminal information and lawsuit
or not capable of giving judicious testimonies due to their mental or physical
impairment.
3. Witness testifiers are entitled to:
a) Be informed or explained about their rights and duties as per this Article;
b) Request summoning authorities to protect their life, health, honor, dignity,
property, legitimate rights and benefits and kindred against menaces;
c) File complaints about competent procedural authorities and persons’ decisions
and legal proceedings appertaining to matters that they testify for and against;
d) Have their expenditure of travel and other expenses covered by summoning
authorities as per the laws.
4. Witness testifiers bear these duties:
a) Be present as per competent procedural authorities’ subpoena. If their absence
due to any but not force majeure or objective obstacles hinders the handling of
criminal information, charges, investigations, prosecution, adjudication, they may be
escorted by force;
b) Present facts to their knowledge on criminal information and lawsuits and
reasons leading to such knowledge in honesty.
5. If witness testifiers give false testimonies, decline or elude testification for any
excuses not relating to force majeure or objective obstacles, they shall incur criminal
liabilities as per the Criminal Code.
6. Organizations where witness testifiers work or pursue education are
responsible for supporting their testification.
Article 67. Witnesses
1. Witnesses are requested by competent procedural authorities to witness legal
proceedings according to this Law.
2. The following persons cannot be a witness:
a) Kindred of accused persons or given authority to institute legal proceedings;
b) Persons deprived of judicious consciousness due to mental or physical
impairment;
c) Persons less than 18 years old;
d) There are evidences of a person’s bias.
3. Witnesses are entitled to:
a) Be informed and explained about their rights and duties as per this Article;
b) Request authorized procedural persons to abide by the laws and protect their
life, health, honor, dignity, property, legitimate rights and benefits, and kindred against
menaces;
c) Read reports of legal proceedings, and give opinions on legal proceedings that
they witness;
d) Complain about competent procedural authorities and persons’ decisions and
legal proceedings pertaining to matters that they witness;
dd) Have expenses covered by summoning authorities as per the laws.
4. Witnesses bear these duties:
a) Appear as per competent procedural authorities’ subpoena;
b) Witness all legal proceedings as requested;
c) Sign records of activities that they witness;
d) Maintain confidentiality of investigative activities that they witness;
dd) Present facts that they witness in honesty at the requests for competent
procedural authorities.
Article 68. Expert witnesses
1. Expert witnesses possess professional knowledge of matters requiring
examinations for experts, who are consulted by competent procedural authorities or
requested by participants in legal proceedings to conduct expert examinations as per
the laws.
2. Expert witnesses are entitled to:
a) Read case files in connection with the subjects of expert examination;
b) Request authorities requisitioning expert examinations or participants in legal
proceedings, who petition for expert examinations, to provide documents necessary for
reaching conclusions;
c) Participate in sessions of interrogation, extraction of statements and inquiry of
matters related to the subjects of expert examination;
d) Refuse to conduct expert examinations without adequate time for relevant
tasks, sufficient documents or substantial grounds to reach a conclusion or decline to
expert examinations surpassing the extent of their professional knowledge;
dd) Put their own opinions in the joint final report if they do not agree to the joint
findings from a team of expert witnesses;
e) Other rights as per the Law on expertise.
3. Expert witnesses bear these duties:
a) Be present as per competent procedural authorities’ subpoena;
b) Maintain confidentiality of investigation findings grasped during expert
examinations;
c) Other duties as per the Law on judicial expert examination.
4. If expert witnesses fabricate findings or object to conclude examinations for
any reasons but neither force majeure nor objective obstacles, they shall face criminal
liabilities as per the Criminal Code.
5. Expert witnesses must decline to engage in legal proceedings or submit to
replacement in the following events:
a) They are concurrently crime victims, litigants, or representatives or kindred of
crime victims, litigants, suspects or defendants;
b) Having performed the role of defense counsels, witness testifiers, interpreters,
translators or valuators in the lawsuit;
c) Having engaged in legal proceedings of the lawsuit.
6. The entities consulting experts shall decide to replace expert witnesses.
Article 69. Valuators
1. Valuators possess professional knowledge of pricing, who are consulted by
competent procedural authorities and requested by participants in legal proceedings to
valuate property as per the laws.
2. Valuators are entitled to:
a) Study case files in connection with the subjects of valuation;
b) Request the entities requisitioning valuation or participants in legal
proceedings, who request valuation, to provide documents necessary for valuation;
c) Refuse to perform activities of valuation without adequate time for relevant
tasks, sufficient documents or substantial grounds for valuation or declined to requests
for valuation surpassing the extent of their professional knowledge;
d) Put their own findings in the joint final report if disagreeing with the
conclusions by the Panel of valuation;
dd) Other rights as per the laws.
3. Valuators bear these duties:
a) Appear as per competent procedural authorities’ subpoena;
b) Maintain confidentiality of investigation facts grasped during their activities of
valuation;
c) Other duties as per the laws.
4. If valuators provide false findings or decline to valuate property for any
reasons but neither force majeure nor objective obstacles, they shall face criminal
liabilities as per the Criminal Code.
5. Valuators must repudiate their engagement in legal proceedings or submit to
replacement in the following events:
a) They are concurrently crime victims, litigants, or representatives, kindred of
crime victims, litigants or suspects, defendants;
b) Having performed the role of defense counsels, witness testifiers, expert
witnesses, interpreters or translators in the lawsuit;
c) Having engaged in legal proceedings of the lawsuit.
6. The entities demanding valuation shall decide the replacement of valuators.
Article 70. Interpreters and translators
1. Interpreters and translators are capable of interpreting and translating
languages, whose services are demanded by competent procedural authorities when
participants in legal proceedings do not speak Vietnamese or documents are made in
foreign languages.
2. Interpreters and translators are entitled to:
a) Be informed and explained about their duties and rights as per this Article;
b) Request entities demanding their services to protect their life, health, honor,
dignity, property, legitimate rights and benefits and kindred against menaces;
c) Complain about competent procedural authorities and persons’ decisions and
legal proceedings regarding oral and written translation;
d) Receive payments for interpretation and translation from authorities
demanding their services and other benefits as per the laws.
3. Interpreters and translators bear these duties:
a) Be present as per competent procedural authorities’ subpoena;
b) Perform tasks of oral and written translation in honesty. If interpreters and
translators provide deceitful services, they shall face criminal liabilities as per the
Criminal Code;
c) Maintain confidentiality of investigation secrets grasped during their tasks of
oral and written translation;
d) Guarantee the execution of their duties before the authorities demanding their
services.
4. Interpreters and translators must decline to engage in legal proceedings or
submit to replacement in the following events:
a) They are concurrently crime victims, litigants; or representatives, kindred of
crime victims, litigants or suspects, defendants;
b) Having performed the role of defense counsels, witness testifiers, expert
witnesses, and valuators in the lawsuit;
c) Having engaged in legal proceedings of the lawsuit.
5. The authorities demanding services of oral and written translation shall decide
the replacement of interpreters and translators.
6. The stipulations of this Article shall also apply to individuals comprehending
signs and behaviors of the mute or the deaf, and writing of the blind.
Article 71. Responsibilities for announcement and explanation of rights and
duties of participants in proceedings and assurance of their execution of such
obligations and rights
1. Competent procedural authorities and persons are responsible for announcing
and explaining the rights and duties of persons participating in legal proceedings and
for assuring the latters' execution of such obligations and grants according to this Law.
If a accused person or aggrieved is entitled to legal aid as per the Law on legal
aid, competent procedural authorities and persons are responsible for elucidating their
right of legal aid. If such person petitions for legal aid, competent procedural
authorities and persons shall promptly inform a Governmental legal aid centers.
2. Announcement and explanation must be recorded in writing.
Chapter V
DEFENSE OF LEGITIMATE RIGHTS AND BENEFITS OF CRIME
VICTIMS AND LITIGANTS
Article 72. Defense counsels
1. Defense counsels are enabled by persons facing charges or appointed by
competent procedural authorities to perform activities of pleading, the registration of
which has been approved by competent procedural authorities and persons/
2. Defense counsels may be:
a) Lawyers;
b) Representatives of persons facing charges;
c) People’s advocates;
d) Legal assistants for charged persons given legal aid.
3. People’s advocates are Vietnamese citizens from 18 years of age, pledging
allegiance to the Nation, possessing good moral quality, having legal knowledge and
sound health to fulfill assignments. Such advocates are assigned by the Committee or
affiliations of the Vietnam Fatherland Front to defend their personnel facing charges.
4. The following individuals cannot plead:
a) Having engaged in legal proceedings of the lawsuit; or being kindred of
persons having engaged in legal procedure of the lawsuit;
b) Having attended the lawsuit as witness testifiers, expert witnesses, valuators,
translators, interpreters;
c) Persons sentenced with criminal records sustained, facing criminal
prosecution, or sent to mandatory rehabilitation or education centers through
administrative measures.
5. A defense counsel may defend various persons facing charges in one lawsuit if
such persons' rights and benefits do not come into collision.
Various defense counsels may defend one person facing charges.
Article 73. Rights and duties of defense counsels
1. Defense counsels are entitled to:
a) Meet and inquire about persons facing charges;
b) Be present during the extraction of statements from arrestees and temporary
detainees or the interrogation of suspects, and question arrestees, temporary detainees
and suspects with the consent of individuals authorized to acquire statements or
conduct interrogation. After authorized individuals end a session of statement
extraction or interrogation, defense counsels may raise questions to arrestees,
temporary detainees and suspects;
c) Engage in the activities of confrontation, identification, recognition of voice
and other investigative activities as per this Law;
d) Be informed by competent procedural authorities of timing and location for
taking statements or interrogating, and schedule and venue for other activities of
investigation as per this Law;
dd) Read the records of legal proceedings, in which they have participated, and
decisions on legal procedure against persons whom they defend;
e) Request the replacement of persons given authority to institute legal
proceedings, expert witnesses, valuators, interpreters and translators; and request the
changes or termination of preventive and coercive measures;
g) Petition for legal proceedings according to this Law; for summoning of
witness testifiers, other participants in legal procedure or authorized procedural
persons;
h) Gather and present evidences, documents, items and request;
i) Inspect, assess and confer on relevant evidences, documents and items and
request authorized procedural persons to check and evaluate such;
k) Request competent procedural authorities to collect evidences, add or repeat
expert examinations or revaluate property;
l) Read, transcribe and photocopy documents from case files related to their
activities of pleading upon the end of investigations;
m) Engage in debates and questioning sessions in court;
n) File complaints about competent procedural authorities and persons’ decisions
and legal proceedings;
o) Lodge appeals against the Court’s judgments and rulings if defendants are less
than 18 years old or have mental or physical defects as per this Law.
2. Defense counsels bear these duties:
a) Implement all measures as defined by the laws to clarify facts absolving
persons facing charges or mitigating criminal liabilities of suspects and defendants;
b) Provide legal assistance to protect legitimate rights and benefits of persons
facing charges;
c) Preserve no right to refuse to defend charged persons whom they have agreed
to plead for, if excuses do not rely on force majeure or objective obstacles;
d) Respect the truth and be inhibited to bribe, coerce or incite other people to
provide false statements or documents;
dd) Appear as per the Court’s subpoena; or, if defense counsels are appointed
according to Point 1, Article 76 of this Law, as per a subpoena by investigation
authorities or The procuracy;
e) It is inhibited to disclose investigation secrets perceived during their activities
of pleading; or exploit documents transcribed or copied from case files to violate the
government’s interests, public benefits, legitimate rights and benefits of authorities and
entities;
g) It is forbidden to divulge information on the lawsuit and charged person,
which they attain when pleading, unless otherwise agreed by the accused person. It is
inhibited to exploit such information to infringe the Government’s interests, public
benefits, legitimate rights and benefits of authorities and entities.
3. If defense counsels break laws, their registration of pleading shall become void
and they shall face disciplinary or administrative penalties or criminal prosecution
according to the nature and severity of their violations. Moreover, they shall incur
amends for damages, if caused, according to the laws.
Article 74. Time of defense counsels' participation in legal proceedings
Defense counsels engage in legal proceedings upon the prosecution of suspects.
Defense counsels for arrestees and temporary detainees engage in legal
proceedings upon the arrestees’ appearance in an office of investigation authorities or
units assigned to carry out certain activities of investigation or upon the release of a
decision on temporary detainment.
The head of the Procuracy is authorized, when confidentiality of investigations
into national security breach is vital, to sanction defense counsels' engagement in legal
proceedings after investigations end.
Article 75. Selection of defense counsels
1. Defense counsels are selected by the accused person, his representative or
kindred.
2. In 12 hours upon receiving a written request for defense counsel(s) from an
arrestee or temporary detainee, competent authorities managing such arrestee and
temporary detainee are responsible for conveying such request to the defense
counsel(s), their representatives or kindred. If an arrestee or temporary detainee does
not specify a defense counsel, competent authorities managing such arrestee or
temporary detainee must impart his written request to a representative or kindred, who
shall seek defense counsel(s).
In 24 hours upon receiving a written request for defense counsel(s) from a person
held in detention, competent authorities managing such person are responsible for
conveying such request to defense counsel(s), their representative or kindred. If a
person in detention does not specify a defense counsel, competent authorities
managing such person shall give his written request to a representative or kindred, who
shall seek defense counsel(s).
3. If a representative or kin of arrestees, temporary detainees or persons in
detention lodge a written request for defense counsel(s), competent authorities are
responsible for promptly informing such persons in custody to attain their opinions on
soliciting defense counsels.
4. Personnel of the Committee or affiliations of Fatherland Front in districts,
communes, provincial cities or centrally-affiliated cities' metropolis, or their
representatives or kindred request the said authorities to assign people’s advocate(s) to
defend such personnel, who face charges.
Article 76. Appointment of defense counsels
1. Competent procedural authorities shall appoint defense counsels, who are not
sought by accused persons, their representative or kin in the following events:
a) Suspects or defendants facing charges that may lead to the harshest sentence of
20 years in prison, life imprisonment or death as per the Criminal Code;
b) Persons facing charges and not capable of defending themselves due to
physical defects; those with mental disabilities or those under 18 years of age.
2. Competent procedural authorities must demand or ask the following
organizations to assign defense counsels for the cases defined in Point 1 of this Article:
a) A bar association assigns a law firm to appoint defense counsel(s);
b) A governmental legal aid center appoints a legal assistant or lawyer to defend
persons qualified for legal aid;
c) The committee or affiliations of Vietnam Fatherland Front appoint people's
advocate(s) for their personnel who face charges.
Article 77. Replacement or rejection of defense counsels
1. The following persons are entitled to reject or request the replacement of
defense counsels:
a) Persons facing charges;
b) Representatives of persons facing charges;
c) Kin of persons facing charges.
All rejections or replacements of defense counsels must be approved by persons
facing charges, executed in writing and inputted in case files, unless otherwise stated
in Point b, Section 1, Article 76 of this Law.
2. If kin of arrestees, temporary detainees or persons in detention reject defense
counsel(s) during the stage of investigation, the investigator and such defense
counsel(s) shall directly meet the person in custody to confirm the rejection.
3. If a defense counsel is appointed according to Point 1, Article 76 of this Law,
the accused person and his representative or kin shall preserve the right to petition for
the replacement or rejection of such defense counsel.
If a defense counsel is replaced, a new defense counsel shall be appointed
according to Point 2, Article 76 of this Law.
If a defense counsel is rejected, competent procedural authorities shall record in
writing such rejection by accused persons or their representatives or kindred according
to Point b, Section 1, Article 76 of this Law, shall terminate the appointment of
defense counsels.
Article 78. Procedures for registration of defense counsel
1. In all legal proceedings, a defense counsel must register his activities of
pleading.
2. A defense counsel, when registering activities of pleading, must present these
documents:
a) A lawyer shall present his lawyer registration card with a certified copy of
such, and the letter of application for defense counsel by representatives or kin of
accused persons;
b) A representative of accused persons must present identity card or citizen
identification card with certified copies of such, and the letter of confirmation by
competent authorities of their relationship with the accused persons;
c) A people’s advocate must present his identity card or citizen identification
card with certified copies of such, and the letter of appointment b the Committee and
affiliations of Vietnam Fatherland Front;
d) A legal assistant or solicitor providing legal aid must present the letter of
appointment by legal aid providers and his legal assistant's card or lawyer registration
card, respectively, with certified copy of such.
3. If a defense counsel is appointed as per Article 76 of this Law, the following
papers must be presented:
a) A lawyer shall present his lawyer registration card with certified copy of such
and the letter of appointment by the law firm at which such lawyer practices law, or
the letter of assignment by the bar association for individual lawyers;
b) A people's advocate shall present his identity card or citizen identification card
with certified copy of such and the letter of appointment by the Committee or
affiliations of Vietnam Fatherland Front;
c) A legal assistant or solicitor providing legal aid shall present his legal
assistant’s card or lawyer registration card, respectively, with certified copy of such
and the letter of appointment by a governmental legal aid center.
4. In 24 hours upon receiving sufficient documents as stated in Point 2 or Point 3
of this Article, competent procedural authorities must verify such papers and the
absence of an application for rejection of defense counsel as stated in Point 5 of this
Article. Competent procedural authorities, upon completing its verification, shall enter
information into a written record for registration of defense counsel, promptly send a
notice of defense counsel to the entities registering such defense counsel, and retain
papers regarding the registration of defense counsel in the case file. If requirements are
not satisfied, denial of registration of defense counsel and reasons shall be informed in
writing.
5. Competent procedural authorities deny the registration of defense counsel in
one of the following events:
a) As per Point 4, Article 72 of this Law;
b) The accused person and qualified for defense counsel appointment rejects a
defense counsel.
6. The written notice of defense counsel takes effect during legal proceedings,
save the following events:
a) The accused person rejects or requests to have the defense counsel replaced;
b) A representative or kin of the accused person, according to Point b, Section 1,
Article 76 of this Law, reject or request to have the defense counsel replaced;
7. Competent procedural authorities remove the registration of defense counsel
and inform the defense counsel and detention facility in one of the following events:
a) The defense counsel falls to circumstances as defined in Point 4, Article 72 of
this Law;
b) The laws are violated during the progress of pleading.
Article 79. Responsibilities for informing defense counsels
1. Competent procedural authorities must give the defense counsel an advanced
notice in rational time on the schedule and location for legal proceedings that they are
permitted to engage in according to this Law.
2. If the defense counsel fails to appear despite of the advance notice by
competent procedural authorities, legal proceedings shall occur, unless otherwise
defined in Article 291 of this Law.
Article 80. Rendezvous with arrestees, temporary detainees and suspects or
defendants in detention
1. The defense counsel, to meet the arrestee, temporary detainees and suspects or
defendants in detention, must present the written notice of defense counsel, the lawyer
registration card or the legal assistant’s card or the identity card or the citizen
identification card.
2. Authorities managing arrestees, temporary detainees, suspects or defendants in
detention must inform the defense counsel of the detention facility’s rules and demand
his strict compliance. If the defense counsel's breach of the rules on meeting is found,
such rendezvous shall be immediately terminated and recorded in writing. Such
incident shall be reported to competent individuals for treatments as per the laws.
Article 81. Gathering and submitting evidences, documents and items
related to activities of pleading
1. The defense counsel gathers evidences, documents, items and facts for
pleading according to Point 2, Article 88 of this Law.
2. In each stage of legal proceedings, the defense counsel shall promptly submit
evidences, documents and items for pleading, which he has collected, to competent
procedural authorities for the latter's input of such into the case file. The submission
and receipt of evidences, documents and items must be executed in writing as per
Article 133 of this Law.
3. If the defense counsel fails to gather evidences, documents and items for
pleading, he may request competent procedural authorities to collect such.
Article 82. Read, transcribe and photocopy documents from case files
1. If the defense counsel needs to read, transcribe and photocopy documents from
case files for activities of pleading upon the end of investigations, competent
procedural authorities are responsible for arranging time and location for the defense
counsel to read, transcribe and photocopy documents from case files.
2. The defense counsel, after reading, transcribing and photocopying documents,
must return case files in original conditions to the authorities providing such files. If
documents and case files go astray or become ruined, penalties shall be imposed as per
the nature and severity of violations according to the laws.
Article 83. Defenders of legitimate rights and benefits of persons facing
accusations or requisitions for charges
1. Defenders of legitimate rights and benefits of persons facing accusations or
requisitions for charges are sought by individuals accused or facing requisitions for
charges to protect their legitimate rights and benefits.
2. Defenders of legitimate rights and benefits of accused persons or facing
requisitions for charges may be:
a) Lawyer;
b) People's advocate;
c) Representative;
d) Legal assistant.
3. Defenders of legitimate rights and benefits of accused persons or facing
request for prosecution are entitled to:
a) Present evidences, documents, items and requests;
b) Verify, assess and confer on relevant evidences, documents and items and
request authorized procedural persons to inspect and evaluate such;
c) Be present during the extraction of statements from accused persons or facing
requisitions for charges or, with the consent of the investigators or procurators,
question such persons. After competent individuals end a session of statement
extraction, the defender of legitimate rights and benefits of accused persons or facing
requisitions for charges is entitled to question such persons.
d) Be present during a session of confrontation, identification, recognition of
voice of accused persons or facing requisitions for charges;
dd) Lodge complaints about competent procedural authorities and persons’
decisions and legal proceedings.
4. Defenders of legitimate rights and benefits of accused persons or facing
requisitions for charges bear these duties:
a) Implement measures as stated by the laws to contribute to the clarification of
objective truths of the case;
b) Providing legal aid to accused persons or facing requisitions for charges to
protect their legitimate rights and benefits.
Article 84. Defenders of legitimate rights and benefits of crime victims or
litigants
1. Defenders of legitimate rights and benefits of crime victims or litigants are
sought by such persons to protect their legitimate benefits and rights.
2. Defenders of legitimate rights and benefits of crime victims and litigants may
be:
a) Lawyer;
b) Representative;
c) People’s advocate;
d) Legal assistant.
3. Defenders of legitimate rights and benefits of crime victims and litigants are
entitled to:
a) Present evidences, documents, materials and requests;
b) Verify, assess and confer on relevant evidences, documents and items and
request authorized procedural persons to inspect and evaluate such;
c) Petition for expert examination and valuation;
d) Be present during competent procedural authorities' extraction of statements,
confrontation, identification and recognition of voice of individuals whom they
defend; read, transcribe and photocopy documents from case files, upon the end of
investigations, in connection with the protection of crime victims' and litigants' rights
and interests;
dd) Engage in questioning session and oral arguments in court; read the Court’s
reports;
e) File complaints about competent procedural authorities and persons' decisions
and legal proceedings;
g) Petition for the replacement of authorized procedural persons, expert
witnesses, valuators, interpreters and translators;
h) Appeal against parts of the Court's judgments and rulings related to the rights,
interests and duties of defended persons under 18 years of age or having physical or
mental defects.
4. Defenders of legitimate rights and benefits of crime victims and litigants bear
these duties:
a) Implement measures as defined by the laws to contribute to the clarification of
objective truths of the case;
b) Provide legal aid to crime victims and litigants to protect their legitimate rights
and benefits.
Chapter VI
ATTESTATION AND EVIDENCE
Article 85. Attestation in criminal lawsuits
Competent procedural authorities, when investing, prosecuting and hearing
criminal lawsuits must attest:
1. The existence of the crime, time, space and facts of the crime;
2. The perpetrator of the crime; the presence of guilt, intentional or unintentional
acts; the existence of criminal capacity; purposes and motive of the crime;
3. Facts aggravating and mitigating criminal liabilities of suspects, defendants
and identity traits of suspects and defendants;
4. Nature and severity of damages caused by the crime;
5. Reasons and conditions leading to the crime;
6. Other facts in connection with the exclusion or exemption of criminal
liabilities and impunity.
Article 86. Evidences
Evidences are de facto and collected as per the sequence and formalities defined
by this Law. Evidences are grounds for the determination of a crime, perpetrators of
such crime and other valuable facts for the settlement of the case.
Article 87. Sources of evidences
1. Evidences are collected and determined from these sources:
a) Exhibits;
b) Statements, presentations;
c) Electronic data;
d) Findings of expert examination and valuation;
dd) Records of legal proceedings, investigation, prosecution, adjudication,
sentence enforcement;
e) Results of judicial delegation and other international cooperations;
g) Other documents and items.
2. Palpable things not collected as per the sequence and formalities as per this
Law bear no legal effect and are not evidences for the settlement of criminal lawsuits.
Article 88. Collection of evidences
1. Competent procedural authorities, to collect evidences, are entitled to perform
activities of evidence collection as per this Law, and to request other authorities and
entities to provide evidences, documents, items, electronic data and facts that solve the
case.
2. Defense counsels, to collect evidences, are entitled to meet persons whom they
defend, crime victims, witness testifiers and other individuals knowledgeable about the
case to put questions and hear such persons’ stories related to the case; to request
authorities and entities to provide documents, items and electronic data for pleading.
3. Other participants in legal proceedings, authorities and entities can provide
evidences, documents, items, electronic data and relate matters of the case.
4. Competent procedural authorities, when receiving evidences, documents, items
and electronic data related to the case from individuals as stated in Point 2 and Point 3
of this Article, shall make written records of submission, verify and assess such as per
this Law.
5. In 05 days’ time upon making written records of investigative activities,
collecting and receiving documents on the case, which procurators do not directly
administer according to this Law, investigation authorities and units assigned to
investigate are responsible for transferring such records and documents to the
Procurarcy for the latter’s administration of the establishment of case files. Such
deadline may be extended for at most 15 days in case of objective obstacles. In 03
days' time, the Procuracy affixes seal on records and documents for administration and
have them archived and transferred to investigation authorities and units assigned to
investigate. The delivery of records and documents are executed in writing according
to Article 133 of this Law.
Article 89. Evident materials
Exhibits include tools and means of crimes, objects with criminal traces,
criminals' targets, money or other items as satisfactory evidences of crimes and
malefactors or of significance to the settlement of cases.
Article 90. Preservation of exhibits
1. Exhibits must be preserved intact and protected from loss, disorder and
deterioration. Exhibits are preserved as follows:
a) Sealing of exhibits that must be stored in sealed containers shall be done upon
the acquisition of such items. Sealing and removal of seal are executed in writing and
inputted in case files. Sealing and removal of seal on exhibits abide by the
government's regulations;
b) Exhibits including money, gold, silver, precious metals, precious stones,
antiques, explosives, inflammables, toxic, radioactive substances and military arms
must undergo expert examination upon the acquisition of such items and must be
subsequently transferred in prompt manner to the State Treasury or specialized units
for storage. If exhibits are money, gold, silver, precious metals, precious stones and
antiques with criminal traces, they shall be put in sealed containers as per Point a of
this Section. If exhibits are harmful bacteria, body parts, tissue samples, blood samples
and other samples from human body, they shall be preserved at specialized authorities
according to the laws.
c) If exhibits cannot be transported to competent procedural authorities for
preservation, competent procedural authorities shall give them to lawful owners or
managers of such items or to their kindred or to local authorities or organizations
adjacent to the said exhibits;
d) If exhibits are susceptible to damage or subject to difficult process of
preservation, competent authorities within their powers shall sanction the sale of such
items as per the laws and transfer earnings to a temporary account of a competent
authority in the State Treasury for management;
dd) If exhibits are preserved by competent procedural authorities, the units in
people's police force, People’s Army force and other units assigned to investigate are
responsible for preserving such exhibits during the stage of investigation and
prosecution while authorities for civil sentence enforcement are liable for preserving
them during the stage of adjudication and sentence enforcement.
2. If individuals liable for preserving exhibits brook damage, loss, breakage of
seal, consumption, illegal use, transfer, swap, concealment or destruction of such
exhibits, disciplinary penalties or criminal prosecution shall be imposed according to
the nature and severity of violations as per the laws.
If exhibits are inserted, dwindled, modified, swapped, disposed or broken to
falsify case files, criminal liabilities shall be imposed. Amends for damage of exhibits
are mandatory as per the laws.
Article 91. Deposition by witness testifiers
1. Witness testifiers depose their knowledge of the crimes, cases, kin and their
relationship with accused persons or aggrieved, other witness testifiers and respond to
questions.
2. If witness testifiers state facts whose origin cannot be clarified, such facts shall
not become evidence.
Article 92. Deposition by crime victims
1. Crime victims depose the facts on the crimes, cases, their relationship with
accused persons and respond to inquiries.
2. If circumstances leading to crime victims’ knowledge of certain facts cannot
be clarified, such facts shall not be deemed as evidence.
Article 93. Deposition by civil plaintiffs and civil defendants
1. Civil plaintiffs and civil defendants state facts on amends for damage caused
by crimes.
2. If civil plaintiffs or civil defendants fail to clarify situations leading to their
knowledge of certain facts, such facts shall not be considered as evidence.
Article 94. Deposition by individuals having interests and duties related to
the lawsuit
1. Individuals having duties and interests in connection with the lawsuit state
facts directly related to their duties and benefits.
2. If such individuals fail to explain the origin of their acquisition of certain facts,
such facts shall not be qualified as evidence.
Article 95. Deposition by emergency detainees, accused persons or facing
requisitions for charges, offenders confessing or surrendering, arrestees and
temporary detainees
Emergency detainees, accused persons and facing requisitions for charges,
offenders confessing and surrendering, arrestees and temporary detainees state facts
directly related to their alleged acts of crime.
Article 96. Statements by denouncers and informants
Denouncers and informants state facts related to their denunciation and
information of the crimes.
Article 97. Deposition by witnesses
Witnesses state facts that they perceive from legal proceedings.
Article 98. Deposition by suspects and defendants
1. Suspects and defendants state facts of the cases.
2. The admission of crimes by suspects or defendants, if matching other
evidences, shall be valid evidence.
The admission of crimes by suspects or defendants shall not be the sole evidence
for conviction.
Article 99. Electronic data
1. Electronic data is composed of signals, letters, numbers, images, sound or
similar elements created, stored and transmitted or acquired through electronic media.
2. Electronic data is collected through electronic media, computer networks,
telecommunication networks, transmission lines and other electronic sources.
3. Electronic data constitutes evident values according to the methods of its
creation, storage or transmission; the methods for assurance and maintenance of the
entirety of electronic data; and the methods for identifying creators and other proper
factors.
Article 100. Results of expert examination
1. Results of a expert examination are produced by entities conducting such
examination in writing to give final professional findings on matters examined as per
requisition or petition.
2. Authorities and entities are held liable for conclusions they have made
regarding matters examined as per requisition or petition.
If a team of expert witnesses carry out a expert examination, all of its members
shall affix signatures on the final report. Each person, if providing different opinions,
shall have their findings presented in the final report.
3. If competent procedural authorities disagree with the results of a expert
examination, their reasons must be specified. If results are found unclear or
inadequate, expert examinations shall be furthered or repeated according to this Law.
4. Findings given by expert witnesses who must decline to perform examinations
or submit to replacement shall be deemed null and invalid for the settlement of the
case.
Article 101. Results of valuation
1. Results of valuation are produced by the Panel of valuation in writing to
conclude values of property as per requests.
The Panel of valuation is held liable for its findings on property values.
2. All members of the Panel of valuation must affix signatures on the written
conclusion of valuation. A member of the Panel, if debating property values
determined by the Panel, shall present his findings in the final report.
3. If competent procedural authorities disagree with the findings on valuation,
their reasons must be specified. If findings are found obscure, valuation process shall
be repeated according to this Law.
4. If findings from the Panel of valuation violate this Law or other laws, they
shall be invalid and not usable for the settlement of the case.
Article 102. Records of inspection and verification of criminal information,
charges, investigations, prosecution, adjudication
The facts on inspection and verification of criminal information, charges,
investigations, prosecution and adjudication, which are established and recorded in
writing according to this Law, shall be evidences.
Article 103. Results of legal delegation and international cooperation
The results of legal delegation and international cooperation from competent
foreign authorities, if matching other evidences, shall become evidences.
Article 104. Other documents and items in the case
Case facts available in documents and items from authorities and entities may
become evidences. If such documents and items possess traits as defined in Article 89
of this Law, they shall be exhibits.
Article 105. Acquisition of exhibits
Exhibits must be acquired promptly and fully and their actual conditions must be
described precisely in writing and in case files. If exhibits cannot be put in case files,
they shall be photographed and recorded by camcorder to be stored in case files.
Exhibits must be sealed or preserved as per the laws.
Article 106. Handling of exhibits
1. Investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate make decisions on
the handling of exhibits if the case is dismissed at the stage of investigation. The
procuracy decides the handling of exhibits if the case is dismissed at the stage of
prosecution. The court president governs the handling of exhibits if the case if
dismissed at the preliminary stage of adjudication. The Trial panel make decisions on
the handling of exhibits if the case is heard.
The enforcement of decisions on the handling of exhibits must be executed in
writing.
2. Exhibits are handled as follows:
a) Exhibits including tools or means of crime, objects prohibited from storage
and trading shall be seized, confiscated into the state budget or disposed;
b) Exhibits including money or property gained through criminal acts shall be
seized and confiscated into the state budget.
c) Exhibits that are not valuable and usable shall be seized and disposed.
3. During the processes of investigation, prosecution and adjudication, the
competent authorities and individuals as stated in Section 1 are entitled to
a) Return property seized and detained but not deemed as evidences to legitimate
owners or managers of such in promptly manner;
b) Return evidences to legitimate owners or managers if such return is deemed
not to affect the settlement of the case and the enforcement of sentences;
c) Evidences susceptible to damage or subject to strenuous preservation may be
sold as per the laws. If they are not salable, disposal shall occur;
d) Evidences including wild animals and exotic plants shall be handled by
competent specialized control units immediately after the release of findings of expert
examinations as per the laws.
4. If disputes over the ownership of exhibits exist, the settlement of such shall be
governed by the Civil procedure code.
Article 107. Acquisition of electronic means and data
1. Electronic media must be obtained promptly and fully, described precisely by
actual conditions and sealed upon acquisition. Sealing and unsealing shall abide by the
laws.
If electronic data storing means cannot be seized, competent procedural
authorities shall copy electronic data into another electronic medium for storage of
evidence. Moreover, relevant authorities and entities shall be requested to store and
preserve the entirety of electronic data that competent procedural authorities have
copied, and assume legal liabilities for storage and preservation of such data.
2. Competent procedural authorities, when attaining, intercepting and copying
electronic data from electronic media, computer networks or transmission lines, must
execute written records for case files.
3. Upon receiving competent procedural authorities’ requisition for expert
examination, entities deemed responsible shall restore, search and examine electronic
data.
4. Only copies of electronic data shall be restored, sought and examined. Results
from restoration, search and expert examination must be converted to readable, audible
or visible formats.
5. Electronic media and data are preserved as evidences according to this Law.
Electronic data, when displayed as evidences, must come with its storage means or
copies.
Article 108. Inspection and evaluation of evidences
1. Each evidence must be inspected and evaluated to verify its validity,
authenticity and connection with the case. The verification of evidences acquired must
be adequate to settle criminal cases.
2. Authorized procedural persons within their powers and duties must inspect and
evaluate all evidences of the case in fully, unbiased and thorough manners.
Chapter VII
PREVENTIVE AND COERCIVE MEASURES
Heading I. PREVENTIVE MEASURES
Article 109. Preventive measures
1. Competent procedural authorities and persons within their powers can
implement measures of emergency custody, arrest, temporary detainment, detention,
bail, surety, residential confinement, exit restriction, in order to preclude crime, to
prevent accused persons from evidently obstructing investigations, prosecution,
adjudication or from committing other crimes, or to assure the enforcement of
sentences.
2. The apprehension of persons refers to emergency custody, arrest of
perpetrators of crimes in flagrante or wanted fugitives, capture of suspects and
defendants for detention, and arrest of persons for extradition.
Article 110. Emergency custody
1. Emergency custody of a person is permitted in one of the following events:
a) There are substantial evidences that such person is going to commit a horrific
or extremely severe felony;
b) The accomplice committing the crime, or the perpetrator of the crime, who
was identified by the crime victim or a person at the crime scene, must be obstructed
from escape;
c) A person carrying criminal traces or a suspect whose residence, workplace or
tools contain criminal traces must be obstructed promptly from escaping or disposing
evidences.
2. The following individuals are entitled to issue an order of emergency custody:
a) Head and vice heads of investigation authorities;
b) Heads of independent units at regiment level and equivalent ones,
commanding officers of border protection posts; commanders of border protection
units at border gates, captains of border protection units in provinces and centrally-
affiliated cities, heads of border reconnaissance departments and drug and crime
departments of the border protection force, heads of special services against drug and
crime of the border protection force; zone commanders of maritime police force, heads
of specialized and legal departments of the maritime police force, heads of special
service of drug enforcement of the maritime police force; heads of zonal bureaus of
fisheries resources surveillances;
c) Commanding pilots and captains of aircrafts and ships leaving airports or sea
ports.
3. The order for emergency custody must specify full name and address of the
detainee, reason and grounds for detainment according to Section 1 of this Article and
other stipulations in Section 2, Article 132 of this Law. The enforcement of a
emergency custody order must abide by Section 2, Article 113 of this Law.
4. Upon holding persons in emergency custody or taking in emergency detainees,
investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate, within 12 hours, must take
statements promptly, and individuals as stated in Point a and Point b, Section 2 of this
Article must issue a temporary detainment order, arrest warrant and discharge order on
the detainee. The emergency custody order and relevant documents must be delivered
promptly to the equivalent Procuracy or competent ones for ratification.
Individuals as per Point c, Section 2 of this Article, after holding persons in
emergency custody, must deliver by force detainees and bring emergency custody
documents to investigation authorities adjacent to the first airport or sea port where the
airplane or ship lands or docks, when returning.
Upon taking in detainees, investigation authorities must take statements promptly
within 12 hours, and individuals as per Point a, Section 2 of this Article must issue a
temporary detainment order, arrest warrant or release order on the emergency detainee.
The emergency custody order and relevant documents must be delivered to the
equivalent Procuracy for approval.
The emergency custody order must specify full name and address of the detainee,
reason and grounds for detainment according to Section 1 of this Article and Section 2,
Article 132 of this Law.
5. A written request for the Procuracy's approval of an emergency custody order
is composed of:
a) The letter of request for the Procuracy’s approval of the emergency custody
order;
b) The written order for emergency custody, arrest warrant against emergency
detainees, temporary detainment order;
c) The written record of emergency custody;
d) The written record of emergency detainee’s deposition;
dd) Evidences, documents and items related to emergency custody.
6. The procuracy must strictly administer the grounds for detainment as per
Section 1 of this Article. The procurator, if necessary, shall meet the emergency
detainee before approving or denying the order for emergency custody. The written
record of the emergency detainee’s deposition, as made by the procurator, must be
retained in the case file.
Upon receiving the written request for approval of emergency custody order, the
Procuracy must decide to approve or deny such order in 12 hours. If The procuracy
denies the emergency custody order, the individual making such order and
investigation authority taking in the detainee must immediately discharge the detainee.
Article 111. Arrest of perpetrators of crimes in flagrante delicto
1. Everyone is permitted to arrest and delivery by force a person, who is caught
in and immediately after the act of committing a crime and chased, to the nearest
police station, Procuracy or People’s committee. The said authorities, when taking in
the detainee, must make written record of the incident and delivery by force the
detainee or report to competent investigation authorities in prompt manner.
2. Everyone is permitted to disarm the detainee when capturing a person caught
in the act of coming a crime.
3. If communal, ward or town police unit or police station detects, arrests and
detains a perpetrator of a crime in flagrante, it shall temporarily seize weaponry, retain
relevant documents and items, make written record of arrest, take initial statements,
protect crime scene as per the laws, deliver by force the detainee or report to
competent investigation authorities in prompt manner.
Article 112. Apprehension of wanted persons
1. Everyone is permitted to capture and deliver by force a wanted person to the
nearest police station, Procuracy or People’s committee. The said authorities, when
taking in the arrestee, must make written record of the incident and deliver by force the
arrestee and report to competent authorities in prompt manner.
2. Everyone, when capturing a wanted person, is permitted to disarm such
person.
3. If communal, ward or town police unit or police station detects, arrests or takes
in, it shall temporarily seize weaponry, retain relevant documents and items, make
written record of arrest, take initial statements, protect crime scene as per the laws,
deliver by force the arrestee or report to competent investigation authorities in prompt
manner.
Article 113. Apprehension of suspects and defendants for detention
1. The following individuals are entitled to order and decide the apprehension of
suspects and defendants for detention:
a) Heads and vice heads of investigation authorities. In this event, the arrest
warrant must be approved by the equivalent Procuracy prior to apprehension;
b) Head and vice heads of a People’s Procuracy, and head and vice heads of a
Military procuracy;
c) Court presidents, Vice court presidents of People’s Courts, and Court
presidents and Vice court presidents of Courts-martial; trial panel.
2. The arrest warrant and written approval of the arrest warrant must specify full
name and address of the arrestee, reasons and other details as per Point 2, Article 132
of this Law.
Enforcers of an arrest warrant must read out the warrant, explain its content,
arrestee's duties and rights, make written record of the arrest, and give the warrant to
the arrestee.
The apprehension of a person at his place of residence must be witnessed by a
representative of communal, ward or town authorities and other individuals. The
apprehension of a person at his place of work or education must be witnessed by a
representative of the place of work or education. The apprehension of a person at other
places must be witnessed by a representative of communal, ward or town authorities.
3. Apprehension must not occur at night, except for criminals in flagrante or
wanted persons.
Article 114. Essential actions upon emergency custody, arrest or intake of
arrestees and detainees
1. Upon holding a person in emergency custody, arresting persons or taking in
arrestees and detainees, investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate must
take statements promptly and, within 12 hours, make decisions on temporary
detainment or discharge of the arrestee.
2. Investigation authorities, after taking in and acquiring statements from wanted
arrestees, must inform the authority issuing the wanted notice for the transfer of the
arrestee. After taking in the arrestee, the authority issuing the wanted notice must
promptly issue a decision on terminating the wanted notice.
If the authority issuing the wanted notice fails to attain the arrestee promptly, the
authority taking in the arrestee, after taking statements, shall issue a decision on
temporary detainment and inform the former. If the authority issuing the wanted notice
still does not acquire the arrestee upon the end of the temporary detainment, the latter
shall extend the time of detainment and submit the written extension of the time of
detainment and relevant documents to the equivalent Procuracy for approval.
If failing to acquire the arrestee promptly, the authority issuing the wanted notice
and authorized for detention must issue a temporary detention order approved by the
equivalent Procuracy to the investigation authority taking in the arrestee. Upon
receiving the detention order, the investigation authority taking in the arrestee must
delivery by force such arrestee to the nearest detention center in prompt manner.
3. If several wanted notices are issued against an arrestee, the authority taking in
the arrestee transfers such arrestee to the nearest authority that issued a wanted notice.
Article 115. Written records of emergency custody and arrest
1. Enforcers of detainment orders or arrest warrants must execute all matters in
writing.
The written record must specify time, date and location of detainment or arrest
and where the record is made. It must indicate actions, circumstances during the
enforcement of the detainment order or arrest warrant, documents and items seized,
health conditions and opinions or complaints of detainees and arrestees and other
details as per Article 133 of this Law.
The record shall be read out to the detainee or arrestee and the witnesses. The
detainee, arrestee, enforcers of the detainment order or arrest warrant and witnesses
must affix signatures onto the record. If a person as stated above has different opinions
or disagrees with the record, he is permitted to enter such opinions or disagreement
into the record and affix signature below.
The temporary seizure of documents and items from detainees and arrestees must
abide by this Law.
2. A written record shall be made upon the transfer of the detainee or arrestee.
Apart from details as defined in Section 1 of this Article, the written record must
elaborate the transfer of the deposition record, documents and items acquired, health
condition of detainees and arrestees and facts occurring upon the transfer.
Article 116. Notice of emergency custody and arrest
The individual issuing the detainment order or arrest warrant, after apprehending
a person, shall inform his family, workplace, educational facility or local authorities in
the commune, ward or town where he resides.
Investigation authorities, in 24 hours after taking in detainees and arrestees, must
inform their family members, workplace, educational facility, local authorities in the
commune, ward or town where he resides. If detainees and arrestees are foreigners,
Vietnamese diplomatic authorities must be informed to deliver notices to diplomatic
missions of countries whose citizens are detained or arrested.
If such notice obstructs the pursuit of suspects or investigative activities,
investigation authorities taking in detainees and arrestees shall release notices after
such obstructions suspend to exist.
Article 117. Temporary detainment
1. Temporary detainment may apply to persons held in emergency custody or
arrested against crimes in flagrante, malefactors confessing or surrendering or persons
arrested as per wanted notices.
2. The individuals authorized to issue detainment orders as per Section 2 of
Article 110 of this Law are entitled to decide temporary detainment.
A decision on temporary detainment must specify full name and address of the
person on temporary detainment, reason, time, starting and final date of temporary
detainment and details as per Point 2, Article 132 of this Law. The decision on
temporary detainment must be given to the person on temporary detainment.
3. Enforcers of decisions on temporary detainment must inform persons on
temporary detainment and explain their duties and rights as per Article 59 of this Law.
4. The individual issuing the decision on temporary detainment, in 12 hours upon
making such decision, must send the decision and supporting documents to the
equivalent Procuracy or a competent Procuracy. If the temporary detainment is found
unjustified or unnecessary, the Procuracy issues a decision on annulling the decision
on temporary detainment. The individual issuing the decision on temporary detainment
must immediately discharge the person on temporary detainment.
Article 118. Time spent in temporary detainment
1. The time limit for temporary detainment is 03 days after investigation
authorities and units assigned to investigate take in or deliver by force detainees and
arrestees to their units, or upon investigation authorities’ issuance of temporary
detainment decisions against malefactors confessing or surrendering.
2. The individual deciding temporary detainment, if necessary, can extend the
time limit for temporary detainment for at most 03 more days. The individual deciding
temporary detainment, in special events, can give second extension of the time limit
for temporary detainment for at most 03 more days.
Extension of temporary detainment must be approved by the equivalent
Procuracy or a competent Procuracy. The procuracy, in 12 hours upon receiving a
written request for temporary detainment extension, must approve or deny such
request.
3. If grounds for prosecution do not suffice during the period of temporary
detainment, investigation authorities and units assigned must promptly discharge the
detainees on temporary detainment. Otherwise, the Procuracy, which has extended
temporary detainment, shall discharge such detainees in prompt manner.
4. The time spent in detainment shall be subtracted from the time spent in
detention. One day spent in detainment gives one day’s credit toward the time passed
in detention.
Article 119. Detention
1. Detention may apply to suspects and defendants perpetrating a horrific or
extremely severe felony.
2. Detention may apply to suspects or defendants committing a felony or
misdemeanor punishable with incarceration for more than 02 years as per the Criminal
Code if grounds show that:
a) Such persons commit crimes despite of existing preventive measures against
them;
b) No definite place of residence is known or a defendant's identity is
unidentified;
c) Such persons have absconded and have been arrested as per wanted notices or
are evidently going to vanish;
d) Such persons continue criminal acts or are evidently going to continue crimes;
d) Such persons commit acts of bribing, coercing or inciting other individuals to
give false statements or documents, destroying or forging case evidences, documents
and item, shifting property related to the case away, threatening, repressing or
avenging witness testifiers, crime victims, denouncers and their kin.
3. Detention may apply to suspects or defendants committing a misdemeanor
punishable with maximum 02-year imprisonment as per the Criminal Code if they
continue criminal acts or are fugitives arrested as per wanted notices.
4. If suspects or defendants have clear information of residence and identity and
are gestating, raising a child less than 36 months of age, suffering from senility or
serious diseases, detention shall be replaced by other preventive measures, except that:
a) They abscond and get arrested as per wanted notices;
b) They continue criminal acts;
d) They commit acts of bribing, coercing or inciting other individuals to give
false statements or documents, destroying or forging case evidences, documents and
item, shifting property related to the case away, threatening, repressing or avenging
witness testifiers, crime victims, denouncers or their kin.
d) Suspects or defendants breach national security and detention evidently
prevents them from transgressing national security.
5. Authorized individuals as defined in Section 1, Article 113 of this Law are
entitled to issue orders and decisions on detention. Detention orders made by
individuals as defined in Point a, Section 1, Article 113 of this Law must be approved
by the equivalent Procuracy prior to the enforcement of such orders. The procuracy, in
03 days upon receiving a detention order, written request for approval and relevant
documents, must approve or deny such request. The procuracy must return documents
to investigation authorities upon the former’s completion of the ratification process.
6. Investigation authorities must inspect identity papers of persons in detention
and inform their family members, workplace, educational facility or local authorities
in the commune, ward or town where they reside.
Article 120. Attention to kindred and preservation of property for persons
in temporary detainment or detention
1. If persons on temporary detainment or in detention live with disabled, senile or
mentally ill individuals left unattended, the authorities deciding temporary detainment
or detention shall assign other relatives to provide them with care. If no relative exists,
the authorities deciding temporary detainment or detention shall put them into care by
local authorities in the commune, ward or town where they reside. The care of
children of persons on temporary detainment or in detention shall comply with the
Law on enforcement of temporary detainment and detention.
2. If persons in temporary detainment or detention own houses or property left
unattended, the authorities deciding temporary detainment or detention shall
implement methods of preservation.
3. The authorities deciding temporary detainment or detention shall give persons
on temporary detainment or in detention a notice of the attention to their kindred and
property. Such notice shall be executed in writing and stored in case files.
Article 121. Bail
1. Surety is a preventive measure in lieu of detention. Investigation authorities,
procuracies and Courts shall consider the nature and severity of acts against the society
and suspects’ or defendants’ personal records and decide to approve or refuse bail.
2. Organizations may bail suspects or defendants, who are their employees. An
organization undertaking bail shall present a written promise that bears the signature of
its head.
Individuals who are at least 18 years of age, have good records, abide strictly by
the laws, gain stable incomes and are capable for overseeing persons on bail can
undertake bail for suspects or defendants who are their kin. In this event, bail must be
undertaken by at least 02 individuals. An individual undertaking bail must present a
written promise endorsed by his workplace or educational facility or local authorities
in the commune, ward or town where he resides.
The written promise from organizations or individuals undertaking bail must
guarantee to prevent suspects or defendants from violating duties as prescribed in
Section 3 of this Article. Organizations and individuals undertaking bail shall be
informed of case facts in connection with their undertaking of bail.
3. Suspects and defendants on bail must guarantee their execution of these duties
in writing:
a) Appear as per a subpoena, unless force majeure or objective obstacles occur;
b) Not to abscond or continue criminal acts;
d) Not to commit acts of bribing, coercing or inciting other individuals to give
false statements or documents, destroying or forging case evidences, documents and
item, shifting property related to the case away, threatening, repressing or avenging
witness testifiers, crime victims, denouncers and their kin.
If suspects and defendants violate duties guaranteed in this Section, they shall be
put in detention.
4. Authorized individuals as defined in Section 1, Article 113 of this Law, and
Presiding judges are entitled to make decisions on bail. The decisions made by
individuals as defined in Point a, Section 1, Article 113 of this Law shall be ratified by
the equivalent Procuracy prior to the enforcement of such decisions.
5. The length of bail time shall not exceed the time of investigation, prosecution
or adjudication as per this Law. Bail time for persons sentenced to imprisonment shall
not exceed the time from conviction to enforcement of incarceration sentence.
6. Organizations and individuals undertaking bail but failing to make suspects or
defendants conform to duties guaranteed shall incur fines subject to the nature and
severity of violations as per the laws.
Article 122. Surety
1. Surety is a preventive measure in lieu of detention. Investigation authorities,
procuracies and Courts shall consider the nature and severity of acts against the society
and suspects’ or defendants’ personal records and decide to allow them or their kin to
undertake surety.
2. Suspects and defendants on surety must guarantee their execution of these
duties in writing:
a) Appear as per a subpoena, unless force majeure or objective obstacles occur;
b) Not to abscond or continue criminal acts;
d) Not to commit acts of bribing, coercing or inciting other individuals to give
false statements or documents, destroying or forging case evidences, documents and
item, shifting property related to the case away, threatening, repressing or avenging
witness testifiers, crime victims, denouncers and their kin.
If suspects and defendants violate duties guaranteed in this Section, they shall be
put in detention and the amount of money as surety shall be confiscated into the state
budget.
3. Authorized individuals as defined in Section 1, Article 113 of this Law, and
Presiding judges are entitled to make decisions on surety. The decisions made by
individuals as defined in Point a, Section 1, Article 113 of this Law shall be ratified by
the equivalent Procuracy prior to the enforcement of such decisions.
4. The length of surety time shall not exceed the time of investigation,
prosecution or adjudication as per this Law. Surety time for persons sentenced to
imprisonment shall not exceed the time from conviction to enforcement of
incarceration sentence. The procuracy or Court is liable for returning the money as
surety to suspects and defendants abiding by all duties guaranteed.
5. Kindred of suspects and defendants permitted by investigation authorities,
procuracies or Courts to undertake surety must engage in a written promise to restrain
suspects and defendants from violating duties as per Section 2 of this Article. If
violations occur, the surety money shall be confiscated into the state budget. Such
individuals, upon making written promises, shall be informed of case facts related to
suspects or defendants.
6. Minister of Public Security leads and cooperates with Head of Supreme
People’s Procuracy, Court president and Minister of Defense to regulates details of
sequence, formalities, level of surety money, impoundment, return, confiscation of
surety money into the state budget.
Article 123. Residential confinement
1. Residential confinement is a preventive measure that may apply to suspects
and defendants having definite place of residence and records assuring their presence
as per subpoena by investigation authorities, procuracies or Courts.
2. Suspects and defendants confined to a specific place of residence must
guarantee their execution of these duties in writing:
a) Not to be absent from the specified place of resident without the permission by
the authority issuing residential confinement orders;
b) Be present as per a subpoena, unless force majeure or objective obstacles
occur;
b) Not to abscond or continue criminal acts;
d) Not to commit acts of bribing, coercing or inciting other individuals to give
false statements or documents, destroying or forging case evidences, documents and
item, shifting property related to the case away, threatening, repressing or avenging
witness testifiers, crime victims, denouncers and their kin.
If suspects and defendants violate duties guaranteed in this Section, they shall be
put in detention.
3. Authorized individuals as defined in Section 1, Article 113 of this Law,
Presiding judges and commanding officers of border protection posts are entitled to
issue residential confinement orders.
4. The length of time of residential confinement shall not exceed the time of
investigation, prosecution or adjudication as per this Law. The length of time of
residential confinement against persons sentenced to imprisonment shall not exceed
the time from conviction to enforcement of incarceration sentence.
5. The individuals issuing residential confinement orders must inform local
authorities in the commune, ward or town where suspects or defendants reside, or
military units that manage them of the enforcement of the measure. Moreover,
suspects and defendants shall be transferred to such local authorities or military units
to oversee and supervise them.
If suspects and defendants ought to temporarily leave the specified place of
residence due to force majeure or objective obstacles, they must obtain permission
from local authorities in the commune, ward and town where they reside, or military
units that manage them. Permission must also be granted by individuals issuing
residential confinement orders.
6. If suspects and defendants violate duties guaranteed, local authorities near
their place of residence or military units managing them must report to the authority
issuing residential confinement orders for intra vires measures.
Article 124. Exit restriction
1. Exit restriction may apply to the following persons when there are evident
grounds that their exit from the country denotes evasion:
a) Persons denounced or facing requisitions for charges are suspected of crimes
according to sufficient grounds and must be detained from absconding or destroying
evidences
b) Suspects and defendants.
2. Authorized individuals as defined in Section 1, Article 113 of this Law, and
Presiding judges are entitled to make decisions on exit restriction. Decisions on exit
restriction made by individuals as defined in Point a, Section 1, Article 113 of this
Law shall be ratified by the equivalent Procuracy prior to the enforcement of such
decisions.
3. The length of exit restriction time must not exceed the time limit for
processing of criminal information, pressing of charges, investigation, prosecution and
adjudication as per this Law. Exit restriction time against persons sentenced to
imprisonment shall not exceed the time from conviction to enforcement of custodial
sentence.
Article 125. Termination or alteration of preventive measures
1. Every preventive measure in effect must be terminated in one of the following
events:
a) Decision not to institute criminal proceedings;
b) Terminate investigation and dismiss lawsuit;
b) Terminate investigation and lawsuit against suspects;
d) The Court declares a defendant not guilty, exempt from criminal liability,
penalty or custodial sentence but imposes a suspended sentence or warning penalty,
fine, non-custodial rehabilitation.
2. Investigation authorities, procuracies, and Courts shall terminate or replace
preventive measures, if deemed superfluous, with other preventive measures.
The procuracy decides to terminate or replace preventive measures that it has
approved during the stage of investigation. The authority requesting approval of a
preventive measure excluding temporary detainment sanctioned by The procuracy, in
10 days prior to its loss of effect, must inform The procuracy of such expiration to
have it terminated or replaced.
Heading II. COERCIVE MEASURES
Article 126. Coercive measures
Competent procedural authorities and persons can implement measures of
coercive delivery, forced escort, property distrainment or freezing of accounts, in order
to maintain intra vires activities of charge filing, investigation, prosecution,
adjudication, sentence enforcement.
Article 127. Coercive delivery and forced escort
1. Coercive delivery may apply to persons held in emergency custody or facing
charges.
2. Forced escort may apply to:
a) Witness testifiers absent despite of subpoenas not due to force majeure or
objective obstacle;
b) Crime victims, not due to force majeure or objective obstacles, refusing expert
examination postulated by competent procedural authorities;
c) Persons facing denunciation or requisitions for charges and, through sufficient
evidences, found involved in criminal acts leading to charges, but resisting subpoena
not because of force majeure or objective obstacle.
3. Investigators, heads of units assigned to investigate, procurators, Presiding
judges, and trial panel are entitled to make decisions on coercive delivery and forced
escort.
4. A decision on coercive delivery or forced escort must specify full name, date
of birth, residential place of the person delivered or escorted by force; time and
location for the appearance of such person and other details as stated in Section 2,
Article 132 of this Law.
5. Enforcers of decisions on coercive delivery or forced escort shall read and
explain such decisions and execute written records of coercive delivery or forced
escort as per Article 133 of this Law.
Competent people’s police force and people’s military force shall be responsible
for enforcing the decisions on coercive delivery and forced escort.
6. The coercive delivery or forced escort of people must not commence at night.
Senile or seriously ill persons with medical facilities’ affirmation shall not be delivered
and escorted by force.
Article 128. Distrainment of property
1. Distrainment of property only applies to suspects and defendants whose
offences are punishable by mulct or confiscation of property as per the Criminal Code,
or applies to guarantee compensations over damage.
2. Authorized individuals as defined in Section 1, Article 113 of this Law, and
Presiding judges are entitled to make decisions on distrainment of property. Such
decisions made by individuals as defined in Point a, Section 1, Article 113 of this Law
shall be ratified by the equivalent Procuracy prior to the enforcement of decisions.
3. Only parts of property proportionate to probable degree of fine, seizure or
compensation for damage shall be distrained. The property distrained shall be
preserved by owners or their kin or legitimate managers. Persons, if consuming,
transferring, swapping, concealing or destroying distrained property assigned to them,
shall incur criminal liabilities as per the Criminal Code.
4. Distrainment of property must be done in the presence of:
a) Suspects or defendants or their representatives or family members at least 18
years of age;
b) Representatives of local authorities in the commune, ward or town where
distrained property are located;
c) Witnesses.
Individuals distraining property shall execute written records, specify names and
conditions of each property distrained. Such written records shall be made according
to Article 178 of this Law, read out to those present and bear their signatures. Opinions
and complaints by persons stated in Point a of this Section against distrainment shall
be entered into written records and undersigned by such persons and individuals
distraining property.
A record of distrainment shall be executed in four originals. One is given to
persons stated in Point a of this Section immediately after distrainment completes. One
is given to the local authority at the commune, ward or town where distrained property
are located. One is delivered to the equivalent Procuracy. One is stored in the case file.
Article 129. Freezing of accounts
1. Account freeze only applies to suspects and defendants whose offences are
punishable by mulct or confiscation of property as per the Criminal Code, or applies to
guarantee compensations over damage upon the detection of such persons’ accounts in
a credit institution or state treasury. Account freeze also applies to other people’s
accounts evidently found to hold amounts involved in criminal acts of accused
persons.
2. Authorized individuals as defined in Section 1, Article 113 of this Law, and
Presiding judges are entitled to make decisions on account freeze. Such decisions
made by individuals as defined in Point a, Section 1, Article 113 of this Law shall be
ratified by the equivalent Procuracy prior to the enforcement of decisions.
3. Only amounts proportionate to probable degree of fine, seizure or
compensation for damage shall be frozen. Persons assigned to freeze and manage
accounts but defreezing such accounts shall incur criminal liabilities as per the
Criminal Code.
4. Competent presiding authorities, when freezing accounts, must give written
decisions on account freeze to the credit institution or state treasury managing the
accounts of accused persons or other people’s accounts involved in criminal acts of
persons facing charges. The delivery of the account freeze order must be executed in
writing according to Article 178 of this Law.
The credit institution or state treasury managing accounts of arrestees, detainees,
suspects, defendants or other people's accounts involved in criminal acts of arrestees,
detainees or defendants, upon receiving the order of account freeze, shall immediately
freeze such accounts and execute written records.
A written record of account freeze shall be executed in five originals. One is
given to the person facing charges. One is given to other people involved in the
accused person. One is given the equivalent Procuracy. One is stored in the case file.
One is retained by the credit institution or state treasury.
Article 130. Termination of property distrainment and account freeze
1. Property distrainment and account freeze in force must be terminated in one of
the following events:
a) Suspension of investigation or lawsuit;
b) Suspension of investigation or lawsuit against suspects;
c) The Court declares defendants not guilty;
d) Suspects are not penalized to incur fine, property distrainment or
compensation for damage.
2. Investigation authorities, procuracies and Courts terminate property
distrainment and account freeze deemed unnecessary.
The procuracy must be informed of the termination or replacement of measures
for property distrainment or account freeze during the stage of investigation and
prosecution prior to the issuance of decisions.
Chapter VIII
CASE FILE, PROCEDURAL DOCUMENT, TIME LIMIT AND
PROCEDURAL EXPENSES
Article 131. Case file
1. Investigation authorities, when filing charges, must establish case files.
2. The case file comprises:
a) Orders, decisions and requests by investigation authorities and procuracies;
b) Procedural records made by investigation authorities and procuracies;
c) Evidences and documents related to the case.
3. Evidences and documents acquired by The procuracy or Court during the stage
of prosecution and adjudication must be put into the case file.
4. Documents enclosed to the case file must be summarized. Summarization of
such documents must specify names, numbers and properties of documents (if
available). Documents added to the case file shall be summarized. The case file must
be managed, retained and used as per the laws.
Article 132. Procedural documents
1. Procedural documents include orders, decisions, requests, investigation
findings, charges, judgments and other procedural documents universally formatted for
procedural activities.
2. Procedural documents must bear:
a) Number, issue date and issuing place of the procedural document;
c) Grounds for the issuance of the procedural document;
c) Contents of the procedural document;
d) Full name, position and signature of the individual issuing the procedural
document and official seal.
Article 133. Records
1. Procedural activities must executed in written records universally formatted.
A written record shall specify location, time, date , starting and ending time,
details of the procedural activity, individuals authorized to institute legal procedure,
participants or persons involved in legal proceedings, their complaints, petitions or
recommendations.
2. The record must bear signatures of the individuals as defined in this Law. Such
individuals affix signatures to endorse the record’s details modified, added, removed
or erased.
If participants in legal proceedings do not sign the record, the individual making
such record shall write down reasons and ask witnesses to sign the record.
If participants in legal proceedings are illiterate, the individual making the record
shall read it out in the presence of witnesses. The record must bear fingerprints of
participants in legal proceedings and signatures of witnesses.
If a participant in legal proceedings cannot sign the record due to their mental or
physical defects or other reasons, the individual making the record shall read it out in
the presence of witnesses and other participants. The record must bear signatures of
witnesses.
Article 134. Timing
1. Timing as per this Law is based on hours, days, months and years. Night
commences at 22 o’clock and ends at 06 o’clock in the next morning.
A day-based time limit ends at 24 o’clock on the final day of such limit.
A month-based time limit ends on the repeated date in the following month or, if
the starting date does not reappear, on the final date of the month. If the final date falls
in a regulated day-off, the immediate succeeding work day shall be the final date of the
time limit.
A time limit for temporary detainment or detention ends on the date as specified
in the order or decision. A month in a month-based time limit has 30 days.
2. A time limit for a petition or document sent by post shall commence on the
date shown in the postmark of the sender's postal service provider. A time limit for a
petition or document sent to a detention facility shall commence when the head of the
detainment facility or the chief supervisor of the detainment cells in a border
protection post or the warder of a temporary or permanent detention facility receives
such petition or document.
Article 135. Procedural expenses
1. Procedural expenses are composed of Court fee, administrative fees and
procedural expenditure.
2. Court fee includes fees for criminal and civil first-instance and appellate
Courts hearing criminal cases.
3. Administrative fees include payables for copies of judgments, decisions and
other documents from competent procedural authorities and other payables as per the
laws.
4. Procedural expenditure comprises:
a) Payables for witness testifiers, interpreters, translators, defense counsels
appointed;
b) Payables for expert examination and valuation;
c) Other payables as per the laws.
Article 136. Responsibilities for settling procedural expenditure and
administrative fees
1. The expenditure as defined in Section 4, Article 135 of this Law is paid by
authorities or individuals requisitioning activities or assigned to make payments. If a
governmental legal aid center appoints a defense counsel, it shall cover relevant
expense.
2. The person convicted or the government incurs the Court fee as per the laws.
The person convicted must incur the Court fee according to the Court’s rulings. The
amount of Court fee and calculation grounds shall be specified in the Court’s
judgments and rulings.
3. The crime victim, if petitioning for the lawsuit, shall incur the Court fee upon
the Court’s declaration of the defendant’s innocence or upon the suspension of the
lawsuit as per the stipulations in Section 2, Article 155 of this Law.
4. The coverage of administrative fees and expenses for procedural activities
requested by participants in legal proceedings abides by the laws.
Article 137. Issuance, transfer, delivery, posting or announcement of
procedural documents
1. Procedural documents are issued, delivered, posted or announced in the
following manners:
a) By hand;
b) By post;
c) At public places;
d) Through mass media.
2. The issuance, delivery, posting or announcement of procedural documents
must abide by this laws.
Article 138. Procedures for issuing and delivering procedural documents by
hand
1. The individuals issuing and delivering procedural documents shall directly
pass such documents to the recipients. The recipients must sign a record or delivery
journal. The time limit for legal procedure commences on the date of the recipient’s
affixture of signature onto the record or delivery journal.
2. If the recipient is absent, procedural procedures may be given to his family
members with adequate legal capacity and such persons must undertake to hand over
documents to the recipient promptly. The date of the family member’s affixture of
signature is the issue date or sending date of the procedural documents.
If procedural documents cannot be delivered to the recipient as stipulated in this
Section, such documents may be handed to local authorities in the commune, ward or
town where the recipient resides or his workplace or education facility and forwarded
to the recipient. The authorities and organizations concerned must report to the
competent procedural authorities making requests about the outcome of the issuance
and delivery of procedural documents. The date of the family member’s affixture of
signature is the issue date or sending date of the procedural documents.
3. If the recipient is absent or his address is unknown, the individuals issuing or
delivering documents must execute a written record of their failure confirmed by the
representative of authorities near the recipient’s dwelling, or his workplace or
educational facility.
If the recipient disapproves delivery of procedural documents, the individuals
issuing or delivering such documents must execute written records of the recipient's
refusal, which shall be confirmed by the representative of authorities near the
recipient’s dwelling, or his workplace or educational facility.
4. If procedural documents are delivered to an organization, they shall be handed
to the representative of such organization, who affixes his signature. The time limit for
legal procedure commences on the date of the said representative's affixture of
signature onto the record or delivery journal.
Article 139. Procedures for mailing procedural documents
Procedural documents sent by post must be delivered via registered mail with
the recipient's endorsement. The documents endorsed shall be forwarded to competent
procedural authorities. The time limit for legal procedure commences on the date of
the recipient’s endorsement of his receipt of procedural documents.
Article 140. Procedures for posting procedural documents publicly
1. Proclamation of procedural documents is done when the recipient’s address or
location is unknown.
2. Procedural documents are publicly posted at the People’s committee at the
commune, ward or town where the recipient’s last known dwelling is situated or his
last known workplace or educational facility.
Procedural documents must be publicly posted in at least 15 days from the initial
date of proclamation. Proclamation shall be executed in a written record that specifies
the date of posting.
The time limit for legal procedure commences on the final date of proclamation.
Article 141. Procedures for announcing procedural documents through mass
media
1. Procedural documents are announced through mass media when proclamation
of such documents are ineffective or other circumstances occur as per the laws.
2. Documents announced through mass media shall be posted on 03 consecutive
issues of a daily newspaper run by the state and broadcasted by a governmental radio
or television station three times per day in 03 continuous days.
The time limit for legal procedure commences on the final date of announcement.
Article 142. Responsibilities for issuing, delivering, posting and announcing
procedural documents
1. Competent procedural authorities and persons shall issue, deliver, post or
announce procedural documents to participants in legal proceedings and concerned
authorities and entities according to this Law.
2. If an individual does not fulfill or complete his assignments to issue deliver,
post or announce procedural documents as per this Law, he shall incur disciplinary or
administrative penalties according to the nature and severity of his violations as per the
laws.
PART TWO
CRIMINAL CHARGE AND INVESTIGATION
Chapter IX
CRIMINAL CHARGE
Article 143. Justifications of criminal charges
A charge shall only be filed upon the ascertainment of signs of criminal
activities. Signs of criminal activities are ascertained by:
1. A person’s denunciation;
2. Information disclosed by an organization or individual;
3. Information provided through mass media;
4. A governmental authority’s requisitions for charges;
5. Competent procedural authorities' direct exposure of signs of criminal
activities;
6. A perpetrator’s confession.
Article 144. Denunciations, criminal information disclosed and requisitions
for charges
1. Denunciation refers to an individual’s detection and denouncement of
activities denoting crimes to competent authorities.
2. Criminal information disclosed refers to the data on activities denoting crimes
as disclosed by authorities, organizations and individuals to competent authorities or
the criminal information disclosed through mass media.
3. Requisitions for charges refers to a competent governmental authority's written
requisition enclosed with relevant evidences and documents to investigation
authorities and procuracies authorized to consider and settle cases with signs of
criminal activities0}
4. Denunciation or criminal information may be made or given verbally or in
writing.
5. If a person makes or provides false denunciation or criminal information, he
shall incur disciplinary or administrative penalties or face criminal prosecution subject
to the nature and severity of violations as per the laws.
Article 145. Responsibilities and authority to receive and process
denunciations, criminal information disclosed and requisitions for charges
1. All denunciations, information and charge requests must be fully acquired and
processed in timely manner. The authorities shall be responsible for receiving and not
rejecting denunciations, information and requisitions.
2. The authorities responsible for receiving denunciations, criminal information
disclosed and requisitions for charges shall include:
a) Investigation authorities and procuracies that obtain denunciations,
information and requisitions;
b) Other authorities that take in denunciations and criminal information
disclosed.
3. The authority to handle denunciations, information and charge requests is
given to:
a) Investigation authorities processing intra vires denunciations, information and
requisitions;
b) Units assigned to investigate process denunciations and criminal information
disclosed within its powers;
c) The procuracy processes denunciations, information and charge requests when
investigation authorities or units assigned to performed certain activities of
investigation are found to commit serious violations of the laws during their inspection
and verification of denunciations, criminal information disclosed, requisitions for
charges or omission of crimes. Furthermore, such issues have not been settled despite
the Procuracy’s written requests.
4. The authorities empowered to process denunciations, information and charge
requests are responsible for informing authorities and entities making denunciations,
disclosing criminal information and requisitioning for charges of the results of the
former's tasks.
Article 146. Procedures for receiving denunciations, criminal information
and requisitions for charges
1. When authorities and entities make direct denunciations, disclose criminal
information and requisition for charges, investigation authorities, procuracies and units
assigned to investigate are authorized as per Section 2, Article 145 of this Law to
execute written records of receipt and enter data into a receipt journal. The acquisition
of such information may be recorded by sound or sound-and-visual means.
If denunciations, criminal information and requisitions for charges are delivered
by post, by telephone or by other means of communication, entries shall be made into
a receipt journal.
2. Investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate, if considering
certain denunciations, criminal information disclosed and requisitions for charges ultra
vires, shall be held responsible for transferring such information and relevant
documents to a competent investigation authority in prompt manner.
The procuracy is responsible for promptly transferring denunciations,
information and charge requests and relevant documents to a competent investigation
authority.
In the events as defined in Point c, Section 3, Article 145 of this Law, competent
authorities processing denunciations, information and charge requests shall, in 05 days
upon the Procuracy’s requests, transfer relevant documents to The procuracy for
consideration and settlement.
3. Ward police units, town police units and police stations shall be responsible
for receiving denunciations and criminal information disclosed, making written
records of receipt and conducting preliminary verification of such information before
promptly transferring such information and relevant documents and items to
competent investigation authorities.
Ward police units shall be responsible for acquiring denunciations and criminal
information disclosed, making written records of receipt, taking preliminary
statements and transferring such information and relevant documents and items to
competent investigation authorities.
4. Other authorities and organizations, upon obtaining denunciations and criminal
information disclosed, shall transfer such information to competent investigation
authorities. In emergency events, information may be given to investigation authorities
by phone or other forms of communication. However, such information must
subsequently be documented.
5. Investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate, in 03 days upon
receiving denunciations, information and requisitions, shall be held responsible for
informing the equivalent Procuracy or competent Procuracy of their receipt of
information in writing.
Article 147. Time limit and procedures for processing denunciations,
criminal information disclosed and requisitions for charges
1. Investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate, in 20 days upon
receiving denunciations, information and requisitions, shall inspect and verify such
information and issue one of the following decisions:
a) Decision to press criminal charges;
a) Decision not to file criminal charges;
c) Decide to suspend the processing of denunciations, information and
requisitions.
2. If denunciations, criminal information disclosed or requisitions for charges
contain complex facts or the verification of such information must be done in several
locations, the time limit for processing such information may be extended but shall not
exceed 02 months. If activities of investigation and verification cannot end within the
time limit as stated in this Section, the head of the equivalent Procuracy or competent
Procuracy can sanction one extension of 02 months at most.
Investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate, in at most 05 days
before the end of the time limit for investigation and verification, must send a written
request for extension to the equivalent Procuracy or competent Procuracy.
3. Competent authorities, when processing denunciations, information and
requisitions, shall perform these activities:
a) Collect data, documents and items from relevant authorities and entities to
verify the information;
b) Examine the scenes;
c) Conduct autopsy;
d) Requisition expert examinations and valuation.
4. The sequence, formalities and time limit for the Procuracy's processing of
denunciations, information and charge requests are governed by this Article.
Article 148. Suspension of the processing of denunciations, criminal
information disclosed and requisitions for charges
1. Competent authorities, upon the expiration of the time limit as defined in
Article 147 of this Law, shall decide to suspend the processing of denunciations,
information and charge requests in one of the following events:
a) Expert examination, valuation and foreign judicial assistance have been
requisitioned to no avail;
b) Though authorities and entities have been asked to provide essential
documents and items that lead to the decision to or not to press charges, nothing
works.
2. Investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate, in 24 hours upon the
decision to suspend the processing of denunciations, information and requisitions,
must send such decision and relevant documents to the equivalent Procuracy or
competent Procuracy, which administer and forward such decision to the authorities
and entities making denunciations, disclosing criminal information and requisitioning
charges.
If a suspension decision is unsubstantiated, the Procuracy shall annul such
decision to have investigative activities continued. The procuracy, in 24 hours upon its
decision to abrogate the suspension, must send its decision to investigation authorities
and units assigned to investigate, and authorities and entities making denunciations,
disclosing criminal information or requisitioning charges. The time limit for the
continued processing of denunciations, information and charge requests shall not
exceed 01 month after investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate
receive the decision to invalidate the suspension.
3. If the processing of denunciations, information and charge requests is
suspended, expert examination, valuation or judicial assistance shall persist until final
findings are available.
Article 149. Resumption of the processing of denunciations, criminal
information disclosed and requisitions for charges
1. When the vindication for the suspension of the processing of denunciations,
information and charge requests languishes, investigation authorities and units
assigned to investigate shall decide to resume the processing of denunciations,
information and requisitions. The time limit for the continued processing of
denunciations, information and charge requests shall not exceed 01 month upon the
decision on resumption.
2. Investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate, in 03 days upon
their decision to resume the processing of denunciations, information and requisitions,
must send such decision to the equivalent Procuracy or competent Procuracy, and
authorities and entities making denunciations, disclosing criminal information or
requisitioning charges.
Article 150. Settlement of disputes over the authority to process
denunciations, criminal information disclosed and requisitions for charges
1. The immediate superior Procuracy shall settle disputes over the authority to
process denunciations, information and requisitions. The competent Procuracy shall
settle disputes over the authority to process denunciations, information and charge
requests among units assigned to investigate.
2. The Supreme People’s Procuracy or the Central military procuracy shall settle
disputes over the authority to process denunciations, information and charge requests
among provincial investigation authorities or among military investigation units in
military zones, respectively. The provincial People’s Procuracy or Military procuracy
related to the authority or military zone that first receive denunciations, information
and charge requests shall settle disputes over the authority to process denunciations,
information and charge requests among district investigation authorities from various
provinces or centrally-affiliated cities or among military investigation units from
different military zones.
3. The head of the Supreme People’s Procuracy shall settle disputes over the
authority to process denunciations, information and charge requests among
investigation units of the people's police force, People’s Army and Supreme People’s
Procuracy.
Article 151. Settlement of cases exhibiting signs of crime uncovered directly
by authorities given authority to institute legal proceedings
Competent procedural authorities, when directly exposing signs of crime, shall
decide to press charges within their powers or transfer the cases to competent
investigation authorities.
Article 152. Offenders confessing or surrendering
1. The authorities taking in an offender confessing or surrendering must execute
written records of his full name, age, occupation, residential address and statements.
The authorities taking in offenders confessing or surrendering shall be responsible for
informing investigation authorities or procuracies of such matter in prompt manner.
2. Investigation authorities taking in ultra vires offenders confessing or
surrendering shall inform competent investigation authorities that handle such
offenders.
3. Competent investigation authorities, in 24 hours upon their acceptance of
offenders confessing or surrendering, must inform the equivalent Procuracy in writing.
Article 153. Authority to press criminal charges
1. Investigation authorities shall make decisions on pressing criminal charges
against all matters exhibiting criminal signs, save those handled by units assigned to
investigate, procuracies or juries as per Section 2, 3 and 4 in this Article.
2. Units assigned to investigate shall make decisions on pressing criminal charges
in the events as defined in Article 164 of this Law.
3. The procuracy makes decisions on pressing criminal charges in the following
events:
a) The procuracy decides to rescind a decision not to press criminal charges from
investigation authorities or units assigned to investigate;
b) The procuracy directly processes denunciations, information and requisitions;
c) The procuracy directly exposes signs of crime or respond to a requisition for
charges by the Trial panel.
4. The Trial panel decides to press charges or request The procuracy to press
criminal charges if omission of crimes is detected during the trial.
Article 154. Decision to press criminal charges
1. A decision to press criminal charges must specify grounds for charges, quote
relevant Articles and clauses from the Criminal Code and present details as required in
Section 2, Article 132 of this Law.
2. The procuracy, in 24 hours upon its decision to press criminal charges, shall
send such decision to competent investigation authorities that carry out investigative
activities.
Investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate, in 24 hours upon their
decision to press criminal charges, shall deliver such decision and relevant documents
to the competent Procuracy that administers the charges.
A Court, in 24 hours upon its decision to press criminal charges, must have such
decision and relevant documents delivered to the equivalent Procuracy.
Article 155. Filing of criminal charges as per the crime victim’s petitions
1. Only criminal charges against offences as defined in Section 1 of Article 134,
135, 136, 138, 139, 141, 143, 155, 156 and 226 of the Criminal Code can be pressed at
the requests for the crime victim or the representative of the crime victim less than 18
years of age or having mental or physical defects or passing away.
2. If the petitioner withdraws his petition for charges, the lawsuit shall be
dismissed. If such person is evidently found to withdraw the petition against his will
out of coercion or duress, the investigation authority, Procuracy or Court shall
maintain the charges regardless of the petition for withdrawal.
3. The crime victim or its representative is not permitted to resubmit a petition
withdrawn, unless such withdrawal results from coercion or duress.
Article 156. Amendments to the decision on pressing criminal charges
1. Investigation authorities, units assigned to investigate or procuracies shall
amend their decisions to press criminal charges when gaining justifications that
charges deviate from actual criminal acts. Moreover, they shall add criminal charges
when identifying other criminal acts left uncharged.
2. Investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate, in 24 hours upon
their decisions to amend or add criminal charges, must send such decisions to the
equivalent Procuracy or competent Procuracy that administers such charges.
The procuracy, in 24 hours upon the decision to amend or add criminal charges,
must send such decision to investigation authorities for investigative activities.
Article 157. Justifications of the decision not to press criminal charges
A criminal charge shall not be filed in the presence of one of these justifications:
1. Criminal acts do not exist;
2. Acts do not constitute crime;
3. Persons committing dangerous acts against the society have not reached the
age of criminal responsibility;
4. Persons whose criminal acts have been sentenced or lawsuits have been
dismissed validly;
5. The prescriptive period for criminal prosecution passes;
6. General amnesty has been granted;
7. The person causing peril against the society is deceased, unless other persons
must undergo reopening procedure;
8. The crime victim or its representative does not petition for charges against
offences as defined in Section 1 of Article 134, 135, 136, 138, 139, 141, 143, 155, 156
and 226 of the Criminal Code.
Article 158. Decision not to press or to drop criminal charges
1. When one of the justifications as stated in Article 157 of this Law exists, the
individuals authorized to press charges shall decide not to file or to drop criminal
charges, if filed, and send notices of reasons to the authority or entities making
denunciations, disclosing criminal information or requisition charges. If different
measures are deemed necessary, the case shall be transferred to competent authorities
for settlement.
A decision not to press or to drop criminal charges and relevant documents, in 24
hours upon the issuance of such decision, must be sent to the equivalent or competent
Procuracy.
2. The authority or entities making denunciations or disclosing criminal
information are permitted to file complaints against the decision not to press criminal
charges. The authority and procedures for the settlement of such complaints are
defined in Chapter XXXIII of this Law.
Article 159. Duties and authority of The procuracy exercising prosecution
rights to handle criminal information
1. Approve or deny an order on emergency custody, extension of temporary
detainment, and other measures that restrict human rights and citizen rights in
connection with the handling of criminal information as per this Law.
2. Propose to inspect and verify information, when necessary, and request
authorities empowered to process criminal information to conduct inspection and
verification.
3. Decide to extend the time limit for the processing of denunciations, criminal
information disclosed and requisitions for charges; decide to press criminal charges.
4. Request investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate to press
criminal charges.
5. Directly process denunciations, criminal information disclosed or requisitions
for charges in the events as defined in the Law.
6. Annul decisions on temporary detainment, decisions to or not to press criminal
charges, decisions to suspend the processing of criminal information and other
unlawful procedural decisions from investigation authorities and units assigned to
investigate.
7. Carry out other duties and powers to exercise prosecution rights as per this
Law to prevent omission of crimes and unjust conviction against guiltless people.
Article 160. The procuracy’s duties and authority to acquire and administer
the processing of criminal information
1. Receive all denunciations, criminal information disclosed and requisitions for
charges from authorities and entities, take in and transfer offenders confessing or
surrendering to competent authorities for treatments.
2. Administer the acquisition of information, administer the verification of
information and the documentation of criminal information by investigation authorities
and units assigned to investigate; administer the suspension of the processing of
criminal information; administer the resumption of the processing of criminal
information.
3. Request investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate to perform
the following activities upon the detection of deficiency or violations in the acquisition
and processing of criminal information:
a) Receive, inspect, verify and decide the processing of criminal information in
adequate and legitimate manners;
b) Inspect the acquisition and processing of criminal information and report to
The procuracy;
c) Provide documents on breach of laws on the acquisition and processing of
criminal information;
d) Correct violations of laws and impose strict penalties against the violators;
dd) Request the replacement of investigators and investigation officers.
4. Settle disputes over the authority to handle criminal information.
5. Request investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate to provide
documents for the administration of the processing of criminal information.
6. Perform other duties and powers to administer the acquisition and processing
of criminal information as per this Law.
Article 161. Duties and authority of The procuracy exercising prosecution
rights and administering the pressing of criminal charge
1. The procuracy, when exercising prosecution rights of criminal charges, bears
the following duties and authority:
a) Request investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate to press
charges or amend or add criminal charges;
b) Annul groundless and unlawful decisions to press charges, decisions to amend
or add criminal charges, decisions not to file criminal charges;
c) Appeal to the Court immediately superior to the trial panel that issues an
unjustified decision to press criminal charges;
d) Press charges, amend or add criminal charges in the events as defined in this
Law;
dd) Perform other duties and authority to exercise prosecution rights of criminal
charge as per this Law.
2. The procuracy, when administering the filing of criminal charges, bears the
following duties and authority:
a) Administer the legal compliance of charges filed by investigation authorities
and units assigned to investigate, make sure that all criminals exposed must face
justified and lawful charges;
b) Request investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate to provide
relevant documents for the administration of criminal charges;
c) Perform other duties and authority to administer criminal charges as per this
Law.
Article 162. Responsibilities of investigation authorities and units assigned to
investigate for fulfilling requests and decisions by The procuracy on filing of
charges
1. Investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate must execute the
requests and decisions to charge from The procuracy.
2. Investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate, despite their
protests, bear the obligation to execute decisions as defined in Section 1 and Section 6,
Article 159, and Point b, Section 1, Article 161 of this Law and preserve the right to
address their angles to the immediate superior Procuracy. The immediate superior
Procuracy, in 20 days upon receiving motions from investigation authorities or in 05
days upon obtaining standpoints from units assigned to investigate, shall consider such
angles and respond to such authorities and units.
Chapter X
GENERAL REGULATIONS ON CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION
Article 163. The authority to investigate
1. Investigation authorities of the people’s police force shall delve into every
crime, save those falling into the powers of investigation authorities of the People’s
Army or of the Supreme People’s Procuracy.
2. Investigation authorities of the People’s Army shall inquire into crimes falling
into the jurisdiction of a military Court.
3. Investigation authorities of Supreme People’s Procuracy or Central military
procuracy shall probe violations of judicial activities, corruption, and breach of
positions in the sector of justice, as defined in chapter XXIII and chapter XXIV of the
Criminal Code, against offenders as officials and employees of investigation
authorities, Courts, procuracies, law enforcement authorities and against individuals
empowered to engage in judicial activities.
4. Investigation authorities are authorized to investigate criminal cases that occur
in their assigned territories. If crimes occur in various or unidentified places, the
investigation authority adjacent to the offender's place of exposure, of residence or of
capture shall conduct investigative activities.
5. The hierarchy of investigation is composed of:
a) District investigation authorities and local military investigation authorities
shall conduct criminal investigations into crimes within juridisction of a district Court
or local military Court;
b) Provincial investigation authorities shall carry out criminal investigations into
crimes within the jurisdiction of a provincial Court. Provincial investigation authorities
shall, if their direct involvement is deemed vital, inquire into cases within the
investigative powers of district investigation authorities, which happen in various
district, towns, provincial cities, cities under centrally-affiliated cities or denote
foreign elements.
Military investigation authorities of military zones shall conduct criminal
investigations into crimes within the jurisdiction of a military Court of a military zone
or, if their direct engagement is deemed essential, within the powers of local
investigation authorities.
c) Investigation authorities of the Ministry of Public Security or Ministry of
Defense shall conduct criminal investigations into severe felonies, which were
dismissed by orders of the judges' panel of the Supreme People’s Court for re-
investigation. Moreover, such authorities, if their direct involvement is deemed
imperative, shall conduct criminal investigations into severe and complex felonies
involving several provinces and centrally-affiliated cities or many countries.
Article 164. Duties and authorities of units, as assigned to investigate, under
border protection force, customs, forest ranger, maritime police force, fisheries
resources surveillances and people’s police force, People’s Army
1. Units of border protection force, customs, forest ranger, maritime police force
and fisheries resources surveillances, when exposing acts that exhibit signs of crime as
per their assignments to investigate, shall bear these duties and authority:
a) Decide to press criminal charges or institute legal proceedings against
defendants, conduct investigations and transfer case files to the competent Procuracy
in 01 month upon the issuance of a decision to press criminal charges against evident
misdemeanors in flagrante and offenders with transparent personal records;
b) Decide to press criminal charges, initiate preliminary investigations and
transfer case files to the competent Procuracy in 07 days upon the issuance of a
decision to press criminal charges against serious crimes, felonies, severe felonies or
complex misdemeanors;
2. Apart from investigation authorities of the people’s police force and People’s
Army as per Article 163 of this Law, other units assigned to investigate, if unmasking
events that exhibit signs of crime, shall be authorized to file criminal charges, institute
preliminary investigations and pass case files to the competent investigation authorities
in 07 days upon the issuance of a decision to file criminal charge.
3. Units of the border protection force, customs, forest ranger, maritime police
force, fisheries resources surveillances and other units of the people's police force and
People’s Army, when assigned to investigate, must perform execute precise duties and
powers as defined in Article 39 and Article 40 of this Law and implement exact
principles, sequence and procedure for investigation according to this Law. The
procuracy shall be responsible for exercising prosecution rights and administering
legal compliance of the said authorities' investigative activities.
4. The Law on the organization of criminal investigation authorities shall govern
particular investigative powers of units under the border protection force, customs,
forest ranger, maritime police force, fisheries resources surveillances and people's
police force, People’s Army.
Article 165. Duties and authorities of The procuracy exercising prosecution
rights during the stage of criminal investigation
1. Request investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate to file
charges, amend or add criminal charges and legal proceedings against defendants.
2. Approve decisions to charge and decisions to amend or supplement charges
against defendants or annul baseless and illegal ones.
3. Press charges, amend or increase criminal charges and legal proceedings
against defendants in the events as stated in this Law.
4. Approve or reject emergency custody orders, extension of temporary
detainment, detention, bail, surety, search warrant, seizure, impoundment of items,
mails, telegraphs, postal packages, special investigation methods and proceedings;
ratify procedural decisions by investigation authorities and assigned to investigate
according to this Law or deny groundless and illicit ones; annul flimsy and illegal
decisions on legal proceedings from investigation authority and units assigned to
investigate. A decision to reject or annul matters must specify reasons.
5. Decisions to implement, alter or terminate preventive and coercive measures
shall abide by this Law.
6. Make requests for investigation and request investigation authorities and units
assigned to investigate to inquire into crimes and offenders; request investigation
authorities to hunt down suspects and implement special investigation methods and
proceedings.
7. Directly perform certain activities of investigation to verify and add documents
and evidences for the decision to charge or for the ratification of orders and decisions
made by investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate, or to respond to
unjust cases, omission of crimes or breach of laws that have not been settled despite
the Procuracy’s written requests.
8. Press criminal charges or request investigation authorities to file criminal
charges upon the revelation of signs of crimes committed by authorized individuals
handling denunciations, information and charge requests or filing charges or
investigating;
9. Decide to extend the time limits for investigation or detention; to transfer
cases, implement summary procedures or civil commitment; nullify decisions to join
or separate cases.
10. Carry out other duties and powers to exercise prosecution rights as per this
Law.
Article 166. Duties and authority of The procuracy administering criminal
investigations
1. Administer legal compliance of charges, investigation and documentation by
investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate.
2. Administer criminal proceedings by participants; requisition from competent
authorities and entities strict actions towards participants in legal proceedings, who
violate laws.
3. Settle disputes over the authority to investigate.
4. Request investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate to provide
relevant documents for the administration of legal compliance of charges and
investigations, if deemed necessary.
5. Request investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate to perform
these activities upon the exposure of inadequate investigations or violations of laws:
a) Conduct investigations that abide by the laws;
b) Inspect the investigations and report to The procuracy;
c) Provide documents on deeds and decisions to charge in violation of
investigative laws.
6. Request investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate to correct
violations of charge and investigation.
7. Request heads of investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate to
replace investigators and investigation officers and to impose strict actions towards
such individuals violating procedural laws.
8. Request concerned authorities and organizations to implement measures that
preclude crimes and breach of laws.
9. c) Perform other duties and authority to administer criminal investigations as
per this Law.
Article 167. Responsibilities of investigation authorities and units assigned to
investigate for fulfilling requests and decisions by The procuracy during the stage
of investigation
1. Investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate must fulfill the
Procuracy's requests and decisions during the stage of investigation.
2. Investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate, despite their
protests, bear the obligation to execute decisions as defined in Section 4 and Section 5,
Article 165 of this Law and preserve the right to address such matters to the immediate
superior Procuracy. The immediate superior Procuracy, in 20 days upon receiving a
motion from investigation authorities or in 05 days upon obtaining standpoints from
units assigned to investigate, shall consider such angles and inform such authorities
and units of final decisions.
Article 168. Responsibilities of authorities, organizations and individuals for
fulfilling requests and decisions by procuracies, investigation authorities and
units assigned to investigate
Authorities and entities must strictly implement decisions and requests by
procuracies, investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate during the stage
of criminal investigation. Failure to comply not due to force majeure or objective
obstacles shall be punishable according to the laws.
Article 169. Transfer of cases for investigation
1. An equivalent Procuracy shall decide to transfer a case for investigation in one
of the following events:
a) An equivalent investigation authority considers the case beyond its
investigative powers and requests case transfer;
b) A superior investigation authority withdraws the case for investigation;
c) The investigator replaced is the head of the investigation authority;
d) The procuracy requests case transfer but the investigation authority does not
respond.
2. The provincial People’s Procuracy or military People’s Procuracy of military
zone shall decide to have cases transferred out of a province, centrally-affiliated city or
military zone, respectively.
3. A case is transferred for intra vires investigation through the following
formalities:
a) The competent Procuracy shall, in 03 days upon receiving a request from the
investigation authority, decide to transfer the case;
b) The procuracy shall, in 24 hours upon making a decision on case transfer,
deliver such decision to the investigation authority inquiring into the case, the
investigation authority authorized to continue investigation, suspect or his
representative, defense counsel, crime victim and competent Procuracy.
4. The investigation authority inquiring into the case shall, in 03 days upon
receiving the decision on case transfer, be held responsible for transferring the case to
the investigation authority authorized to continue investigation.
5. The time limit for investigation resumes upon the investigation authority's
receipt of the case file and continues to the end of the time limit as defined in this Law.
If the investigation is incomplete at the end of its time limit, the competent Procuracy
shall consider and decide an extension of the investigation according to general
stipulations in this Law.
Article 170. Joinder or separation in criminal cases for investigation
1. Investigation authorities can join multiple issues for intra vires investigation of
a single case in one of the following events:
a) The suspect commits multiple crimes;
b) The suspect commits a crime in multiple times;
c) Several suspects commit one crime, or accomplices and accessories who
conceal or fail to report the suspect or use property obtained by crime.
2. Investigation authorities shall only be permitted to separate issues from a case,
if such separation is neccesary because investigations into all crimes present cannot be
finished in timely manner and such separation does not affect the determination of
entire objective truths of the case.
3. A decision on joinder or separation must be sent to the equivalent Procuracy in
24 hours upon the issuance of such decision. The procuracy, if disagreeing with the
investigation authority’s decision on joinder or separation, shall decide to annul such
decision and state reasons.
Article 171. Mandate of investigation
1. An investigation authority shall mandate another investigation authority, if
deemed necessary, to conduct certain investigations. The decision to mandate
investigation must specify requests and be sent to the investigation authority mandated
and its equivalent Procuracy.
2. The investigation authority mandated must fulfill every task mandated in a
period set by the mandating investigation authority and shall be held liable for the
results of the former's implementation of the mandate. The authority mandated, if
failing the assignments, shall promptly inform in writing the mandating investigation
authority of reasons of such failure.
3. The procuracy at equivalent level of the investigation authority mandated shall
be held responsible for exercising prosecution rights and administer the mandated
authority's investigative activities and for reporting the results of such tasks to The
procuracy mandating the enforcement of prosecution rights and administration of
investigations.
Article 172. Time limit for investigation
1. The time limit for a criminal investigation shall not exceed 02 months for
misdemeanors, 03 months for felonies and 04 months for horrific and extremely severe
felonies. The time limit applies from the filing of charges to the end of the
investigation.
2. If an investigation must be extended due to the case’s complexity, the
investigation authority shall, within 10 days prior to the expiry date of the time limit,
requisition the Procuracy’s extension of investigation.
An investigation is extended as follows:
a) An investigation into misdemeanors may be extended once for 02 more
months;
b) An investigation into felonies may be extended twice, for 03 more months in
the first time or for 02 more months in the second time;
c) An investigation into horrific felonies may be extended twice, for 04 more
months each time;
d) An investigation into extremely severe felonies may be extended thrice, for 04
more months each time.
3. If the investigation into extremely severe felonies is incomplete, despite the
expiration of its time limit, due to the case’s complexity, the head of the Supreme
People’s Procuracy may sanction one extension for at most 04 more months.
The head of the Supreme People’s Procuracy is entitled to extend an
investigation into breach of national security once for at most 04 more months.
4. If a decision to press criminal charges or to join issues into one lawsuit is
amended, the total time limit for investigation shall not exceed the limits as defined in
Section 1, 2 and 3 of this Article.
5. The procuracy's authority to extend an investigation:
a) An investigation into misdemeanors is extended by a district People’s
Procuracy or local Military procuracy. If a provincial investigation authority or
military investigation authority of a military zone handles the investigation, the
equivalent provincial People’s Procuracy or Military procuracy of the military zone
shall decide the extension of investigation;
b) A district People’s Procuracy or local Military procuracy shall ratify the first
and second extensions of an investigation into felonies. If a provincial investigation
authority or military investigation authority of a military zone handles the
investigation, the equivalent provincial People’s Procuracy or Military procuracy of
the military zone shall decide the first and second extensions of such investigation;
c) A district People’s Procuracy or local Military procuracy shall ratify the first
extension of an investigation into horrific felonies while the provincial People’s
Procuracy or Military procuracy of a military zone shall decide the second extension.
If a provincial investigation authority or military investigation authority of a military
zone handles the investigation, the equivalent provincial People’s Procuracy or
Military procuracy of the military zone shall decide the first and second extensions of
such investigation;
c) A provincial People’s Procuracy or Military procuracy of a military zone shall
ratify the first and second extensions of an investigation into extremely severe felonies
while the Supreme People’s Procuracy or central military People’s Procuracy shall
decide the third extension;
6. If an investigation authority of the Ministry of Public Security, Ministry of
Defense or People’s Supreme Procuracy handles the investigation, the Supreme
People’s Procuracy or Central military procuracy shall decide to extend the
investigation.
Article 173. Time limit for detention for investigation
1. The time limit for temporary detention of suspects for investigation shall not
exceed 02 months for misdemeanors, 03 months for felonies and 04 months for
horrific and extremely severe felonies.
2. If an investigation must be prolonged due to a variety of complex facts in the
case and no grounds for change or termination of detention exist, the investigation
authority shall, within 10 days prior to the expiration of the time limit, request The
procuracy to extend the detention.
Detention is extended as follows:
a) Detention of offenders of misdemeanors may be extended once for 01 more
month;
b) Detention of offenders of felonies may be extended once for 02 more month;
c) Detention of offenders of horrific felonies may be extended once for 03 more
month;
d) Detention of offenders of extremely severe felonies may be extended twice,
for 04 more months each time.
3. The procuracy's authority to extend detention:
b) A district People’s Procuracy or local Military procuracy is entitled to extend
detention of offenders of misdemeanors, felonies and horrific felonies. If a provincial
investigation authority or a military zone’s investigation authority handles the
investigation, the equivalent provincial People’s Procuracy or Military procuracy of
the military zone is entitled to extend detention of offenders of misdemeanors,
felonies, horrific felonies and to decide the first extension of detention of offenders of
extremely severe felonies;
b) If the investigation is incomplete despite the expiration of the first extension as
stated in Point a of this Section and no grounds for change or termination of temporary
detention exist, the provincial People’s Procuracy or Military procuracy of the military
zone may decide the second extension against offenders of extremely severe felonies.
4. If an investigation authority of the Ministry of Public Security, Ministry of
Defense or People’s Supreme Procuracy handles the investigation, the Supreme
People’s Procuracy or Central military procuracy shall decide to extend the
investigation.
5. The head of the Supreme People’s Procuracy is entitled to extend the detention
of violators of national security once for at most 04 more months. If the investigation
is incomplete despite the expiration of the extension(s) as stated in this Section and no
grounds for change or termination of temporary detention exist, the head of the
Supreme People’s Procuracy is entitled to ratify 1-month extension against felonies, 2-
month extension against horrific felonies, and 4-month extension against extremely
severe felonies. If no grounds for termination of detention exist in a special case of
extremely severe felony of national security breach, the head of the Supreme People’s
Procuracy shall decide to maintain detention until the investigation closes.
6. If no grounds for change or termination of detention exist in a special case of
horrific felonies not related to national security breach, the head of the Supreme
People’s Procuracy is entitled to sanction one 4-month extension. If no grounds for
termination of detention against a special case, the head of the Supreme People’s
Procuracy shall decide to extend the detention by the entire length of time of the
investigation.
7. If detention in force is deemed unnecessary, the investigation authority must
request The procuracy to terminate the detention to discharge the detainee in timely
manner or implement other measures, if necessary.
The detainee must be discharged when the detention expires. Competent
procedural authorities, if necessary, shall implement other preventive measures.
Article 174. Time limit for resumption of investigation, further investigation,
re-investigation
1. If an investigation resumes as per Article 235 of this Law, the time limit for
the continued investigation shall not exceed 02 months for misdemeanors and felonies
and 03 months for horrific and extremely severe felonies. Such time limit applies from
the issue date of the decision to resume investigation to the closure of the
investigation.
If an investigation must be extended due to the case’s complexity, the
investigation authority shall, within 10 days prior to the expiry date of the time limit,
requisition the Procuracy’s extension of investigation.
An investigation is extended as follows:
a) An investigation into misdemeanors may be extended once for 01 more month;
b) An investigation into felonies and horrific felonies may be extended once for
02 more months;
c) An investigation into extremely severe felonies may be extended once for 03
more months.
The authority to extend investigations into each type of crime is defined in
Section 5, Article 172 of this Law.
2. If The procuracy returns case files for further investigation, the time limit for
the additional investigation shall not exceed 02 months. If a Court returns case files for
further investigation, the time limit added shall not exceed 01 month. The procuracy
can return case files for further investigation twice. The presiding judge of a Court can
return case files for further investigation once and the Trial panel can return case files
for additional investigation once.
The time limit for an additional investigation commences upon the investigation
authority’s retrieval of case files and request for further investigation/
3. If case files are returned for re-investigation, the time limit and extension of
investigation shall be governed by Article 172 of this Law.
The time limit for investigation commences upon the investigation authority’s
retrieval of case files and request for re-investigation.
4. The investigation authority, when resuming, furthering and resetting an
investigation, is entitled to implement, alter or terminate preventive and coercive
measures as per this Law.
If a detention is deemed necessary as per the grounds defined in this Law, the
time limit for detention for resumption or furthering of the investigation shall not
exceed the relevant time limit as defined in Section 1 and Section 2 of this Article.
The time limit and extension of detention for re-investigation are governed by
Article 173 of this Law.
Article 175. Settlement of requisitions from participants in legal proceedings
1. When participants in legal proceedings lodge requisitions related to the case,
investigation authorities, units assigned to investigate, and procuracies within their
powers shall process such requisitions and have petitioners informed of results.
Investigation authorities, units assigned to investigate or procuracies, if rejecting such
requisitions, must respond and state reasons.
2. Participants in legal proceedings, if disagreeing with feedbacks from
investigation authorities, units assigned to investigate or procuracies, shall be
permitted to lodge complaints. Lodging and settlement of complaints are defined in
chapter XXIII of this Law.
Article 176. Witnesses' attendance
Witnesses shall be summoned to observe activities of investigation in the events
stated in this Law.
Witnesses shall be responsible for confirming contents and results of the tasks
that authorized procedural persons have performed in their presence. Witnesses may
state personal opinions. Such opinions shall be recorded in writing.
Article 177. Non-disclosure of investigation secrets
If an investigation must be kept confidential, investigators, investigation officers,
procurators and checkers shall demand participants in legal proceedings not to disclose
investigation secrets. Such demands shall be recorded in writing.
If investigators, investigation officers, procurators, checkers or participants in
legal proceedings disclose investigation secrets, they shall incur disciplinary or
administrative penalties or face criminal prosecution according to the nature and
degree of their violations as per the laws.
Article 178. Investigation records
Authorized procedural persons, when investigating, must execute their
investigations in writing as per Article 133 of this Law.
Investigators and investigation officers, who make written records, must read out
such records to the participants in legal proceedings and explain participants’ rights to
add their notions and remarks about the records. Additional notions and remarks shall
put into the records. If additional notions are rejected, reasons must be specified in the
records. Participants in legal proceedings, investigators and investigation officers shall
affix signatures onto the records.
If the records are made by procurators or checkers, such records shall be
governed by this Article. The records shall be promptly sent to investigators who shall
put them in case files.
The making of such records during the stage of charge shall be governed by this
Article.
Chapter XI
FILING OF CHARGES AGAINST SUSPECTS AND SUSPECT
INTERROGATION
Article 179. Filing of charges against suspects
1. When a person or juridical person is found on sufficient evidences to commit
an act defined by the Criminal Code as a crime, investigation authorities shall decide
to file charges against suspects.
2. A decision to charge a suspect shall specify time and location for the issuance
of such decision; full name and position of the issuer; date of birth, nationality,
ethnicity, religion, gender, residential place, occupation of the suspect; crimes against
which the suspect is charged, Articles and Sections quoted from the Criminal Code;
time, location and other facts of the crimes.
If the suspect is charged against multiple crimes, the decision to charge must
specify each crime and Articles and relevant Sections quoted from the Criminal Code.
3. Investigation authorities, in 24 hours upon their decision to charge suspects,
must send such decision and relevant documents on charges against suspects to the
equivalent Procuracy for approval. The procuracy, in 03 days upon receiving a
decision to charge suspects, shall approve or annul such decision or request additional
evidences and documents that support its approval and respond to the investigation
authority in prompt manner.
If the Procuracy requests further documents and documents, it shall, in 03 days
upon receiving such additional evidences and documents, approve or annul the
decision to charge suspects.
4. The procuracy, upon the exposure of a perpetrator committing uncharged acts
defined as crimes by the Criminal Code, shall request investigation authorities to file
charges against the suspect or, if investigation authorities do not respond to such
request, shall directly press charges. The procuracy, in 24 hours upon issuing a
decision to charge a suspect, must send such decision to investigation authorities for
investigation.
The procuracy, when acquiring investigative documents and findings and
uncovering other perpetrators of uncharged acts defined as crimes in the Criminal
Code, shall press charges against such suspects and return documents to investigation
authorities for further investigation.
5. Investigation authorities, upon receiving the Procuracy's decision to charge or
approval of their decisions to charge the suspects, must promptly deliver such
decision(s) and explain the suspects' rights and duties.
Investigation authorities, upon receiving the approval of their decisions to charge
suspects, must take photographs and make identity records of accused persons for the
case file.
The delivery of the said decisions shall be executed in writing as per Article 133
of this Law.
Article 180. Amendments to the decision on pressing charges against
suspects
1. Investigation authorities or procuracies shall amend their decisions to charge
suspects in one of the following events:
a) The suspects are evidently found not to commit charged crimes during the
process of investigation;
b) A decision to charge contains incorrect full name, age and personal details of
the suspects.
2. Investigation authorities and procuracies, if there are grounds on suspects’
commission of other acts defined as crimes in the Criminal Code, shall supplement
their decisions to charge suspects.
3. Investigation authorities, in 24 hours upon altering or supplementing their
decisions to charge suspects, must send such decisions and relevant documents to the
equivalent Procuracy for approval. The procuracy, in 03 days upon receiving the said
amendments or supplements to charges against suspects, shall approve or reject such
amendments or supplements or request additional evidences and documents that
support its approval and respond to investigation authorities in prompt manner.
If The procuracy requests further documents and documents, it shall, in 03 days
upon receiving such additional evidences and documents, approve or reject the said
amendments or supplements.
The procuracy, in 24 hours upon amending or supplementing charges against
suspects, shall have investigation authorities informed for investigation.
4. Investigation authorities, upon obtaining the Procuracy’s amendments or
supplements to charges or its approval or rejection of amendments or supplements,
shall inform persons charges of such details.
The delivery of the said decisions shall be executed in writing as per Article 133
of this Law.
Article 181. Suspension of suspects from duty
Investigation authorities, units assigned to investigate and procuracies, when
considering a suspect's holding of office as obstruction of investigation, shall be
entitled to request authorities or organizations in control of suspects to suspend them
from duty. The said authorities and organizations, in 07 days upon receiving such
request, must respond in writing to investigation authorities, units assigned to
investigate and procuracies that issuing the request.
Article 182. Summoning of suspects
1. Investigators, when convening a suspect, must send out a subpoena. A
subpoena for a suspect shall specify the suspect’s full name and residential address;
time, date and location for his appearance, schedule of tasks, contact individuals and
liabilities for absence not due to force majeure or objective obstacles.
2. The subpoena shall be sent to local authorities at the commune, ward or town
where the suspect resides or his workplace or educational facility. The authorities or
organizations receiving the subpoena are held responsible for forwarding it to the
suspect in prompt manner.
The suspect, when receiving the subpoena, must sign and date the recipient’s
Section. The forwarder of the subpoena shall deliver the subpoena’s Section bearing
the suspect’s signature to the authority issuing the subpoena. If the suspect does not
affix signature, a written record of his non-compliance shall be made and sent to the
summoning authority. If the subpoena cannot be delivered due to the suspect’s
absence, it shall be given to his family member possessing legal capacity, who affixes
signature and forward the paper to the suspect.
3. The suspect bear the obligation to appear as per the subpoena. Avoidance
behavior or absence not due to force majeure or objective obstacles shall lead to
investigators’ decision to deliver by force.
4. Procurators, if necessary, may convene suspects. Summoning of a suspect
shall be governed by this Article.
Article 183. Suspect interrogation
1. Investigators, upon the issuance of a decision to charge a suspect, shall
interrogate suspects. A suspect may be interrogated at the investigated scenes or at
suspects' place of residence. Investigators, before interrogating a suspect, must inform
procurators and defense counsels of the time and location for interrogation.
Procurators, if necessary, shall participate in the suspect interrogation.
2. Investigators, before conducting the first session of interrogation, must explain
to the suspect his rights and duties as defined in Article 60 of this Law. Such activities
shall be recorded in writing.
If there are several suspects, they shall be separately interrogated and prevented
from interacting with each other. A suspect may be permitted to write his statements.
3. Suspect interrogation does not occur at night, unless otherwise indispensable.
Reasons must be clarified in the written record.
4. Procurators interrogate suspects, who claim innocence or complain of
investigative activities, or in the presence of grounds showing investigative activities'
non-compliance with laws or in other events deemed necessary. Procurators’ suspect
interrogation shall be governed by this Article.
5. Investigators, investigation officers, procurators and checkers extorting
statements and torturing suspects shall incur criminal liabilities as per the Criminal
Code.
6. Suspect interrogation at a detention facility or the office of investigation
authorities or units assigned to investigate shall be recorded by sound or sound-and-
visual means.
Suspect interrogation at various places shall be recorded by sound or sound-and-
visual means at the requests for the suspect or competent procedural authorities and
persons.
Article 184. Written records of suspect interrogation
1. Every session of suspect interrogation shall be recorded in writing.
A written record of suspect interrogation shall be made according to Article 178
of this Law and contain all statements from the suspect, questions and answers.
Investigators and investigation officers are inhibited to alter the suspect's statements.
2. Investigators and investigation officers, after conducting interrogation, shall
read out the written record or let the suspect read it. If there are amendments to the
written record, investigators, investigation officers and suspects shall affix signatures
to endorse such. If a written record has several pages, the suspect shall sign every
page. If the suspect writes the statement by himself, investigators, investigation
officers and suspects shall affix signatures to endorse such self-declared statement.
3. If an interpreter attends the suspect interrogation, investigators and
investigation officers must explain the interpreter's rights and duties and the suspect's
right to change the interpreter. Every page of the interrogation record shall bear the
interpreter’s signature.
If a defense counsel or representative of the suspect attends the interrogation,
investigators and investigation officers must explain the attendees' rights and duties
during the process of interrogation. Suspects, defense counsel or representative shall
affix signatures onto the written record of interrogation. If the defense counsel is
permitted to address questions to the suspect, the written record must contain all
inquiries raised by the defense counsel and the suspect's responses.
4. If a procurator interrogates the suspect, the written record shall abide by this
Article. The written record of suspect interrogation shall be promptly sent to
investigators to be put into case files.
Chapter XII
DEPOSITION BY TESTIFIERS, CRIME VICTIMS, CIVIL PLAINTIFFS,
CIVIL DEFENDANTS AND PERSONS HAVING INTERESTS AND DUTIES
IN CONNECTION WITH THE CASE, CONFRONTATION AND
IDENTIFICATION
Article 185. Summoning of witness testifiers
1. Investigators, when summoning witness testifiers for deposition, shall send out
a subpoena.
2. A subpoena for a witness testifier shall specify the witness testifier’s full
name, residential address or work address or educational facility’s address; time, date
and location for his appearance, objectives, tasks and schedule, contact individuals and
liabilities for absence not due to force majeure or objective obstacles.
3. The delivery of the subpoena is as follows:
a) The subpoena is given to the witness testifier directly or through local
authorities at the commune, ward or town where the witness testifier resides or his
workplace or educational facility. In all circumstances, signatures must be affixed to
confirm the delivery of the subpoena. Local authorities at the commune, ward and
town where the witness testifier resides or his workplace or educational facility shall
be responsible for supporting the witness testifier to perform his duties;
b) The subpoena for a witness testifier less than 18 years of age shall be given to
his parents or representative.
c) The delivery of the subpoena for the witness testifier according to a foreign
entity's judicial delegation shall be governed by this Article and the Law on judicial
assistance.
4. Procurators, if necessary, may convene the witness testifier for deposition.
Summoning of a witness testifier shall be governed by this Article.
Article 186. Deposition by witness testifiers
1. A witness testifier’s deposition shall be carried out at the investigative scene,
his residential place or workplace or educational facility.
2. If there are several witness testifiers in a case, each person shall give
testimonies separately and prevented from interacting with others during the process of
deposition.
3. Investigators and investigation officers, before conducting depositions, must
explain witness testifiers’ rights and duties as per Article 66 of this Law. Such
activities shall be recorded in writing.
4. Investigators, before inquiring into the case, must ask about the relationship of
the witness testifiers, suspects and defendants and personal information of the witness
testifiers. Investigators, before raising questions, shall ask the witness testifiers to
speak or write their knowledge of the case in honest and voluntary manners.
5. If investigators' deposition sessions are deemed biased or unlawful,
procurators shall take statements from witness testifiers. If evidences and documents
must be clarified to facilitate the Procuracy’s charges or its approval or rejection of the
investigation authority’s decision to charge, witness testifiers’ statements shall be
taken by procurators. Witness testifiers' depositions shall be governed by this Article.
Article 187. Written records of witness testifiers’ depositions
A written record of witness testifiers’ depositions shall be made according to
Article 178 of this Law.
Witness testifiers’ depositions may be recorded by sound or sound-and-visual
means.
Article 188. Summoning of crime victims and litigants for deposition
Summoning of crime victims and litigants for deposition shall be governed by
Article 185, 186 and 187 of this Law.
The taking of testimonies from crime victims and litigants may be recorded on
sound recorder or camcorder.
Article 189. Confrontation
1. If testimonies from two or several persons come into conflict despite various
investigative measures implemented, investigators shall conduct a confrontation.
Investigators, before carrying out a confrontation, must inform the equivalent
Procuracy to assign procurators administering the confrontation. Procurators must be
present to administer the confrontation. The procurators' absence shall be clearly
described in the written record of confrontation.
2. Investigators must explain liabilities against witness testifiers or crime victims
refusing, avoiding or falsifying depositions, prior to their participation in a
confrontation. Such process shall be recorded in writing.
3. Investigators, at the beginning of the confrontation, shall inquire into the
mutual relationship of attendees before asking about facts to be clarified. Investigators,
after listening to the confrontation, may raise additional questions to each attendee.
Investigators, during the confrontation, can present relevant evidences,
documents and items. Attendees may question each other. Their questions and answers
shall be reduced to writing.
Attendees’ previous statements shall be restated only after the attendees in the
confrontation complete their depositions.
4. The written record of confrontation is made according to Article 178 of this
Law. The confrontation may be recorded by sound or sound-and-visual means.
5. Procurators, if necessary, may organize the confrontation. Confrontation shall
be governed by this Article.
Article 190. Identification
1. Investigators, when necessary, may present persons, photos or items to witness
testifiers, suspects or defendants for identification.
There must be at least three externally identical persons, photos or items to be
identified, except for the identification of corpses.
Investigators, prior to the identification, must inform the equivalent Procuracy to
assign procurators administering the process of identification. Procurators must be
present to administer the identification. The procurators' absence shall be clearly
described in the written record of identification.
2. The following persons bear the obligation to attend a process of identification:
a) Witness testifiers, crime victims or defendants;
b) Witnesses.
3. Investigators must explain liabilities against witness testifiers or crime victims
refusing, avoiding or falsifying depositions, prior to their participation in a session of
identification. Such activities shall be recorded in writing.
4. Investigators must first inquire into the identifying persons' knowledge of
facts, traces and traits that may facilitate their progress of identification.
During the process of identification, investigators shall not raise suggestive
questions. After the identifying person recognizes an individual, item or photo
displayed for identification, investigators shall request to know his justifications from
traces and traits that result in the recognition of such individual, item or photo.
5. The written record of identification shall be made according to Article 178 of
this Law. The written record shall specify the identity and health conditions of the
identifying person and individuals to be identified; characteristics of items and photos
shown for identification, identifying persons' statements; lighting conditions during the
process of identification.
Article 191. Recognition of voices
1. Investigators, when necessary, may let crime victims, witness testifiers or
arrestees, detainees and defendants to recognize voices.
There must be at least three voices in similar timbre and loudness.
Investigators, prior to the recognition of voices, must inform the equivalent
Procuracy to assign procurators administering the process of voice recognition.
Procurators must be present to administer the process of voice recognition. The
procurators' absence shall be clearly described in the written record of voice
recognition.
2. The following persons bear the obligation to attend a process of voice
recognition:
a) Expert witnesses of sound;
b) Persons requested to recognize voices;
c) Persons presented to be recognized by voice, unless voice recognition is done
through a sound recorder;
d) Witnesses.
3. Investigators must explain liabilities against witness testifiers or crime victims
refusing, avoiding or falsifying depositions, prior to their participation in a session of
voice recognition. Such activities shall be recorded in writing.
4. Investigators must first ask identifying persons about their knowledge of traits
that help their recognition of voices.
During the process of voice recognition, investigators shall not raise suggestive
questions. After the identifying person recognizes one of the voices projected,
investigators shall ask him to explain traits that he relies on to recognize a voice.
5. The written record of voice recognition shall be made according to Article 178
of this Law. The written record shall specify the identity and health conditions of the
identifying person and individuals whose voices are recognized; characteristics of
voices projected for recognition, identifying persons' statements; lighting conditions
during the process of voice recognition.
Chapter XIII
SEARCH, SEIZURE AND IMPOUNDMENT OF DOCUMENTS AND
ITEMS
Article 192. Justifications for search of body, residence, workplace, area,
vehicle, document, item, mail, telegraphy, postal package and electronic data
1. Search of body, residence, workplace, area, vehicle shall only be permissible
in the presence of justifications showing the existence of criminal instruments,
documents, items, property obtained by crime or other objects, electronic data,
documents related to the case on the body or in the residence, workplace, site and
vehicle.
Search of residence, workplace, area and vehicle shall be conducted to seek
wanted persons or search and rescue crime victims.
2. If there are justifications showing the existence of criminal instruments,
documents, items and property related to the case in mails, telegraphs, postal packages
and electronic data, such items and data shall be searched.
Article 193. The authority to issue search warrants
1. Competent individuals as defined in Section 1, Article 113 of this Law are
entitled to issue search warrants. Search warrants issued by individuals as defined in
Section 2, Article 35 and Point a, Section 1, Article 113 of this Law must be approved
by The procuracy prior to the enforcement of such warrants.
2. In emergency events, competent individuals as defined in Section 2, Article
110 of this Law shall be entitled to issue search warrants. Individuals issuing search
warrants, in 24 hours upon the completion of the search, must send written notices to
the equivalent Procuracy or The procuracy empowered to exercise prosecutors; rights
and administer cases and lawsuits.
3. Investigators, before conducting the search, must inform the equivalent
Procuracy of the time and location of the search to have procurators assigned to
administer the search, except for emergency circumstances. Procurators must be
present to administer the search. The procurators' absence shall be clearly described in
the written record of the search.
4. All cases of search shall be executed in writing according to Article 178 of this
Law and entered into case files.
Article 194. Search of body
1. Enforcers of a search warrant, before searching body, must read out the
warrant and let the searched person read it. The searched person and attendees in the
search shall hear explanations of their rights and duties.
Searchers must request the searched persons to present documents and items
related to the case. If they refuse or present insufficient items and documents related to
the case, the search shall occur.
2. The search of a person's body shall be carried out by a person of same gender
and witnessed by other individuals of same gender. The search process shall not affect
the life, health, property, honor and dignity of the person searched.
3. Body search shall be permissible without a warrant in case of an arrest or in
the presence of justifications asserting that the person present at the location of the
search is concealing weapons, evidences, documents and items in connection with the
case.
Article 195. Search of residence, workplace, area and vehicle
1. Search of residence requires the presence of the suspect or a co-resident person
from 18 years of age, representatives of local authorities at communal of the
commune, ward or town (at communal or lower level). If the suspect or the co-resident
person is intentionally absent, absconds or fails to appear for any reasons, the search of
residence, if not deferrable, shall be conducted in the presence of the representatives of
local authorities at communal or lower level and two witnesses.
Search of residence shall not commence at night, except for emergency
circumstances that must be specified in writing.
2. The person, when his residence is searched, must be present. Despite the
absence of such person, the search of residence, if not deferrable, shall occur and be
reduced to writing.
Search of workplace requires the presence of the representative of the
organization employing the suspect. If the said representative of the employer is
absent, the search shall occur in the presence of the representatives of local authorities
at communal or lower level and 02 witnesses.
3. Search of an area requires the presence of the representatives of local
authorities and witnesses.
4. Search of a vehicle requires the presence of the owner or manager of such
vehicle or witnesses. If the owner or manager of the vehicle is absent, absconds or fails
to appear for any reasons, the search, if not deferrable, shall occur in the presence of
two witnesses.
A relevant specialist may be summoned to participate in the search of a vehicle.
5. The persons attending a search of residence, workplace, area or vehicle shall
not be left to the discretion of leaving the place searched, contacting or interacting
with each other or other individuals until the completion of the search.
Article 196. Seizure of electronic media and data
1. Seizure of electronic media and data is conducted by authorized procedural
persons. Relevant specialists may be summoned to attend the search. If seizure is not
viable, data shall be transferred to a storage medium and stored as a piece of evidence.
2. Seizure of electronic media may include accompanying peripherals and
relevant documents.
Article 197. Seizure of mails, telegraphs and postal packages at the premises
of providers of postal or telecommunications services
1. Investigation authorities, when affirming the necessity of the seizure of mails,
telegraphs and postal packages at the premises of providers of postal or
telecommunications services, shall issue a search warrant. The said warrant, prior to
enforcement, must be approved by an equivalent Procuracy.
2. If the seizure of the said items cannot be delayed, investigation authorities
shall carry it out and specify reasons in writing. The report of the seizure, after
completed, and relevant documents shall be promptly delivered to the equivalent
Procuracy for ratification.
The procuracy, in 24 hours upon receiving the request for ratification and
documents related to the seizure of mails, telegraphs and postal packages, shall decide
to approve and reject the request. If The procuracy rejects the said request, the issuer
of the seizure warrant shall immediately return the items seized to the providers of
postal and telecommunications services. Moreover, the recipients of mails, telegraphs
or postal packages seized shall be informed.
3. The enforcers of the warrant, before seizing items, must inform the managerial
personnel of the concerned providers of postal or telecommunications services.
Managerial personnel of concerned providers of postal or telecommunications services
must support the enforces of the warrant to accomplish their missions.
Seizure of mails, telegraphs and postal packages requires the presence of the
representative of postal or telecommunications service providers, who shall sign the
written record of the seizure.
The authority issuing the seizure warrant shall notice the recipients of mails,
telegraphs and postal packages seized. If the said notice obstructs investigative
activities, the authority issuing the seizure warrant shall promptly deliver the notice
upon the disappearance of such obstruction.
Article 198. Impoundment of documents and items during a search
1. Investigators, when conducting a search, shall be permitted to impound items
deemed as evidences and documents in direct connection with the case. Items
prohibited from storage or circulation shall be seized and transferred to competent
authorities in prompt manner. If sealing is necessary, items shall be sealed in the
presence of the owner, manager, witnesses, family members as representatives, and
representatives of local authorities at communal or lower level.
2. The impoundment of items and documents during a search shall be executed in
writing as per Article 133 of this Law. A written record of impounds shall be made
into four originals. One is given to the owner or manager of the items or documents.
One is stored in the case file. One is submitted to the equivalent Procuracy. One is
delivered to the authority managing items and documents impounded.
Article 199. Responsibilities for preserving vehicles, documents, items,
electronic data, mails, telegraphs, postal packages seized, impounded or sealed
1. Vehicles, documents, items, electronic data, mails, telegraphs and postal
packages seized, impounded or sealed must be preserved in intact conditions.
2. Criminal liabilities as per the Criminal Code shall be imposed on persons
breaking seals, consuming, transferring, swapping, hiding or ruining vehicles,
documents, items, electronic data, telegraphs and postal packages.
Article 200. Liabilities of individuals issuing and enforcing warrants of
search, seizure and impoundment.
Individuals issuing or enforcing warrants of search, seizure or impoundment in
illegal manners shall incur disciplinary treatments or face criminal prosecution
according to the nature and degree of violations as per the laws.
Chapter XIV
CRIME SCENE EXAMINATION, AUTOPSY, INSPECTION OF TRACES
ACROSS A BODY, EXPERIMENTAL INVESTIGATION
Article 201. Crime scene examination
1. Investigators organize the examination of the scenes where crimes occur or
criminals are detected to seek criminal traces, evidences, relevant documents, items
and electronic data and to elucidate facts significant to the case.
2. Investigators, before examining crime scenes, must inform the equivalent
Procuracy of the time and location of an examination to have procurators assigned to
administer such examination. Procurators must be present to administer a crime scene
examination.
An examination of crime scenes requires the presence of witnesses. Suspects,
defense counsels, crime victims and witness testifiers may be permitted and specialists
may be summoned to participate in the examination.
3. A crime scene examination requires the taking of photographs and making of
crime scene sketches, descriptions, measurements and mockups. Moreover, criminal
traces, documents and items related to the case shall be examined on-site and
collected. Results of the examination shall be clearly reduced to writing. The written
record of crime scene examination shall be made according to Article 178 of this Law.
If documents and items seized cannot be examined on-site, they shall be kept
intact or sealed and transported to the investigation site.
Article 202. Autopsy
1. Forensic post-mortem expert witnesses shall conduct an autopsy under the
management of investigators. An autopsy shall require witnesses.
Investigators, before examining corpses, shall inform the equivalent Procuracy of
the time and location of the autopsy to have procurators assigned to administer such
examination. Procurators must be present to administer an autopsy.
2. Forensic autopsy technicians may be summoned to participate in a post-
mortem examination to expose and collect traces for expert examination.
3. An autopsy requires the taking of photographs and description of traces across
the body. Photographs and samples shall be taken and preserved for expert
examination. Results of the post-mortem examination shall be specified in writing.
The written record of autopsy is made according to Article 178 of this Law.
4. Investigation authorities, if requiring burial excavation, shall issue a decision
and have the deceased person’s family members informed in advance. If family
members of the deceased do not exist or are unidentified, representatives of local
authorities at the commune, ward or town where the body is buried shall be informed.
Article 203. Inspection of traces across a body
1. Investigators, when necessary, shall inspect the body of an emergency
detainee, arrestee, person on temporary detainment, suspect, crime victim or witness
testifier for criminal traces or other signs significant to solve the case. Investigation
authorities, when necessary, shall requisition expert examination.
2. The inspection of traces across the body of a person must be carried out and
witnessed by individuals of same gender. A doctor of medicine, if necessary, shall be
summoned.
It is prohibited to violate the health, honor and dignity of the person whose body
is inspected for traces.
An inspection of bodily traces shall be described in a written record. Photographs
or expert examination shall be required if necessary.
The written record of bodily trace inspection shall be made according to Article
178 of this Law.
Article 204. Experimental investigation
1. Investigation authorities, in order to inspect and verify documents and acts
significant to solve the case, may conduct experimental investigation by reproducing a
crime scene, replaying acts, situations or other facts of a certain event and by
performing other experimental activities deemed necessary. An experimental
investigation requires measurements, photographs, video recording, sketches. Results
of the experimental investigation shall be specified in writing.
An experimental investigation is prohibited from violating the life, health, honor,
dignity and property of participants in the investigation and other people.
2. Investigators, before conducting an experimental investigation, must inform
the equivalent Procuracy of the time and location of the investigation. Procurators
must be present to administer an experimental investigation. The procurators' absence
shall be specified in writing.
3. Investigators shall organize the execution of an experimental investigation.
Witnesses during the investigation is required.
Investigation authorities may summon a specialist to participate in an
experimental investigation. Temporary detainees, suspects, defense counsels, crime
victims and witness testifiers, if necessary, may be participate in an experimental
investigation.
4. The procuracy, if necessary, shall administer an experimental investigation.
Experimental investigations shall be conducted according to this Article.
Chapter XV
EXPERT EXAMINATION AND VALUATION
Article 205. Requisition for expert examination
1. Competent procedural authorities, in an event deemed necessary or defined in
Article 206 of this Law, decide to requisition expert examinations.
2. A decision to requisition expert examination shall specify:
a) Names of the authority and competent individual requisitioning expert
examination;
b) Full name of organizations and persons requested to conduct expert
examination;
c) Name and traits of the subject to be examined;
d) Name of a relevant document or sample enclosed (if available);
dd) Contents of requisitions for expert examination;
e) Date of the expert examination and deadline for findings.
3. An authority, in 24 hours upon issuing a decision to requisition expert
examination, must send such decision, documents and examined subjects to the
entities conducting the examination. Moreover, such decision shall be sent to The
procuracy empowered to exercise prosecution rights and administer investigative
activities.
Article 206. Mandatory expert examinations
Expert examinations are mandatory to corroborate:
1. mental conditions of the accused person when doubts of their criminal capacity
arise. Mental conditions of witness testifiers or crime victims shall be verified when
there are doubts of their awareness and capacity of providing accurate statements on
facts of a case;
2. the age of suspects, defendants and crime victims if it is significant to solve the
case and there is no document to determine their exact age or the authenticity of such
documents is doubtful;
3. causes of death;
4. properties of injuries, degree of harms against health or work capacity;
5. narcotics, military weapons, explosives, inflammables, toxic, radioactive
substances, counterfeit money, gold, silver, precious metal, precious stones, antiques;
6. level of environmental pollution.
Article 207. Petition for expert examinations
1. Litigants or their representatives are entitled to petition competent procedural
authorities for requisitioning exert examinations of matters regarding their legitimate
rights and benefits, except for examinations that determine criminal liabilities of
accused persons.
Presiding authorities, in 07 days upon receiving the petition, must consider and
decide to requisition expert examinations. Petitioners shall be informed in writing of
the rejection of their petitions and reasons. Petitioners shall be entitled, when the
deadline passes or they receive the written rejection from competent procedural
authorities, to consult expert witnesses by themselves.
2. Petitioners of expert examinations shall have rights and duties as per the Law
on judicial expert examination.
Article 208. Time limit for expert examination
1. Time limit for mandatory expert examination is:
a) 03 months at most for events as defined in Section 1, Article 206 of this Law;
b) 01 month at most for events as defined in Section 3 and Section 6, Article 206
of this Law;
c) 09 days at most for events as defined in Section 2, 4 and 5, Article 206 of this
Law.
2. Time limit for expert examination for other events shall be subject to the
decision to requisition expert examination.
3. If expert examination fails to occur within the time limit as stated in Section 1
and Section 2 of this Article, entities conducting such examinations must inform
authorities and persons requesting examinations in writing of such delay and reasons.
4. Time limit for expert examination as stated in this Article applies to expert
examinations added or repeated.
Article 209. Process of expert examination
1. The process of expert examination shall occur at premises of authorities
conducting examinations or at places of investigation upon the issuance of a decision
to requisition examinations.
Investigators, procurators, judges and petitioners for expert examinations can
participate in the examinations after informing expert witnesses of their attendance.
2. Expert examinations shall be conducted by individuals or group of persons.
Article 210. Additional expert examinations
1. Additional expert examinations shall be conducted in the following events:
a) Findings from an expert examination are obscure or inadequate;
b) Expert examinations must be carried out on new matters in connection with
existing facts of the case, which were verified through previous examinations.
2. Additional expert examinations may be conducted by entities performing
previous ones or other entities.
3. The requisition for additional expert examinations shall be processed in the
same method of the first examination.
Article 211. Repeated expert examinations
1. Expert examinations shall be repeated when the accuracy of the first
examination is in doubt. A repeated expert examination must be performed by
different expert witnesses.
2. The authority requisitioning expert examinations shall decide the repetition of
an examination on its own discretion or according to petitions by participants in legal
proceedings. If the individual authorized to requisition expert examination rejects the
request for examination repetition, the person making such request shall be informed
in writing of the rejection and reasons.
3. If the repeated expert examination and the initial one inspect the same matter
but produce different findings, the individual authorized to requisition examinations
shall make decisions on repeating the examination for the second time. The second
repeated expert examination shall be conducted by the panel of expert examination
according to the Law on judicial expert examination.
Article 212. Repetition of expert examination in special circumstances
The head of the Supreme People’s Procuracy or Court president of the Supreme
People’s Court, in special circumstances, shall decide the repetition of expert
examinations after the panel of expert examination present its findings. A new panel
shall repeated an expert examination in special circumstances. Participants in the
previous examination shall not attend the repeated one. Findings of the repeated expert
examination in this event shall contribute to the settlement of the case.
Article 213. Conclusion of expert examinations
1. The conclusion of an expert examination must specify findings on matters, of
which examinations have been requisitioned, and other matters as per the Law on
judicial expert examination.
2. Entities performing expert examinations, in 24 hours upon generating findings,
shall deliver such results to the authorities or persons requesting examinations.
The authorities or persons requesting expert examinations, in 24 hours upon
receiving the said findings, shall forward them to The procuracy that exercise
prosecution rights and administer investigative activities.
3. The authorities or persons requesting expert examinations, in order to clarify
findings, shall be entitled to ask for expert witnesses' explication of such findings and
further details of facts deemed necessary.
Article 214. Rights of suspects, defendants, crime victims and other
participants in legal proceedings to findings of expert examinations
1. Competent procedural authorities, in 07 days upon receiving petitions for
expert examinations from suspects, defendants, crime victims and other participants in
legal proceedings, shall consider and make decisions on requisition for expert
examinations.
2. Competent procedural authorities, in 07 days upon obtaining findings of expert
examinations, shall inform suspects, defendants, crime victims and other participants
in legal proceedings of such findings.
3. Suspects, defendants, crime victims and other participants in legal proceedings
shall be entitled to state their opinions on findings of expert examinations or to petition
for additional or repeated examinations. Investigation authorities, procuracies and
Courts must record the said persons’ direct statements in writing.
4. If investigation authorities, procuracies and Courts reject petitions by suspects,
defendants, crime victims or other participants in legal proceedings, petitioners shall
be informed in writing of such rejection and reasons.
Article 215. Requisition for valuation
1. Competent procedural authorities, when requiring the valuation of property for
the settlement of criminal cases, shall requisition valuation in writing.
2. A written requisition for valuation shall specify:
a) Names of the authority and competent individual requisitioning valuation;
b) Name of the panel that is requested to valuate property;
c) Name and traits of the property to be valuated;
d) Name of relevant documents (if any);
dd) Contents of requisitions for valuation;
e) Date of valuation and deadline for findings.
3. The authorities requesting valuation, in 24 hours upon issuing the written
request for valuation, must deliver such request, documents and objects to be valuated
to the Panel of valuation. Moreover, the written request for valuation shall be sent to
the Procuracy that exercise prosecution rights and administer investigative activities.
4. The requisition for property valuation to settle civil cases in criminal lawsuits
shall be governed by the laws on civil procedure.
Article 216. Deadline for valuation
Time limit for process and conclusion of property valuation shall be subject to
the written request for valuation. If property valuation fails to occur within the
requested time limit, the Panel of valuation shall promptly inform authorities or
persons requesting valuation in writing of such delay and reasons.
Article 217. Process of property valuation
1. The Panel of valuation shall valuate property. The meeting for property
valuation shall be carried out at the location of the property appraised or other places
aas per decisions of the Panel of valuation.
Investigators, procurators and judges can attend the property valuation meeting
after informing the Panel of valuation in advance. The said individuals, when
permitted by the Panel of valuation, can provide their opinions.
2. The government shall regulate the details of the establishment and operation of
the Panel of valuation; sequence and procedure for valuation of property.
Article 218. Repetition of property valuation
1. If findings of the initial process of valuation are in doubt, competent
procedural authorities shall requisition the repetition of the valuation process on their
own discretion or according to petitions by accused persons or other participants in
legal proceedings. The repeated valuation process shall be conducted by the immediate
superior Panel of valuation.
2. If the initial and repeated processes of valuation generate contradictory
findings on the value of the property appraised, competent procedural authorities shall
requisition in writing the repetition of the valuation process for the second time. The
second repeated valuation process shall be conducted by a competent Panel of
valuation. Findings of the repeated valuation process in this event shall contribute to
the settlement of the case.
Article 219. Valuation of property missing or evanishing
If the property missing or evanishing must be appraised, the process of valuation
shall be subject to the documents that compile information and papers on such
property.
Article 220. Repetition of property valuation in special circumstances
The head of the Supreme People’s Procuracy or Court president of the Supreme
People’s Court, in special circumstances, shall decide the repetition of property
valuation after the Panel of valuation provides findings of the second repeated
valuation process. A new panel shall perform the valuation process repeated in special
circumstances. Participants in the previous valuation process shall not attend the
repeated one. Findings of the repeated valuation process in this event shall contribute
to the settlement of the case.
Article 221. Conclusion of property valuation
1. The conclusion of a property valuation process must specify findings on the
value of the property according to the request for valuation and other details as per the
laws.
2. The Panel of valuation, in 24 hours upon concluding the valuation process,
must send its findings to the authorities and persons requesting valuation.
The authorities or persons requesting valuation, in 24 hours upon receiving the
said findings, shall forward them to The procuracy that exercise prosecution rights and
administer investigative activities.
3. The authorities requesting valuation, in order to clarify findings, shall be
entitled to ask the Panel of valuation for explanations of such findings and further
details of facts deemed necessary.
Article 222. Rights of suspects, defendants, crime victims and other
participants in legal proceedings to findings of property valuation
1. Competent procedural authorities, in 07 days upon receiving petitions for
property valuation from suspects, defendants, crime victims and other participants in
legal proceedings, shall consider and make written decisions on requisition for
property valuation.
2. Competent procedural authorities, in 07 days upon acquiring findings of
property valuation, shall inform suspects, defendants, crime victims and other
participants in legal proceedings of such findings.
3. Suspects, defendants, crime victims and other participants in legal proceedings
shall be entitled to state their opinions on the findings of property valuation and to
request the repetition of property valuation. Investigation authorities, procuracies and
Courts must record the said persons’ direct statements in writing.
4. If investigation authorities, procuracies and Courts reject petitions by suspects,
defendants, crime victims or other participants in legal proceedings, petitioners shall
be informed in writing of such rejection and reasons.
Chapter XVI
SPECIAL METHODS OF INVESTIGATION AND LEGAL
PROCEEDINGS
Article 223. Special methods of investigation and proceedings
After filing charges, authorized procedural persons during the stage of
investigation shall be entitled to enforce special methods of investigation and
proceedings:
1. Secret recording by sound or sound-and-visual means;
2. Secret phone tapping;
3. Secret collection of electronic data.
Article 224. Circumstances for enforcement of special methods of
investigation and proceedings
Special methods of investigation and proceedings shall apply to these
circumstances:
1. Breach of national security, drug-related crimes, corruption, terrorism, money
laundering;
2. Other organized crimes categorized as extremely severe felonies.
Article 225. Duties and authority to decide and enforce special methods of
investigation and proceedings
1. Heads of provincial investigation authorities and military investigation
authorities of a military zone or higher level shall decide to enforce special methods of
investigation and proceedings on their own discretion or as per requests for heads of
provincial People’s Procuracy and Military procuracy of the military zone. If a district
investigation authority or local military investigation authority handles the case, the
heads of such authorities shall recommend the heads of the provincial investigation
authority or military investigation authority of the military zone to consider and
enforce such methods.
2. A decision to implement special methods of investigation and proceedings
must specify essential information of the subjects for such methods, names of
methods, duration, location for enforcement, authorities enforcing special methods of
investigation and proceedings and other details as per Section 2, Article 132 of this
Law.
3. The decision to implement special methods of investigation and proceedings,
before executed, must be approved by the head of the equivalent Procuracy. The head
of the investigation authority issuing such decision is responsible for controlling the
enforcement of the methods in strict manner and promptly requesting The procuracy to
terminate methods deemed unnecessary.
Specialized units of the people’s police force and people’s arm shall be
responsible for implementing special methods of investigation and proceedings
according to the laws.
4. Heads of investigation authorities, competent procuracies and enforcers of
special methods of investigation and proceedings must maintain confidentiality.
Article 226. Time limit for special methods of investigation and proceedings
1. Time limit for a special method of investigation and proceedings shall not
exceed 02 months upon the approval by the head of The procuracy. Time limit may be
extended in complex circumstances but shall not exceed the time limit for
investigation as defined in this Law.
2. The head of the investigation authority issuing the enforcement decision, in at
least 10 days prior to the expiration of the time limit for special methods of
investigation and proceedings, shall request the head of The procuracy in writing to
consider and approve the extension, if deemed essential by the former.
Article 227. Use of information and documents collected through special
methods of investigation and proceedings
1. Information and documents collected through special methods of investigation
and proceedings shall only be used to press charges, investigate, prosecute and
adjudicate criminal lawsuits. Documents and information irrelevant to the case must be
disposed in timely manner.
It is prohibited to exploit such information, documents and evidences for other
purposes.
2. Information and documents collected through special methods of investigation
and proceedings may be used as evidences to solve the case.
3. Investigation authorities shall be responsible for informing the head of The
procuracy approving the former’s decision of the results of special methods of
investigation and proceedings.
Article 228. Termination of special methods of investigation and proceedings
The head of The procuracy approving the decision to enforce special methods of
investigation and proceedings shall annul such decision promptly in the following
events:
1. As per the written request by the head of the competent investigation authority;
2. There are violations in the process of special methods of investigation and
proceedings;
3. Special methods of investigation and proceedings are no longer necessary.
Chapter XVII
SUSPENSION AND CLOSURE OF INVESTIGATION
Article 229. Suspension of investigation
1. Investigation authorities shall decide to suspend investigative activities in one
of the following events:
a) Suspects are unidentified or their whereabouts are unknown despite the
expiration of the investigation time limit. If the location of suspects is unknown,
investigation authorities must issue wanted notices before suspending the
investigation;
b) If judicial expert examination finds that suspects suffer from mental illness or
fatal diseases, the investigation may be suspended ahead of schedule;
c) Time limit for investigation expires while expert examination, property
valuation or judicial assistance, though requested, does not progress. In such event,
expert examination, valuation process and judicial assistance shall continue until
results are achieved.
2. If there are several suspects in one case but the reason for suspension of
investigation does not apply to all of them, the investigative activities against each
suspect shall be suspended separately.
3. Investigation authorities, in 02 days upon deciding to suspend the
investigation, shall send such decision to the equivalent Procuracy, suspects, their
defense counsels or representatives and deliver notices to the crime victims, litigants
and protectors of their legitimate rights.
Article 230. Termination of investigation
1. Investigation authorities shall decide to terminate investigative activities in one
of the following events:
a) As per justifications as defined in Section 2, Article 155 and Article 157 of this
Law or in Article 16 or Article 29 or Section 2, Article 91 of the Criminal Code;
b) Time limit for investigation expires though suspects are not proved to commit
crimes.
2. A decision to terminate investigation shall specify time and issuing place of
the decision, reasons and justifications, termination of preventive and coercive
measures, return of documents and items impounded (if any), handling of evidences
and relevant matters.
If there are several suspects in one case but the reason for suspension of
investigation does not apply to all of them, the investigative activities against each
suspect shall be terminated separately.
3. The procuracy, in 15 days upon receiving the decision to terminate
investigation and case files from investigation authorities, shall consider justifications
of such decision and return case files to investigation authorities that handle intra vires
matters. If the suspension decision is deemed unjustified, it shall be abrogated and
investigation authorities shall be requested to resume investigative activities. If
justifications of prosecution suffice, the Procuracy shall nullify the decision on
investigation suspension and decide to prosecute according to the time limit, sequence
and formalities as stated in this Law.
Article 231. Seeking of suspects
1. Investigative authorities shall decide to issue wanted notices against suspects
on the loose or in unknown places.
2. A wanted notice shall specify full name, date of birth, residential address of
suspects, their traits for identification, crimes against which suspects are charged and
other details as per Section 2, Article 132 of this law; and suspects' photos (if
available).
A wanted notice for a suspect shall be sent to the equivalent Procuracy and
publicly announced for everyone to detect and detain the wanted person.
3. Upon the capture of the suspect as per the wanted notice, the investigation
authority issuing such notice shall terminate it. A decision to terminate wanted notice
shall be sent to the equivalent Procuracy and publicly announced.
Article 232. Closure of investigation
1. Investigation authorities, when closing an investigation, must conclude the
investigation in writing.
2. The investigation ends when the investigation authorities concluding the
investigation requisition charges or terminate the investigation.
3. The written conclusion of investigation shall specify date, full name and
position of the person concluding the investigation and bear his signature.
4. Investigation authorities, in 02 days upon concluding the investigation in
writing, shall send such conclusion to requisition charges or enclose a decision to
terminate investigation and case files to the equivalent Procuracy. Suspects or their
representative or defense counsels shall be given a copy of the conclusion of
investigation for charges or suspension of investigation. Crime victims, litigants and
protectors of their legitimate rights shall be informed.
Article 233. Conclusion of investigation during the stage of prosecution
During the stage of prosecution, the written conclusion of investigation shall
specify the progress of crimes; evidences of suspects' commission of crimes, their
artifices, motives, purposes, nature and degree of damage caused by the crimes;
preventive and coercive measures enforced, altered or terminated; factors aggravating
and mitigating criminal liabilities, traits and personal record of suspects; seizure and
impoundment of documents and items, handling of evidences; reasons and
circumstances leading to the crimes and other facts significant to the case; reasons and
justifications of prosecution; offence titles, Articles, Sections and Points quoted from
the Criminal Code; recommendations for the settlement of the case.
The written conclusion of investigation shall specify issue date, full name and
position of the person concluding the investigation and bear his signature.
Article 234. Conclusion of an investigation terminated
When an investigation is terminated, the written conclusion of investigation shall
specify events, process of investigation, reasons and justification of investigation
suspension.
The written conclusion of investigation shall specify issue date, full name and
position of the person concluding the investigation and bear his signature.
A decision to terminate investigation shall specify time and issuing place of the
decision, reasons and justifications, termination of preventive and coercive measures,
return of documents and items impounded (if any), handling of evidences and relevant
matters.
Article 235. Resumption of investigation
1. Investigation authorities, when having justifications to annul the decision to
terminate or suspend investigation, shall decide to resume the investigation if the
prescriptive period for criminal prosecution remains effective.
If the investigation is terminated according to Section 5 and Section 6, Article
157 of this Law without the consent of the suspect who petitions for repetition of
investigation, investigation authorities or equivalent procuracies shall decide to resume
the investigation.
2. Investigation authorities, in 02 days upon deciding to resume the investigation,
shall send such decision to the equivalent Procuracy, suspects, their defense counsels
or representatives and deliver notices to the crime victims, litigants and protectors of
their legitimate rights.
PART THREE
PROSECUTION
Chapter XVIII
GENERAL
Article 236. Duties and authorities of The procuracy exercising prosecution
rights during the stage of prosecution
1. Decide to implement, alter or terminate preventive and coercive measures;
request investigation authorities to issue wanted notices against suspects.
2. Request authorities and entities to provide documents related to the case when
necessary
3. A Court returns documents to investigation authorities, which The procuracy
deems unnecessary, for further investigation; therefore, the Procuracy is entitled to
directly carry out certain activities of investigation. Moreover, its direct investigative
activities can contribute to the verification and addition of documents and evidences
for making decisions to prosecute.
4. Decide to press charges, amend or supplement decisions to file lawsuits or
charges against suspects upon the detection of criminal acts or other offenders not
charged or investigated.
5. Decide to return documents to investigation authorities for further
investigation.
6. Decide to join and separate cases; transfer lawsuits to competent authorities for
prosecution, implement summary procedures and civil commitment.
7. Decide to or not to extend the time limit for prosecution, and duration of
preventive and coercive measures.
8. Decide to prosecute.
9. Decide to dismiss or adjourn cases; to dismiss or adjourn lawsuits against
suspects; to resume cases or lawsuits against suspects.
10. Carry out other duties and powers to make decisions on prosecution as per
this Law.
Article 237. Duties and authorities of The procuracy administering activities
during the stage of prosecution
1. The procuracy, when administering activities during the stage of prosecution,
bears these duties and authority:
a) Administer criminal proceedings of participants in legal procedure; request
competent authorities and entities to implement strict measures against participants in
legal proceedings, who breach laws;
b) Request concerned authorities and organizations to implement preventive
measures against crimes and breach of laws;
c) Perform other duties and authority to administer activities during the stage of
prosecution according to this Law.
2. Competent authorities and entities, in 10 days upon receiving requests as stated
in Point a and Point b, Section 1 of this Article, shall be responsible for informing The
procuracy of the their fulfillment of such requests.
Article 238. Delivery of case files and written conclusions of investigation
1. When investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate hand over case
files and written conclusions of investigation for prosecution and evidences (if any),
the Procuracy shall inspect and handle information in the following manner:
a) If case files and accompanying exhibits (if any) suffice according to the list of
documents and evidences and suspects or their representatives receive the written
conclusion of investigation, the Procuracy shall obtain case files;
b) If case files and accompanying exhibits (if any) do not suffice according to the
list of documents and evidences, or the written conclusion of investigation is not given
to suspects or their representatives, the Procuracy shall refuse to take in case files and
request investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate to supplement
documents and exhibits or to provide suspects or their representatives with the written
conclusion of investigation.
2. The delivery of case files and written conclusion of investigation shall be
executed in writing as per Article 133 of this Law and inputted into case files.
Article 239. The authority to prosecute
1. The procuracy exercising prosecution rights and administering investigative
activities shall make decisions on prosecution. A procuracy’s authority to prosecute
shall be subject to the Court's jurisdiction over the case.
If a case goes beyond a Procuracy's authority to prosecute, the Procuracy shall
promptly decide to transfer the case to another competent Procuracy. A provincial
People’s Procuracy or Military procuracy of a military zone shall decide the transfer of
cases to procuracies out of the province, centrally-affiliated city or military zone.
A superior Procuracy shall decide to prosecute cases, against which it exercises
prosecution rights and administer investigation. The superior Procuracy, in 02 month
prior to the closure of the investigation, must inform the lower Procuracy, at the level
equivalent to that of the first-instance Court having jurisdiction over the case, to assign
procurators to examine case files. The superior Procuracy, when issuing a decision to
prosecute, shall assign the lower Procuracy to exercise prosecution rights and
administer the process of adjudication. The competent inferior Procuracy, upon
receiving case files and charging documents, shall exercise prosecution rights and
administer the process of adjudication as per this Law.
2. A Procuracy, in 03 days upon issuing a decision on case transfer, must inform
in writing the investigation authority closing the investigation, suspects or their
representatives, defense counsels, aggrieved persons and other participants in legal
proceedings.
The delivery of case files and charging documents shall occur as per Section 2,
Article 240 of this Law. In such event, the time limit for prosecution shall commence
after the prosecutor authorized to prosecute receives case files.
Article 240. Time limit for the issuance of decisions to prosecute
1. A Procuracy, in 20 days for misdemeanors and felonies or 30 days for horrific
and extremely severe felonies upon receiving case files and written conclusion of
investigation, must make one of the following decisions:
a) Prosecute suspects in a Court;
b) Return documents for further investigation;
c) Dismiss or adjourn the case; dismiss or adjourn lawsuits against suspects;
The head of The procuracy, when necessary, may extend the time limit for the
issuance of a decision to prosecute for 10 more days for misdemeanors or felonies or
15 more days for horrific felonies or at most 30 more days for extremely severe
felonies.
2. The procuracy, in 03 days upon making one of the decisions as stated in
Section 1 of this Article, must inform suspects, their defense counsels or
representatives and crime victims of the return of documents for further investigation.
Moreover, it shall in 03 days provide suspects or their representatives, investigation
authorities and defense counsels with charging documents, decisions to adjourn or
dismiss the case or lawsuit against suspects. Furthermore, it shall send notices to crime
victims, litigants and protectors of their legitimate rights and benefits.
The delivery of the said documents shall be executed in writing according to
Article 133 of this Law and be inputted in case files.
If the case is complex, the time limit for the delivery of charging documents and
decisions on suspension or dismissal of the case to suspects or their representatives
may be extended for 10 more days at most.
3. The decisions as stated in Section 1 of this Article, when made, must be
promptly sent to the superior Procuracy. The head of the superior Procuracy shall be
entitled to revoke, terminate or annul decisions deemed groundless or unlawful and to
request the lower Procuracy to make lawful decisions.
Article 241. Implementation, alteration and termination of preventive and
coercive measures
The procuracy, when receiving case files and written conclusion of investigation,
shall be entitled to decide to implement, alter or terminate preventive and coercive
measures according to this Law.
The time limit for preventive measures during the stage of prosecution shall not
exceed that defined in Section 1, Article 240 of this Law.
Article 242. Joinder or separation in cases during the stage of prosecution
1. The procuracy shall decide to join issues into one case in the following events:
a) The suspect commits multiple crimes;
b) The suspect commits a crime in multiple times;
c) Several suspects commit one crime, or there are accomplices and accessories
who conceal or fail to report the suspect or use property obtained by crime.
2. When the lawsuit against the suspect is suspended, the Procuracy shall decide
to separate issues from a case in the following events, if separation is deemed not to
affect the determination of unbiased and comprehensive truths:
a) Suspects abscond;
b) Suspects suffer from fatal diseases;
c) Civil commitment is imposed on suspects.
Chapter XIX
DECISION TO PROSECUTE SUSPECTS
Article 243. Decision to prosecute suspects
The procuracy shall decide to prosecute a suspect in a Court through charging
documents.
Charging documents shall detail the progress and acts of crime; evidences
clarifying suspects’ crimes, their artifices, motives, purposes, nature and degree of
damage caused by the crimes; preventive and coercive measures enforced, altered or
terminated; factors aggravating and mitigating criminal liabilities, traits and personal
record of suspects; seizure and impoundment of documents and items, handling of
evidences; reasons and circumstances leading to the crimes and other facts significant
to the case.
The conclusion of the charging documents shall specify offence titles and
articles, sections and points quoted from the Criminal Code.
Charging documents shall specify their date of issuance, full name and position
of the person releasing such documents and bear his signature.
Article 244. Transfer of case files and charging documents to the Court
The procuracy, in 03 days upon issuing charging documents, must submit case
files and charging documents to the Court. The time limit for filing papers and
charging documents of a complex case in the Court may be extended for 10 more days
at most.
If suspects are in detention, the Procuracy shall, in 07 days prior to the end of the
detention, inform the Court to consider and decide the detention of such suspects
before obtaining case files.
Article 245. Return of case files for further investigation
1. The procuracy shall decide to return case files and request investigation
authorities to conduct further investigative activities in one of the following events:
a) Evidences do not suffice to evince one of the matters as stated in Article 85 of
this Law; however, the Procuracy fails to supplement evidences by itself;
b) There are justifications to press charges against the suspect for one or many
crimes;
c) Accomplices or other offenders related to the case have not been charged;
d) Serious violations of legal procedure occur.
2. A decision to return documents and request further investigation must detail
additional issues to be investigated according to Point 1 of this Article and Point 2,
Article 132 of this Law.
3. Investigation authorities shall be responsible for fulfilling requests that are
stated in the Procuracy’s decision to return documents for further investigation. If they
fail to accomplish the requests due to force majeure or objective obstacles, reasons of
such failure must be clearly reported in writing.
Investigation authorities, when closing additional investigation, shall conclude
such investigation in writing. The written conclusion of the additional investigation
shall specify additional findings and standpoints for the settlement of the case. If the
additional findings basically conflict with previous ones, investigation authorities shall
issue a new conclusion of investigation to replace the old one.
The transfer of case files and additional conclusion of investigation to The
procuracy and the delivery of notices of additional findings shall be governed by
Article 232 and Article 238 of this Law
Article 246. Handling of the Court’s request for further investigation
If the Court decides to return case files and request further investigation, the
Procuracy shall consider justifications for further investigation and handle such request
in the following manner:
1. The Court reach a justified decision to return documents to investigation
authorities, which The procuracy deems unnecessary, for further investigation;
therefore, the Procuracy is entitled to directly carry out certain activities of
investigation to supplement documents and evidences. However, the Procuracy, if
unable to conduct further investigation, shall forward documents to investigation
authorities for additional investigative activities.
If additional findings alter the fundamentals of existing charging documents, the
Procuracy shall redress such documents and convey documents to the Court. If
additional findings lead to the dismissal of the case, the Procuracy shall decide to have
the case dismissed and send a notice to the Court;
2. The procuracy, if finding no justifications for the return of documents for
further investigation, shall state its reasons, maintain the decision to prosecute and
send documents back to the Court.
Article 247. Suspension of cases
1. The procuracy shall decide to suspend a case in the following events:
b) If judicial expert examination finds that the suspect suffer from mental illness
or fatal diseases, the case may be suspended prior to the expiration of the time limit for
the issuance of a decision to prosecute;
b) Though the time limit for issuing a decision to prosecute expires, the suspect
absconds to an unknown location. In this event, investigation authorities shall be
requested to release a wanted notice against the suspect prior to the suspension of the
case. The search for the suspect shall abide by Article 231 of this Law;
c) Time limit for issuing a decision to prosecute expires while expert
examination, valuation process or judicial assistance, though requested, does not
progress. In such event, expert examination, valuation process and judicial assistance
shall continue until results are achieved.
2. A decision to suspend a case must specify reasons and justifications for
suspension, relevant details and other matters as stated in Section 2, Article 132 of this
Law.
If there are several suspects in one case but the reason for case suspension does
not apply to all of them, the lawsuit against each suspect shall be suspended separately.
Article 248. Dismissal of cases
1. The procuracy shall decide not to prosecute and to dismiss the case when
possessing one of the justifications as defined in Section 2, Article 155 and Article 157
of this Law or as stated in Article 16 or Article 19 or Section 2, Article 91 of the
Criminal Code.
2. A decision to dismiss a case must specify reasons and justifications for the
dismissal of the case, termination of preventive and coercive measures, handling of
evidences, documents and items impounded (if any), other relevant matters and other
details as stated in Section 2, Article 132 of this Law. If there are many suspects in one
case but the justifications for case dismissal do not apply to all of them, the case shall
be dismissed separately for each suspect.
Article 249. Resumption of cases
1. The procuracy, when having justifications to annul the decision to suspend or
dismiss a case, shall decide to resume the case if the prescriptive period for criminal
prosecution remains effective. If the case is dismissed according to Section 5 and
Section 6, Article 157 of this Law without the consent of the suspect who petitions for
case resumption, the Procuracy shall decide to resume the case. The case can be
resumed fully or partly against each suspect.
2. A decision to resume a case must specify reasons and justifications for case
resumption, relevant matters and details as stated in Section 2, Article 132 of this Law.
3. The procuracy, in 03 days upon making the decision, shall send the decision to
resume case or lawsuit against a suspect to the suspect, his defense counsel or
representative, authorities closing the investigation; and send a notice to the crime
victims, litigants and protectors of their legitimate rights and benefits.
The delivery of the decision to resume the case or lawsuit against the suspect
shall be executed in writing and inputted into the case file.
4. The time limit for issuing a decision to prosecute upon the resumption of the
case shall be subject to universal stipulations in this Law and commence upon the
Procuracy’s issuance of the decision to resume the case.
5. The procuracy, when resuming a case, shall be entitled to enforce, alter or
terminate preventive and coercive measures as per this Law.
If there are justifications for detention as per this Law, the duration of detention
for the resumption of the case shall not exceed the time limit for the issuance of a
decision to prosecute.
PART FOUR
CRIMINAL ADJUDICATION
Chapter XX
GENERAL
Article 250. Direct, verbal and uninterrupted adjudication
1. The trial shall be conducted through verbal communication.
The Trial panel shall directly determine facts of the case by asking and listening
to the defendants, crime victims or their representatives, witness testifiers, expert
witnesses and other attendees summoned by the Court. The lay assessors shall
consider and examine documents and evidences collected; announce written records
and documents and engage in other legal proceedings to inspect evidences. The lay
assessors shall listen to procurators, defense counsels, and protectors of legitimate
benefits and rights of the crime victims and litigants.
2. The trial shall not be interrupted, save break time and halt.
Article 251. Temporary halt to trial
1. The trial may be halted in one of the following events:
a) Evidences, document and items must be verified, gathered or supplemented;
however, such tasks are not viable in court and shall be fulfilled in 05 days' time upon
the temporary halt to the trial;
b) Authorized procedural persons and participants in legal proceedings, due to
health conditions, force majeure or objective obstacles, cannot continue their
attendance in court; however, they can reappear in court in 05 days' time upon the
temporary halt to the trial;
c) The court clerk is absent from the Courtroom.
2. The temporary halt to the trial shall be inputted into the written record of the
Court and announced to participants in legal proceedings. The duration of a temporary
halt to a trial shall not exceed 05 days upon the issuance of the decision to halt the
trial. Upon the expiration of the halt, the trial resumes. If the trial cannot resume, it
shall be adjourned.
Article 252. The Court’s verification, collection and addition of evidences
A Court verifies, collects and adds evidences through the following activities:
1. Obtain evidences, documents and items in connection with the case from
authorities and entities;
2. Request authorities and entities to provide documents and items related to the
case;
3. Assess on site evidences not movable to the Courtroom;
4. Assess crime scenes or other sites in connection with the case;
5. Requisition expert examination or property valuation, except for situations that
require mandatory expert examination or property valuation as per Article 206 and
Article 215 of this Law; requisition additional or repeated expert examinations and
repeated valuation of property;
6. If The procuracy fails to provide additional proofs according to the Court's
request, the Court shall verify and collect documents and evidences to settle the case.
Article 253. Procurement of evidences, documents and items related to the
case
1. The presiding judge of the Court shall procure evidences, documents and items
of the case from authorities and entities and pose questions to the providers of such
articles about matters in connection with such evidences, documents and items. The
procurement shall be executed in writing.
2. The Court, upon receiving evidences, documents and items from authorities
and entities, must forward such to the equivalent Procuracy. The procuracy, in 03 days
upon receiving evidences, documents and items, shall assess and return such articles to
the Court to be put in the case file.
Article 254. Composition of a trial panel
1. A trial panel of a first-instance Court is composed of one judge and two lay
assessors. A trial panel of a first instance Court adjudicating a serious and complex
case shall comprise two judges and three lay assessors.
Two judges and three lay assessors shall constitute a trial panel of a first-instance
Court adjudicating defendants whose crimes are punishable by life imprisonment or
death as per the Criminal Code.
2. A trial panel of an appellate Court shall comprise three judges.
Article 255. Decision to hear a case
1. A decision to bring a case to trial shall detail:
a) Issue date of the decision; name of the Court’s issuing the decision; date, time
and location of the trial;
b) Public or secret trial;
c) Full name, date of birth, place of birth, occupation and residential address of
the defendants;
d) Offence titles, points, sections and articles of the Criminal Code, which are
quoted by The procuracy to prosecute defendants;
dd) Full name of judge(s), lay assessors, Court clerk; full name of reserve
judge(s), lay assessor(s) and Court clerk(s), if any;
e) Full name of procurators exercising prosecution rights and administering the
trial; full name of reserve procurators (if any);
g) Full name of defense counsels (if any);
h) Full name of interpreters (if any);
i) Full name of other individuals summoned to the Court;
k) Evidences taken to and assessed in court.
2. A decision to hear a case in an appellate Court shall state details as defined in
Point a, b, e, g, h, i and k, Section 1 of this Article; offence titles and punishments
ruled by the first-instance Court; full name of the appellant and appellee; The
procuracy filing appeals; full name of judge(s) and Court clerk; full name of reserve
judge(s) and Court clerk(s), if any.
Article 256. Internal rules of a Court
1. Every person in court must be dressed properly, conform to the security check
and follow the guidelines given by The court clerk.
2. Every person in court must respect the Trial panel, maintain order and follow
the instructions by The presiding judge.
3. Every person in court must stand up when the Trial panel enters the Courtroom
and pronounces judgments. The defendants must stand up when the procurator
announce the charges or the decision to prosecute. The persons summoned by the
Court must obtain The presiding judge’s permission before stating their opinions. The
persons giving opinions must stand up when stating their viewpoints and responding to
questions.
The presiding judge may permit individuals to remain seated due to health
conditions.
4. In court, the defendants in detention shall only interact with their defense
counsels. They must obtain The presiding judge's permission before interacting with
other people.
5. People less than 16 years of age shall not enter the Courtroom, unless
summoned by the Court.
Article 257. Courtroom
1. The Courtroom must be arranged to uphold solemnity, safety and equality
between individuals exercising prosecution rights and lawyers or defense counsels.
2. The court president of the Supreme People’s Court shall regulate the details of
this Article.
Article 258. Records of Court
1. A written record of a Court shall detail time, date and location of the trial and
every event in court from start to finish. Apart from the written record, the Court's
progress may be recorded by sound or sound-and-visual means.
2. Questions, answers, presentations and rulings in court shall be inputted into the
written record.
3. The presiding judge, at the end of the trial, must examine the Court record.
The signatures of his and The court clerk’s shall be affixed on to the record.
4. After The presiding judge and Court clerk sign the Court record, the
procurator, defendants, defense counsels, crime victims, litigants and protectors of
legitimate rights and benefits of crime victims and litigants and their representatives
shall be permitted to read the Court record. If amendments to the Court record are
requested, The court clerk shall input such amendments into the Court record. A Court
record shall not be erased or modified directly. Amendments shall be inputted at the
bottom of the record and endorsed by the signatures of The presiding judge and Court
clerk. If The presiding judge disapproves such request, he must state reasons in The
court clerk.
Article 259. Records of deliberation
1. Deliberation must be executed in writing.
All members of the Trial panel must sign the record of deliberation in the retiring
room before pronouncing judgments.
2. The record of deliberation by a trial panel of a first-instance Court shall detail:
a) Time and date of the record; name of the Court holding the trial;
b) Full name of judge(s) and lay assessors;
c) The case being adjudicated;
d) Result of the Trial panel’s voting on issues argued according to Section 3,
Article 326 of this Law, and other opinions (if any).
3. The record of deliberation by a trial panel of an appellate Court must specify
details as per point a, c and d, Section 2 of this Article and full name of judges.
Article 260. Judgments
1. A Court passes judgments in the name of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam.
Judgment provided in written form must bear signatures of all members of the
Trial panel.
2. The judgments of a first instance Court must specify:
a) Name of the first-instance Court; case number and initial date of admission;
number and date of the judgment, full name of members in the Trial panel, Court clerk
and procurators; full name, date of birth, place of birth, residential address, occupation,
educational level, ethnicity, criminal records and previous convictions of the
defendants; date of temporary detainment or detention of the defendants; full name,
age, occupation, place of birth, residential address of representatives of the defendants;
full name of defense counsels, witness testifiers, expert witnesses, valuators,
interpreters, translators and other individuals summoned by the Court to attend the
trial; full name, age, occupation and residential address of the crime victims, litigants
and their representatives; number and date of the decision to hear the case; public or
secret trial; time and location of the trial;
b) Number and date of charging documents and decisions to prosecute; name of
The procuracy prosecuting; defendants’ acts as per the crimes prosecuted by The
procuracy; crimes and points, sections, articles quoted from the Criminal Code and
punishments, additional penalties, judicial remedies, compensations for damage, which
are recommended by The procuracy against the defendants; handling of evidences;
c) Opinions given by defense counsels, crime victims, litigants and other
individuals summoned by the Court to attend the trial;
d) The Trial panel’s judgments must analyze evidences establishing guilt or
innocence, determine the defendants’ state of being guilty of what crimes or guiltless,
points, sections and articles quoted from the Criminal Code and other legislative
documents, factors aggravating and mitigating criminal liabilities and solutions. If the
defendants are found guiltless, the judgment must detail justifications of their
innocence and the restoration of their honor, legitimate rights and benefits as per the
laws;
dd) The analysis of reasons that the Trial panel rely on to reject justifications of
accusation or acquittal and requests from procurators, defendants, defense counsels,
crime victims, litigants and their representatives and protectors of their legitimate
rights and benefits;
e) The analysis of the legality of legal proceedings and relevant decisions of
investigators, procurators and defense counsels during the investigation, prosecution
and adjudication;
g) The Trial panel’s rulings over each issue of the case, Court fee and right to
appeal against the judgments. Rulings, if immediately executed, must be specified.
3. The judgment of an appellate Court must specify:
a) Name of the appellate Court; case number and initial date of admission;
number and date of the judgment, full name of members in the Trial panel, Court clerk
and procurators; full name, date of birth, place of birth, residential address, occupation,
educational level, ethnicity, criminal records and previous convictions of the
defendants filing or facing appeals and those who do not but are reviewed by the
appellate Court; date of temporary detainment or detention of the defendants; full
name, age, occupation, place of birth, residential address of representatives of the
defendants; full name of defense counsels, witness testifiers, expert witnesses,
valuators, interpreters, translators and other individuals summoned by the Court to
attend the trial; full name, age, occupation and residential address of the crime victims,
litigants and their representatives; name of The procuracy filing appeals; public or
secret trial; time and location of the trial;
b) Summary of the case, rulings from the judgment of the first-instance Court;
details of the appeals; judgments by the appellate trial panel, justifications for approval
or disapproval of appeals; points, sections and articles quoted from the Criminal Code
and other legislative documents, which the appellate judicial Court base on to settle the
case;
c) The appellate trial panel’s rulings over each issue of the case, which arise due
to the appeals, fees of first-instance and appellate Courts.
Article 261. Amendments to a judgment
1. A judgment shall not be amended unless it contains apparent errors in spelling
or figures due to confusion or miscalculation.
Amendments to a judgment shall not alter the nature of the case or lead to the
disadvantage of defendants or other participants in legal proceedings.
Amendments to a judgment shall be executed in writing and promptly given to
the individuals as defined in Article 262 of this Law.
2. Amendments to a judgment as per Section 1 of this Article shall be subject to
the decisions by The presiding judge of the Court passing such judgment. If The
presiding judge is unable to adopt the said amendments, The court president of the
Court adjudicating the case shall ratify them.
Article 262. Delivery of judgments
1. A first-instance Court, in 10 days upon pronouncing a judgment, must deliver
such judgment to the defendants, crime victims, the equivalent Procuracy, defense
counsels and defendants convicted in absentia according to Point c, Section 2, Article
290 of this Law, the immediate superior Procuracy, equivalent investigation authority,
competent authority enforcing criminal sentences, detention or penal facility holding
defendants in captivity. Moreover, written notices shall be sent to local authorities at
the commune, ward or town where defendants reside or to defendants’ workplaces or
educational facilities. Furthermore, litigants or their representatives shall receive
copies or relevant extracts of the judgments.
The judgments, if passed in a trial in absentia according to Point a or Point b,
Section 2, Article 290 of this Law, shall be posted at the People’s committee of the
commune, ward or town where defendants last resided or at their last workplaces or
educational facilities within the time limit as stated above.
The first-instance Court shall deliver its judgments to a competent authority
enforcing civil sentences if such judgments expresses pecuniary fine, confiscation of
property and civil rulings according to the Law on civil sentence enforcement.
2. An appellate Court, in 10 days upon pronouncing a judgment or issuing a
ruling, must deliver such appellate judgment or ruling to the equivalent Procuracy,
competent authority enforcing criminal sentences, investigation authorities,
procuracies, the Court of first instance, detention or penal facility holding defendants
in captivity, appellants, individuals having interests and duties related to the appeals or
their representatives. Moreover, the competent authority enforcing civil sentences shall
receive the appellate judgment expressing pecuniary fines, confiscation of property
and civil rulings. Furthermore, written notices shall be sent to local authorities of the
commune, ward or town where defendants reside or to their workplaces or educational
facilities. If the Higher People’s Court hears the appeals, the time limit stated above
may be extended for 25 more days at most.
Article 263. Interpretation in a Courtroom
1. If a defendant, crime victim, litigant or witness testifier does not speak
Vietnamese or suffers from mutism or deafness, an interpreter shall explicate
presentations, questions and answers in court, the Trial panel’s rulings and relevant
matters for them to perceive.
2. The interpreter must translate presentations, questions and answers made by
individuals as defined in Section 1 of this Article into Vietnamese for the Trial panel
and other attendees in court to grasp.
Article 264. Requisition for rectification of shortcomings and violations in
managerial tasks
1. The Court, when passing a judgment, shall ask concerned authorities and
organizations to implement essential measures to rectify causes and circumstances
leading to criminal acts at such authorities or organizations. Authorities and
organizations, in 30 days upon receiving the Court’s requisition, must inform the Court
in writing of measures taken.
2. The Court’s requisition, along with the judgments, may be read out in court or
sent privately to concerned authorities or organizations.
Article 265. Requisition for competent authorities’ revision of legislative
documents
The Court, when adjudicating a criminal case, shall detect and propose
competent authorities’ revision or abrogation of legislative documents in violation of
the Constitution, laws, resolutions passed by the National Assembly, ordinances and
decrees passed by Standing Committee of the National Assembly to guarantee
legitimate rights and benefits of authorities and entities.
The contemplation of matters and respond to the Court about the handling of
legislative documents proposed shall be governed by the laws.
Article 266. Duties and authorities of The procuracy exercising prosecution
rights during the stage of adjudication
1. The procuracy, when exercising prosecution rights during the stage of a trial of
first instance, shall bear the following duties and authority:
a) Announce the accusations and decisions to prosecute through summary
procedures and other decisions on charges against defendants in court;
b) Pose questions, assess evidences, and examine scenes;
c) Engage in the arraignment, oral arguments, revoke parts or all of the decisions
to prosecute, conclude other equivalent or lesser crimes, and state the Procuracy's
standpoints on the settlement of the case in court;
d) Appeal against the judgments or rulings of the Court, which are unjust or
incorrect or which omit crimes and offenders.
dd) Perform other duties and authority to exercise prosecution rights at a first-
instance trial as per this Law.
2. The procuracy, when exercising its prosecution rights to hear appeals, shall
bear these duties and authority:
a) State opinions on the appeals;
b) Add new evidences;
c) Amend the appeals o revoke parts or all of the appeals;
d) Pose questions, assess evidences, and examine scenes;
dd) State the Procuracy's opinions on the settlement of case in court and meeting
session;
e) Engage in oral arguments with the defendants, defense counsels and other
participants in legal proceedings in court;
g) Perform other duties and authority when exercising prosecution rights at an
appellate trial as per this Law.
Article 267. Duties and authority of the Procuracy administering the trial
1. Administer legal compliance of the Court’s hearing of criminal cases.
2. Administer legal compliance of participants in legal proceedings, request
competent authorities to handle participaints in legal proceedings, who breach the
laws.
3. Administer judgments, rulings and other procedural documents of the Court
4. Request the equilvaint Court or lower authorities to transfer the cases to
consider and decide the appeals.
5. Appeal against the Court’s judgments and decision in serious of violations of
legal proceedings.
6. Request the Court, authorities and entities to conduct procedural activities as
defined in this Law; request the Court to rectify procedural violations.
7. Request concerned authorities and organizations to implement preventive
measures against crimes and breach of law in managerial tasks.
8. Exercise the right to make other requests and perform other duties and powers
when administering the criminal trial as per this Laws.
Chapter XXI
TRIAL OF FIRST INSTANCE
Volume I. JURISDICTION OF COURTS
Article 268. Jurisdiction of a Court
1. A district People’s Court or local military Court hears criminal cases of
misdemeanors, felonies and horrific felonies at first instance, except for the following
crimes:
a) Breach of national security;
b) Sabotage of peace, crimes against humanity and war crimes;
c) Crimes as defined in Article 123, 125, 126, 227, 277, 278, 279, 280, 282, 283,
284, 286, 287, 288, 337, 368, 369, 370, 371, 399 and 400 of the Criminal Code;
d) Crimes committed outside the territories of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam.
2. A provincial People’s Court or military Court of a military zone hears
following cases at first instance:
a) Criminal cases beyond the jurisdiction of a district People’s Court or local
military Court;
b) Criminal cases related to defendants, crime victims or litigants who live
abroad or in connection with property involved in other lawsuits occurring on foreign
territories;
c) A criminal lawsuit, though within the jurisdiction of a district People’s Court
or local military Court, comprise complex facts making it hard to assess or reach
unanimity upon the properties of the case or is involved in various sectors and levels
of authority or is brought against a defendant who is a judge, procurator, investigator,
primary governmental leaders in district, township, provincial city or city of a
centrally-affiliated city, religious dignitary or individual having high prestige in a
community of minority.
Article 269. Territorial jurisdiction
1. A Court, whose location is most adjacent to the scene of a crime, shall have
jurisdiction over the criminal lawsuit against that crime If crimes occur in various
places or at an unknown site, the Court most adjacent to the site where investigative
activities are finished shall retain jurisdiction.
2. The provincial People’s Court at the last residential place of a defendant
committing a crime abroad shall have jurisdiction if such person is tried in Vietnam. If
a defendant’s last residential place in Vietnam is unknown, The court president of the
Supreme People’s Court shall, as the case may be, decide to assign the People’s Court
of the city of Hanoi or the city of Ho Chi Minh or the city of Da Nang to hear the case.
A defendant committing a crime abroad, if falling within the jurisdiction of a
military Court, shall be tried by the military Court of a military zone as per the
decision by The court president of the Central military court.
Article 270. Jurisdiction over crimes occurring aboard an aircraft or ocean
ship of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam, which is operating outside the airspace
or territorial waters of Vietnam
A Vietnamese Court most adjacent to the airport or harbor, where an aircraft or
ocean ship of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam is registered or first arrives, shall have
jurisdiction over crimes occurring on such aircraft or ocean ship operating outside the
airspace or territorial waters of Vietnam.
Article 271. Trial against a defendant committing multiple crimes that fall
within the jurisdiction of a Court at different level
A superior Court shall hear the entire case involved in multiple crimes, some of
which come within its jurisdiction.
Article 272. Jurisdiction of a military Court
1. A military Court has jurisdiction over:
a) A criminal case against a defendant who is a serviceman on active duty, state
employee, worker, national defense official or reserve soldier undergoing focus
training or combat availability tests; militia undergoing focus training or subordinated
to the People’s Army in combat, citizens mobilized, convoked or contracted to serve
the People’s Army;
b) A criminal case against a defendant who is not stated in Point a, Section 1 of
this Article and is involved in military secrets or causes damage to the life, health,
honor and dignity of servicemen on active duty, state employees, workers, national
defense officials, reserve soldiers undergoing focus training or combat availability
tests or causes damage to the property, honor and reputation of the People’s Army or
commits crimes in a military barrack or military area under the management and
protection of the People’s Army.
2. A military Court has jurisdiction over all crimes occurring in areas under
martial law.
Article 273. Trial against a defendant committing multiple crimes that fall
within the jurisdiction of a People’s Court and Military Court
If a defendant or crime comes within the jurisdiction of a Military Court and
another defendant or crime in the same case falls within the jurisdiction of a People’s
Court, the case shall be subject to the following jurisdiction:
1. If issues of the case can be separated, the Military Court shall judge defendants
and crimes within its jurisdiction and the People’s Court shall judge defendants and
crimes within its jurisdiction;
2. If separation is not viable, the Military Court shall hear the entire case.
Article 274. Case transfer during the stage of adjudication
1. A Court shall return files of a case beyond its jurisdiction to The procuracy
initiating prosecution, which shall transfer the case to a competent Procuracy for
prosecution.
The procuracy initiating prosecution, in 03 days upon retrieving case files, shall
issue a decision to transfer them to a competent Procuracy for intra vires prosecution.
The transfer of a case out of a province, centrally-affiliated city or a military zone shall
abide by Article 239 of this Law.
The procuracy, if considering thin court returning case files still has juridistion
over the case, shall give such documents back to the Court with an enclosed letter of
explanation. If the Court still deem the case ultra vires, the dispute over jurisdiction
shall be settled according to Article 275 of this Law. The procuracy must conform to
the decisions of the competent Court.
2. The time limit for prosecution and the enforcement of preventive measures
shall be governed by Article 240 and Article 241 of this Law.
Article 275. Settlement of disputes over jurisdiction
1. The court president of a provincial People’s Court or a Military court of a
military zone shall make decisions on disputes over jurisdiction among People’s
Courts at district level in the same province or centrally-affiliated city or Military
courts in the same military zone.
2. The court president of a provincial People’s Court or a Military court of a
military zone most adjacent to the site where investigative activities end shall make
decisions on disputes over jurisdiction among district People’s Courts in various
provinces or centrally-affiliated cities or Military courts from different military zones.
3. The court president of the Supreme People’s Court or the Central military
court shall make decisions to settle disputes over jurisdiction among provincial
People’s Courts or Military courts of military zones.
4. The court president of the Supreme People’s Court shall make decisions on
disputes over jurisdiction between a People’s Court and Military court.
The transfer of a case for intra vires prosecution shall abide by Article 274 of this
Law.
Volume II. TRIAL PREPARTION
Article 276. Obtain case files, charging documents and admit the case
1. When the Procuracy delivers charging documents, case files and evidences (if
available), the Court shall examine and handle such papers and objects in the
following manner:
a) If case files and accompanying exhibits (if any) suffice according to the list of
documents and exhibits, and the suspect or his representative receives charging
documents, the case file shall be admitted;
b) If case files and accompanying exhibits (if any) do not suffice according to the
list of documents and exhibits, or the suspect or his representative does not receive
charging documents, the case file shall not be admitted. In this event, the Procuracy
shall be requested to supplement documents and exhibits or send charging documents
to the suspect or his representative.
2. The delivery of case files and charging documents shall be executed in writing
according to Article 133 of this Law and be inputted into the case file.
The court, upon receiving case files and charging documents, shall admit the
case. The court president of the Court, in 03 days upon admitting the case, shall
appoint The presiding judge who hears the case.
Article 277. Time limit for trial preparation
1. The presiding judge, in 30 days for misdemeanors, 45 days for felonies, 02
months for horrific felonies and 03 months for extremely severe felonies upon the
admission of the case, shall make one of the following decisions:
a) Hear the case;
b) Return documents for further investigation;
c) Suspend or dismiss the case.
The court president of the Court may decide to extend the time limit for
preparation for trial against a complex case for 15 more days for misdemeanors and
felonies and 30 more days at most for horrific felonies and extremely severe felonies.
The equivalent procuracy must be promptly informed of the extension of the time limit
for trial preparation.
2. If a case is returned for further investigation, the Presiding judge, in 15 days
upon retrieving documents, must decide to hear the case. If a case is resumed, the time
limit for trial preparation shall abide by universal stipulations of this Law and
commences as of the date of the Court's decision to resume the case.
3. The court, in 15 days upon issuing a decision to hear the case, must hold a
trial. If force majeure or objective obstacles occur, the Court may initiate the trial
within 30 days.
Article 278. Implementation, alteration and termination of preventive and
coercive measures
1. The presiding judge, after admitting a case, shall decide to implement, alter
and terminate preventive or coercive measures. However, the Court president or Vice
court president shall make such decisions on detention measure.
2. The time limit for detention prior to trial shall not exceed that for trial
preparation as stated in Section 1, Article 277 of this Law.
3. If the time limit for detention of a defendant in detention expires upon the
initiation of the trial, the Trial panel shall consider the necessity of detention for trial
and issue a detention order that loses effect at the end of the trial.
Article 279. Processing of requests before trial
1. The presiding judge, before initiating a trial, must process these requests:
a) Requests by procurators and participants in legal proceedings for the provision
and addition of evidences, summoning of witness testifiers, authorized procedural
persons and other participants in legal proceedings to the court, and for the
replacement of members of the Trial panel or Court clerk;
b) Requests by defendants or their representatives, defense counsels for alteration
or termination of preventive and coercive measures;
c) Requests by procurators and participants in legal proceedings for a trial
through summary procedures or for a public or secret trial;
d) Requests by participants in legal proceedings for their absence from the
courtroom.
2. The presiding judge, if considering such requests justified, shall grant those
within his powers or inform competent individuals to handle the requests according to
this law. Moreover, the persons issuing such requests shall be informed. Rejection and
reasons shall be informed in writing.
Article 280. Return of documents for further investigation
1. The presiding judge shall decide to return documents to the Procuracy for
further investigation in one of the following events:
a) Evidences for matters defined in Article 85 of this Law are not sufficient and
cannot be supplemented in court;
b) There are grounds showing the existence of the suspect’s other acts, apart from
those prosecuted by the Procuracy, deemed as crimes in the Criminal Code;
c) There are grounds showing the existence of other accomplices or offenders of
criminal acts, as per the Criminal Code, involved in the case and facing no charges;
d) The charges, investigation and prosecution have constituted serious violations
of legal proceedings.
2. If the Procuracy finds grounds to have documents returned for additional
investigation, it shall request the Court in writing for document return.
3. A decision to return documents for further investigation must specify issues to
be further investigated. Such decision and case files shall be given to the Procuracy in
03 days upon the issuance of the decision.
If additional findings lead to the dismissal of the case, the Procuracy shall decide
to have the case dismissed and inform the Court in 03 days upon the issuance of such
decision.
If additional findings lead to the alteration of the decision to prosecute, the
Procuracy shall issue new charging documents that replace the previous ones.
If the Procuracy fails to provide additional information as per the Court's requests
and retain its decision to prosecute, the Court shall commence the trial.
Article 281. Case suspension
1. The presiding judge shall decide to suspend a case in one of the following
events:
a) There are justifications for case suspension as defined in Point b and Point c,
Section 1, Article 229 of this Law;
b) The location of a suspect or defendant is unknown despite the expiration of the
time limit for trial preparation. In this event, investigation authorities shall be
requested to seek such defendant or suspect prior to the suspension of the case. The
seeking of a suspect or defendant shall abide by Article 231 of this Law;
c) Await the result of the processing of legislative documents as per the Court’s
requisitions.
2. If there are several suspects or defendants in one case but the reason for case
suspension does not apply to all of them, the lawsuit shall be suspended for each
suspect or defendant separately.
3. The decision to suspend the case must specify reasons for suspension and
details as stated in Section 2, Article 132 of this Law.
Article 282. Case dismissal
1. The presiding judge shall decide to dismiss a case in one of the following
events:
a) There are justifications for case dismissal as defined in Section 2, Article 155
or Point 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7, Article 157 of this Law;
b) The procuracy revokes all decisions to prosecute before the trial commences.
If there are several suspects or defendants in one case but the reason for case
dismissal does not apply to all of them, the lawsuit shall be dismissed for each suspect
or defendant separately.
2. The decision to dismiss the case must specify reasons for dismissal and details
as stated in Section 2, Article 132 of this Law.
Article 283. Case resumption
1. If the prescriptive period for criminal prosecution is still effective and there are
grounds to annul the decision to suspend or dismiss a case, the Presiding judge issuing
such decision shall decide to resume the case.
If the Judge issuing the decision to suspend or dismiss the case is obstructed, the
Court president shall issue the decision to resume the case.
2. If the case is suspended or dismissed for each suspect or defendant separately,
the decision on case resumption shall apply to each of them.
3. The decision to resume the case must specify reasons for case resumption and
details as stated in Section 2, Article 132 of this Law.
4. The court, when resuming the case, shall be entitled to implement, alter or
terminate preventive and coercive measures as per this Law.
If there are justifications for the necessity of detention as per this Law, the
duration of detention for case resumption shall not exceed the time limit for trial
preparation.
Article 284. Request for the Procuracy’s addition of documents and
evidences
1. The presiding judge, when requiring additional documents and evidences
necessary to settle to the case without the return of case files for further investigation,
shall request the Procuracy to supplement such papers and proofs.
2. The request for additional documents and evidences shall be executed in
writing and sent to the equivalent Procuracy in 02 days upon the issuance of the
written request. Such request must specify documents and evidences to be added.
3. The procuracy, in 05 days upon receiving the Court’s request, shall provide the
Court with additional documents and evidences as requested. If the Procuracy fails to
provide additional documents or evidences, the court shall commence the trial.
Article 285. The procuracy’s revocation of the decision to prosecute
The procuracy, when finding a justification as per Article 157 of this Law or
Article 16 or Article 29 or Section 2, Article 91 of the Criminal Code, shall decide to
revoke the decision to prosecute prior to the start of the trial and to request the Court to
dismiss the case.
Article 286. Delivery of a first-instance Court’s decisions
1. A decision to hear a case shall be given to the defendant or his representative,
defense counsel, crime victim and litigant in 10 days at most prior to the start of the
trial.
A decision to hold a trial in absentia shall be given to the defendant's defense
counsel or representative. Such decision shall also be posted publicly at the People’s
committee at the commune, ward or town where the defendant last resided or his last
workplace or educational facility.
2. The court’s decision to suspend, dismiss or resume a case shall be given to the
suspect, defendant, crime victim or their representatives and other participants in legal
proceedings in 03 days upon the issuance of such decision.
3. The delivery of a decision to appoint a Judge presiding the court, to try a case,
to suspend, dismiss or resume a case to the equivalent procuracy must occur in 02 days
upon the issuance of such decision. A decision to dismiss or suspend a case must be
sent to the immediate superior Procuracy in 02 days upon the issuance of such
decision.
4. A decision to implement, alter or terminate preventive or coercive measure
shall be given, in 24 hours upon the issuance of such decision, to the suspect,
defendant, the equivalent Procuracy, detention facility holding the suspect or
defendant in captivity.
Article 287. Summoning of individuals to the trial for questioning
The presiding judge shall consider the decision to hear the case and requests by
procurators, defense counsel and other participants in legal proceedings to summon
individuals to the trial for questioning.
Volume III. GENERAL REGULATIONS ON COURT PROCEEDINGS
Article 288. Attendance of members of the Trial panel and Court clerk
1. The trial shall proceed only in the presence of full members of the Trial panels
and the Court clerk. The members of the Trial panel must hear the case from start to
finish.
2. If a Judge or lay assessor cannot continue hearing the case but a reserve Judge
or lay assessor attends the trial from the start, the reserve one shall be the replace
member of the Trial panel. If the Trial panel consists of two judges but the Presiding
judge cannot continue attending the trial, the other Judge shall preside the court and a
reserve Judge shall be the replace member of the Trial panel.
3. If a reserve Judge or lay assessor is not available or a judge substituting the
presiding judge is not available as per Section 2 of this Article, the trial shall be halted.
4. If the Court clerk is changed or cannot continue attending the court, the trial
may progress in the presence of a reserve Court clerk. If a replace clerk is not
available, the trial shall be halted.
Article 289. Attendance of Procurators
1. A procurator of the equivalent Procuracy must appear in court to exercise
prosecution rights and administer the trial. If the procurator is absent, the trial shall be
halted0} Many procurators may attend a lawsuit composed of serious and complex
elements. If procurator(s) cannot attend the trial, reserve procurator(s) attending the
trial from the start shall become replace(s) to exercise prosecution rights and
administer the trial.
2. If procurator(s) must be replaced or cannot continue exercising prosecution
rights or administering the trial in the absence of reserve procurator(s), the trial shall
be halted.
Article 290. Defendants’ attendance in the court
1. A defendant must be present in the court as per the Court’s subpoena during
the trial. If the defendant is absent not due to force majeure or objective obstacles, he
shall be delivered by force to the court. If his absence results from force majeure or
objective obstacles, the trial shall be halted.
If the defendant suffers from mental illness or fatal disease, the Judicial panel
shall suspend the case until the defendant is cured.
If the defendant absconds, the Trial panel shall suspend the case and request
investigation authorities to seek for him.
2. The court can only hold a trial in absentia in the following events:
a) The defendant has absconded and remains elusive despite the wanted notice;
b) The defendant is on foreign soil and cannot be summoned to the court;
c) The trial panel approves a request for trial in absentia;
d) The defendant’s absence is not because of force majeure or objective obstacles
and does not hinder the trial.
Article 291. Attendance of defense counsels
1. The defense counsel must appear in court to plead for persons whom they
agree to advocate. The defense counsel may send the written statement of defense to
the Court in advance. If the defense counsel is absent for the first time due to force
majeure or objective obstacles, the trial shall be halted unless the defendant agrees to
be tried in the absence of the defense counsel. If the defense counsel is absent not due
to force majeure or objective obstacles or fails to appear as per the valid second
subpoena, the court shall hold the trial.
2. If a defense counsel appointed as per Section 1, Article 76 of this Law is
absent, the Trial panel shall halt the trial unless the defendant or his representative
agrees to engage in the trial in the absence of the defense counsel.
Article 292. Attendance of crime victims, litigants or their representatives
1. If crime victim(s), litigant(s) or their representatives are absent, the Trial panel,
as the case may be, shall decide to halt or continue the trial.
2. If the absence of the crime victim(s) or litigant(s) only obstructs the settlement
of compensations for damage, the Trial panel may separate the issue of compensation
for later adjudication as per the laws.
Article 293. Attendance of witness testifiers
1. Testifiers shall attend the trial to elucidate facts of a case. If a testifier is absent
but gives statements to investigation authorities, the presiding judge shall announce
such statements. If a witness testifier for vital issues of the case is absent, the Trial
panel shall, as the case may be, decide to halt or continue the trial.
2. If a witness testifier is summoned by the Court but is intentionally absent not
due to force majeure or objective obstacles, the Trial panel shall decide to escort by
force such witness testifier, whose absence is deemed to hinder the trial, according to
this Law.
Article 294. Attendance of expert witnesses and valuators
1. Expert witnesses and property valuators shall attend the trial as per the Court’s
subpoena.
2. If the expert witness or valuator is absent, the Trial panel, as the case may be,
shall decide to halt or continue the trial.
Article 295. Attendance of interpreters and translators
1. Interpreters and translators, when summoned by the Court, shall attend the
trial.
2. If the interpreter or translator is absent without a replace, the Trial panel shall
decide to halt the trial.
Article 296. Attendance of Investigators and other individuals
During the process of trial, the Trial panel may summon Investigators, authorized
procedural persons handling the lawsuit and other individuals, if deemed necessary, to
adduce matters related to the case.
Article 297. Temporary halt to trial
1. The court shall halt the trial in one of the following events:
a) There are justifications as defined in Article 52, 53, 288, 289, 290, 291, 292,
293, 294 and 295 of this Law;
b) Evidences, documents or items must be verified or supplemented outside the
court;
c) Expert examinations must be furthered or repeated;
d) Valuation processes must be furthered or repeated.
If the trial is halted, it shall restart.
2. The duration of a temporary halt to a trial at first instance shall not exceed 30
days upon the issuance of a decision to halt the trial.
3. A written decision to halt a trial shall specify these primary details:
a) The issue date of the decision;
b) The name of the Court and full name of the Judge(s), lay assessors and Court
clerk;
c) The full name of Procurator(s) exercising prosecution rights and administering
the trial in court;
d) The case being adjudicated;
d) The reasons of the temporary halt to the trial;
e) The time and location for the resumption of the trial
4. The presiding judge shall represent the Trial panel to sign the written decision
to halt the trial. If the presiding judge is absent or replaced, the Court president shall
decide to halt the trial.
A decision to halt a trial, in 02 days upon the issuance of the decision, must be
announced to the participants in legal proceedings in court, be sent to the equivalent
Procuracy and to individuals absent from the court.
Article 298. Limits of adjudication
1. A court shall adjudicate defendants and acts of crimes prosecuted by a
Procuracy and brought to trial as per the Court's decision.
2. The court, when adjudicating defendants, may adduce different sections in a
legal article, which the Procuracy quote for prosecution, or may consider other crimes
equal or lesser than those prosecuted by the Procuracy.
3. If the defendants must be tried for crimes that outweigh those prosecuted by
the Procuracy, the Court shall return documents for the Procuracy to re-prosecute and
have defendants or their representatives and defense counsels informed of reasons. If
the Procuracy still prosecute the original crimes, the Court shall be entitled to adjudge
the defendants to crimes of higher degree.
Article 299. Pronouncement of a Court's judgments and rulings
1. The trial panel shall discuss and pass judgments in the retiring room.
2. The decisions to change Trial panel's members, procurator(s), court clerk,
expert witness(s), valuator(s), interpreter(s), translator(s) or to suspend or dismiss
cases, to halt a trial, to hold or discharge defendants in detention shall be discussed and
passed in writing the retiring room.
3. The decisions on other matters, as discussed and passed by the Trial panel in
the retiring room, may not be executed in writing but must be inputted in the court
record.
Volume IV. FORMALITIES TO COMMENCE COURT PROCEEDINGS
Article 300. Preliminary activities to commence a trial
The court clerk, prior to the start of the trial, shall perform these tasks:
1. Verify the attendance and perceive reasons for the absence of the individuals
summoned by the Court;
2. Announce the court’s rules.
Article 301. Start of trial
1. The presiding judge commences the trial and utter the decision to hear the
case.
2. The court clerk reports to the Trial panel on the attendance and absence, with
reasons, of the individuals summoned by the Court.
3. The presiding judge reviews the presence of the individuals responding to the
Court’s subpoena, examines personal records and announce their rights and duties.
Article 302. Handling of requests for the replacement of Judges, lay
assessors, Procurators, Court Clerks, expert witnesses, property valuators,
interpreters or translators
The presiding judge shall ask the Procurators and participants in legal
proceedings in court about requests and reasons for the replacement of Judges, lay
assessors, Procurators, Court clerks, expert witnesses, valuators, interpreters or
translators. The trial panel shall consider and ratify such requests, if raised.
Article 303. Undertaking by interpreters, translators, expert witnesses and
property valuators
The presiding judge, after elucidating the rights and duties of interpreters,
translators, expert witnesses and property valuators, shall demand their commitments
to accomplish their missions.
Article 304. Oath and exclusion of witness testifiers
1. The presiding judge, after explaining the witness testifiers’ rights and duties,
shall demand them to undertake to honest testimony.
2. The presiding judge, prior to the questioning of witness testifiers about the
case, shall decide measures to exclude witness testifiers from hearing each other’s
testimonies or interacting with concerned people. If the defendant’s statements and
witness testifiers’ testimonies come under mutual influence, the presiding judge shall
isolate defendants from witness testifiers before witness testifiers undergo questioning
session.
Article 305. Handling of requests for evidence assessment and temporary
halt to trial out of absence
The presiding judge must ask Procurators and participants in legal proceedings in
court about requests for the summoning of additional witness testifiers or display of
more exhibits and documents for assessment. If a participant in legal proceedings is
absent or appear in court but fails to engage in legal proceedings due to ill health
conditions, the presiding judge shall ask about requests for a temporary halt to the trial.
The trial panel shall consider and ratify such requests, if raised.
Volume V. FORMALITIES TO CONDUCT COURT PROCEEDINGS
Article 306. Announcement of charges
Procurators, before engaging in the questioning session, shall announce the
charges and state additional opinions, if available. Additional opinions must not
exacerbate the defendants' situations.
Article 307. Sequence of questioning
1. The trial panel must ascertain sufficient facts of each event and every crime in
the case and per capita. The presiding judge shall govern the questioning session and
decide the rational order of persons raising questions.
2. Each person shall be questioned by the presiding judge then, as per his
decisions, by other Judges, lay assessors, Procurators, defense counsels, and protectors
of litigants' legitimate rights and benefits.
Participants in court proceedings shall be entitled to petition the presiding judge
for his inquiry into facts that require further clarification.
Expert witnesses and property valuators shall be asked about matters related to
expert examinations and property valuation.
3. The trial panel, when running the questioning session, shall examine exhibits
in connection with the case.
Article 308. Disclosure of statements gathered during the stage of
investigation or prosecution
1. If the person questioned appears in court, the Judicial panel and procurators
shall not disclose their statements gathered during the stage of investigation or
prosecution.
2. Statements gathered during the stage of investigation or prosecution shall be
disclosed in one of the following events:
a) The person questioned gives testimonies in court, which conflict with his
statements taken during the stage of investigation or prosecution;
b) The person questioned does not give testimonies in court or does not
remember his statements taken during the stage of investigation or prosecution;
c) The person questioned petitions for the disclosure of his statements taken
during the stage of investigation or prosecution;
d) The person questioned is absent or deceased.
3. The trial panel shall not disclose documents of a case to, in special events,
maintain the confidentiality of state secrets, trade secrets, business secrets or personal
secrets, family secrets must be maintained, if deemed necessary or as per requests by
participants in legal proceedings, or to preserve national conventions.
Article 309. Questioning of defendants
1. The presiding judge shall decide to have each defendant questioned separately.
If a defendant’s testimonies influence another defendant's statements, the presiding
judge must exclude them from hearing each other. The defendant excluded shall be
informed of the prior defendant's testimonies and be permitted to raise questions to
that defendant.
2. A defendant shall state his opinions regarding the charging documents and
facts of the case. The trial panel inquires further about details that a defendant has not
elucidated or that come into collision.
Procurators shall ask defendants about evidences, documents and items in
connection with conviction or acquittal and other facts of the case.
Defense counsels shall ask defendants about evidences, documents and items
related to their tasks of defense and facts of the case.
Protectors of legitimate rights and benefits of crime victims and litigants shall ask
defendants about facts regarding their protection of litigants’ legitimate benefits and
rights.
Participants in court proceedings shall be permitted to petition the presiding
judge to inquire further about facts related to them.
3. If a defendant does not answer questions, the Trial panel, Procurators, defense
counsels, protectors of legitimate benefits and rights of aggrieved persons and litigants
shall ask other persons and examine exhibits and documents pertaining to the case.
A defendant, with the presiding judge’s permission, shall ask other defendants
about matters linked to him.
Article 310. Questioning of crime victims, litigants or their representatives
Crime victims, litigants or their representatives shall present the case's facts
associated with them. After such persons' presentations, the Trial panel, Procurators,
defense counsels and protectors of legitimate rights and benefits of crime victims and
litigants shall ask them more about insufficient or contradictory details in their speech.
Defendants, when permitted by the presiding judge, shall raise questions to crime
victims, litigants or their representatives about matters related to the defendants.
Article 311. Questioning of witness testifiers
1. Each witness testifier shall be questioned separately. None of the witness
testifiers is allowed to gain knowledge of each other’s questions and answers.
2. The trial panel, when questioning a witness testifier, shall inquire about the
witness testifier’s relationship with defendants and litigants of the case. The presiding
judge shall request witness testifiers to expound the facts of the case, which came to
their knowledge, and have them clarify inadequate or inconsistent details in their
testimonies. Procurators, defense counsels and protectors of legitimate rights and
benefits of crime victims and litigants may pose additional questions to witness
testifiers.
With the presiding judge’s consent, a defendant may ask witness testifiers about
matters that are connected to the defendant.
3. Witness testifiers, after giving testimonies, shall remain in the courtroom for
further questioning.
4. If there are evidences of violations or risks of violations against the life, health,
property, honor and dignity of a witness testifier or his kindred, the Trial panel shall
decide to have them secured by protective measures according to this Law or other
relevant laws.
5. The court, if necessary, shall question witness testifiers through a network of
computers or telecommunications.
Article 312. Assessment of exhibits
1. Exhibits, images or written attestation of exhibits shall be displayed for
assessment in court.
The trial panel, along with procurators, defense counsels and participants in court
proceedings, shall assess immovable exhibits on site, if necessary. The onsite
assessment of exhibits shall be executed in writing according to Article 133 of this
Law.
2. Procurators, defense counsels and other participants in court shall be permitted
to state their opinions regarding the exhibits. The trial panel, procurators, defense
counsels and protectors of the legitimate rights and benefits of litigants and crime
victims can inquire courtroom participants further about matters linked with exhibits.
Article 313. Audible or visual records
The trial panel shall decide to have audible or visual records played in court to
assess evidences, documents and items related to the case or verify the defendants’
claims of torture or confession extortion.
Article 314. Scene assessment
The trial panel, along with procurators, defense counsels and participants in court
proceedings, shall assess crime scenes or other sites in connection with the case, if
necessary. Procurators, defense counsels and other participants in court proceedings
shall be entitled to make remarks on the crime scenes or other sites linked with the
case. The trial panel can ask courtroom participants more about matters regarding such
locations.
The process of scene assessment shall be executed in writing according to Article
133 of this Law.
Article 315. Presentation and announcement of reports and documents from
authorities and organizations
Authorities and organizations shall assign representatives to expound on their
reports and documents. If their representatives do not attend the trial, the Trial panel
shall announce such reports and documents in court.
Procurators, defendants, defense counsels and other participants in court
proceedings shall be entitled to make remarks on the said documents and reports and
raise questions to the representatives of the said authorities or organizations and to
other participants in court proceedings about matters related to such documents and
reports.
Article 316. Questioning of expert witnesses and property valuators
1. The trial panel shall, on its own discretion or as per requests by Procurators,
defense counsels or other participants in court, request expert witnesses and property
valuators to state their findings on matters examined or property valued. Expert
witnesses and property valuators, when reporting, are entitled to give additional
explanations and justifications for their findings.
2. Procurators, defense counsels and other participants in court proceedings shall
be entitled to comment on the findings of expert examinations and property valuation.
Moreover, they shall be permitted to ask about unclear or contradictory details of such
findings or the details that conflict with other facts of the case.
3. If expert witnesses or property valuators are absent from the court, the
presiding judge shall announce the findings of expert examinations and property
valuation.
4. The trial panel shall order that expert examinations are furthered or repeated or
property valuation process starts again, if deemed necessary.
Article 317. Remarks by Investigators, Procurators, persons participating in
or given authority to institute legal proceedings
The trial panel shall, on its discretion or at the requests for authorized procedural
persons, request Investigators, Procurators, persons participating in or given authority
to institute legal proceedings to give their opinions, if deemed necessary to clarify
decisions and proceedings during the stage of investigation, prosecution and
adjudication.
Article 318. End of questioning session
The presiding judge, when considering facts of the case fully assessed, shall ask
Procurators, defendants, defense counsels and other participants in court proceedings
about their further questions. If no further question exists, the questioning session shall
end. If further questions raised are deemed necessary, the presiding judge shall decide
to sustain the questioning session.
Article 319. Procurator’s revocation of decisions on prosecution or
conclusion of lesser charges in court
Procurators, after ending their questioning session, can revoke parts or all of their
decisions to prosecute or conclude lesser charges.
Article 320. Sequence of oral arguments
1. Procurators, after finishing their questioning session, shall draw conclusions. If
grounds for conviction are not found, all decisions to prosecute shall be revoke and the
Court shall be requested to declare defendants not guilty.
2. Defendants and defense counsels shall give arguments to defend the former.
Defendants and their representatives shall be entitled to supplement the defense
arguments.
3. Crime victims, litigants and their representatives state their arguments to
defend their legitimate rights and benefits. Other protectors of such people’s legitimate
benefits and rights shall be entitled to present and supplement arguments.
4. If charges are pressed at the requests by the crime victims, the Procurators
shall draw conclusions before the aggrieved and their representatives state and
supplement arguments.
Article 321. Conclusion by Procurators
1. Procurators, when reaching conclusions, must contemplate evidences,
documents and items examined in court and arguments given by defendants, defense
counsels, protectors of legitimate rights and benefits of crime victims and litigants, and
other participants in court proceedings.
2. The content of such conclusions must analyze and assess, in unbiased,
comprehensive and thorough manners, evidences of guilt or innocence; nature and
harmful extent of crimes against society; consequences of crimes; personal records and
roles of defendants in crimes; offence titles; points, sections and articles quoted from
the Criminal Code, factors aggravating or mitigating criminal liabilities; level of
compensations for damage, handling of evidences, judicial remedies; reasons and
circumstances leading to crimes and other significant facts of the case.
3. Procurators shall propose the conviction of defendants on parts or all of
charges or lesser crimes; primary and additional penalties, judicial remedies, liabilities
for amends, handling of evidences.
4. Preventive measures against crimes and breach of laws shall be proposed.
Article 322. Oral arguments in court
1. Defendants, defense counsels and other participants in legal proceedings shall
be entitled to present their opinions, evidences and arguments in response to
Procurators' presentation of evidences of guilt and innocence; nature and harmful
extent of crimes against society; consequences of crimes; personal records and roles of
defendants in the case; factors aggravating and mitigating criminal liabilities,
penalties; civil liabilities, measures for handling evidences, judicial remedies; reasons
and circumstances leading to crimes and other significant facts of the case.
Defendants, defense counsels and other participants in legal proceedings shall be
entitled to state their propositions.
2. Procurators must display evidences, documents and arguments to respond to
the last of each standpoint given by the defendants, defense counsels and other
participants in court proceedings.
Individuals engaging in oral arguments shall be entitled to respond to other
people’s opinions.
3. The presiding judge shall not restrict the time for oral arguments and shall
endorse Procurators, defendants, defense counsels, crime victims and other
participants in legal proceedings to argue and state all viewpoints. However; opinions
not related to the case or repeated shall be removed.
The presiding judge shall demand Procurators’ obligation to respond to
standpoints of defense counsels and other participants in legal proceedings if
Procurators do not debate such standpoints.
4. The trial panel must listen and acknowledge every standpoint from
Procurators, defendants, defense counsels and other individuals providing oral
arguments in court to judge truths of the case in impartial and comprehensive manners.
The trial panel, if overruling standpoints of courtroom participants, must clarify its
justifications that are inputted into the court record.
Article 323. Resumption of questioning session
If oral arguments expose unasked or unclear facts of the case, the Trial panel
must resume the questioning session. Oral arguments shall continue upon the end of
the questioning session.
Article 324. Defendants’ last words
1. When no more argument is made, the presiding judge declares the end of the
oral argument session.
2. Defendants shall speak their last words. No question shall be raised after the
defendants utter their last words. If the defendants’ last words reveal new facts
significant to the case, the Trial panel shall decide to resume the questioning session.
The trial panel shall be entitled to request the defendants not to digress from the case.
However, no time limit shall be imposed on the defendants' final speech.
Article 325. Revocation of decisions to prosecute or to conclude lesser
charges in court
1. The trial panel shall sustain the trial though the Procurators revoke parts of the
decision to prosecute or draw conclusions on lesser offences.
2. If the Procurators revoke the entire decision to prosecute before the
deliberation session, the Trial panel shall request courtroom participants to state their
opinions on the revocation of the decision to prosecute.
Volume VI. DELIBERATION AND PRONOUNCEMENT OF
JUDGMENTS
Article 326. Deliberation of judgments
1. Only judges and lay assessors are empowered to deliberate judgments The
deliberation session occurs in the retiring room.
The presiding judge chairing the deliberation session shall be responsible for
stating each issue of the case that must be settled through the Trial panel’s
deliberation. The presiding judge himself or assigns a member of the Trial panel to
execute the written record of deliberation. Members of the Trial panel must settle all
and every issue of the case under majority rule. The votes shall be first casted by the
lay assessors then by the Judge(s). If the opinions do not win most of the vote, each of
the trial panel’s members’ opinions shall be re-discussed and re-voted for the most
voted ones. The minority voters shall be permitted to state their opinions in writing,
which are inputted into the case file.
2. The deliberation session shall only consider evidences and documents verified
in court on the basis of fully and thoroughly examined evidences and standpoints of
Procurators, defendants, defense counsels and other participants in legal proceedings.
3. The following issues of a case must be settled through deliberation:
a) The case is suspended or documents are returned for further investigation;
b) The legality of evidences and documents gathered by Investigation authorities,
Investigators, Procuracies and Procurators or provided by lawyers, suspects,
defendants and other participants in legal proceedings;
c) The existence of justifications for the conviction of the defendants. If
justifications for conviction suffice, the points, sections and articles applicable from
the Criminal Code must be specified.
d) Penalties and judicial panels imposed on the defendants; liabilities for
compensations; civil matters in the criminal lawsuit;
dd) The defendants‘ exemption from criminal liabilities or penalties;
e) Criminal court fee, civil court fee; handling of evidences; property seized,
accounts frozen;
g) The validity of acts and procedural decisions of Investigators, Procurators and
defense counsels during the processes of investigation, prosecution and adjudication;
h) Propositions for the prevention of crimes and correction of violations.
4. If the Procurators revoke the entire decision to prosecute, the Trial panel shall
continue settling the issues of the case by the sequence defined in section 1 of this
Article. If justifications absolve a defendant of guilt, the Trial panel shall declare the
defendant not guilty. The trial panel, if considering the revocation of the decision to
prosecute groundless, shall decide to suspend the lawsuit and inform the head of the
equivalent or immediate superior Procuracy of such matter.
5. If a case comprises a variety of complex facts, the Trial panel can decide to
extend the duration of the deliberation for 07 more days at most upon the end of the
oral argument session in court. The trial panel must inform the courtroom participants
and other participants in legal proceedings, who are absent from the court, of the time,
date and location for the pronouncement of judgments.
6. The trial panel, when finishing the deliberation session, shall decide one of the
following matters:
a) Pass and pronounce the sentences;
b) Resume the sessions of questioning and oral argument if some facts of the case
remain unasked or unclear;
c) Return case files to the Procuracy for further investigation and the Procuracy's
addition of documents and evidences;
d) Suspend the lawsuit.
The trial panel must inform the courtroom participants and other participants in
legal proceedings, who are absent from the court, of the decisions as stated in Point c
and Point d of this Section.
7. If crimes are omitted, the Trial panel shall decide to file a lawsuit according to
Article 18 and Article 153 of this Law.
Article 327. Pronouncement of judgments
The presiding judge or a member of the Trial panel shall read the sentence
document. In a closed trial, only the ruling section of the sentence document shall be
read. Additional explanations on the abidance by the sentences and the right to appeal
may be provided after the reading of the sentence document.
Article 328. Discharge of defendants
In the following events, the Trial panel must declare the immediate discharge, in
the courtroom, of a defendant in detention, if he is not held in detention for another
crime:
1. The defendant is guiltless;
2. The defendant is exempt from criminal liabilities or penalties;
3. The defendant is not sentenced to imprisonment;
4. A suspended jail sentence is imposed on the defendant;
5. The length of the jail sentence is equal to or shorter than the length of the
detention of the defendant.
Article 329. Detention of defendants after the pronouncement of sentences
1. If a defendant held in detention is sentenced to jail and such detention is
deemed necessary to enforce the sentence, the Trial panel shall decide to hold such
defendant in detention, unless otherwise stated in Section 4 and Section 5, Article 328
of this Law.
2. If a defendant not held in detention is sentenced to jail, he shall only be put in
detention for the enforcement of the sentence upon the effect of the sentence. The trial
panel can decide to hold a defendant in detention in court if justifications show that he
may abscond or continue criminal acts.
3. The time limit for the detention of a defendant, as per Section 1 and Section 2
of this Article, is 45 days upon the pronouncement of the sentence.
4. If a defendant is sentenced to death, the Trial panel shall decide, in the
sentence document, to continue the detention of the defendant for the enforcement of
the sentence.
Chapter XXII
APPELLATE TRIAL
Volume I. CHARACTERISTICS OF APPELLATE TRIAL AND RIGHT
TO APPEAL
Articles 330. Characteristics of appellate trial
1. Appellate trial means that the immediate superior Court re-tries a case or re-
considers the decisions passed by the first instance court, whose judgments and rulings
pronounced for the case are appealed before coming into force.
2. The decisions in a first instance court, which are appealed, refer to decisions to
suspend or dismiss the case or lawsuit against suspects and defendants and other
decisions in the first instance court as per this Law.
Article 331. Right to appeal
1. Defendants, crime victims and their representatives shall have the right to
appeal against the judgments or rulings of the first instance court.
2. Defense counsels shall have the right to appeal protect the benefits of
individuals aged below 18 or having mental or physical defects, who they have
defended.
3. Civil plaintiffs, civil defendants and their representatives shall have the right to
appeal against parts of the judgments or rulings, that are related to compensations for
damage.
4. Individuals having benefits and duties from the case and their representatives
shall have the right to appeal against parts of the judgments or rulings, which are
associated with their duties and benefits.
5. The protectors of legitimate rights and benefits of crime victims or litigants
aged less than 18 or having mental or physical defects shall have the right to appeal
against parts of the judgments or rulings, which are in connection with the benefits and
duties of those under their protection.
6. A person declared not guilty by a Court shall have the right to appeal against
the justifications of the first-instance court’s verdict of no guilty.
Article 332. Appellate procedure
1. The appellant lodges an appeal to the court that conducted the first instance
trial or a court of second instance.
If the defendant is held in detention, the warden of the detention center or head of
the detention facility must enable the defendant's execution of his right to appeal. The
warden or head shall obtain and forward the written appeal to the first-instance court
that issued the judgments or rulings appealed.
The appellant can directly present his appeal to the court that conducted the first-
instance trial or the appellate court. The court must make a written record of the appeal
as per Article 133 of this Law.
The appellate court, that has made the written record of the appeal or received the
written appeal, shall send such record or written appeal to the first instance court for
further activities according to general regulations.
2. A written appeal shall contain these primary details:
a) The date of the written appeal;
b) The full name and address of the appellant;
c) The reasons and petitions of the appellant;
d) The signature or fingerprint of the appellant.
3. The written or direct appeal shall be enclosed with additional evidences,
documents and items, if available, that evince the grounds of such appeal.
Article 333. Time limit for appeal
1. The time limit for appeal against a first-instance court’s judgments is 15 days
upon the pronouncement of such judgments. If the defendant or litigant is absent from
the court, the time limit for appeal commences upon his receipt or the proclamation of
the judgments according to the laws.
2. The time limit for appeal against a first-instance court’s rulings is 07 days and
commences when the person entitled to appeal receives such rulings.
3. The entry date of an appeal is determined as follows:
a) The date shown in the postmark on the mail containing the written appeal sent
by post;
b) If the written appeal is forwarded by the warden of the detention center or
head of the detention facility, the entry date of the appeal shall be the date when the
warden or detention head receives the written appeal. The warden or detention head
must specify and confirm the date of receipt by affixing his signature on the written
appeal;
c) If the appellant submits the written appeal in court, the entry date of the appeal
shall be fixed upon the Court’s receipt of the written appeal. If the appellant directly
appeals in court, the entry date of the appeal shall be fixed upon the Court’s written
record of such appeal.
Article 334. Procedures for admission and processing of appeals
1. The first-instance court, after receiving the written appeal or executing a
written record of the appeal, must enter details into a receipt journal and verify the
validity of such appeal according to this Law.
2. If the written appeal is valid, the first-instance Court shall send a notice of
appeal according to Article 338 of this Law;
3. If the written appeal is valid but its content is obscure, the first-instance Court
must promptly inform the appellant for the latter's elucidation.
4. If the content of the written appeal conforms to this Law but the time limit for
appeal expires, the first-instance court shall request the appellant to present his excuses
and evidences, documents and items, if available, which justify his late submission of
the written appeal.
5. If the petitioner does not have the right to appeal, the Court shall return the
petition, in 03 days upon the receipt of such paper, and notice the petitioner and
equivalent Procuracy in writing. Such written notice must specify reasons for the
return of the petition.
A complaint can be lodged against the return of such petition in 07 days upon the
receipt of the notice. The processing of such complaint shall abide by the stipulations
in Chapter XXXIII of this Law.
Article 335. Late appeal
1. The filing of a late appeal shall be permissible on condition that the appellant
has been obstructed by force majeure or objective obstacles to lodge an appeal within
the time limit as defined by this Law.
2. The court of first instance, in 03 days upon receiving a late appeal, shall
forward to the appellate court the written appeal, the appellant's letter explaining the
retardation of the appeal and evidences, documents and items (if available).
3. The appellate court, in 10 days upon receiving the late appeal enclosed with
evidences, documents and items (if any), shall establish a Panel of three Judges to
scrutinize the late appeal. The panel that contemplates the late appeal shall be entitled
to decide to endorse or reject such appeal in writing and specify its reasons in the
written decision.
4. The procurator of the equivalent Procuracy shall attend the meeting, in which
the late appeal is perused. The appellate Court, in 03 days prior to its contemplation of
the late appeal, shall send a copy of the late appeal with evidences and documents (if
any) to the equivalent Procuracy. The procurator shall express the Procuracy’s
standpoints on the ratification of the late appeal.
5. The decision by the late appeal review Panel shall be sent to the appellant, the
Court of first instance and the Procuracy equivalent to the appellate Court.
If the appellate Court accepts the late appeal, the Court of first instance shall go
through the formalities as defined in this Law and send the case file to the appellate
Court.
Article 336. Appeal by the Procuracy
1. An appeal can be lodged by a Procuracy equivalent to the court of first
instance or the immediate superior Procuracy to protest a judgment or ruling passed by
such court.
2. An appeal by the Procuracy shall contain these primary details:
a) The issue date and number of the decision to appeal;
b) The name of the Procuracy that decides to appeal;
c) The appeal is filed against parts or the whole of judgments or rulings of the
first instance court;
d) The reasons, justifications for appeal and requests by the Procuracy;
dd) Full name and position of the individual signing the written decision to
appeal.
Article 337. Time limit for protest
1. The time limit for protests against a first-instance court’s judgments is 15 days
for the equivalent Procuracy and 30 days for the immediate superior Procuracy upon
the Court’s pronouncement of such judgments.
2. The time limit for protests against a first-instance court’s rulings is 15 days for
the equivalent Procuracy and 30 days for the immediate superior Procuracy upon the
Court’s issuance of such rulings.
Article 338. Notice of appeals and delivery of prosecution decisions to appeal
1. The first-instance court shall notice the equivalent Procuracy and concerned
individuals in writing about the appeal in 07 days upon the expiration of the time limit
for appeal. Such written notice must specify the appellant’s requests.
2. The procuracy, in 02 days upon issuing the decision to appeal, shall deliver
such appeal with additional evidences, documents and appeals (if any) to the Court
that held the first-instance trial, the defendants and concerned individuals. The
procuracy filing the appeal must send its decision to appeal to another Procuracy that
has jurisdiction of appeals.
3. Participants in legal proceedings, who are informed in writing of the appeal or
protest, shall be entitled to state their opinions on the content of such appeal in writing
to the appellate Court. Their opinions shall be inputted into the case file.
Article 339. Results of appeals or protests
Parts of the Court's judgments and rulings being appealed shall not be enforced,
unless otherwise defined in Article 363 of this Law. If an appeal is filed against the
whole of the Court’s judgments or rulings, the enforcement of all judgments or rulings
shall be postponed, except for circumstances as defined in Article 363 of this Law.
The first-instance Court must provide the appellate Court with the case file,
written appeal and documents, evidences and items (if any) in 07 days upon the
expiration of the time limit for appeals or protests.
Article 340. Admission of cases
1. The appellate Court, upon receiving the file of the case appealed with
evidences, documents and items (if any), shall enter details into the case admission
journal.
2. In 03 days upon the admission of the case, the Court president of the appellate
Court shall appoint a Judge to preside the court and meeting session.
Article 341. Transfer of case files to the Procuracy
1. The appellate Court, after admitting the case, must transfer the case file to the
equivalent Procuracy. The case file must be returned to the Court, in 15 days’ time for
the provincial People’s Procuracy or military procuracy of a military zone or 20 days’
time for the Higher People’s Procuracy or Central military procuracy upon such
procuracies’ receipt of the case file. In the case of extremely severe or complicated
felonies, the said time limit may be extended for 25 more days for the provincial
People’s Procuracy or military procuracy of a military zone or 30 more days for the
Higher People’s Procuracy or Central military procuracy.
2. Additional evidences, documents and items given to the appellate Court prior
to its process of adjudication must be forwarded to the equivalent Procuracy. The
procuracy, in 03 days upon receiving such additional documents, evidences and items,
must return them to the Court.
Article 342. Amendment or withdrawal of appeals
1. The appellant or Procuracy deciding to appeal shall be entitled to amend the
appeal but not to aggravate the defendants' circumstances, in the appellate court or
prior to the start of the trial. The right to withdraw parts or all of the appeal shall be
granted to the appellant, the Procuracy deciding to appeal or the immediate superior
Procuracy in the appellate court or prior to the start of the trial.
2. The amendment or withdrawal of an appeal prior to the start of the trial must
be executed in writing and sent to the appellate Court. The appellate court must inform
the Procuracy, defendants and concerned individuals of the amendment or withdrawal
of the appeal. The amendment or withdrawal of an appeal in court shall be noted in the
court record.
3. If the appellant or Procuracy withdraws a part of the appeal in court, which
does not affect other parts, the appellate Trial panel shall consider the part withdrawn
and decide to terminate its adjudication of such part of the appeal.
Article 343. Effect of a first-instance court’s judgments and rulings not
being appealed
A first-instance court's judgments, rulings and parts of such not being appealed
shall come into force upon the expiration of the time limit for appeals and protests.
Volume II. PROCEDURE IN APPELLATE COURTS
Article 344. Appellate jurisdiction
1. A provincial People’s Court shall have appellate jurisdiction over a district
People’s Court's judgments and rulings being appealed.
2. The higher People’s Court shall have appellate jurisdiction over a provincial's
judgments and rulings being appealed. However, such appellate jurisdiction shall be
subject to territorial jurisdiction.
3. A military court of a military zone shall have appellate jurisdiction over a local
military court's judgments and rulings being appealed.
4. The Central military court shall have appellate jurisdiction over the judgments
and rulings that were passed by a military court of a military zone and are being
appealed.
Articles 345. Scope of appellate jurisdiction
An appellate court shall review the content of sentences and rulings being
appealed. It can review other parts of such sentences and rulings, which are not
appealed, if necessary.
Article 346. Time limit for appellate trial preparation
1. A provincial People’s Court or military Court of a military zone must start the
appellate trial in 60 days upon the receipt of the case file. The higher People’s Court or
Central military court must begin the appellate trial in 90 upon receiving the case file.
2. Upon the admission of a case, the provincial People’s Court and military court
of the military zone, in 45 days, or the Higher People’s Court and Central military
court, in 75 days, must issue one of the following decisions:
a) Terminate the appellate trial;
b) Hear the appellate case;
3. In 15 days upon deciding to hear the case, the Court must start the appellate
trial.
4. The appellate court, in 10 days at most prior to the start of the trial, must send
its decision to try the case to the equivalent Procuracy, defense counsels, crime
victims, protectors of legitimate rights and benefits of crime victims and litigants,
appellants and individuals having duties and interests related to the appeal.
Article 347. Implementation, alteration and termination of preventive and
coercive measures
1. The appellate court, upon accepting the case, shall be empowered to
implement, alter or terminate preventive and coercive measures.
The implementation, alteration and termination of detention shall be subject to
the decisions of the Court president and Vice court presidents. The implementation,
alteration and termination of other preventive and coercive measures shall be subject
to the decisions of the Presiding judge.
2. The time limit for detention prior to trial shall not exceed the time limit for
appellate trial preparation as per Article 346 of this Law.
The appellate court shall base on the first-instance court’s decision on detention
to set the time limit for extending the active detention of a defendant, if deemed
imperative. The appellate court shall base on the first-instance court’s decision on
detention to extend the active time limit for the continued detention of a defendant, if
deemed imperative.
If a defendant is held and must be kept in detention for the completion of the
trial, the Trial panel shall decide to hold him in detention until the end of the trial.
3. If a defendant in detention is sentenced to jail but his detention time expires,
the Trial panel shall decide to hold him in detention for sentence enforcement, unless
otherwise stated in Section 4 and Section 5, Article 328 of this Law.
If a defendant not in detention is sentenced to jail, the Trial panel can decide to
put him in detention upon the pronouncement of sentences.
The time limit for detention is 45 days upon the pronouncement of sentences.
Article 348. Termination of appellate trial
1. The appellate court shall terminate the appellate trial when the appellant or
Procuracy withdraws the entire appeals. The termination of the appellate trial shall be
subject to the decisions of the Presiding judge, prior to the start of the trial, or the
decisions of the Trial panel, in court. The first-instance court’s sentences shall come
into force upon the appellate Court’s issuance of the decision to terminate the appellate
trial.
2. If the appellant or Procuracy, prior to the start of the trial, withdraws parts of
the appeal, which are deemed not to affect other parts, the Presiding judge shall decide
to terminate the appellate trial against the parts withdrawn.
3. A decision to terminate appellate trial must specify reasons of termination and
other details as defined in Section 2, Article 132 of this Law.
The appellate court, in 03 days upon issuing its decision to terminate the
appellate trial, must send such decision to the equivalent Procuracy, the court that held
the first-instance trial, defense counsels, crime victims, litigants, protectors of
legitimate rights and benefits of crime victims and litigants, appellants and individuals
having duties and interests related to the appeal.
Article 349. Attendance of members of the appellate Trial panel and Court
clerk
1. The trial shall proceed only in the presence of full members of the Trial panel
and the Court clerk. Members of the Trial panel must hear the case from start to finish.
2. If a Judge fails to continue hearing the case but a reserve Judge attends the trial
from the start, the reserve one shall be the substitute member of the Trial panel. If the
Presiding judge cannot continue hearing the case, a member Judge of the Trial panel
shall preside the court and a reserve Judge shall become a substitute member of the
Trial panel.
3. If a reserve Judge or a Judge to substitute the presiding judge, when required,
is not available, the trial shall be halted.
4. If the Court clerk is replaced or cannot continue attending the court, the trial
may progress in the presence of a reserve Court clerk. If a substitute clerk is not
available, the trial shall be halted.
Article 350. Attendance of Procurators
1. Procurator(s) of the equivalent Procuracy must appear in the court to exercise
prosecution rights and administer the trial. The trial shall be halted in the absence of
procurator(s). Many procurators may attend a lawsuit composed of serious and
complex factors. If procurator(s) cannot attend the trial, reserve procurator(s) attending
the trial from the start shall become substitute(s) to exercise prosecution rights and
administer the trial.
2. If reserve procurator(s) is not available to replace procurator(s) who must be
changed or cannot continue exercising prosecution rights or administering the trial, the
Trial panel shall halt the trial.
Article 351. Attendance of defense counsels, protectors of legitimate rights
and benefits of crime victims and litigants, appellants and individuals having
duties and interests related to the appeal
1. Defense counsels, protectors of legitimate rights and benefits of crime victims
and litigants, appellants and individuals having duties and interests related to the
appeal must appear in court as per subpoenas. If such person(s) is absent, the Trial
panel shall implement the following measures:
If the defense counsel is absent for the first time due to force majeure or
objective obstacles, the trial shall be halted unless the defendant agrees to be tried in
the absence of the defense counsel. If the defense counsel is absent not due to force
majeure or objective obstacles or fails to appear as per the valid second subpoena, the
court shall hold the trial.
If a defense counsel appointed as per Section 1, Article 76 of this Law is absent,
the trial shall be halted unless the defendant or his representative agrees to engage in
the trial in the absence of the defense counsel.
b) If the appellant, crime victims, litigants and their representatives who have
interests and duties related to the appeal, and protectors of legitimate rights and
benefits of crime victims and litigants are absent not due to force majeure or objective
obstacles, the Trial panel shall hold the trial. If such people are absent due to force
majeure or objective obstacles, the Trial panel can hold the trial but cannot pass a
judgment or ruling that is inimical to the crime victims or litigants;
c) If the defendant filing or facing an appeal is absent due to force majeure or
objective obstacles, the Trial panel can hold the trial but cannot pass a judgment or
ruling inimical to the defendant. If the defendant’s absence out of force majeure or
objective obstacles does not hinder the trial, the Trial panel shall hold the trial.
2. The appellate court shall decide to summon other individuals to the court, if
necessary.
Article 352. Halt of appellate trial
1. The appellate court can halt the trial only in one of the following events:
a) There are justifications as defined in Article 52, 53, 349, 350 and 351 of this
Law;
b) Evidences, documents or items must be verified or added outside the court;
If the trial is halted, the process of adjudication shall restart.
2. The duration of a halt to a trial of second instance shall be defined in Article
297 of this Law.
Article 353. Addition and examination of evidences, documents and items
1. The procuracy, prior to or at the appellate trial, can gather new evidences on its
own discretion or at the requests for the Court. Furthermore, the appellant and
individuals having duties and interests related to the appeal, defense counsels,
protectors of legitimate benefits and rights of crime victims and litigants shall be
entitled to supplement evidences, documents and items.
2. Existing and new evidences and newly added documents and items must be
examined in court. The appellate court’s judgments must consider existing and newly
added evidences.
Article 354. Procedure of appellate court
1. The procedures to start the trial and conduct oral arguments in an appellate
court and first-instance court are similar; however, a member of the Trial panel in the
court of second instance shall summarize the case, the first-instance court’s judgments
and rulings and details of the appeal before the questioning session.
2. The presiding judge shall ask the appellant about his intention to amend or
withdraw the appeal. If such intention exists, the presiding judge shall ask about the
Procurator’s opinions on such amendment or withdrawal of the appeal.
The presiding judge shall ask about the Procurator's intention to amend or
withdraw the protest. If such intention exists, the presiding judge shall ask the
defendants and individuals in connection with the protest to express their opinions on
such amendment or withdrawal of the protest.
3. During the court’s session of oral argument, the Procurator and individuals
related to the appeal shall express their opinions on the details of the appeal.
Moreover, the Procurator shall state the Procuracy’s opinions on the settlement of the
case.
Article 355. The appellate Trial panel’s jurisdiction over the first-instance
court’s judgments
1. The appellate trial panel shall have the rights to:
a) Reject appeals and sustain the first-instance court’s judgments;
b) Alter the first-instance court’s judgments;
c) Annul the first-instance court’s judgment and send the case back for re-
investigation or retrial;
d) Annul the first-instance court’s judgments and dismiss the case;
dd) Terminate the appellate trial.
2. The appellate court’s judgments shall come into force upon the pronouncement
of such judgments.
Article 356. Rejection of appeals and sustainment of the first-instance
court’s judgments
The appellate court, when considering the first-instance court’s judgments
justified and conformable to the laws, shall reject appeals and sustain the first-instance
court’s judgments.
Article 357. Alteration of the first-instance court’s judgments
1. In the presence of new facts or grounds showing the disparity in the first-
instance court’s judgments and the defendant’s personal records or nature, degree and
consequences of the crimes, the Trial panel of the appellate court shall be entitled to
alter the first-instance court’s judgments as follows:
a) Exempt the defendant from criminal liabilities or penalties; enforce no
additional penalty or judicial remedy;
b) Implement articles and sections of the Criminal Code on lesser crimes;
c) Mitigate the defendant’s punishments;
d) Lessen the compensation level and amend the rulings on the handling of
evidences;
dd) Commute a punishment to a less harsh one;
e) Sustain or alleviate a jail sentence and grant a suspended sentence.
2. At the requests by the Procuracy or crime victims, the Trial panel of the
appellate court can:
a) Aggravate punishments and implement articles and sections of the Criminal
Code on harsher crimes; pass additional punishments and implement judicial remedies;
b) Increase the compensation level;
c) Replace existing punishments with harsher ones;
d) Nullify suspended sentence.
The trial panel, if acquiring sufficient justifications, can mitigate punishments
and implement articles and sections of the Criminal Code on lesser crimes, commute
existing punishments to less harsher ones, sustain and suspend jail sentence and reduce
the compensation level.
3. The trail panel of the appellate court, if possessing satisfactory grounds, can
alter the first-instance court’s judgments, as per Section 1 of this Article, for the
defendants filing or facing no appeal.
Article 358. Annulment of the first-instance court’s judgments for re-
investigation or retrial
1. The trial panel of the appellate court shall annul the first-instance court’s
judgments in the following events:
a) There are grounds demonstrating the first-instance court’s omission of crimes
or criminals or the demand for charges and investigation into crimes harsher than those
defined in the first-instance court's judgments;
b) The appellate court cannot fulfill the incomplete investigation activities at first
instance;
c) Legal proceedings during the stage of investigation or prosecution have
constituted serious violations.
2. The trial panel of the appellate court shall annul the first-instance court’s
judgments to re-try the case at first instance with a new Trial panel in these events:
a) The composition of the Trial panel of the first-instance court does not abide by
this Law;
c) Legal proceedings during the stage of adjudication at first instance have
constituted serious violations;
c) The first-instance court issued a verdict of not guilty in favor of a person, who
is found to commit crimes through substantial grounds;
d) Grant unjustified exemption of criminal liability, punishment or judicial
remedy in favor of the defendant;
dd) Though the first-instance court committed serious errors in the
implementation of laws for its passing of judgments, Article 357 of this Law is not
applicable for the appellate Trial panel to alter the judgments.
3. The trial panel of the appellate court, when annulling the first-instance court's
judgments for re-investigation or retrial, must specify reasons for such invalidation of
judgments.
4. The appellate trial panel, when annulling the first-instance court’s judgments
for retrial, shall not set, in advance, evidences for the first-instance court to approve or
reject or applicable points, sections and articles of the Criminal Code or punishments
against the defendants.
5. When the first-instance court's judgments are annulled for re-investigation or
retrial but the time limit for the detention of the defendant expires, the appellate Trial
panel shall, if finding the need of keeping such defendant in detention, issue a decision
to continue the temporary detainment of the defendant until the Procurator or the first-
instance court re-handles the case.
In 15 days upon the annulment of the first-instance court's judgments, the case
shall be sent to the Procuracy or the first-instance court for general proceedings as per
this Law.
Article 359. Annulment of the first-instance court’s judgment and dismissal
of the case
1. If one of the justifications as defined in Section 1 and Section 2, Article 157 of
this Law exists, the appellate Trial panel shall nullify the first-instance court's
judgments, declare the defendant not guilty and dismiss the case.
2. If one of the justifications as defined in Section 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7, Article 157 of
this Law exists, the appellate Trial panel shall nullify the first-instance court's
judgments and dismiss the case.
Article 360. Re-investigation or retrial of criminal cases
1. After the appellate Trial panel annuls the first-instance court’s judgments for
re-investigation, the Investigation authorities, Procuracy and first-instance Court shall
be empowered to investigate, prosecute and adjudicate the case again according to this
Law.
2. After the appellate Trial panel annuls the first-instance court’s judgments for
retrial, the first-instance Court shall be empowered to rehear the case according to this
Law.
Article 361. The appellate trial panel’s jurisdiction over the first-instance
court’s rulings
1. The appellate trial panel shall have the rights to:
a) Reject appeals and sustain the first-instance Court’s rulings that are deemed
justified and conformable to the laws;
b) Alter the first-instance Court’s rulings;
c) Annul the first-instance Court’s rulings and transfer the case to the first-
instance court for further settlement of the case.
2. The appellate court’s rulings shall come into force when pronounced.
Article 362. Appellate procedure against the first-instance court’s rulings
1. The appellate Trial panel, when reviewing the first-instance court’s rulings
being appealed, must summon to the meeting session the appellant, defense counsels,
protectors of litigants’ legitimate rights and benefits, and individuals having interests
and duties related to the appeal. The appellate Trial panel, despite the absence of such
people, shall hold the meeting session.
2. In 15 days upon the acceptance of the case, the Court must hold the meeting
session to examine the first-instance court's rulings being appealed.
In 10 days upon the decision to hold the meeting session, the appellate Trial
panel must start the meeting session. The court, in 02 days upon issuing the decision to
hold the meeting session, must send the case file and such decision to the equivalent
Procuracy. The procuracy, in 05 days upon receiving the case file, must send the file
back to the Court.
3. In the meeting session, a member of the appellate Trial panel shall briefly
present the first-instance court's rulings, the details of the appeal and accompanying
evidences, documents and items (if any).
The procurator of the equivalent Procuracy must attend the meeting session and
express the Procuracy’s opinions on the settlement of the appeal prior to the appellate
Trial panel’s issuance of its rulings.
PART FIVE
REGULATIONS ON THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE COURT’S
SENTENCES AND RULINGS
Chapter XXIII
SENTENCES AND RULINGS THAT ARE IMMEDIATELY ENFORCED
AND THE AUTHORITY TO DECIDE THE ENFORCEMENT OF
SENTENECS
Article 363. The court’s sentences and rulings that are immediately enforced
The court's sentences or rulings, though appealable, shall be immediately
enforced when the first-instance court decides to dismiss the case for a defendant in
detention or declare that defendant guiltless or exempt from criminal liabilities or
punishments. Moreover, alternatives to incarceration or suspended prison sentences or
jail sentences, whose length of time is equal to or shorter than the detention time
served, shall take immediate effect.
Warnings shall be delivered in court.
Article 364. Authority and procedure to order the enforcement of sentences
1. The president of the court that held the first-instance trial shall assume
authority to order the enforcement of sentences or delegate the president of an
equivalent court to order the execution of sentences.
2. The time limit for the issuance of an order for sentence enforcement shall be
07 days upon the effect of the first-instance court's sentences and rulings or upon the
receipt of sentences and rulings from the appellate court or decisions generated
through cassation or reopening procedures.
The court president, when delegated by the president of the court that held the
first-instance trial, shall in 07 days upon the receipt of the written delegation issue an
order to enforce the sentences.
3. If a person on bail is sentenced to jail, the order on the enforcement of such
prison sentence must state that the said person must in 07 days upon receiving the
written order present himself to a criminal sentence enforcement unit of a district
police office to serve time.
If a person on bail and sentenced to jail absconds, the President of the Court that
has ordered the sentence enforcement shall request a wanted notice to be issued by the
criminal sentence enforcement police unit of the provincial Police office at the location
where the prison sentence was passed.
Article 365. Explication and revision of the Court’s sentences and rulings
1. Criminal and civil sentence enforcement authorities, procuracies, sentenced
persons, crime victims and litigants in connection with the enforcement of sentences
shall be entitled to petition the Court that passed such sentences and rulings for its
explication and revision of obscure details of such judgments and decisions for the
purpose of enforcement.
2. The presiding judge of the court that pronounced the sentences and rulings
shall be held responsible for explicating and revising vague details of the Court’s
judgments and decisions. The president of the Court that passed the sentences and
rulings, if the presiding judge cannot explicate or revise such, shall undertake the
tasks.
Article 366. Settlement of motions against the Court’s sentences and rulings
If a criminal or civil sentence enforcement authority makes a motion for revision
of the Court’s sentences or rulings through the reopening or cassation procedures, the
competent Court shall be responsible for responding to such motion in 90 days upon
the receipt of the motion made in writing. The time limit for response, in complex
cases, can be extended for 120 more days at most upon the receipt of the written
motion.
Chapter XXIV
PROCEDURES FOR THE EXECUTION OF DEATH PENALTY,
PAROLE AND EXPUNGEMENT OF CRIMINAL RECORDS
Article 367. Procedures for the review of death penalty before execution
1. The following procedures shall apply to the review of a death penalty before
execution:
a) When a death penalty comes into force, the case file shall be promptly sent to
the President of the Supreme People’s Court and the sentences shall be immediately
delivered to the Head of the Supreme People’s Procuracy;
b) Supreme People’s Court, after reviewing the case file to make decisions to or
not to file an appeal through reopening or cassation procedures, shall have the case file
sent to the Supreme People’s Procuracy. Supreme People’s Procuracy, in 01 month
upon receiving the case file, shall return it to the Supreme People’s Court;
c) The president of the Supreme People’s Court or head of the Supreme People’s
Procuracy, in 02 months upon the receipt of the case file, must decide to or not to
appeal through reopening or cassation procedures;
d) The sentenced person shall be allowed to, in 07 days upon the effect of the
sentence, petition for the State president’s commutation;
dd) A death penalty shall be executed if the President of the Supreme People’s
Court and the Head of the Supreme People’s Procuracy do not appeal through
reopening or cassation procedures and the sentenced person does not petition for the
State president’s amnesty.
If an appeal is filed against the death penalty through the reopening or cassation
procedures but is rejected by the Reopening panel or Cassation panel of the Supreme
People’s Court for sustaining the death penalty, the Supreme People’s Court shall
promptly notice the sentenced person for the latter’s petition for amnesty;
e) If the sentenced person petitions for remission, the death penalty shall be
executed upon the State President’s rejection of the petition.
2. The president of the Court that held the first-instance trial, in the presence of
grounds as defined in Section 3, Article 40 of the Criminal Code, shall not order to
enforce the death penalty and report to the President of the Supreme People’s Court for
the reduction of the death sentence to incarceration for life.
Article 368. Procedures for parole
1. Prisons and detention centers of the Ministry of Public Security, detention
centers of the Ministry of Defense, criminal sentence enforcement units of provincial
Police offices and military zones shall be responsible for preparing and sending the
application for parole to the provincial Procuracy or military Procuracy of the military
zone, provincial People’s Court, military Court of the military zone at the location
where the convict serves time.
An application for parole comprises:
a) The convict’s letter of application for parole, including his undertakings to
obey the laws and perform mandatory duties of the parole;
b) A copy of the sentence in effect and sentence enforcement order;
c) A copy of the decision to mitigate the prison sentence’s term of length for a
person convicted of felonies or harsher crimes;
d) The documents showing the fulfillment of additional pecuniary fines, court
fees and civil liabilities;
dd) The personal records of the convict and his family background;
e) The ranking result of the convict’s serving of his time on quarterly, 6-month
and annual basis; the decision to commend or the competent authority's written
confirmation of the convict's merit, if existing;
g) The written request for parole from the authority that prepares the application.
2. The written request for parole from the authority that prepares the application
shall contain these primary details:
a) Number and date of the written request;
b) Full name, position and signature of the individual authorized to make the
request;
c) Full name, gender, year of birth, residential place of the convict; and the
location where the convict undergoes probation;
d) Length of time served and remaining;
dd) Remarks and requests by the authority that prepares the application.
3. The provincial People’s Procuracy or military Procuracy of the military zone
must, in 15 days upon receiving the application for parole, expresses its opinions in
writing on such application.
If the Procuracy demands further documents, the authority making the
application must, in 03 days upon receiving such demand, prepare and send additional
papers to the Procuracy and Court.
4. The president of the provincial People’s Court or military Court of the military
zone, in 15 days upon obtaining the application, must hold a meeting to consider the
parole and inform the equivalent Procuracy in writing to have procurator(s) assigned to
such meeting. If the Court demands further documents, the authority making the
application must, in 03 days upon receiving such demand, prepare and send additional
papers to the Court and Procuracy.
5. The parole board is composed of the Court president, chairing the board, and
02 judges.
6. A member of the Board shall brief the application in the meeting. The
procurator shall state the Procuracy’s standpoints on the concerned authority’s
application for parole and the legal compliance of the ratification of parole. The
representative of the authority making the application can present additional details to
elucidate the application for parole.
7. The parole meeting shall be recorded in writing. The written record shall
specify the date and location of the meeting, participants, contents and events in the
meeting and the Board's decision to approve or reject the application for parole for
each convict.
At the end of the meeting, the Procurator shall view the written record and
request amendments (if any) to such record. The chairman of the Board must review
the record and, together with the meeting clerk, sign the record.
8. In 03 days upon the issuance of the decision to grant parole, the Court must
send such decision to the convict, equivalent Procuracy, immediate superior
Procuracy, authority making the application, Court that ordered sentence enforcement,
criminal sentence enforcement unit of district Police or military zone, local authorities
at the commune, ward or town where the person on parole resides, military unit
managing such person, and Department of Justice adjacent to the office of the Court
issuing the decision.
9. The prison, upon receiving the decision to grant parole, shall announce such
decision and handle formalities to execute the parole decision. If the person on parole
does not violate Section 4, Article 66 of the Criminal Code during his probation, the
criminal sentence enforcement unit of the district Police or military zone that managed
such person, upon the expiration of the probation, shall certify his fulfillment of jail
sentence in writing.
10. If the person on parole violates Section 4, Article 66 of the Criminal Code,
the criminal sentence enforcement unit of the district Police office adjacent to the
residential location of the person on parole or the military unit managing such person
must submit documents to the Procuracy and Court that decided the parole. The said
Procuracy and Court shall consider such documents to annul the decision issued and
compel that person to serve the jail time remaining.
The court, in 05 days upon receiving a request, must hold a meeting to review
details and make decision.
The court, in 03 days upon annulling the parole decision, must send its new
decision to the authorities and individuals as stated in Section 8 of this Article.
11. The procuracy and the convict are entitled to appeal or complain,
respectively, against the decision to approve or reject the parole and the decision to
annul the parole decision.
The order, procedures and authority to settle such appeals and complaints against
the decisions as stipulated in this section shall abide by Chapter XXII and Chapter
XXXIII of this Law.
Article 369. Procedures for expungement of criminal records
1. The authority managing criminal record database, in 05 days upon receiving
the request by the person whose criminal records are eligible for expungement, shall
consider the conditions as stated in Article 70 of the Criminal Code and issue a
certificate of no justice records.
2. The court shall decide the expungement in the events as defined in Article 71
and Article 72 of the Criminal Code. The sentenced person must send the Court, which
held the first-instance trial, his petition bearing remarks of the local authority at the
commune, ward or town where he resides or of his workplace or educational facility.
The court that held the first-instance trial, in 03 days upon receiving the
sentenced person’s petition, shall send the application for expungement to the
equivalent Procuracy. The equivalent Procuracy, in 05 days upon obtaining the
documents from the Court, shall respond in writing and return such papers to the
Court.
The president of the Court that held the first-instance trial, in 05 days upon
retrieving documents from the Procuracy, shall consider the eligibility and approve or
reject the application for expungement.
The court, in 05 days upon issuing a decision to approve or reject the application
for expungement, must have such decision sent to the sentenced person, equivalent
Procuracy, local authorities at the commune, ward or town where the person resides or
his workplace or educational facility.
PART SIX
REVIEW OF SENTENCES AND RULINGS IN EFFECT
Chapter XXV
CASSATION PROCEDURE
Article 370. Nature of cassation procedure
The cassation procedure reviews a Court’s effective sentences and rulings under
protest upon the exposure of a serious breach of law in the settlement of the case.
Article 371. Grounds for protest through the cassation procedure
A court’s sentences and rulings in effect shall be protested according to the
cassation procedure in the presence of one of the following grounds:
1. The court’s sentences and rulings do not correspond with objective facts of the
case;
2. A serious breach of legal proceedings for investigation, prosecution and
adjudication resulted in a serious error in the settlement of the case;
3. An error in the application of the law occurred.
Article 372. Detection of effective sentences and rulings to be reviewed
through the cassation procedure
1. The sentenced person, authorities, organizations and every person shall be
entitled to expose violations of the laws in a Court’s sentences and rulings that have
come into force, and inform individuals authorized to lodge protests.
2. The provincial People’s Court shall examine the effective sentences and
rulings passed by a district People’s Court in order to detect violations of laws and
propose the President of the Higher People’s Court or the Supreme People’s Court to
lodge protests.
The military court of the military zone shall examine the effective sentences and
rulings passed by a local military court to detect violations of laws and propose the
President of the Central military court to lodge protests.
3. Individuals authorized to lodge protests shall be informed promptly in writing
upon the Court’s or Procuracy's detection of violations of laws in a Court's judgments
and rulings through the cassation review or administration of the process of
adjudication or through other sources of information.
Article 373. Right to lodge protests through the cassation procedure
1. The president of the Supreme People’s Court and the head of the Supreme
People’s Procuracy shall have the right to lodge protests through the cassation
procedure, when deemed necessary, against the effective sentences and rulings passed
by a Higher People’s Court or other Courts, except for the rulings pronounced by the
Judicial panel of the Supreme People’s Court.
2. The president of the Central military court and the head of the Central military
procuracy shall have the right to lodge protests through the cassation procedure against
the effective sentences and rulings passed by a military Court of a military zone or a
local military Court.
3. The president of the Higher People’s Court and the head of the Higher
People’s Procuracy shall have the right to lodge protests through the cassation
procedure against the effective sentences and rulings passed by a provincial People’s
Court or a district People’s Court in conformity to the territorial jurisdiction.
Article 374. Procedures for notice of a Court’s effective rulings and
sentences to be reviewed through the cassation procedure
1. The sentenced person, authorities and entities, when exposing violations of
laws in the Court’s effective sentences and rulings, shall submit a written notice or
give a direct presentation and evidences, documents and items, if available, to the
individuals authorized to lodge protests or to the nearest Court or Procuracy.
2. A written notice shall contain these primary details:
a) Date;
b) Name and address of the authority or entity issuing the notice;
c) The court’s effective sentences or rulings in violation of the laws;
d) The details of violations exposed;
dd) The petition for the competent individuals' protests.
3. Such notice must bear the signature or fingerprint of the informing person or
the corporate seal and signature of the legal representative of the authority or
organization issuing the notice.
Article 375. Procedures for acquisition of notices of a Court’s effective
rulings and sentences to be reviewed through the cassation procedure
1. The court or procuracy, when acquiring the written notice, shall input details
into the notice receipt journal.
2. When the sentenced person, authorities or entities directly state the violations
of laws in a Court’s effective sentences and rulings, the Court or Procuracy must
record details stated in writing. If the informing person provides evidences, documents
and items, the Court and Procuracy must execute a written record of custody. Such
written record shall be made according to Article 133 of this Law.
3. The court or procuracy that receives the written notice and execute written
records must send such notice and records with evidences, documents and items, if
available, to the individuals authorized to lodge protests. Moreover, the sentenced
person, authorities and entities making requests shall be informed in writing.
Article 376. Transfer of case files for contemplation of protests through the
cassation procedure
1. The court or procuracy, if in need of examining the case file to contemplate
protests through the cassation procedure, shall be entitled to request in writing the
Court managing such file to have it transferred.
The court managing the case file, in 07 days upon receiving the written request,
must have it transferred to the Court or Procuracy making such request.
2. If the Court and Procuracy simultaneously issue their written requests, the
Court managing the case file shall have it transferred on first-come basis and inform
the later one.
Article 377. Suspension of the enforcement of sentences and rulings
protested through the cassation procedure
The individual issuing the decision to protest sentences and rulings in effect
through the cassation procedure shall be entitled to suspend the enforcement of such
rulings and sentences.
The decision to suspend the enforcement of sentences and rulings protested
through the cassation procedure must be sent to the Court and Procuracy, which held
the trials at first and second instance, and competent sentence enforcement authorities.
Article 378. Decision to lodge protests through the cassation procedure
A decision to lodge protests through the cassation procedure shall contain these
primary details:
1. The number and date of the decision;
2. The individual authorized to make the decision;
3. The number and date of the sentence or ruling protested;
4. Remarks and analysis of violations and errors in the sentence or ruling
protested;
5. Legal grounds that lead to the decision to protest;
6. The decision to protest the whole or parts of the sentence or ruling;
7. The name of the Court empowered to perform the cassation review of the case;
8. The requests by the individual initiating protests.
Article 379. Time limit for protests through the cassation procedure
1. The time limit for protests against the sentenced person shall be 01 year upon
the effect of the sentence or ruling.
2. Protests in favor of the sentenced person shall be initiated any time, even for
the exoneration of the sentenced person who passed away.
3. Protests on litigants’ civil matters in a criminal case shall abide by the Civil
procedure code.
4. If there is no ground to lodge protests through the cassation procedure, the
individual authorized to protest must inform the requesting authorities and entities in
writing of his decision not to protest and reasons.
Article 380. Delivery of decisions to protest through the cassation procedure
1. The decision to protest through the cassation procedure must be promptly
delivered to the Court that passed the effective sentence and ruling protested, the
sentenced person, competent authorities enforcing criminal or civil sentences, and
other people having interests and duties related to the protests.
2. If the President of the Supreme People’s Court initiates protests, the decision
to protest and case file must be promptly delivered to the Court empowered to conduct
cassation procedure.
If the President of the Higher People’s Court or Central military court initiates
protests, the decision to protest and case file must be promptly delivered to the
competent Procuracy.
The court empowered to conduct cassation procedure must deliver the decision to
protest and case file to the equivalent Procuracy. The procuracy, in 30 days upon
receiving the case file, must send back the file to the Court.
3. If the head of the Supreme People’s Procuracy or Higher People’s Procuracy
or Central military procuracy initiates protests, the decision to protest and case file
must be promptly delivered to the Court empowered to conduct the cassation
procedure.
Article 381. Amendment or revocation of protests
1. Before trial or at the court of cassation, the protesting individual shall be
entitled to supplement and amend protests if the time limit for protests is still effective.
Amendments to the protests before trial must be executed through written decisions
and delivered according to Section 1, Article 380 of this Law. Amendments to the
protests in court shall be inputted into the court record.
2. Before trial or in the court of cassation, the protesting individual shall be
entitled to withdraw parts or the whole of the protests. The withdrawal of protests
before trial must be executed through written decisions. The withdrawal of protests in
court shall be inputted into the court record.
3. If all protests are withdrawn before trial, the President of the Court empowered
to conduct the cassation procedure shall decide to dismiss the trial of cassation. If all
protests are withdrawn in court, the Trial panel shall decide to dismiss the trial of
cassation.
The court, in 02 days upon issuing its decision to dismiss the trial of cassation,
shall send such decision to the persons as stated in Section 1, Article 380 of this Law
and to the equivalent Procuracy.
Article 382. Jurisdiction over cassation procedure
1. Committee of Judges of the Higher People’s Court conducts the cassation
procedure through a Judicial panel of three judges to review effective sentences and
rulings passed by provincial People’s Courts or district People's Courts in conformity
to the territorial jurisdiction.
2. Plenary assembly of the Committee of Judges of the Higher People’s Court
conducts the cassation review of effective rulings and sentences passed by a People’s
Court as per Section 1 of this Article, which comprise complex elements, or sentences
and rulings reviewed by the 3-judge Judicial panel established the Committee of
Judges of the Supreme People’s Court through the cassation procedure without
reaching an agreement on the settlement of the case through voting.
When the Plenary assembly of the Committee of Judges of the Higher People’s
Court holds the trial of cassation, two thirds of its members must be attend the trial,
which is chaired by the President of the Supreme People’s Court. Rulings of the
Plenary assembly of the Committee of Judges must be approved by more than half of
its members; otherwise, the trial shall be halted. Plenary assembly of the Committee of
Judges, in 30 days upon halting the trial, must resume the trial.
3. Committee of Judges of the Central military court conducts the cassation
review of effective sentences and rulings passed by a military court of a military zone
or local military court. More than two thirds of members of the Committee of Judges
of the Central military court must attend the trial of cassation, which is chaired by the
President of the Central military court. Rulings of the Committee of Judges must be
approved by more than half of its members; otherwise, the trial shall be halted.
Committee of Judges, in 30 days upon halting the trial, must resume the trial.
4. Justices’ Council of the Supreme People’s Court assigns a Judicial panel of
five Judges to conduct the cassation review of effective rulings and sentences passed
the Higher People’s Court or Central military court.
5. Plenary assembly of Judges of the Supreme People’s Court conducts the
cassation review of effective rulings and sentences as stated in Section 4 of this
Article, which comprise complex elements, or effective rulings and sentences
reviewed by the Judicial panel of five Judges of the Justices’ Council of the Supreme
People’s Court through the cassation procedure without reaching an agreement on the
settlement of the case by voting.
More than two thirds of members of the Plenary assembly of Judges of the
Supreme People’s Court must be present at the trial of cassation, which is chaired by
the President of the Supreme People’s Court. Rulings of the Plenary assembly of
Judges of the Supreme People’s Court must be approved by more than half of its
members; otherwise, the trial shall be halted. Plenary assembly of Judges, in 30 days
upon halting the trial, must resume the trial.
6. Justices’ Council of the Supreme People’s Court shall conduct the cassation
review of the entire lawsuit, whose effective sentences and rulings protested fall into
different levels of jurisdiction over cassation procedure.
Article 383. Participants in a trial of cassation
1. The procurator assigned by the equivalent Procuracy must attend the trial of
cassation.
2. The court, when perceiving the necessity or grounds to amend parts of an
effective sentence or ruling, must summon the sentenced person, defense counsel and
individuals having interests and duties related to the protests to the court of cassation.
The trial of cassation shall occur despite the absence of the said people.
Article 384. Preparation for a trial of cassation
The court president shall assign a Judge from the Judicial panel of cassation to
prepare an verbal report on the case. Such report shall summarize the details of the
case, the Courts’ sentences and ruling, and particulars of the protests.
The verbal report and relevant documents must be sent to the members of the
Judicial panel of cassation not later than 07 days before trial.
Article 385. Time limit for the start of a trial of cassation
The court given authority to conduct the cassation procedure, in 04 months upon
receiving the decision to protest and case file, must start the trial.
Article 386. Procedures for a trial of cassation
1. After the presiding judge commences the trial, a member of the Judicial panel
of cassation shall present the verbal report on the case. Other members of the Judicial
panel of cassation, before discussing and expressing their opinions on the settlement of
the case, shall address questions about unclear details to the Judge delivering the
verbal report. If the protests are lodged by the Procuracy, the Procurator shall present
the details of such protests.
2. If the sentenced person, defense counsel or individuals having duties and
interests related to the protests appear in court, they shall be permitted to state opinions
at the requests for the Judicial panel of cassation.
The procurator shall present the Procuracy’s opinions on the decision to protest
and the settlement of the case/
The procurator and participants in the trial of cassation shall present their oral
arguments on relevant issues in connection with the settlement of the case. The
presiding judge must allow the Procurator and participants in legal proceedings to
express all opinions in just and equal manners before the court.
3. Members of the Judicial panel of cassation shall present their opinions and
converse. The judicial panel of cassation shall take vote and announce its rulings on
the settlement of the case.
Article 387. Scope of cassation procedure
The judicial panel of cassation must review the entire case beyond the boundary
of the protests.
Article 388. Powers of the Judical panel of cassation
1. Reject the protests and sustain the effective sentences and rulings that have
been protested.
2. Abrogate the sentences and rulings in effect and sustain lawful judgments and
decisions of the Court of first instance or second instance, which were annulled or
modified unlawfully.
3. Abrogate sentences and rulings in effect for re-investigation or retrial.
4. Abrogate sentences and rulings in effect and dismiss the case.
5. Redress sentences and rulings in effect.
6. Terminate the cassation procedure.
Article 389. Rejection of protests and sustainment of effective sentences and
rulings under protest
The judicial panel of cassation shall reject the protests and sustain the effective
sentences and rulings under protest if such rulings and sentences are deemed justified
and statutory.
Article 390. Abrogation of sentences and rulings in effect and sustainment of
lawful judgments and decisions of a Court of first instance or second instance,
which were annulled or modified unlawfully
The judicial panel of cassation shall decide to abrogate the sentences and rulings
in effect and sustain the lawful judgments and decisions of the Court of first instance
or second instance, which were annulled or modified unlawfully.
Article 391. Abrogation of sentences and rulings in effect for re-investigation
or retrial
The judicial panel of cassation shall abrogate the effective sentences and rulings,
partly or wholly, for re-investigation or retrial in the presence of one of the grounds as
defined in Article 371 of this Law. In the event of retrial, the Judicial panel of
cassation shall, as the case may be, decide to have the case retried in the first or second
instance.
If the continued detention of the defendant is deemed necessary, the Judicial
panel of cassation shall order such detention until a Procuracy or Court handles the
case again.
Article 392. Abrogation of sentences and rulings in effect and dismissal of
the case
The judicial panel of cassation shall abrogate the sentences and rulings in effect
and dismiss the case in the presence of one of the grounds as defined in Article 157 of
this Law.
Article 393. Rectification of sentences and rulings in effect
The judicial panel of cassation shall redress the sentences and rulings in effect
upon the fulfillment of all conditions below:
1. Documents and evidences in the case file are sufficient and explicit;
2. The rectification of the sentences and rulings does not alter the nature of the
case or worsen the sentenced person's circumstances or put the crime victims and
litigants at disadvantage.
Article 394. Decision to institute the cassation procedure
1. A judicial panel of cassation shall issue a decision to institute the cassation
procedure in the name of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam.
2. The decision to institute the cassation procedure shall comprise:
a) The date and location of the trial;
b) The full name of members of the Judicial panel of cassation;
c) The full name of the Procurator exercising the prosecution rights and
administering the trial;
d) The name of the case reviewed by the Judicial panel through the cassation
procedure;
dd) The name, age and address of the sentenced person and individuals having
interests and duties in connection with the decision to institute the cassation procedure;
e) Summarize the case and parts of the effective sentences and rulings under
protest;
g) The decision to protest and justifications;
h) Remarks by the Judicial panel of cassation, including the analysis of the said
justifications for the approval or rejection of the protests;
i) Points, sections and articles of the Criminal Procedure Law and Criminal Code,
which are adduced by the Judicial panel of cassation in its decisions;
k) The decisions by the Judical panel of cassation.
Article 395. Effect of rulings from the cassation procedure and delivery of
such rulings
1. The rulings by the Judical panel of cassation shall come into force as of the
date of pronouncement.
2. The judicial panel of cassation, in 10 days upon pronouncing its rulings, must
have them delivered to the sentenced person, individuals filing protests, equivalent
Procuracy, Procuracy and Court that held the first-instance or appellate trial.
Moreover, competent authorities enforcing criminal or civil sentences, individuals
having interests and duties related to the protests or their representatives shall receive
such rulings. Furthermore, a written notice shall be sent to the local authorities at the
commune, ward and town where the sentenced person resides or his workplace of
educational facility.
Article 396. Time limit for transfer of case file for re-investigation or retrial
If the Judicial panel of cassation decides to abrogate a sentence or ruling in effect
for re-investigation, the case file, in 15 days upon the issuance of such decision, must
be transferred to the equivalent Procuracy for re-investigation according to this Law.
If the Judicial panel of cassation decides to abrogate a sentence or ruling in effect
for retrial in the first or second instance, the case file, in 15 days upon the issuance of
such decision, must be transferred to a competent Court for retrial according to this
Law.
Chapter XXVI
REOPENING PROCEDURE
Article 397. Nature of reopening procedure
The reopening procedure reviews a Court’s effective sentences and rulings under
protest upon the exposure of new facts that may alter the fundamentals of such
sentences and rulings, given that the said Court had no knowledge of such facts when
passing its judgments and decisions.
Article 398. Grounds for protest through reopening procedure
A court’s sentences and rulings in effect shall be protested through the reopening
procedure in the presence of one of the following grounds:
1. There are grounds to ascertain the falseness of vital details in witness testifiers'
statements, findings of expert examinations and property valuation, interpreters’
metaphrase, written translations;
2. Investigators, Procurators, Judges and lay assessors had no knowledge of
certain facts and, consequently, drew inaccurate conclusions that made the Court’s
effective sentences and rulings deviate from the objective truths of the case;
3. Evidences, records of investigation, prosecution or adjudication, records of
other legal proceedings or other proofs, papers and items in the case were falsified or
inaccurate.
4. Other facts that made the Court’s effective rulings and sentences deviate from
the objective truths of the case.
Article 399. Announcement and verification of facts newly found
1. The sentenced person, authorities, organizations and every person shall be
entitled to find new facts of the case and send written notice and relevant documents to
the Procuracy or Court. When the Court receives such notice or finds new facts itself,
it must promptly send a written notice and relevant documents to the head of the
Procuracy authorized to lodge protests through reopening procedure. The head of the
Procuracy authorized to lodge protests through reopening procedure shall issue
decisions to verify such facts.
2. The procuracy must verify new facts, when deemed necessary. The head of the
Procuracy authorized to lodge protests through reopening procedure shall request the
competent investigation authorities to verify new facts and convey findings to the
Procuracy.
3. When verifying new facts, the Procuracy and investigation authorities shall be
entitled to implement investigative and procedural methods according to this Law.
Article 400. Individuals authorized to lodge protests through the reopening
procedure
1. The head of the Supreme People’s Procuracy shall have the right to lodge
protests through the reopening procedure against the effective sentences and rulings
passed by a Court, save the decisions by the Justices’ Council of the Supreme People’s
Court.
2. The head of the Central military procuracy shall have the right to lodge
protests through the reopening procedure against the effective sentences and rulings
passed by a military Court of a military zone or a local military Court.
3. The head of the Higher People’s Procuracy shall have the right to lodge
protests through the reopening procedure against the effective sentences and rulings
passed by a provincial People’s Court or a district People’s Court in conformity to the
territorial jurisdiction.
Article 401. Time limit for protests through the reopening procedure
1. The reopening procedure against the sentenced person shall only be
permissible within the prescriptive period for criminal prosecution, as defined in
Article 27 of the Criminal Code. The time limit for filing of protests shall not exceed
01 year upon the Procuracy's receipt of information on newly found facts.
2. The reopening procedure in favor of the sentenced person shall not be
restricted in time and shall be permissible for the exoneration of the sentenced person
who is deceased.
3. Protests regarding litigants’ civil matters in a criminal case shall abide by the
Civil procedure code.
Article 402. Powers of the Judical panel of reopening
1. Reject the protests and sustain the effective sentences and rulings that have
been protested.
2. Abrogate a Court's sentences and rulings in effect for re-investigation or
retrial.
3. Abrogate sentences and rulings in effect and dismiss the case.
4. Dismiss the reopening trial.
Article 403. Other proceedings of the reopening procedure
Other proceedings of the reopening procedure shall follow the stipulations on the
proceedings of the cassation procedure as per this Law.
Chapter XXVII
PROCEDURES FOR THE REVIEW OF RULINGS BY THE JUSTICES’
COUNCIL OF THE SUPREME PEOPLE’S COURT
Article 404. Requests, requisitions and propositions for the review of rulings
by the Justices’ Council of the Supreme People’s Court
1. In the presence of grounds that indicate the serious breach of laws in the
rulings by the Justices’ Council of the Supreme People’s Court, the Justices’ Council
of the Supreme People’s Court must meet and review such rulings at the requests by
the Standing Committee of the National Assembly or as per the requisitions by the
Judiciary Committee of the National Assembly or the head of the Supreme People’s
Procuracy or according to the propositions by President of the Supreme People’s
Court. The same applies upon the revelation of new significant facts that were beyond
the knowledge of the Justices’ Council of the Supreme People's Court upon the
passing of its rulings and may alter the fundamentals of such rulings.
2. The president of the Supreme People’s Court, at the requests the Standing
Committee of the National Assembly, shall be held responsible for reporting to the
Justices’ Council of the Supreme People’s Court for the review of the rulings of the
Justices’ Council of the Supreme People's Court.
3. In response to the requisitions by the Judiciary Committee of the National
Assembly and the head of the Supreme People's Procuracy, the Justices’ Council of the
Supreme People's Court shall conduct the meeting to review its rulings.
In response to the propositions by the President of the Supreme People's Court,
the Justices’ Council of the Supreme People's Court shall enter a meeting to review its
rulings.
Article 405. Participants in the meeting organized by the Justices’ Council of
the Supreme People’s Court for examination of requisitions and propositions
1. The head of the Supreme People’s Procuracy must attend the meeting of the
Justices’ Council of the Supreme People’s Court to examine the requisitions by the
Judicial Committee of the National Assembly or by the head of the Supreme People’s
Procuracy or the propositions by the President of the Supreme People's Court.
2. The representative of the Judicial Committee of the National Assembly shall
be invited to the meeting of the Justices’ Council of the Supreme People’s Court to
examine the requisitions by the Judicial Committee of the National Assembly.
3. Relevant authorities and entities can be invited by the Supreme People's Court
to the meeting, if deemed necessary.
Article 406. Preparation of the meeting for examination of requisitions and
propositions
1. Upon the receipt of requisitions from the Judicial Committee of the National
Assembly or the head of the Supreme People’s Procuracy or written propositions from
the President of the Supreme People’s Court for the review of the rulings of the
Justices' Council of the Supreme People's Court, the Supreme People's Court shall
send copies of such requisitions or propositions and case files to the Supreme People’s
Procuracy for the latter’s preparation of its presentation in the meeting for examination
of such requisitions or propositions.
The president of the Supreme People’s Court shall have documents examined
and report to the Justices’ Council of the Supreme People’s Court for the latter to
consider details and make decisions in the meeting.
2. In 30 days upon the receipt of requisitions from the Judicial Committee of the
National Assembly or the head of the Supreme People’s Procuracy or upon the
proposition in writing by the President of the Supreme People’s Court, the Justices’
Council of the Supreme People’s Court must carry out the meeting to examine such
requisitions or propositions. Moreover, the head of the Supreme People’s Procuracy
shall be informed in writing of the time and location of such meeting.
Article 407. Procedures for the organization of a meeting for examination of
requisitions and propositions
1. The president of the Supreme People’s Court shall himself or assign a member
of the Justices’ Council of the Supreme People’s Court to present the case and its
settlement in brief.
2. The representative of the Judicial Committee of the National Assembly, the
President of the Supreme People’s Court, the head of the Supreme People's Procuracy,
requisitioning for or proposing the review of the rulings of the Justices' Council of the
Supreme People's Court, shall present the following particulars:
a) The content of the requisitions or propositions;
b) The grounds for such requisitions or propositions;
c) The analysis of evidences existing and arising (if any) to evince the serious
breach of laws in the rulings of the Justices’ Council of the Supreme People's Court, or
new facts that may alter the fundamentals of such rulings.
3. For the examination of requisitions from the Judicial Committee of the
national Assembly or propositions from the President of the Supreme People’s Court,
the head of the Supreme People’s Procuracy shall state opinions on the grounds and
validity of such requisitions or propositions and specify standpoints and reasons for his
consent to or dissent against such propositions or requisitions.
4. Justices’ Council of the Supreme People's Court discuss details and take vote
under majority rule on its accord or discord with the requisitions or propositions for
the review of the rulings of the Justices’ Council of the Supreme People’s Court.
5. Justices’ Council of the Supreme People’s Court, if concurring with
requisitions from the Judicial Committee of the National Assembly or the head of the
Supreme People’s Procuracy or propositions from the President of the Supreme
People’s Court, shall decide to engage in a meeting to review its rulings.
6. Every event of the meeting for examination of requisitions or propositions and
the decisions passed in such meeting shall be inputted into the meeting record and the
archive of documents for examination of such requisitions or propositions.
Article 408. Notice of results of the meeting for examination of requisitions
or propositions
At the end of the meeting, the Justices’ Council of the Supreme People’s Court
shall inform the Judicial Committee of the National Assembly and the head of the
Supreme People's Procuracy in writing of the results of the meeting and the accord or
discord with the requisitions or propositions. The written notice must specify reasons
for the consent to or dissent against requisitions or propositions.
If the result of the examination meeting of the Justices’ Council of the Supreme
People’s Court is deemed not satisfactory, the Judicial Committee of the National
Assembly, the head of the Supreme People’s Procuracy and the President of the
Supreme People’s Court shall be entitled to report to the Standing Committee of the
National Assembly for the latter’s decisions.
Article 409. Assessment of case files; verification and collection of evidences,
documents and items
1. At the requests by the Standing Committee of the National Assembly or as per
the consent of the Justices' Council of the Supreme People's Court to the review of its
rulings, the President of the Supreme People's Court shall organize the assessment of
case files and the verification and collection of evidences, documents and items, if
necessary.
2. The assessment of case files, verification and collection of evidences,
documents and items must clarify the existence of serious violations of laws or new
significant facts that may alter the fundamentals of the rulings of the Justices' Council
of the Supreme People's Court.
Article 410. Time limit for the start of the meeting to review rulings of
Justices’ Council of the Supreme People’s Court
1. In 04 months upon the receipt of requests from the Standing Committee of the
National Assembly or upon the consent of the Justices’ Council of the Supreme
People’s Court to the review of its rulings, the Justices’ Council of the Supreme
People’s Court must open the meeting.
2. At the requests for the Standing Committee of the National Assembly, the
Supreme People’s Court shall inform the Supreme People’s Procuracy in writing of the
time and location of the meeting to review the former’s rulings and provide case files.
Article 411. Procedures and authority to review the rulings of the Justices’
Council of the Supreme People's Court
1. The head of the Supreme People’s Procuracy must attend the meeting to
review the rulings of the Justices’ Council of the Supreme People’s Court and express
opinions on the existence of serious violations of laws or new significant facts that
may alter the fundamentals of the rulings of Justices' Council of the Supreme People's
Court. Moreover, he shall state standpoints on the settlement of the case.
2. After the report by the President of the Supreme People's Court and
presentations by the head of the Supreme People’s Procuracy and concerned
authorities and entities (if any), the Justices’ Council of the Supreme People's Court
shall decide to:
a) Refuse the requests by the Standing Committee of the National Assembly,
requisitions by the Judicial Committee of the National Assembly or the head of the
Supreme People’s Procuracy, and propositions by the President of the Supreme
People’s Court, and sustain the rulings of the Justices’ Council of the Supreme
People’s Court;
b) Rescind the rulings of the Justices’ Council of the Supreme People’s Court,
effective sentences and rulings in violation of the laws and decisions on the particulars
of the case;
c) Rescind the rulings of the Justices’ Council of the Supreme People’s Court,
effective sentences and rulings and determine liabilities for amends according to the
laws;
d) Rescind the rulings of the Justices’ Council of the Supreme People’s Court,
effective sentences and rulings in violation of the laws for re-investigation or retrial.
3. Rulings of the Justices’ Council of the People’s Supreme Court must be
approved by more than three fourth of its members.
Article 412. Delivery of decisions by the Justices’ Council of the Supreme
People’s Court on the review of its rulings
After the Justices’ Council of the Supreme People’s Court issues one of the
decisions as defined in Article 411 of this Law, the Supreme People’s Court shall
deliver such decision to the Standing Committee and the Judicial Committee of the
National Assembly, the Supreme People's Procuracy, investigation authorities,
procuracies and courts that settled the case and concerned individuals.
PART SEVEN
SPECIAL PROCEDURES
Chapter XXVIII
LEGAL PROCEEDINGS FOR PERSONS LESS THAN 18 YEARS OF
AGE
Article 413. Scope of regulation
Legal proceedings for accused persons, individuals aggrieved and witness
testifiers who are less than 18 years old shall be governed by this Chapter and other
regulations of this Law not contrary to those in this Chapter.
Article 414. Principles of legal proceedings
1. Legal proceedings must be congenial and conformable to the mentality, age
level, maturity level and awareness of persons less than 18 years of age. Legitimate
rights and interests of persons aged under 18 must be assured. Persons under age of 18
must be guaranteed to gain the best benefits.
2. Personal information of individuals below 18 years of age must be kept
confidential.
3. The right to participate legal proceedings must be guaranteed for the
representatives of persons under 18, schools, Youth Union, individuals with
experience and knowledge of psychology and social affairs, places where persons aged
below 18 pursue education and do daily activities.
4. The rights of persons under age of 18 to attend and express opinions must be
respected.
5. The rights of persons aged under 18 to defense and legal assistance must be
guaranteed.
6. Principles of treatments as per the Criminal Code for persons less than 18
years of age must be assured.
7. The cases in connection with persons aged below 18 must be settled in swift
and timely manners.
Article 415. Presiding officers
Presiding officers in the cases, in which persons aged under 18 are involved,
have been trained or experienced in conducting activities of investigation, prosecution
and adjudication related to persons less than 18 years of age. Presiding officers must
have essential knowledge of psychology and educational science for persons under age
of 18.
Article 416. Elucidation of essential details in the process of legal
proceedings against accused persons, whose age is under 18
1. The age, physical and spiritual growth level, awareness level of crimes of
persons aged under 18
2. The conditions of life and education.
3. The incitement by persons from 18 years of age.
4. The reasons, conditions and circumstances that lead to crimes.
Article 417. Determination of age of accused persons or crime victims under
the age of 18
1. Competent procedural authorities shall determine the age of accused persons
and crime victims under 18 years of age according to the laws.
2. The date of birth of such persons shall be determined in the following manner
if legitimate approaches do not generate an accurate result:
a) If the month of birth is identified but the day is unknown, the last day of that
month shall be the day of birth.
b) If the quarter when birth occurred is identified but the date is unknown, the
last date of that quarter shall be the date of birth.
c) If the half of the year when birth occurred is identified but the date is
unknown, the last day of the final month of that half of the year shall be the date of
birth.
d) If the year of birth is identified but the date is unknown, the last day of the
final month of that year shall be the date of birth.
3. If the year of birth is not identified, age shall be determined through expert
examinations.
Article 418. Supervision of accused persons aged below 18
1. Investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate, procuracies and
courts can decide to have accused persons aged under 18 supervised by their
representatives to guarantee their attendance in response to competent procedural
authorities’ subpoenas.
2. Individuals assigned with supervisory duties shall be held responsible for
supervising persons less than 18 years of age in strict manner, oversee their conduct
and morality and educate them.
Individuals assigned with supervisory duties must report and cooperate with
competent procedural authorities in prompt manner to implement timely preventive
measures if the persons under the age of 18 are likely to abscond or commit the acts of
bribing, coercing and fomenting other people to falsify statements or provide false
documents; destroying or forging evidences, documents and items related to the case,
or shifting property related to the case away; threatening, repressing or avenging
witness testifiers, crime victims, denouncers and their kin, or continuing criminal acts.
Article 419. Implementation of preventive and coercive measures
1. Preventive measures and coercive delivery of persons aged below 18 shall be
viable only in truly vital circumstances.
Temporary detainment or detention of accused persons less than 18 years of age
shall be viable only on the grounds that supervisory approach and other preventive
measures fail. The permissible duration of the detention of accused persons under 18
shall be two thirs of the time limit for the detention of individuals from the age of 18
as per this Law. Competent individuals must promptly terminate or change preventive
measures when the grounds for temporary detainment or detention evanesce.
2. Persons from the age of 14 to below 16 may be held in emergency custody,
apprehended, temporarily detained or held in detention for their crimes as defined in
Section 2, Article 12 of the Criminal Code in the presence of grounds as stated in
Article 110, 111 and 112, and Point a, b, c, d and dd, Section 2, Article 119 of this
Law.
3. Persons from the age of 16 to below 18 may be held in emergency custody,
apprehended, temporarily detained or held in detention for intentional felonies, horrific
or extremely severe felonies in the presence of grounds as stated in Article 110, 111
and 112, and Point a, b, c, d and dd, Section 2, Article 119 of this Law.
4. Suspects or defendants from the age of 16 to below 18 may be apprehended,
detained and held in detention if they continue criminal acts, abscond and are placed
under arrest as per wanted notices after being charged, investigated, prosecuted and
tried for unintentional felonies or misdemeanors punishable by a maximum term of
imprisonment of 2 years according to the Criminal Code.
5. In 24 hours upon the emergency custody, apprehension, temporary detainment
or detention, the individuals issuing custodial orders against persons aged under 18
must inform the representatives of such juveniles.
Article 420. Representative, school and organization participating in legal
proceedings
1. Representatives of persons aged below 18, teachers and representatives of the
school, Youth Union and other organizations, where persons aged under 18 pursue
education and perform daily activities, shall have the right and duty to participate in
legal proceedings as per the decisions of investigation authorities, procuracies and
courts.
2. Representatives of persons less than 18 years of age can attend the session of
deposition and interrogation of persons under 18. Such representatives can submit
evidences, documents, items, requests, complaints and Charges. They can read,
transcribe and photocopy documents related to charges against persons aged below 18
from the case file after investigative activities end.
3. Individuals as defined in Section 1 of this Article shall be entitled, in court, to
present evidences, documents, items, requests, to requisition the replacement of
presiding officers, to express opinions, arguments, and to file complaints against
procedural acts of authorized procedural persons and the Court’s decisions.
Article 421. Deposition of persons held in emergency custody, apprehended
or temporarily detained, crime victims, witness testifiers; interrogation of
suspects; confrontation
1. When a person under 18 gives depositions while held in emergency custody or
apprehended or temporarily detained, or suffers harms of crimes, or testify, or is
interrogated, the competent procedural authorities must inform the defense counsel,
representative and protector of such person’s legitimate rights and benefits of the time
and location of the deposition or interrogation in advance.
2. The defense counsel or representative must be present during the taking of
depositions from person held in emergency custody, apprehended or temporarily
detained or during the interrogation of suspects.
The representative or protector of legitimate rights and benefits of crime victims
or witness testifiers must attend the deposition of such persons.
3. The defense counsel and representative can pose questions, with the consent of
the investigators or procurators, to the persons apprehended and detained or suspects
under the age of 18. After competent individuals end each session of despotion or
interrogation, the defense counsel and representative can raise questions to the
suspects or persons held in emergency custody, apprehended or held in termporary
custody.
4. There shall be at most, on daily basis, two sessions of deposition of persons
under 18. Each session shall be less than 02 hours, unless the case comprises a variety
of complex factors.
5. Only two sessions of interrogation of suspects under 18 shall be permissible
per day. The duration of each session shall be limited to 02 hours, except for:
a) Organized crimes;
b) Seeking of fugitive criminals;
c) Prevention of crimes;
d) Search of tools or instruments of crime or other exhibits related to the case;
dd) Cases with several complex facts.
6. Authorized procedural persons shall have suspects or defendants confronted
with crime victims aged below 18 for the sole purpose of elucidating facts of the case
if the case cannot be solved without confrontation.
Article 422. Defense
1. Accused persons under 18 years of age shall be entitled to defend themselves
and be defended.
2. Representatives of accused persons aged under 18 shall be entitled to select a
defense counsel or themselves defend such juveniles charged.
3. If accused persons under 18 do not have or their representatives do not select a
defense counsel, investigation authorities, procuracies or courts shall appoint a defense
counsel according to Article 76 of this Law.
Article 423. Adjudication
1. The trial panel of the first-instance court must consist of a lay assessor who has
been a teacher or Youth Union’s official or possessed experience and psychological
knowledge regarding persons less than 18 years of age.
2. If a defendant or crime victim below 18 years of age must be protected in
special circumstances, the Court can decide to hold a secret trial.
3. The representatives of defendants aged under 18, representatives of the school
or organization where such defendants pursue education and do daily activities must
attend the trial against the juveniles, unless such representatives are absent not due to
force majeure or objective obstacles.
4. The session of questioning or debate in court for defendants, crime victims and
witness testifiers under 18 must correspond with their age and growth level. The
courtroom must be congenial and conformable to persons less than 18 years of age.
5. If crime victims and witness testifiers are less than 18 years old, the Trial panel
must limit the interaction between such juveniles and defendants when the said
adolescent give testiomines in court. The presiding judge can request the
representative, protector of legitimate rights and benefits to question the victims and
witness testifiers.
6. The trial panel, when holding the trial, shall have defendants to undergo
educational remedies in a reform school if considering penalties not necessary.
7. The president of the Supreme People’s Court shall elaborate the juvenile and
family Court's adjudication of cases involved in persons under 18.
Article 424. Termination of educational remedies at the commune, ward or
town, in the reform school, mitigation or exemption of penalties
Sentenced persons aged below 18 may benefit from the termination of
educational remedies at the commune, ward or town, or in the reform school, of from
the mitigation or exemption of penalties upon the satisfaction of requirements in
Article 95 or Article 96 or Article 105 of the Criminal Code.
Article 425. Expungement of criminal records
Criminal records of persons aged under 18 shall be expunged according to this
Law upon the fulfillment of requirements in Article 107 of the Criminal Code.
Article 426. Authority to implement supervisory and education remedies
against criminals under 18 who are exempt from criminal liabilities
Investigation authorities, procuracies and courts shall be empowered to decide
the enforcement of one of following supervisory and educational remedies against
criminals aged below 18 who are exempt from criminal liabilities:
1. Reprimand;
2. Community conciliation;
3. Edification at the commune, ward or town.
Article 427. Order and procedures of the remedy of reprimand
1. When a criminal under 18 is exempt from criminal liabilities but is eligible for
reprimand according to the Criminal Code, the head or vice head of investigation
authorities, procuracies or the Trial panel shall decide to implement the remedy of
reprimand against the juvenile criminals in cases that they settle.
2. A decision to implement the remedy of reprimand shall have these primary
details:
a) Number, issue date and issuing place of the decision;
b) Full name, position and signature of the individual authorized to make the
decision and seal of the issuing authority;
c) Reasons and grounds of the decision;
d) Full name, date of birth and residential address of the suspect or defendant;
dd) Offence title, applicable points, sections and articles from the Criminal Code;
e) Length of time of duties of persons reprimanded.
3. Investigation authorities, procuracies and courts must promptly send their
decisions to reprimand to the person reprimanded, his parents or representative.
Article 428. Order and procedures of the remedy of community conciliation
1. When requirements for community conciliation as per the Criminal Code are
deemed satisfied, the head or vice head of investigation authorities, procuracies or the
Trial panel shall decide to implement the remedy of community conciliation.
2. A decision to implement the remedy of community conciliation shall have
these primary details:
a) Number, issue date and issuing place of the decision;
b) Full name, position and signature of the individual authorized to make the
decision and seal of the issuing authority;
c) Reasons and grounds of the decision;
dd) Offence title, applicable points, sections and articles from the Criminal Code;
dd) Full name of the investigator or procurator or judge assigned to organize a
conciliation;
d) Full name, date of birth and residential address of the suspect or defendant;
g) Full name of the crime victim;
h) Full name of other participants in the conciliation;
i) Time and location of the conciliation.
3. The decision on community conciliation must be delivered, in no more than 03
days prior to the conciliation, to the criminals aged under 18, their parents, crime
victims and their representatives and People’s committee of the commune, ward or
town where the conciliation happens.
4. When conducting the conciliation, the investigator, procurator or judge
assigned to conciliate must cooperate with the People's committee of the commune,
ward or town where the conciliation takes place. Moreover, the conciliation must be
recorded in writing.
5. The written record of conciliation shall contain these primary details:
a) Location, time and date of the conciliation, starting and ending time;
b) Full name of the investigator, procurator or judge assigned to organize the
conciliation;
d) Full name, date of birth and residential address of the suspect or defendant;
d) Full name, date of birth and residential address of the crime victim;
dd) Full name, date of birth and residential address of other participants in the
conciliation;
e) Questions, answers and colloquy of participants in the conciliation;
g) Results of the conciliation; persons under 18, their parents or representatives
giving apologies and amends (if any); victims and their representatives voluntarily
conciliating and petitioning for exemption of criminal liabilities (if any);
h) Signature of the investigator, procurator or judge organizing the conciliation.
6. At the end of the conciliation, the investigator, procurator or judge organizing
the conciliation shall re-read the written record to the participants in the conciliation.
The investigator, procurator or judge making the written record must enter
amendments requested into the record and have them confirmed by signature. If such
requests are rejected, reasons for rejection must be specified in the record. The written
record of conciliation shall be immediately given to the participants in the conciliation.
Article 429. Order and procedures of the remedy of edification at the
commune, ward or town
1. When a criminal under 18 is exempt from criminal liabilities but is eligible for
edification at the commune, ward or town according to the Criminal Code, the head or
vice head of investigation authorities, procuracies or the Trial panel shall decide to
implement such remedy against the juvenile criminals in cases that they settle.
2. A decision to implement the remedy of edification at the commune, ward or
town shall have these primary details:
a) Number, issue date and issuing place of the decision;
b) Full name, position and signature of the individual authorized to make the
decision and seal of the issuing authority;
c) Reasons and grounds of the decision;
d) Full name, date of birth and residential address of the suspect or defendant;
dd) Offence title, applicable points, sections and articles from the Criminal Code;
e) Length of time of the remedy;
g) Responsibilities of local authorities at the commune, ward or town where the
remedied person resides.
3. Investigation authorities, procuracies and courts must send their decisions, in
03 days upon issuing a decision to implement the remedy, to the remedied person, his
parents or representative, and local authorities at the commune, ward or town they the
concerned person reside.
Article 430. Order and procedures of the educational remedy in the reform
school
1. The trial panel, when considering penalties not necessary, shall sentence the
criminal under 18 to educational remedy in a reform school.
2. A decision to implement the educational remedy in a reform school have these
primary details:
a) Number, issue date and issuing place of the decision;
b) Full name and signatures of members of the Trial panel issuing the decision;
c) Reasons and grounds of the decision;
d) Full name, date of birth and residential address of the suspect or defendant;
dd) Offence title, applicable points, sections and articles from the Criminal Code;
e) Length of time of education remedy in the reform school;
g) Responsibilities of the reform school that educate the remedied person.
3. The decision to implement this remedy shall be immediately given to the
criminals under 18, their parents or representatives and the reform school.
Chapter XXIX
PROCEDURES FOR CRIMINAL PROSECUTION OF JURIDICAL
PERSONS
Article 431. Scope of regulation
Legal proceedings against juridical persons denounced or reported for crimes, or
facing requisitions for charges, or investigated, prosecuted or tried, or enforcing
sentences shall abide by this Chapter and other regulations in this Law, which are not
contrary to this Chapter.
Article 432. Filing of lawsuit and amendments to decisions to file criminal
lawsuits
1. Competent authorities, when finding signs of crimes committed by a juridical
person, shall file criminal lawsuits according to Article 143, 153 and 154 of this Law.
2. The grounds, order and procedures for amendments to decisions to file
criminal lawsuits shall conform to Article 156 of this Law.
Article 433. Filing of charges against suspected juridical persons and
amendments to decisions to press such charges
1. Competent authorities, when having sufficient grounds to define a juridical
person’s acts as crimes according to the Criminal Code, shall decide to press charges
against the juridical person suspected.
2. A decision to charge a juridical person suspected shall specify time and
location where the decision is issued; full name and position of the issuer; name and
address of the juridical person as per the decision of establishment by a competent
authority; offence title and applicable articles of the Criminal Code; time and location
of crimes and other particulars of the crimes.
If a juridical person is charged against multiple crimes, the decision to charge the
juridical person suspected must specify each offence title and applicable sections and
articles of the Criminal Code.
3. The authority, order and procedures for filing of charges against suspects, and
amendments to decisions to charge juridical persons suspected shall abide by Article
179 and 180 of this Law.
Article 434. Legal representatives of juridical persons in legal proceedings
1. A juridical person facing criminal prosecution engages in every legal
proceeding through its legal representative. The juridical person must assign and
assure its legal representative to participate in all activities of charging, investigation,
prosecution, adjudication and sentence enforcement at the requests for competent
authorities and individuals.
If the legal representative of the juridical person is charged, investigated,
prosecuted or tried or cannot engage in legal proceedings, the juridical person must
appoint another person as its legal representative in legal proceedings. If the juridical
person replaces its legal representative, competent procedural authorities must be
promptly informed.
If the juridical person does not have a legal representative or has a variety of
legal representatives at the time of charging, investigation, prosecution or adjudication,
competent procedural authorities shall appoint a person representing that juridical
person in legal proceedings.
2. The legal representative of the juridical person in legal proceedings must
provide competent procedural authorities with the information of his full name, date
birth, nationality, ethnicity, religion, gender, occupation and position. If such
information changes, the legal representative shall promptly inform competent
procedural authorities.
Article 435. Rights and duties of a legal representative of a juridical person
1. A legal representative of a juridical person shall be entitled to:
a) Be informed of the result of the processing of criminal information;
b) Be informed of reasons for the filing of charges against the juridical person;
c) Be informed and given explanations of the rights and duties as stated in this
Article;
d) Receive decisions to charge the juridical person suspected, to amend the
decision to charge, to approve the decision to charge, to ratify the decision to amend
the decision to charge, to implement, alter or terminate coercive measures, to suspend
or terminate investigation, to suspend or dismiss the case, to bring the case to trial and
other procedural decisions; written conclusion of investigation, charging documents,
Court's judgments and rulings as per this Law;
dd) Present statements and opinions, bear no obligation to testify against the
juridical person he represents or to admit that the juridical person is guilty;
e) Present evidences, documents, items and requests;
g) Request the replacement of authorized procedural persons, expert witnesses,
property valuators, interpreters or translators according to this Law;
h) Defend the juridical person or solicit a defense counsel;
i) Read, transcribe and photocopy papers or digital documents related to charges,
vindication or other documents regarding the defense of the juridical person, if
requested, at the end of the investigation;
k) Attend the trial, pose questions, with the presiding judge’s consent, or ask the
presiding judge to question courtroom participants, engage in oral argument session in
court;
l) State the last opinion before deliberation;
m) Read the court record, and request amendments to the court record;
n) Appeal the Court’s sentences and rulings;
o) Complain of procedural decisions and actions of competent procedural
authorities and persons.
2. A legal representative of a juridical person shall bear duties to:
a) Appear as per authorized procedural persons' subpoenas. The person may be
escorted by force if absent not due to force majeure or objective obstacles;
b) Conform to decisions and requests by competent procedural authorities and
persons.
Article 436. Coercive measures against juridical person
1. Investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate, procuracies and
courts can implement the following coercive measures against a juridical person
charged, investigated, prosecuted or tried:
a) Distrainment of assets linked with the juridical person's criminal acts;
b) Freeze the juridical person’s accounts in connection with its criminal acts;
c) Suspend the juridical person's operations associated with its criminal acts in
limited time;
d) Impose a pecuniary guarantee of the enforcement of sentences.
2. The length of time of coercive measures as defined in Section 1 of this Article
shall not exceed the time limit for investigation, prosecution and adjudication.
Article 437. Distrainment of assets
1. Distrainment of assets applies when amends for damage must be guaranteed or
the juridical person is charged, investigated, prosecuted or tried for crimes punishable
by mulct as per the Criminal Code.
2. Only parts of assets proportionate to probable degree of seizure, fine or
compensation for damage shall be distrained. The head of the juridical person, if
overlooking the consumption, use, transfer, swapping, concealing or destruction of
distrained assets put under his maintenance, shall incur liabilities as per the laws.
3. The following individuals must be present when the juridical person’s assets
are distrained:
a) The legal representative of the juridical person;
b) The representative of local authorities at the commune, ward or town where
the juridical person’s assets are located and distrained;
c) Witnesses.
4. The authority, order and procedures for asset distrainment shall abide by
Article 128 of this Law.
Article 438. Freezing of accounts
1. Freezing of a juridical person's accounts, evidently available at a credit
institution or State Treasury, applies when amends for damage must be guaranteed or
the juridical person is charged, investigated, prosecuted or tried for crimes punishable
by mulct as per the Criminal Code.
2. Account freeze also applies to the accounts of other entities evidently found to
hold amounts involved in the juridical person’s criminal acts.
3. Only amounts proportionate to probable degree of fine or compensation for
damage shall be frozen.
4. Authorities warranted to freeze accounts must give written decisions on
account freeze to the representative of the credit institution or State Treasury manaing
the accounts of the juridical person or other entities in connection with the juridical
person's criminal acts.
5. The authority, order and procedures for account freeze shall abide by Article
129 of this Law.
Article 439. Suspension of a juridical person’s operations associated with
that juridical person’s criminal acts in limited time; imposition of pecuniary
guarantee of sentence enforcement
1. Suspension of a juridical person's operations in limited time only applies when
there are grounds showing that the juridical person's criminal acts undermine or are
likely to maim the life and health of human beings, environment or social order and
safety.
Competent individuals as defined in Section 1, Article 113 of this Law shall be
authorized to issue decisions to suspend a juridical person’s operations in limited time.
A decision to suspend a juridical person’s operations, which are issued by individuals
as defined in Point a, Section 1, Article 113 of this Law, must be ratified by the
equivalent Procuracy before implementation.
The length of time of the suspension of a juridical person's operations must not
exceed the time limit for investigation, prosecution and adjudication according to this
Law. The length of time of the suspension of a juridical person sentenced shall not
exceed the time from the pronouncement of sentences to the juridical person's
execution of such sentences.
2. Mandatory pecuniary guarantee of the enforcement of sentences applies to a
juridical person charged, investigated, prosecuted or tried for crimes punishable by
mulct as per the Criminal Code or assures the amends for damage.
Only an amount propotionate to probable degree of fine or amends shall be
imposed to guarantee the enforcement of sentences.
Competent individuals as defined in Section 1, Article 113 of this Law, shall be
authorized to issue decisions to compel the juridical person to submit a pecuniary
guarantee of the enforcement of sentences. When individuals as defined in Point a,
Section 1, Article 113 of this Law issue decisions to compel a juridical person to
submit a pecuniary guarantee of the enforcement of sentences, such decisions must be
ratified by the equivalent Procuracy before implementation.
The government shall regulate details of the order, procedures and level of the
pecuniary guarantee of the enforcement of sentences, custody or return or confiscation
of such amount to the state treasury.
Article 440. Summoning of legal representative of juridical person
1. Authorized procedural persons, when summoning the legal representative of a
juridical person, must send subpoenas. The subpoena shall specify the full name,
residential or work address of the legal representative of the juridical person; time,
date and location for his appearance, contact person and liabilities for absence not due
to force majeure or objective obstacles.
2. The subpoena shall be sent to the legal representative or to the juridical person.
in which the summoned person is working, or local authorities at the commune, ward
or town where he resides. Authorities and organizations receiving the subpoena shall
be responsible for forwarding it to the legal representative of the juridical person in
prompt manner.
The legal representative, upon receiving the subpoena, must affix his signature,
date and time of receipt. The forwarder of the subpoena must deliver the subpoena’s
section bearing the legal representative’s signature to the authority issuing the
subpoena. If the legal representative does not affix signature, a written record of his
non-compliance shall be made and sent to the summoning authority. If the subpoena
cannot be delivered due to the legal representative’s absence, it shall be given to his
family member from 18 years of age, who affixes signature and forward the paper to
the legal representative.
3. The legal representative of the juridical person must be present as per the
subpoena. Absence not due to force majeure or objective obstacles shall result in
authorized procedural persons' decision to escort by force.
Article 441. Elucidation of essential details during legal proceedings against
a juridical person charged
1. The existence of criminal acts, time, location and other particulars of criminal
acts that fall into the juridical person's criminal liabilities as per the Criminal Code.
2. Errors committed by the juridical person or personnel of the juridical person.
3. Nature and degree of damage caused by the juridical person’s criminal acts.
4. Factors aggravating and mitigating criminal liabilities and other facts related to
exemption of punishments.
5. Reasons and conditions that lead to crimes.
Article 442. Deposition of legal representative of juridical person
1. Investigators and investigation officers of units assigned to investigate shall
carry out the deposition of the legal representative of a juridical person at the location
of investigative activities, at the office of the investigation authority or unit assigned to
investigate, or at the juridical person’s office. Investigators and investigation officers,
before taking statements, must inform the Procurator and defense counsel of the time
and location of deposition. The procurator shall participate in the deposition, if
necessary.
2. Investigators and investigation officers of units assigned to investigate, prior to
the first deposition, must provide the legal representative of the juridical person with
clear explanations of his rights and duties as defined in Article 435 of this Law. The
event of explanation shall be recorded in writing. The legal representative may be
permitted to write his statements.
3. The deposition of the legal representative of a juridical person shall not occur
at night.
4. The procurator shall take statements from the legal representative if he does
not admit the juridical person’s criminal acts or complains of investigative activities. If
investigative activities breach the laws or other essential events arise, the procurator
shall also take statements.
The procurator’s taking of statements from the legal representative shall abide by
this Article.
5. The deposition of the legal representative at the office of the investigation
authority or unit assigned to investigate must be recorded by sound or sound-and-
visual means.
The deposition of the legal representative of a juridical person at other places
shall be recorded by sound or sound-and-visual means at the requests for that person or
competent procedural authorities and persons.
6. The written record of the deposition of the legal representative of a juridical
person shall be made according to Article 178 of this Law
Article 443. Suspension and termination of investigation, dismissal of cases,
removal of suspects or defendants
1. Investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate shall decide to
suspend investigative activities when expert examination, property valuation or foreign
judicial assistance, despite the expiration of the time limit for investigation, is
requisitioned to no avail. In such event, expert examination, valuation process and
judicial assistance shall continue until results are achieved.
2. Investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate shall decide to
terminate investigation, or the Procuracy or Court shall decide to dismiss the case or
remove the suspect or defendant, that is a juridical person, in one of the following
events:
a) Criminal acts do not exist;
b) The juridical person’s acts do not constitute crimes;
c) The juridical person’s criminal acts have been sentenced or the case has been
dismissed by effective rulings.
d) The time limit for investigation expires but the juridical person’s commission
of crimes has not been proved;
dd) The prescriptive period of criminal prosecution expires.
Article 444. Jurisdiction and procedures for trial against juridical person
1. A court, whose location is adjacent to the scene of the juridical person’s crime,
shall have jurisdiction over the criminal lawsuits against that crime. If crimes occur in
various places or at an unknown site, the Court adjacent to the headquarter or branch
of the juridical person shall retain jurisdiction.
2. The trial in the first and second instance, cassation and reopening procedures
against a juridical person committing crimes shall abide by Part four and Part six of
this Law. The legal representative of the juridical person, Procurator of the equivalent
Procuracy, crime victims or their representatives must attend the trial against that
juridical person.
Article 445. Authority and procedures for enforcement of sentences against
juridical person
1. Heads of civil sentence enforcement authorities shall be authorized to make
decisions on the enforcement of pecuniary penalties against a juridical person. The
order and procedures for the enforcement of pecuniary penalties shall abide by the
Law on civil sentence enforcement.
2. Competent governmental authorities shall be authorized to enforce other
penalties and judicial remedies, as defined in the Criminal Code, against a juridical
person as per the laws.
3. If the juridical person sentenced is splitted, divided, consolidated or merged,
the successive entity inheriting rights and duties from the juridical person sentenced
shall be held liable for executing the duties to enforce pecuniary penalties and amends
for damage.
Article 446. Expungement of criminal records for eligible juridical person
In 05 days upon the receipt of the request from the juridical person eligible for
expungement of criminal records and upon the satisfaction of requirements as defined
in Article 89 of the Criminal Code, the President of the Court the held the first-
instance trial shall issue a certificate of the expungement of the juridical person's
criminal records.
Chapter XXX
PROCEDURES FOR THE ENFORCEMENT OF CIVIL COMMITMENT
Article 447. Circumstances and authority to enforce civil commitment
1. Investigation authorities, procuracies and courts, as per the progress of legal
proceedings, shall requisition forensic psychiatric assessment on the grounds that the
perpetrators of acts dangerous to society do not have criminal capacity as per Article
21 of the Cirminal Law.
2. The procuracy shall rely on the findings of the forensic psychiatric assessment
to make decisions on the enforcement of civil commitment during the stage of
investigation and prosecution. Similar decisions during the stage of adjudication and
sentence enforcement shall fall into the authority of the Court.
Article 448. Investigative activities against person with uncertain criminal
capacity
1. Investigation authorities must clarify these matters on the grounds that the
person causing danger to society does not have criminal capacity:
a) The acts endangering society occurred;
b) Mental conditions and illness of the person endangering society;
c) Whether the person endangering society loses sense of awareness or ability to
control his actions.
2. Investigation authorities, when conducting legal proceedings, must assure the
presence of a defense counsel after the person endangering society is determined to
succumb to mental illness or other diseases that deprive him of sense of awareness or
ability to control actions. A representative of the mentally ill person can participate in
legal proceedings when necessary.
Article 449. Enforcement of civil commitment during the stage of
investigation
1. When the forensic psychiatric assessment, as requisitioned by investigation
authorities, finds the suspect mentally ill or deprived of sense of awareness or ability
to control actions due to other diseases, investigation authorities shall propose in
writing civil commitment with findings of the assessment to the equivalent Procuracy
for approval.
In 03 days upon the receipt of the written proposition from investigation
authorities and findings of the assessment, the Procuracy shall decide to enforce
medical treatments against the suspect or request the investigation authorities to
requisition further or repeated assessments if considering existing grounds insufficient.
2. If the Procuracy decides to enforce civil commitment, the investigation
authorities must decide to suspend or terminate investigative activities against the
suspect.
Article 450. Decisions by the Procuracy during the stage of prosecution
1. After receiving the case file and investigative findings, the Procuracy, if
finding grounds of the suspect’s possession of no criminal capacity, shall requisition a
forensic psychiatric assessment.
2. The procuracy shall consider the findings of the assessment to make one of
these decisions:
a) Suspend the case and enforce civil commitment;
b) Dismiss the case and enforce civil commitment;
c) Return the case file for further investigation;
d) Prosecute the suspect before a Court.
3. Apart from civil commitment, the Procuracy can handle other issues of the
case.
Article 451. Decisions by the Court during the stage of adjudication
1. The court, after accepting the case and grasping grounds that the suspect or
defendant does not possess criminal capacity, shall requisition forensic psychiatric
assessment.
2. The court shall consider the findings of the assessment and make one of these
decisions:
a) Suspend or dismiss the case and enforce civil commitment;
b) Return case files for repeated or further investigation;
c) Grant exemption of criminal liabilities or penalties, and enforce civil
commitment;
d) Try the case.
3. The court, apart from its decision to enforce civil commitment, can handle
matters of compensation or other issues of the case.
Article 452. Enforcement of civil commitment against persons incarcerated
1. The prison, detention center or criminal sentence enforcement unit of the
provincial Police office shall propose the provincial People’s Court or military Court
of the military zone, at the place of a prisoner's imprisonment, to requisition forensic
psychiatric assessment on the grounds that such prisoner allegedly succumbs to mental
illness or other diseases bereaving him of abilities of perception or action control.
2. The president of the provincial People’s Court or military Court of the military
zone, at the place of the prisoner’s imprisonment, shall consider the findings of the
forensic psychiatric assessment and decide to suspend the execution of the jail
sentence and enforce civil commitment.
The said person, when cured, shall continue serving time if it is unjustifiable to
excuse the jail sentence.
Article 453. Complaints, appeals and protests
1. The filing and handling of complaints against a Procuracy's decisions to
enforce civil commitment shall abide by Chapter XXXIII of this Law.
2. The filing of appeals or protests to a Court's rulings on the enforcement of civil
commitment shall follow the stipulations for appeals or protests to the rulings of a
first-instance court in this Law.
3. A decision to enforce civil commitment shall mantain its effect until it is
replaced by another decision or rendered void.
Article 454. Termination of civil commitment
1. Civil commitment shall transpire at a mandatory mental treatment facility
designated by the Procuracy or Court according to the laws.
2. When the head of the mandatory mental treatment facility announces the
successful healing of a person forced to undergo medical treatments, the authority
proposing such treatments or the Procuracy or Court enforcing the treatments shall
requisition a forensic psychiatric assessment of the conditions of the said person.
The procuracy or court shall consider the assessment's findings on the treated
person and decide to terminate civil commitment.
3. The authority proposing civil commitment or the Procuracy or Court must
promptly send the decision to terminate treatments to the treatment facility and the
representative of the person forced to receive treatments.
4. Legal proceedings and sentences suspended can only be resumed according to
this Law.
Chapter XXXI
SUMMARY PROCEDURE
Article 455. Scope of summary procedure
Summary procedure for investigation, prosecution, trial in the first and second
instance shall be governed by this Chapter and other stipulations of this Law, which
are not contrary to this Chapter.
Article 456. Requirements for the application of summary procedure
1. Summary procedure shall be applied during the stage of investigation,
prosecution and trail in the first instance upon the satisfaction of these requirements:
a) The perpetrator of criminal acts confesses or is caught in the act;
b) The crime is plain and evidences are lucid;
c) The crimes committed are misdemeanors;
d) The perpetrator of crimes has manifest address of residence and personal
record.
2. Summary procedure shall be applied for trial in the second instance upon the
satisfaction of one of these requirements:
a) Summary procedure was applied for the trial in the first instance. Furthermore,
appeals or protests are lodged to commute or suspend sentences;
b) Summary procedure was not applied for the trial in the first instance despite
the satisfaction of all requirements in Section 1 of this Article. Moreover, appeals or
protests are lodged to commute or suspend sentences.
Article 457. Decisions to apply summary procedure
1. In 24 hours upon the satisfaction of requirements in Article 456 of this Law,
investigation authorities, procuracies and courts shall decide to apply summary
procedure.
Summary procedure shall commence upon the issuance of the decision and end
upon the closure of the appellate trial, unless such procedure is terminated according to
Article 458 of this Law.
2. The decision to apply summary procedure shall be given to the suspect,
defendant or their representatives, and defense counsel in 24 hours upon its issuance.
Investigation authorities or Courts, in 24 hours upon the issuance of their
decision to apply summary procedure, shall send such decision to the equivalent
Procuracy.
3. The procuracy, when finding the invalidity of investigation authorities’
decisions to apply summary procedure, shall decide to nullify such decisions in 24
hours upon the receipt of such, and inform the investigation authorities.
4. The procuracy, when finding the invalidity of the Court’s decision to apply
summary procedure, shall propose its findings to the President of that Court. The court
president must consider details and respond in 24 hours upon the receipt of the
Procuracy’s propositions.
5. Complaints may be lodged against a decision to apply summary procedure.
The suspect, defendant or their representatives shall be entitled to lodge complaints
against a decisions to apply summary procedure. The time limit for such complaints
shall be 05 days upon the receipt of the decision. Complaints shall be sent to the
investigation authorities, procuracies or courts issuing the decision to apply summary
procedure. Such complaints, after received, must be settled in 03 days.
Article 458. Nullification of decisions to apply summary procedure
If one of the requirements in Point b, c and d, Section 1, Article 456 of this Law
is not satisfied during the summary procedure, investigation authorities, procuracies
and courts shall nullify the decisions to apply summary procedure and handle the case
according to general regulations in this Law. The same applies if the investigation or
the case is suspended or documents are returned for further investigation according to
this Law.
The time limit for legal proceedings of the lawsuit shall abide by general
stipulations in this Law upon the nullification of the decision to apply summary
procedure.
Article 459. Temporary detainment and detention for investigation,
prosecution and adjudication
1. Grounds, authority and procedures for temporary detainment and detention
shall abide by this Law.
2. The length of time of temporary detainment shall not exceed 03 days upon the
investigation authorities’ acquisition of an arrestee.
3. The time limit for temporary detention shall not exceed 20 days during
investigation, 05 days during prosecution, 17 days during trial in the first instance, and
22 days during trial in the second instance.
Article 460. Investigation
1. The time limit for investigation under summary procedure shall be 20 days
upon the issuance of a decision to file a lawsuit.
2. Investigation authorities, when closing investigation, shall issue decisions to
prosecute.
A decision to prosecute shall summarize criminal acts, artifices, motives,
purposes, nature and degree of damage caused by criminal acts; preventive and
coercive measures implemented, altered or terminated; seizure and impoundment of
documents, items, handling of evidences; personal traits of suspects, factors
aggravating or mitigating criminal liabilities; reasons and grounds for prosecution;
offence titles, applicable points, sections and articles of the Criminal Code; specific
time and issuing place of the decision. Such decision must bear the full name and
signature of the individual issuing the decision.
3. Investigation authorities, in 24 hours upon issuing a decision to prosecute,
must send such decision to the suspect or his representative, defense counsel, crime
victims, litigants or their representatives. Moreover, such decision and case files shall
be delivered to the Procuracy.
Article 461. Decision to prosecute
1. The procuracy, in 05 days upon receiving a decision to prosecute and case
files, shall make one of these decisions:
a) Prosecute the suspect before a Court via the decision to prosecute;
b) Decide not to prosecute the suspect and dismiss the case;
c) Return documents for further investigation;
d) Suspend the case;
dd) Dismiss the case.
2. A decision to prosecute shall summarize criminal acts, artifices, motives,
purposes, nature and degree of damage caused by criminal acts; preventive and
coercive measures implemented, altered or terminated; seizure and impoundment of
documents, items, handling of evidences; personal traits of suspects, factors
aggravating or mitigating criminal liabilities; reasons and grounds for prosecution;
offence titles, applicable points, sections and articles of the Criminal Code; specific
time and issuing place of the decision. Such decision must bear the full name and
signature of the individual issuing the decision.
3. The procuracy, in 24 hours upon issuing a decision to prosecute, must send
such decision to the suspect or his representative, defense counsel, crime victims,
litigants or their representatives and investigation authorities. Moreover, such decision
and case files shall be delivered to the Court.
Article 462. Preparation for trial in the first instance
1. The judge appointed to hold trial, in 10 days upon the admission of the case,
shall make one of these decisions:
a) Hear the case;
b) Return documents for further investigation;
c) Suspend the case;
d) Dismiss the case.
2. The court, if deciding to hear the case, shall start the trial in 07 days upon the
issuance of such decision.
3. The first-instance court, in 24 hours upon deciding to hear the case, must send
such decision to the equivalent Procuracy, the defendant or his representative, defense
counsel, crime victims, litigants or their representatives.
Article 463. Trial in the first instance
1. A trial under summary procedure in the first instance shall be held by one
Judge.
2. The procurator, after the preliminary formalities of the trial, shall announce the
decision to prosecute.
3. The order and procedures of this court of first instance shall abide by general
stipulations in this Law, without a session of deliberation.
Article 464. Preparation for trial in the second instance
1. The appellate court shall receive and admit case files according to general
stipulations in this Law.
The court, after admitting the case, shall send case files to the equivalent
Procuracy/ In 05 days, the Procuracy must return case files to the Court.
2. The judge appointed to hold trial, in 15 days upon the admission of the case,
shall make one of these decisions:
b) Hear the case in the second instance;
b) Dismiss the appellate lawsuit.
3. The court, if deciding to hear the case in the second instance, shall start the
trial in 07 days upon the issuance of such decision.
4. The appellate court, in 24 hours upon deciding to hear the case, must send such
decision to the equivalent Procuracy, the defendant or his representative, defense
counsel, crime victims, litigants or their representatives.
Article 465. Trial in the second instance
1. An appellate trial under summary procedure shall be held by one Judge.
2. The order and procedures of this court of second instance shall abide by
general stipulations in this Law, without a session of deliberation.
Chapter XXXII
RECTIFICATION OF IMPEDIMENTS TO LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
Article 466. Punitive actions against individuals hindering legal proceedings
of authorities given authority to institute legal proceedings
When sentenced persons and other participants in legal proceedings commit one
of the following acts, competent procedural authorities shall consider the degree of
their violations and decide to deliver or escort them by force, to inflict admonitory
penalties or fines, to enforce administrative detention or impose obligations to make
restitution for consequences caused, or to institute criminal prosecution according to
the laws:
1. Falsify or destroy evidences to obstruct the settlement of affairs and cases;
2. Give false statements or documents;
3. Decline deposition or refuse to provide documents or items;
4. Expert witnesses or property valuators give false findings or refuse to conclude
expert examinations or valuation tasks not due to force majeure or objective obstacles;
5. Delude, threaten, bribe or use force to make witness testifiers refrain from
testifying or give false testimonies;
6. Delude, threaten, bribe or force witness testifiers to refrain from testifying or
to give false testimonies;
7. Delude, threaten, bribe or force expert witnesses or property valuators to
refrain from their duties or to give findings that deviate from objective truths;
8. Delude, threaten, bribe or force interpreters and translators to refrain from their
duties or to provide false translation;
9. Delude, threaten, bribe or force representatives of authorities and organizations
and other individuals to refrain from legal proceedings;
10. Defame the honor, dignity and reputation of authorized procedural persons;
threaten or use force or commit other acts to obstruct legal proceedings of authorized
procedural persons;
11. Have not appeared despite a subpoena not due to force majeure or objective
obstacles; therefore, hinder legal proceedings;
12. Prevent the delivery or announcement of procedural documents by competent
procedural authorities.
Article 467. Punitive actions against contempt of court
1. Persons in contempt of court shall incur administrative penalties, subject to the
nature and degree of their violations, as per the Presiding judge’s orders according to
the laws.
2. The presiding judge shall be entitled to expel violators from the courtroom or
have them held in administrative detention. Police officers or personnel maintaining
court order shall execute the Presiding judge’s orders on expelling or administrative
detention of persons disturbing the order of the court.
3. If the violators' disobedience of court rules results in criminal prosecution, the
Trial panel shall be entitled to file a criminal lawsuit.
4. The stipulations in this Article shall apply to persons committing violations in
a Court’s meeting.
Article 468. Form, authority, order and procedures of punitive actions
Form, authority, order and procedures of punitive actions against the
impediments to criminal proceedings shall be governed by the Law on punitive actions
against administrative violations and relevant laws.
Chapter XXXIII
COMPLAINT AND DENOUNCEMENT IN CRIMINAL PROCEDURE
Article 469. Right to complain
1. Authorities and entities shall be entitled to lodge complaints against decisions
and legal proceedings of competent procedural authorities and persons on the grounds
that such decisions and proceedings breach the laws or violate their legitimate rights
and benefits.
2. Chapter XXI, XXII, XXIV, XXV, XXVI and XXXI of this Law shall govern
complaints, appeals or protests to a first-instance sentences and rulings not in effect, a
Court’s sentences and rulings in force or decisions to prosecute or to apply summary
procedure, rulings of a Trial panel in the first or second instance, Judicial panel of
cassation or reopening, or Panel ratifying reduction of time, exemption of punishments
or parole.
Article 470. Decisions and legal proceedings that prone to complaints
1. Procedural decisions, which prone to complaints, are issued by heads and vice
heads of investigation authorities, investigators, heads and vice heads of procuracies,
procurators, presidents and vice presidents of courts, judges and individuals authorized
to investigate according to this Law.
2. Legal proceedings, which prone to complaints, are procedural actions of heads
and vice heads of investigation authorities, investigators, investigation officers, heads
and vice heads of procuracies, procurators, checkers, presidents and vice presidents of
courts, judges, verifiers and individuals assigned to investigate according to this Law.
Article 471. Prescriptive period for complaints
1. The prescriptive period for complaints shall be 15 days after the person filing
complaints receives or perceive procedural decisions and proceedings that he deems
unlawful.
2. If a person fails to exercise his right to complain by the prescriptive period due
to force majeure or objective obstacles, the length of time of such force majeure or
objective obstacles shall not be counted into the prescriptive period for complaints.
Article 472. Rights and duties of persons filing complaints
1. Persons filing complaints shall be entitled to:
a) Lodge complaints by themselves or through a defense counsel, protector of
litigants’ legitimate rights and benefits or representative;
b) Lodge complaints anytime during the settlement of a criminal case;
c) Withdraw complaints anytime during the processing of complaints;
d) Obtain the decision to process complaints;
dd) Reclaim legitimate rights and benefits violated and receive amends for
damage as per the laws.
2. Persons filing complaints shall bear the duties to:
a) Present matters, information and documents to the individuals processing
complaints in honest manner; and assume liabilities for their presentations and
provision of documents and information;
b) Obey effective decisions on complaints.
Article 473. Rights and duties of persons facing complaints
1. Persons facing complaints shall be entitled to:
a) Be informed of the details of the complaints;
b) Present evidences on the validity of decisions and proceedings under
complaint;
c) Obtain the decision to process complaints against their decisions and
proceedings.
2. Persons facing complaints shall bear the duties to:
a) Explain the decisions and proceedings under complaint; provide relevant
information and documents at the requests for competent authorities and entities;
b) Obey effective decisions on complaints.
c) Make restitution, reimbursement and remedies against consequences caused by
their unlawful decisions and proceedings as per the laws.
Article 474. Authority and time limit for settlement of complaints against
procedural decisions and actions regarding emergency custody, arrest, temporary
detainment and detention
1. Complaints against emergency custody orders, arrest warrants, decisions on
temporary detainment or detention, detention orders, decisions to approve arrest,
decisions to extend temporary detainment or detention, and actions to execute such
orders and decisions must be settled in 24 hours upon the receipt of such complaints.
The time limit may be extended for 03 mores days upon the receipt of the complaints
if the settle of verification takes time.
2. Heads of Procuracies shall be held responsible for settleing complaints against
procedural decisions and actions regarding emergency custody, arrest, temporary
detainment and detention during the stage of investigation and prosecution. In 24
hours upon the receipt of complaints, authorities and individuals having rights to
emergency custody, arrest, temporary detainment and detention must promptly transfer
the case and matters under complaint related to the persons arrested or held in custody
or detention to the Procuracy exercising prosecution rights and administering
investigation.
Heads of procuracies shall settle complaints against procedural decisions and
actions, regarding emergency custody, arrest, temporary detainment and detention, of
heads and vice heads of investigation authorities, investigators, investigation officers,
procurators, checkers and individuals assigned to investigate.
Heads of procuracies shall settle complaints against procedural decisions and
actions, regarding arrest, temporary detainment and detention, of vice heads of
procuracies.
If the decisions by the head of the Procuracy on the complaints are not
satisfactory, the person lodging complaints can file complaints to the head of the
immediate superior Procuracy in 03 days upon that person’s receipt of such decisions.
If a head of a provincial People’s Procuracy settles such complaints initially, further
complaints shall be delivered to the head of the Supreme People's Procuracy. In 07
days upon the receipt of complaints, the head of the immediate superior Procuracy or
Supreme People’s Procuracy must consider and settle such complaints. Decisions by
the head of the immediate superior Procuracy or Supreme People’s Procuracy shall
come into force.
Complaints against procedural decisions and actions, regarding arrest, temporary
detainment and detention, of a head of a Procuracy shall be settled by the head of the
immediate superior Procuracy. If complaints are lodged against procedural decisions
and actions of a head of a provincial People’s Procuracy, they shall be settled by the
head of the Supreme People’s Procuracy. In 07 days upon the receipt of complaints,
the head of the immediate superior Procuracy or Supreme People’s Procuracy must
consider and settle such complaints. Decisions by the head of the immediate superior
Procuracy or Supreme People’s Procuracy shall come into force.
3. The court is responsible for settling complaints against decisions on arrest or
detention during the stage of adjudication.
Heads of procuracies shall process complaints against procedural decisions and
actions, regarding arrest, temporary detainment and detention, of vice heads of
procuracies.
If the Court president’s decisions on the complaints are not satisfactory, the
person filing complaints can lodge further complaints to the President of the
immediate higher Court in 03 days upon the receipt of such decisions.
In 07 days upon the receipt of complaints, the President of the immediate higher
Court must consider and settle such complaints. Decisions by the President of the
immediate higher Court shall come into force.
The president of the immediate higher Court shall settle complaints against
procedural decisions and actions, regarding arrest and detention, of the President of the
lower Court. In 07 days upon the receipt of complaints, the President of the immediate
higher Court must consider and settle such complaints. Decisions by the President of
the immediate higher Court shall come into force.
Article 475. Authority and time limit for settlement of complaints against
investigators, investigation officers, vice heads and heads of investigation
authorities and individuals assigned to investigate
1. Heads of investigation authorities shall settle complaints against procedural
decisions and actions of investigators, investigation officers and vice heads of
investigation authorities in 07 days upon the receipt of such complaints, except for
those related to emergency custody, arrest, temporary detainment and detention. If the
decisions by the head of the investigation authority are not satisfactory, the person
filing complaints can lodge further complaints to the head of the equivalent Procuracy
in 03 days upon the receipt of such decisions. In 07 days upon the receipt of
complaints, the head of the equivalent Procuracy shall consider and settle such
complaints. Decisions by the head of the equivalent Procuracy shall come into force.
The head of the equivalent Procuracy shall settle complaints against procedural
decisions and actions of heads of investigation authorities and procedural decisions of
investigation authorities, which have been approved by the Procuracy, in 07 days upon
the receipt of such complaints.
If the decisions by the head of the equivalent Procuracy on the complaints are not
satisfactory, the person lodging complaints can file complaints to the head of the
immediate superior Procuracy in 03 days upon that person’s receipt of such decisions.
If a head of a provincial People’s Procuracy settles such complaints initially, further
complaints shall be delivered to the head of the Supreme People's Procuracy.
In 15 days upon the receipt of complaints, the head of the immediate superior
Procuracy or Supreme People’s Procuracy must consider and settle such complaints.
Decisions by the head of the immediate superior Procuracy or Supreme People’s
Procuracy shall come into force.
2. Heads of units assigned to investigate shall settle complaints against
procedural decisions and actions of investigation officers and vice heads of such units
in 07 days upon the receipt of such complaints, except for those related to emergency
custody, arrest and temporary detainment. If the decisions by the heads of the said
units are not satisfactory, the person filing complaints can lodge further complaints to
the head of the Procuracy exercising prosecution rights and administering investigation
in 03 days upon the receipt of such decisions. In 07 days upon the receipt of
complaints, the head of the Procuracy shall consider and settle such complaints.
Decisions by the head of the Procuracy shall come into force.
Heads of procuracies exercising prosecution rights and administering
investigation shall settle complaints against procedural decisions and actions of heads
of units assigned to investigate. In 07 days upon the receipt of complaints, the head of
the Procuracy shall consider and settle such complaints. Decisions by the head of the
Procuracy shall come into force.
Article 476. Authority and time limit for settlement of complaints against
procurators, checkers, vice heads and heads of procuracies
1. Heads of procuracies shall settle complaints against procedural decisions and
actions of procurators, checkers and vice heads of procuracies in 07 days upon the
receipt of such complaints. If the decisions by a head of a procuracy are not
satisfactory, the person filing complaints can lodge further complaints to the head of
the immediate superior Procuracy in 03 days upon the receipt of such decisions. In 15
days upon the receipt of complaints, the head of the immediate superior Procuracy
shall consider and settle such complaints. Decisions by the head of the immediate
superior Procuracy shall come into force.
2. The immediate superior Procuracy shall settle complaints against procedural
decisions and actions of a head of a procuracy in 15 days upon the receipt of such
complaints. Decisions by the head of the immediate superior Procuracy shall come
into force.
3. Complaints against procedural decisions and actions of a head of a provincial
People’s Procuracy, in the events as defined in Section 1 and Section 2 of this Article,
shall be settled in the following manner:
a) Supreme People’s Procuracy shall settle complaints against procedural
decisions and actions, regarding the exercising of prosecution rights and
administration of investigation and prosecution of a head of a provincial People’s
Procuracy in 15 days upon the receipt of such complaints. Decisions by the head of the
Supreme People's Procuracy shall come into force.
b) Higher People’s Procuracy shall settle complaints against procedural decisions
and actions, regarding the exercising of prosecution rights and administration of
adjudication, of a head of a provincial People’s Procuracy in 15 days upon the receipt
of such complaints. Decisions by the head of the higher People's Procuracy shall come
into force.
4. The head of the Supreme People’s Procuracy or the Central military procuracy
shall settle complaints against procedural decisions and actions of vice heads,
procurators and checkers of the Supreme People’s Procuracy, or vice heads,
procurators and checkers of the Central military procuracy, respectively, in 15 days
upon the receipt of such complaints. Decisions by the head of the Supreme People’s
Procuracy or the Central military procuracy shall come into force.
Article 477. Authority and time limit for settlement of complaints against
judges, verifiers, court presidents and vice court presidents
1. The president of a district People’s Court or a local military Court shall settle
complaints against procedural decisions and actions, before trial, of judges, verifiers
and vice presidents of the district People's Court or local military court, respectively,
in 07 days upon the receipt of such complaints.
If the decisions by the President of the district People’s Court or local military
Court are not satisfactory, the person filing complaints can lodge further complaints to
the President of the provincial People’s Court or military Court of a relevant military
zone in 03 days upon the receipt of such decisions. In 15 days upon the receipt of
complaints, the President of the provincial People's Court or military Court of the
military zone must consider and settle such complaints. Decisions by the President of
the provincial People’s Court or military Court of the military zone shall come into
force.
The president of a provincial People’s Court or a military Court of a military
zone shall settle complaints against procedural decisions and actions, before trial, of
the presidents of the relevant district People's Courts or local military courts,
respectively, in 15 days upon the receipt of such complaints. Decisions by the
President of the provincial People’s Court or military Court of the military zone shall
come into force.
2. The president of a provincial People’s Court or a military Court of a military
zone shall settle complaints against procedural decisions and actions, before trial, of
judges, verifiers and vice presidents of the provincial People’s Court or the military
Court of the military zone, respectively, in 07 days upon the receipt of such
complaints. If the decisions by the President of the district People’s Court or local
military Court are not satisfactory, the person filing complaints can lodge further
complaints to the President of the higher People’s Court or central military Court in 03
days upon the receipt of such decisions. In 15 days upon the receipt of complaints, the
President of the higher People's Court or central military Court shall settle such
complaints. Decisions by the President of the higher People’s Court or central military
Court shall come into force.
The president of a higher People’s Court shall settle complaints against
procedural decisions and actions, before trial, of judges, verifiers and vice presidents
of the higher People’s Court, in 07 days upon the receipt of such complaints. If the
decisions by the President of the higher People’s Court are not satisfactory, the person
filing complaints can lodge further complaints to the President of the Supreme
People’s Court in 03 days upon the receipt of such decisions. In 15 days upon the
receipt of complaints, the President of the Supreme People's Court shall settle such
complaints. Decisions by the president of the Supreme People's Court shall come into
force.
The president of the higher People’s Court or central military Court shall settle
complaints against procedural decisions and actions of presidents of provincial
People's Courts or military courts of military zones, respectively, in 15 days upon the
receipt of such complaints. Decisions by the President of the higher People’s Court or
central military Court shall come into force.
3. The president of the Supreme People’s Court or central military Court shall
settle complaints against procedural decisions and actions of presidents of higher
People’s Courts, vice presidents, judges and verifiers of the Supreme People's Court,
vice presidents, judges and verifiers of the central military Court, respectively, in 15
days upon the receipt of such complaints. Decisions by the President of the Supreme
People’s Court or central military Court shall come into force.
Article 478. Right to denounce
Individuals shall have the right to present denunciations to competent authorities
and persons against the breach of laws by an authorized procedural person, which
cause damage or menace the interests of the Government and legitimate rights and
benefits of authorities and entities.
Article 479. Rights and duties of persons filing complaints
1. A person filing complaints shall be entitled to:
a) Lodge petitions or directly state denunciations to competent authorities and
individuals;
b) Request to have his full name, address and handwriting maintained
confidential;
c) Receive decisions on denunciations;
d) Request competent procedural authorities' protection from menaces,
repression, vengeance.
2. A person filing complaints shall bear duties to:
a) Present details of the denunciations in honest manner, and provide information
and documents in connection with such denunciations;
b) Identify his full name and address;
c) Be held liable for intentional false denunciations.
Article 480. Rights and duties of persons facing complaints
1. A person facing complaints shall be entitled to:
a) Be informed of the particulars of the complaints;
b) Present evidences of the inaccuracy of the denunciations;
c) Receive decisions on the denunciations;
d) Reclaim legitimate rights and benefits violated, restore honor and receive
amends for damage caused by inaccurate denunciations;
dd) Request competent authorities and entities to castigate persons giving false
denunciations.
2. A person facing complaints shall bear duties to:
a) Elucidate the actions complained; provide relevant information and documents
at the requests for competent authorities and individuals;
b) Conform to the decisions on denunciations;
c) Make restitution, reimbursement and remedies against consequences caused by
their unlawful procedural actions as per the laws.
Article 481. Authority and time limit for settlement of denunciations
1. The head of a competent procedural authority shall be given authority to settle
denunciations against unlawful actions of competent personnel of that authority.
The head of an investigation authority or Procuracy shall be given authority to
settle denunciations against the head of the immediate lower investigation authority or
Procuracy.
The president of a provincial People’s Court or a military Court of a military
zone shall be given authority to settle denunciations against the president of a district
People’s Court or local Court.
The president of the higher People’s Court or central military Court shall be
given authority to settle denunciations against the president of a provincial People’s
Court or military Court of a military zone.
The president of the Supreme People’s Court shall be given authority to settle
denunciations against the president of the higher People's Court or central military
Court.
The procuracy exercising prosecution rights and administering investigation shall
be given authority to settle denunciations against procedural actions of persons
assigned to investigate.
2. The settlement of denunciations against unlawful procedural actions denoting
crimes shall abide by Article 145 of this Law.
3. The time limit for settlement of denunciations shall not exceed 30 days upon
the receipt of such denunciations. The time limit for complex cases may be extended
for 60 more days at most.
4. The head of an equivalent Procuracy or competent Procuracy shall settle
denunciations against emergency custody, temporary detainment and detention during
the stage of investigation and prosecution, in 24 hours upon the receipt of such
denunciations. If information must be further verified, the time limit shall be 03 more
days at most upon the receipt of denunciations.
Article 482. Responsibilities of authorities and persons authorized to settle
complaints and denunciations
1. Authorities and persons authorized to settle complaints and denunciations,
within their powers and objectives, shall be held responsible for admitting and settling
complaints and denunciations in prompt and legal manner and for sending results of
the settlement of such complaints and denunciations in writing to the person lodging
such complaints and denunciations. Moreover, they shall castigate violators of laws in
stringent manner, implement protective measures for denouncers upon requests and
prevent possible damage. Furthermore, they shall assure the strict settlement of
complaints and denunciations and assume liabilities for their relevant actions.
2. If a person, though authorized to settle denunciations and complaints, does not
perform or neglect his given tasks, he shall face disciplinary penalties or criminal
prosecution or make restitution to damage caused according to the nature and degree
of his violations as per the laws. Moreover, his illicit actions to settle complaints or
denunciations shall give rise to the same consequences.
3. Investigation authorities, units assigned to investigate and courts shall be
responsible for sending written notices of their admission and settlement of complaints
and denunciations to the equivalent Procuracy or competent Procuracy.
Article 483. Duties and authority of procuracies administering the
settlement of complaints and denunciations
1. A procuracy shall administer the settlement of complaints and denunciations
by investigation authorities and units assigned to investigate, equivalent or lower
courts.
2. The procuracy, when administering the settlement of denunciations and
complaints, shall bear the following duties and authority:
a) Reqeust investigation authorities, courts, units assigned to investigate to settle
complaints and denunciations according to this Chapter;
b) Request investigation authorities, courts and units assigned to investigate to,
by themselves, inspect the settlement of complaints and denunciations by their
personnel and inferior ones; and inform the Procuracy of the findings of such
inspection;
c) Request investigation authorities, courts and units assigned to investigate to
provide the Procuracy with documents related to the settlement of denunciations and
complaints;
d) Directly administer the settlement of denunciations and complaints by
investigation authorities, units assigned to investigate, equivalent and lower courts;
dd) Conclude the tasks of administration in writing; exercise the rights to lodge
appeals or protests, request investigation authorities, courts and units assigned to
investigate to rectify violations in the settlement of denunciations and complaints.
3. A procuracy shall be responsible for inspecting the lower procuracy's
settlement of denunciations and complaints. Supreme People’s Procuracy shall inspect
procuracies’ settlement of denunciations and complaints.
Chapter XXXIV
PROTECTION OF DENOUNCERS, WITNESS TESTIFIERS, CRIME
VICTIMS AND PARTICIPANTS IN LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
Article 484. Persons under protection
1. The following persons shall be protected:
a) Denouncers;
b) Witness testifiers;
c) Crime victims;
d) Kindred of denouncers, witness testifiers, crime victims.
2. Protected persons shall have rights to:
a) Petition for protection;
b) Receive information and explanations of their duties and rights;
c) Be informed of the implementation of protective measures; petition for the
alteration, addition or termination of protective measures;
d) Receive amends for damage, have honor restored and have legitimate rights
and benefits guaranteed during their protection.
3. Protected persons shall bear duties to:
a) Conform to the protection authorities’ requests regarding the protection;
b) Maintain confidentiality of information protected;
c) Inform the protection authorities of doubts in prompt manner during the
protection.
Article 485. Authorities and individuals authorized to decide the
implementation of protective measures
1. The following authorities shall be given authority to implement protective
measures:
a) Investigation units of the People’s police force;
b) Investigation units of the People’s army.
2. The following individuals shall be given authority to make decisions on
protective measures:
a) Heads and vice heads of investigation units of the People’s police force shall
be given authority to decide to implement protective measures for criminal issues and
cases that they have admitted, handled or investigated or at the requests for the
equivalent People's Procuracy or People's Court or Supreme People's Procuracy;
b) Heads and vice heads of investigation units of the People’s army shall be
given authority to decide to implement protective measures regarding criminal issues
and cases that they have admitted, handled or investigated or at the requests for the
equivalent military Procuracy or military Court or Central military procuracy;
3. People’s procuracies and People’s courts shall propose investigation
authorities that directly handle the criminal case to implement protective measures, if
deemed necessary. Such requests shall be executed in writing.
Investigation units of the Supreme People's Procuracy or Central military
procuracy, if finding the necessity of protective measures regarding criminal issues
and cases that they have admitted, handled or investigated, shall report to the head of
the Supreme People’s Procuracy or Central military procuracy, who shall propose
investigation police units, security investigation department of the Ministry of Public
Security, criminal investigation department and security investigation department of
the Ministry of Defense to issue a decision to implement protective measures.
Article 486. Protective measures
1. Authorities and persons authorized to institute legal proceedings shall decide
to implement the following protective measures on the grounds that the life, health,
property, honor or dignity of the protected persons are harmed or menaced due to such
persons’ provision of evidences, documents and information related to crimes:
a) Deploy personnel, implement professional measures, utilize weapons, support
equipment and other means for guard and protection;
b) Constrain the protected persons' travel and interaction for their safety;
c) Maintain and request other people to maintain the confidentiality of
information related to the protected persons;
d) Displace protected persons, encase information of their residential place,
workplace or educational facility; change their whereabouts, personal records and
identities, with their consent;
dd) Deter, warn or attenuate intrusive actions against the protected persons;
hinder and resolve intrusive actions in timely manner according to the laws;
e) Other protective measures as per the laws.
2. The implementation and alteration of protective measures as defined in Section
1 of this Article must not impinge on legitimate rights and benefits of the protected
persons.
Article 487. Petition for and request for protective measures
1. Protected persons are entitled to petition or request in writing competent
authorities to implement protective measures. A written petition or request must
contain these primary details:
a) Date;
b) Name and address of the petitioner;
c) Reasons and particulars of the petition for protective measures;
d) The signature or fingerprint of the petitioner. The legal representative of the
authority or organization petitioning for protection shall affix the corporate seal or his
siganture.
2. In emergency events, the protected persons can state their requests for
protective measures to competent authorities and individuals in direct manner or
through means of communication; however, such requests must later be submitted in
writing. Competent authorities and individuals, when receiving the petitions and
requests, must execute written records for the archive of protection-related files.
3. Units assigned to investigate, procuracies and courts, upon the receipt of a
petition or request for protective measures during their procedural actions towards a
lawsuit, shall be responsible for considering details and requisitioning the equivalent
investigation authority to ratify particulars and decide to implement protective
measures. If the higher People's Procuracy or higher People’s Court receives a petition
or request for protection, investigation units of the Ministry of Public Security shall
consider details and decide to implement protective measures.
4. Investigation authorities must inspect grounds and authenticity of the petition
or request for protection. If protective measures are deemed not necessary, relevant
reasons must be clearly explained to the petitioner or requester.
Article 488. Decisions to implement protective measures
1. A decision to implement protective measures shall comprise these main
details:
a) Number, issue date and issuing place of the decision;
b) Position of the individual making the decision;
c) Grounds of the decision;
d) Full name, date of birth and residential address of the protected person;
d) Protective measures and starting time of such measures.
2. The decision to implement protective measures shall be delivered to the person
requesting protection, the protected person, the Procuracy or Court that has proposed
protective measures and protection-related authorities and organizations.
3. Upon the issuance of the decision to implement protective measures,
competent investigation authorities must enforce such measures. Agencies and units of
the People’s Police force and People’s Army, in essential circumstances, shall
cooperate with relevant authorities to provide protection.
4. Investigation authorities issuing the decision can alter or add protective
measures, if deemed necessary, during the protection.
5. The time of protection shall start upon the implementation of such measures
and end upon the decision to terminate protective measures.
Article 489. Termination of protection
1. The head of the investigation authority, which issued the decision to
implement protective measures, shall decide to terminate such measures when
detriments or menaces against the life, health, property, honor and dignity of the
protected person are deemed to vanish.
2. The decision to terminate protective measures must be sent to the protected
person, the authority that proposed such measures and protection-related authorities
and organizations.
Article 490. Protection-related documents
1. Investigation authorities that decided to implement protective measures must
establish protection-related documents.
2. Protection-related documents shall comprise:
a) The petition or written request for protective measures; written records of such
petition or request;
b) Results of the verification of detriments or menaces against the life, health,
property, honor and dignity of the protected person;
c) Documents on consequential damage that occurred (if any) and competent
authorities' solutions;
d) The petition or written request for alteration, addition or termination of
protective measures;
dd) The decisions to implement, alter, add or terminate protective measures;
e) Documents on the progress of protective measures implemented;
g) The written proposition or request for the cooperation from authorities and
entities in protection-related tasks;
h) Reports on the implementation of protective measures;
i) The decision to terminate protective measures;
k) Other protection-related documents.
PART EIGHT
INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION
Chapter XXXV
GENERAL
Article 491. Scope of international cooperation in criminal procedure
1. International cooperation in criminal procedure means that competent
authorities of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam and competent foreign authorities
collaborate and support each other to carry out activities of investigation, prosecution,
adjudication and enforcement of criminal sentences.
2. International cooperation in criminal procedure includes judicial assistance in
criminal matters, extradition, acquisition and transfer of persons serving time and other
international cooperation activities as defined in this Law, the laws on judicial
assistance and international agreements that the Socialist Republic of Vietnam has
signed.
3. International cooperation in criminal procedure in the territories of the
Socialist Republic of Vietnam shall be governed by international agreements that the
Socialist Republic of Vietnam has signed or by the principle of reciprocity, in
adherence to this Law, the laws on judicial assistance and other relevant laws of
Vietnam.
Article 492. Principles of international cooperation in criminal procedure
1. International cooperation in criminal procedure shall be carried out in
deference to national independence, sovereignty, territorial integrity, non-intervention,
equality and reciprocity in conformity to the Constitution and laws of Vietnam and
international agreements that the Socialist Republic of Vietnam has signed.
2. If Vietnam does not sign or accede to a relevant international agreement,
international cooperation in criminal procedure shall adhere to the principle of
reciprocity and the laws of Vietnam, international laws and practices.
Article 493. Central governmental authorities' engagement in international
cooperation in criminal procedure
1. Ministry of Public Security shall be the central governmental authority of the
Socialist Republic of Vietnam, which extradites and transfers persons serving time.
2. Supreme People’s Procuracy shall be the central governmental authority of the
Socialist Republic of Vietnam, which is responsible for judicial assistance in criminal
matters and other international cooperation activities as per the laws.
Article 494. Validity of documents and items acquired via international
cooperation in criminal procedure
Documents and items, which are collected by foreign competent authorities as
per the judicial delegation by competent Vietnamese authorities, or documents and
items, which foreign competent authorities send to Vietnam for the delegation of
criminal prosecution, shall be regarded as evidences. Documents and items with
attributes as defined in Article 89 of this Law shall be regarded as evidences.
Article 495. Legal proceedings taken by competent Vietnamese individuals
in foreign countries and by foreign competent nationals in Vietnam
Legal proceedings taken by competent Vietnamese individuals in foreign
countries and by foreign competent nationals in Vietnam shall abide by international
agreements that the Socialist Republic of Vietnam has signed or by the principle of
reciprocity.
Article 496. Overseas presence of witness testifiers, expert witnesses and
persons serving time in Vietnam and vice versa
1. Competent Vietnamese authorities can propose foreign competent authorities
to permit witness testifiers, expert witnesses and persons serving time abroad to be
present in Vietnam for the settlement of a criminal case.
2. Competent Vietnamese authorities may permit witness testifiers, expert
witnesses and persons serving time in Vietnam to be present in a foreign country,
according to propositions by that country's competent authorities, for the settlement of
a criminal case.
Chapter XXXVI
INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION ACTIVITIES
Article 497. Acquisition and transfer of documents and items in connection
with a legal case
The acquisition and transfer of items and documents related to a legal case shall
conform to international agreements that the Socialist Republic of Vietnam has signed,
regulations of this Law, laws on judicial assistance and other relevant laws of
Vietnam.
Article 498. Rejection of extradition of Vietnamese citizens
Competent Vietnamese authorities shall be held responsible for considering
requests by foreign competent authorities to initiate criminal prosecution or enforce a
foreign Court’s criminal sentences and rulings against Vietnamese citizens whose
extradition is rejected.
Article 499. Sequence and procedure for the consideration and settlement of
requisitions for criminal prosecution against Vietnamese citizens whose
extradition is rejected
1. In 10 days upon the rejection of foreign competent authorities’ request for
extradition of a Vietnamese citizen, the Court that decided to reject extradition shall
transfer documents from abroad to the Supreme People's Procuracy for the latter's
consideration of criminal prosecution.
2. Supreme People's Procuracy shall consider and settle foreign entities’
requisitions for criminal prosecution against Vietnamese citizens, whose extradition is
rejected, according to the laws/
3. Charging, investigation, prosecution and adjudication of persons against whom
criminal prosecution is requested shall be governed by this Law.
4. Competent Vietnamese authorities can request foreign competent authorities to
provide and supplement evidences, documents and items to assure the justification and
legitimacy of activities of investigation, prosecution and adjudication.
Article 500. Requirements for the enforcement of a foreign Court’s criminal
sentences and rulings against a Vietnamese citizen whose extradition is requested
A foreign Court’s criminal sentences and rulings against a Vietnamese citizen
whose extradition is rejected can be enforced in Vietnam upon the satisfaction of these
requirements:
1. A foreign competent authority issues a written request for the enforcement of a
foreign Court’s criminal sentences and rulings against the Vietnamese citizen whose
extradition is rejected.
2. Criminal acts committed by Vietnamese citizens sentenced overseas constitute
crimes according to the Criminal Code of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam;
3. The foreign Court’s criminal sentences and rulings against the Vietnamese
citizen, who faces no other legal proceedings, have come into force.
Article 501. Sequence and procedure for the consideration of requisitions for
the enforcement of a foreign Court’s criminal sentences and rulings against
Vietnamese citizens whose extradition is rejected
1. In 30 days upon the receipt of competent foreign authorities’ requisitions for
the enforcement of a foreign Court’s criminal sentences and rulings against
Vietnamese citizens whose extradition has been rejected, the provincial People’s Court
that rejected extradition shall consider such requisitions from abroad.
2. A competent Court shall summon a meeting via a Panel of three Judges to
conside the requisitions for the enforcement of the foreign Court’s criminal sentences
and rulings against Vietnamese citizens whose extradition has been rejected. The
procurator of the equivalent Procuracy, the person against whom the enforcement of
the foreign Court’s criminal sentences and rulings are requested, his lawyer or
representative (if any) must attend the meeting.
3. Upon the commencement of the meeting, a member of the Panel shall express
matters related to the requisitions for the enforcement of the foreign Court’s criminal
sentences and rulings against Vietnamese citizens and present legal grounds for the
enforcement of such in Vietnam.
The procurator states the Procuracy’s opinions on the enforcement of the foreign
Court's criminal rulings and sentences against Vietnamese citizens in Vietnam.
The person against whom the enforcement of foreign criminal sentences and
rulings are requested, his lawyer or representative shall state their opinions (if any).
The panel shall discuss and decide to approve or reject the enforcement of
foreign criminal sentences and rulings under majority rule.
4. The approval of the enforcement of the foreign Court’s criminal sentences and
rulings against a Vietnamese citizen in Vietnam must specify the length of time of that
citizen’s prison sentence in Vietnam on the grounds that:
a) If the length of time of the foreign penalty corresponds with the laws of
Vietnam, the time served in Vietnam shall be equal to that length of time;
b) If the nature or length of time of the foreign Court’s penalty does not
correspond with the laws of Vietnam, such penalty shall be converted according to the
laws of Vietnam but shall not exceed the length of the foreign sentence passed.
5. In no later than 10 days upon the issuance of the decision to approve or reject
the enforcement of the foreign Court’s criminal sentences and rulings, the provincial
People’s Court shall send such decision to the person bound by such foreign
judgments, the equivalent People’s Procuracy and Ministry of Public Security for
execution of the decision.
The person bound to serve foreign criminal sentences and rulings or the
equivalent People's Procuracy shall be entitled to lodge an appeal or protest,
respectively, in 15 days upon the provincial People's Court's decision. However, the
higher People’s Procuracy shall be entitled to lodge its protest in 30 days .
The provincial People’s Court must send the documents and appeal or protest to
the higher People’s Court in 07 days upon the expiration of the time limit for appeal or
protest.
6. In 20 days upon the receipt of documents for the contemplation of requisitions
for the enforcement of foreign criminal sentences and rulings under appeal or protest,
the higher People’s Court shall hold a meeting to contemplate the provincial People’s
Court’s decisions under appeal or protest.
Procedures for the contemplation of a provincial Court’s decisions under appeal
or protest shall be governed by this Article.
7. A decision to implement a foreign Court’s criminal sentences and rulings
against a Vietnamese citizen shall comprise:
a) The provincial People's Court's decisions under appeal or protest;
b) The decisions by the higher People’s Court.
8. The sequence and procedure for the enforcement of a foreign Court's criminal
sentences and rulings gainst a Vietnamese citizen in Vietnam shall be governed by this
Law and the Law on criminal sentence enforcement.
9. Upon the announcement of a reprieve, general amnesty, commutation or
exemption of foreign sentences being served in Vietnam by a Vietnamese citizen
whose extradition was rejected by Vietnamese authorities despite his commission of
crimes on foreign soil, the Ministry of Public Security shall promptly inform the
competent Court and Procuracy to consider details and make decisions.
Article 502. Preventive measures, grounds and authority to implement
preventive measures
1. Preventive measures that enable the consideration of requisitions for
extradition or execution of extradition shall include arrest, temporary detainment,
residential confinement, surety or exit restriction.
2. Preventive measures shall only apply to persons whose extradition is requested
or executed upon the satisfaction of these requirements:
a) The court has decided to consider the request for extradition or its decision to
execute extradition has taken effect;
b) The person whose extradition is requested is suspected of absconding or
obstructing the consideration of the request for extradition or the execution of
extradition.
3. The president and vice presidents of a provincial People’s Court or higher
People’s Court shall make decisions on implementing preventive measures as defined
in Section 1 of this Article. The presiding judge of the meeting for consideration of
requests for extradition shall be entitled to make decisions on ordering residential
confinement or surety to assure the attendance of the persons, whose extradition is
requested, in the meeting.
Article 503. Detention of persons whose extradition is requested
1. The capture of persons, whose extradition is requested, for detention or
execution of extradition shall conform to Article 133 of this Law.
2. The duration of detention for consideration of requests for extradition shall not
exceed the length of time of the arrest warrant by competent authorities of the nation
requesting extradition. Moreover, the duration of detention shall not exceed the full or
remaining length of time of the criminal sentences and rulings by the Court of the
countries requesting extradition.
In essential circumstances, the provincial People’s Court or higher People’s
Court can request in writing, via the Ministry of Public Security, the competent
authorities of the nation requesting extradition to issue orders or decisions to hold
persons whose extradition is requested in detention or extended detention to enable the
consideration of requests for extradition.
Article 504. Residential confinement, exit restriction
1. Residential confinement is a preventive measure applicable to persons, whose
extradition is requested, with definite place of residence to guarantee their presence as
per a Court's subpoenas.
The execution of residential confinement shall be governed by Article 123 of this
Law.
The time limit for residential confinement shall not exceed the time limit for the
consideration of the request for extradition and time limit for appeals or protests
against a decision to approve or reject extradition according to the laws on judicial
assistance.
2. Exit restriction is a preventive measure applicable to persons whose extradition
is requested to guarantee their presence as per a Court’s subpoenas.
The execution of exit restriction shall be governed by the Article 124 of this Law.
The time limit for exit restriction shall not exceed the time limit for the
consideration of the request for extradition and time limit for appeals or protests
against a decision to approve or reject extradition according to the laws on judicial
assistance.
Article 505. Surety
1. Surety is a preventive measure applicable to persons whose extradition is
requested and subject to conditions of their assets in order to guarantee their presence
as per a Court's subpoenas.
2. The execution of surety shall be governed by Article 122 of this Law.
3. The time limit for surety shall not exceed the time limit for the consideration
of the request for extradition and time limit for appeals or protests against a decision to
approve or reject extradition according to the laws on judicial assistance.
Article 506. Termination or alteration of preventive measures
1. When a competent Court decides to reject extradition or the nation requesting
extradition does not take in an extradited person in 15 days upon the execution of
extradition, all preventive measures implemented shall be terminated.
2. Individuals authorized to implement preventive measures as defined in Article
502 of this Law must promptly terminate or alter preventive measures, if deemed
unlawful or unnecessary, at their discretion.
Article 507. Handling of assets gained through crimes
1. Competent Vietnamese authorities shall cooperate with foreign competent
authorities to seek, impound, distrain, freeze, seize and appropriate assets gained
through crimes for activities of investigation, prosecution, adjudication and criminal
sentence enforcement.
2. The pursuit, impoundment, distrainment, freezing and seizure of assets gained
through crimes in Vietnam shall abide by this Law and other relevant laws of Vietnam.
3. Assets gained through crimes in Vietnam shall be handled according to
international agreements that the Socialist Republic of Vietnam has signed or on a
case-by-case basis between relevant competent Vietnamese authorities and foreign
competent authorities.
Article 508. Cooperation in investigation and special investigation methods
and proceedings
1. Competent Vietnamese authorities can cooperate with foreign competent
authorities to jointly carry out investigation or implement special investigation
methods and proceedings. The cooperation in investigation or special investigation
methods and proceedings shall adhere to international agreements that the Socialist
Republic of Vietnam has signed or on a case-by-case basis between relevant
competent Vietnamese authorities and foreign competent authorities.
2. Investigation cooperation activities in the territories of the Socialist Republic
of Vietnam shall be governed by this Law and other relevant laws of Vietnam.
PART NINE
ENFORCEMENT
Article 509. Force
1. This Law shall come into force as of the 01st of July 2016.
2. The Criminal procedure code no 19/2003/QH11 shall lose effect upon this
Law's entry into force.
3. The regulation on the issuance of the defense counsel certificate according to
Section 3 and Section 4, Article 27, Law on lawyers no 65/2006/QH11 as amended
and supplemented by the Law no 20/2012/QH13, shall be rendered void.
Article 510. Elaboration
The Government, Supreme People’s Procuracy and Supreme People’s Court shall
stipulate particulars of the articles and sections in this Law.
This Law was passed by the 13th National Assembly of the Socialist Republic of
Vietnam in the 10th meeting session on the 27th of November 2015.
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