Pubdate: Wed, 23 Sep 1998 Source: Examiner, The (Ireland) Contact: Brian Carroll, Security Correspondent RIGHT TO SILENCE TO GO ON RANGE OF SERIOUS CRIMES JUSTICE Minister John O'Donoghue is to significantly expand the types of cases in which a suspect's right to silence will be curtailed, as part of a crack down on serious crime. The right to silence is currently only curbed in terrorist or drug trafficking cases. However, the Government is planning to extend this to serious criminal cases carrying a sentence of five years or more. Suspects refusing to answer questions in relation to murder, rape, arson, kidnapping, assault occasioning serious bodily harm and other offences will have this used against them at the trial stage. As part of the crackdown, the Government is also considering extending the detention period for suspects, increasing Garda search and arrest powers, and removing some of the restrictions on the seizure of evidence. Minister O'Donoghue received a report recommending the changes two weeks ago and legislation curtailing the right to silence will be put before the Dail early next year. The report examines Garda proposals to extend detention hours under Section Four of the Criminal Justice Act from the present 12-hour maximum to a period ranging from 24 hours to four days for crimes involving death, assault occasioning serious bodily harm, sexual assault, kidnapping or complex fraud. Sources said no decision had been made on the four-day period yet, but technical changes to the period of detention would be made. For example, under the new legislation gardai questioning a suspect for an initial 12-hour period will be allowed to release him on police bail before that period expires and re-arrest him for another minimum 12-hour period to consider new evidence such as forensic results. This effectively doubles the period of detention. The get-tough approach was initiated by the Minister when he set up a working group to examine the proposals made in a SMI report on the Garda Siochana last year. This group was told to examine any constitutional complications or legal difficulties under the European Convention on Human Rights which might arise by curtailing the right to silence in serious criminal cases. "This group submitted its report two weeks ago and the Minister is examining its proposals. The right to silence is one of a number of issues which arose and the working group was set up in the aftermath of that," a Department of Justice spokesman confirmed yesterday. Under the changes a refusal or failure to answer relevant questions put by a member of the Gardai would entitle the Judge or jury to drawn inferences when the case comes to trial, sources said. Similar provisions are already in place through the Offences Against the State(amendment) Act 1998 and under the 1996 Drug Trafficking Act. The move has been strongly criticised by the Director of the Centre for Criminal Justice, Professor Dermot Walsh and by the Irish Council for Civil Liberties which said miscarriages of justice could result. Prof Walsh said it was a retrograde step and would subvert the balance of the criminal justice system and undermine the principal that an accused is innocent until proven guilty. "There is no excuse for it. It will give away further rights in a criminal justice system that has already been tilted away from the suspect, not to mind the innocent, and give away rights without any concomitant safeguards being introduced," Prof Walsh said. "We have already seen major inroads into civil rights not just in the areas of terrorism and organised crime but for other forms of crime. To contemplate further curtailments at this point in time seems totally unbalanced and unnecessary when crime has been falling substantially for the past two years and this trend is set to continue." Vice-Chairman of the ICCL, Michael Finucane, said: "We are totally opposed to any change in the right to silence in the general criminal law. It shifts the burden of proof on to the accused which is unfair and possibly unconstitutional. This could lead to miscarriages of justice." - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry