Even if suspects are not specifically informed of the technical offence they are suspected of, there is unlikely to be a breach of Article 5(2) if the nature and essence of the suspected offence becomes apparent during questioning.
Answer
Fox, Campbell and Hartley v UK (1990) 13 EHRR 157
Tags
#cases #freedom-of-person #human-rights #public
Question
Even if suspects are not specifically informed of the technical offence they are suspected of, there is unlikely to be a breach of Article 5(2) if the nature and essence of the suspected offence becomes apparent during questioning.
Answer
?
Tags
#cases #freedom-of-person #human-rights #public
Question
Even if suspects are not specifically informed of the technical offence they are suspected of, there is unlikely to be a breach of Article 5(2) if the nature and essence of the suspected offence becomes apparent during questioning.
Answer
Fox, Campbell and Hartley v UK (1990) 13 EHRR 157
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Parent (intermediate) annotation
Open it offence or is about to do so. Additionally Fox provides an important authority qualifying the protection afforded by Article 5(2). As elsewhere in the Convention, the wording of Articles will be construed in a non-absolute, proportionate way. <span>Even if suspects are not specifically informed of the technical offence they are suspected of, there is unlikely to be a breach of Article 5(2) if the nature and essence of the suspected offence becomes apparent during questioning.<span><body><html>
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