Journal of Research and Development in Comparative Law

Journal of Research and Development in Comparative Law

Feasibility study of Intervening in “Invisible” Crimes through Reasonable Suspicion of a Crime (Comparative Study of the English Criminal Justice System)

Document Type : scientific research paper

Author
Associate Professor, Department of Law, Faculty of Literature and Humanities, Malayer University, Malayer, Iran
10.22034/law.2026.2084273.1759
Abstract
Crimes are divided into two categories, visible and invisible, from the perspective of the occurrence in the visible and from the perspective of the officers and others. The principle and extent of action and intervention by the officers in each of these categories have important differences from the other. in invisible crimes, according to the first paragraph of Article 44 Criminal Procedure Code, any action by judicial officers is subject to obtaining permission from the judicial authority; that is, judicial officers are not allowed to intervene in these crimes with their “reasonable suspicion” and this reasonable suspicion must first be created in the mind of the judicial authority and then he issues the necessary order to the judicial officer. This research, using a descriptive-analytical method and using library tools, intends to answer this fundamental question: do judicial officers have the possibility of inspecting places and objects in invisible crimes based on their reasonable suspicion (and not the judicial authority)? Comparatively, in the laws of countries such as England, although the “principle” is to obtain an order before any intervention by judicial officers in invisible crimes, special permits have been issued for judicial officers to intervene to inspect places and objects through their reasonable suspicion based on some expediency. In our country's criminal justice system, only one case has been identified for the intervention of a bailiff based on his reasonable suspicion (the crime of smuggling goods), and in the rest of the crimes, the bailiff has no possibility to inspect non-obvious crimes based on his reasonable suspicion and is forced to first arouse the reasonable suspicion of the judicial authority before any intervention so that he can obtain an order for inspection. This issue has created challenges in judicial practice, especially in the inspection of passing vehicles. Draft amendment to some legal articles of criminal procedure has attempted to create some exceptions in this regard and establish permissions for bailiffs.
Keywords
Subjects

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