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The Limits of Modifying the Description of the Criminal Offence from the Indictment in the Judgment: Interpreting the Requirement of Objective Identity between the Charge and the Judgment

Pravnik, Ljubljana 2025, Vol. 80 (142), Nos. 1-2

A corollary of the accusatorial principle (Article 19 of the Criminal Procedure Act – CPA) is the requirement of objective identity between the charge and the judgment (Article 354 of the CPA). This requirement mandates that the judgment may be based solely on the act described by the prosecutor in the indictment. The significance of this requirement is twofold. First, by limiting the court’s judgment to the act charged by the prosecutor, it preserves the separation between the procedural functions of charging and deciding on the charge, which is essential for ensuring an impartial trial. Second, it allows the accused to organise their defence based on a specific charge brought against them. If the court were to convict the accused of a different offence, it would deprive them of the opportunity to organise an appropriate defence. In this article, I examine whether a court that perceives an act differently during the trial from how the prosecutor described it in the indictment may adjust the description without overstepping into the prosecution’s role. I explore this question by considering

Key words: identity of the charge and the judgment, objective identity, accusatorial principle, modification of the description of the offence, right to be informed of the accusation, separation of procedural functions.

Spletno naročilo edicije: Številka 1-2/2025

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