Article contents
The Irish exclusionary rule after DPP v JC
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2018
Abstract
This commentary updates the paper ‘Excluding evidence (or staying proceedings) to vindicate rights in Irish and English law’ by analysing the recent decision of the Supreme Court of Ireland in DPP v JC. It argues that although the court has relaxed the exclusionary rule in one major respect, it has strengthened it in others, and that Ireland's approach to unconstitutionally or illegally obtained evidence remains very different from that of England and Wales.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Society of Legal Scholars 2015
References
1. [2015] IESC 31.
2. [1965] IR 142.
3. [1990] 2 IR 110.
4. [2012] 2 IR 266.
5. [2015] IESC 50.
6. [1977] IR 55.
7. T Ward and C Leon ‘Excluding evidence (or staying proceedings) to vindicate rights in Irish and English law’ (2015) 35(4) Legal Stud 571–589. See text to nn 37–39.
8. DPP v Balfe [1998] IR 50 at 58–59.
9. See http://humanrights.ie/civil-liberties/dpp-v-jc-initial-observations-on-the-exclusionary-rule-case/ (accessed 2 May 2015). But cf Clarke J at para 50.
10. Constitution of Ireland, Preamble and Arts 6.1, 40.6.1, 41.2.1, 42.3.2, 42.5, 43.2, 45.2.
11. Finnis, J Natural Law and Natural Rights (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1980) pp 210–221.Google Scholar
- 2
- Cited by