Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 28 – Russian courts
do rule that information extracted by torture is not admissible in legal
proceedings, but they are quite prepared to accept evidence found on the basis
of that information, something that makes the use of torture both inevitable
and widespread, Kirill Titiyev says.
In most countries, courts exclude
not only the information extracted by torture but also any information
collected on the basis of it, the director of the Moscow Institute on Problems
of Law Enforcement points out (meduza.io/feature/2019/06/26/my-znaem-chto-pravoohranitelnaya-sistema-v-rossii-prognila-no-kak-eto-proizoshlo-i-chto-s-etim-delat).
Consequently,
there is little chance that the police will be penalized for using torture
against those they are investigating – and a very real one that they will be
rewarded for solving crimes through its use, especially given the way in which
their work is evaluated in terms of convictions and the hyper-centralized and
over-formalized police system in Russia.
Titiyev
devotes most of his 6,000-word interview to those problems, arguing that
hyper-centralization undermines the ability of police to respond as they should
to local conditions and over-formalization means that they spend entirely too much
time filling out forms rather than fighting crime.
He
also details problems that are often overlooked, including the existence of
separate police higher educational institutions where legal instruction is far
less good than in others and where future policemen acquire attitudes toward torture
and corruption that make it difficult if not impossible to improve the situation.
Titiyev
also says that the system fails because magistrates often repeat the investigations
of the police, the courts assume that any case presented to them should result
in a finding of guilty, and the population, understanding all this more or less
well does its best to avoid reporting crimes.
All
this allows the powers that be to argue that the Russian system is more
successful than others in fighting crime when in fact it is simply better at
hiding what is really going on to the detriment of the population. The
situation with the magistracy suffers from many of the same problems, Titiyev
concludes.
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