The Georgian Judiciary Today
I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just; that his justice cannot sleep forever.-Thomas Jefferson
The judiciary is in permanent need of control from the side of an impartial and quality observer with a view to ensuring its existence. We are still on the way to its establishment.
The judiciary was released from the prosecution’s influence considerably. As opposed to previous years, the courts do not seem predisposed to granting all the prosecution’s motions seeking imprisonment as preventive measure (in 28% of the observed hearings court ordered bail, while prosecution demanded imprisonment). On its side, the number of requested imprisonments from the prosecution has also decreased (in 41% of the observed cases, the prosecution demanded bail as a preventive measure). Often the requested amount of bail does not coincide with the sum requested by the prosecution (in 50 % of the monitored cases, courts reduced the sum of bail requested by the prosecution).
To our regret, this positive trend at different stages of proceeding is still accompanied by negative tendencies that have been engraved for years. The types of applied preventive measures remain problematic; in particular, bail and imprisonment are the only measures used. We remind and will always remind the courts that there are also other preventive measures such as personal guarantees, agreement on not leaving the country and proper conduct and others which may be applied as other two preventive measures.
The courts’ inconsistent approach is revealed periodically in terms of high-profile and typical cases. For example in one of the ongoing cases the judge deemed bail the only possibility when he ordered GEL 2000 to the defendant for taking a small substance of a particular drug. When the defendant objected and declared that requested bail was incommensurate with his financial status, the judge asked with surprise: “What do you think, should we not use any preventive measure at all or what do you say?” However, in another high-profile case, the court appeared unusually lenient when it left one of the high state officials (Tbilisi Mayor) without any preventive measure, though serious charges were submitted by the prosecution.
The inconsistent practice of applying preventive measures remains problematic since neither prosecutor bothers to justify the reason behind his/her choice, nor does the court provide adequate reasoning while ordering preventive measures. Application of alternative preventive measures could have assisted significantly towards resolution of the issue.
Pre-trial hearings, when parties submit evidences to the court on termination of the prosecution or continuation of the case for merit hearing bear pro-forma nature. Admissibility of evidences is rarely examined, persecution is not terminated and the case is forwarded for merit hearing.
It would be interesting to stress that lawyers who represent defendants’ interests express special vigor only in high-profile cases, whereas in other cases when public interest is low, or the defendant is not a high state official, they are extremely passive. They frequently submit legally incorrect arguments and provide no evidences to courts. The fact when a lawyer submits evidences in 22 volumes is a sensation for the Georgian judiciary and happens only when the defendant is a high state official, while monitoring has revealed a number of other cases with serious accusations when lawyers seemed passive.
With a view to overcoming the initial stage of justice, the prosecution and lawyers should consider the problems of preventive measures and pre-trial hearings and select a common approach both in terms of high-profile cases and other typical ones.
Eka Khutsishvili
Project Analyst
Georgian Young Lawyers’ Association
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15, J. Kakhidze str. 0102, Tbilisi, Georgia. Tel: (995 32) 95 23 53; Fax: (995 32) 92 32 11; E-mail: gyla@gyla.ge; www.gyla.ge