Public procurator
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A public procurator is an officer of a state charged with both the investigation and prosecution of crime. The office is a feature of a civil law inquisitorial rather than common law adversarial system. Japan also uses a procuratorial system. The office of a procurator is called a procuracy or procuratorate. The terms are from Latin and originate with the procurators of the Roman Empire.
See also
- Supreme People's Procuratorate of China
- The Supreme People's Procuracy of Vietnam
- Procurator General of the USSR
- Prosecutor General of Russia
- Prosecutor General of Ukraine
- Procurator Fiscal (Scotland)
- Inquisitorial system – use in France and limited use in common law jurisdictions such as the United States
External links
- http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/data/laws/detail.php?id=20
- http://en.chinacourt.org/public/detail.php?id=110
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