Speedy trial

In criminal law, the right to a speedy trial is a human right under which it is asserted that a government prosecutor may not delay the trial of a criminal suspect arbitrarily and indefinitely. Otherwise, the power to impose such delays would effectively allow prosecutors to send anyone to jail for an arbitrary length of time without trial, expressed as the maxim Justice delayed is justice denied.

Although it is important for the protection of speedy trial rights for there to be a court in which a defendant may complain about the unreasonable delay of the trial, it is also important that nations implement structures that avoid the delay.[1]

Jurimetrics allows to estimate the current judicial efficiency.[2] Speedy justice tends to correlate with quality and fairness of justice.[3]

  1. ^ Buonomo, Giampiero (2000). "Equa durata del processo: il risarcimento non risolve il problema". Diritto&Giustizia Edizione Online. Archived from the original on 2012-08-01. [permanent dead link]
  2. ^ Unger, Adriana Jacoto; Neto, José Francisco dos Santos; Fantinato, Marcelo; Peres, Sarajane Marques; Trecenti, Julio; Hirota, Renata (21 June 2021). Process mining-enabled jurimetrics: analysis of a Brazilian court's judicial performance in the business law processing. ACM. p. 240–244. doi:10.1145/3462757.3466137. ISBN 978-1-4503-8526-8.
  3. ^ Melcarne, Alessandro; Ramello, Giovanni B.; Spruk, Rok (2021). "Is justice delayed justice denied? An empirical approach". International Review of Law and Economics. 65: 105953. doi:10.1016/j.irle.2020.105953.