Excepciones a la exclusión de la prueba ilícita en el sistema procesal penal con tendencia acusatoria ley 906 de 2004

The exceptions to the exclusion of illegal evidence in the Colombian criminal justice system, is addressed under the parameters defined by the 1991 Constitution, the Legislative Act 03, 2002 and Act 906 of 2004, which aims to visualize, as exceptions illegal evidence, are means enabling its assessme...

Full description

Autores:
Gonzalez Rodriguez, Luz Dary
Arias Galvis, Francine
Tipo de recurso:
Fecha de publicación:
2015
Institución:
Universidad de San Buenaventura
Repositorio:
Repositorio USB
Idioma:
spa
OAI Identifier:
oai:bibliotecadigital.usb.edu.co:10819/3045
Acceso en línea:
http://hdl.handle.net/10819/3045
Palabra clave:
Prueba ilícita
Vínculo atenuado
Due process
Independent source
Derecho probatorio
Sistema acusatorio
Prueba (derecho penal)
Actos ilicitos
Rights
License
http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2
Description
Summary:The exceptions to the exclusion of illegal evidence in the Colombian criminal justice system, is addressed under the parameters defined by the 1991 Constitution, the Legislative Act 03, 2002 and Act 906 of 2004, which aims to visualize, as exceptions illegal evidence, are means enabling its assessment in a criminal trial without interest that have been obtained in breach of fundamental rights and procedural outside legal rites. Now it is in Act 906 of 2004 that the adversarial system is incorporated in Colombia, where the illegal evidence are regulated and it is stated that any evidence obtained in violation of the fundamental guarantees shall be sanctioned with nullity and should be exclude from the process. However, the Colombian legislature adopted some exceptions illegal evidence, to enable the assessment of evidence obtained illegally, which are: the independent source, the inevitable discovery and attenuated link. According to the above, in Colombia the American model of the exclusionary rule was adopted, as a common sanction in the most garantistas democracies of fundamental rights