The
pretrial Pandora’s box
Michael Herdi Hadylayais ; A lawyer at a law firm in
Jakarta
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JAKARTA
POST, 17 Februari 2015
In Greek mythology, there was a conflict between Zeus and
Prometheus. Prometheus stole fire from the mighty god and gave it to mankind.
The angered Zeus sent Prometheus to be chained to a rock in the Caucasus and
sought his revenge on humans. He gave a beautiful woman named Pandora to
Epimetheus — Prometheus’ brother- and despite Prometheus’ warning to
Epimetheus never to accept any gift from Zeus, Epimetheus accepted Pandora
and married her. On their wedding day, Olympian gods gave them a beautiful
box but warned them not to open it. Unfortunately, the curious Pandora opened
the box and released all the evils into the world.
Now, the conflict is not between Zeus and Prometheus. It
is Comr. Gen. Budi Gunawan vs. the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK).
The general challenged the legality of the antigraft body’s decision to name
him a bribery suspect in the South Jakarta District Court. Budi won his case
on Monday. It was shocking, not only because Budi is the President’s sole
candidate as National Police chief, but also because it is unprecedented.
There is no article in the Criminal Procedural Law (KUHAP) to allow such things.
It is true that there are legal principles such as res
judicata pro veritate habeteur (presumption of indisputable truth) and ius
curia novit (the court knows the law). However, the more and more I learn
about law, the more I am aware that these are merely fiction. The Comr. Gen.
Budi Gunawan vs. KPK pretrial hearing showed clearly that not all judges know
the law and so fail to bring forth indisputable truth in their decisions.
The very basic principal taught in the first year of law
school is that there is lex stricta in criminal procedural law. This
principle guides all law students not to forget that a procedural law cannot
be interpreted freely. One is bound to follow the rules strictly.
Chapter 77 of KUHAP sets the competency of a pretrial
hearing as the determination of the legality of an arrest or detention, the
termination of an investigation or prosecution, and asking for compensation
and rehabilitation. Thus, in not in a single clause, does KUHAP regulate
challenges to a decision to name someone a suspect. Therefore, based on lex
stricta principle, it was not within the competency of a pretrial hearing to
examine this case.
True, a judge must be free and independent. However, it
doesn’t mean that a judge can make any decision without a basis. A judge is
bound by the law and the principles of the law itself. If the case is a
criminal case, the judge is bound not only by the criminal law and the
procedural law, but also by the principles of criminal law.
To address this case, the KPK can appeal to a higher court
in this case since Chapter 87 (1) of KUHAP only stipulates that “no appeals
may be logged for judgment in a pretrial review in the matters as intended by
Article 79, Article 80 and Article 81.” None of the mentioned articles say
anything about the decision to name someone a suspect. However, to choose the
path of an appeal is problematic; by appealing we stand on the false grounds
created by the pretrial judge.
I can only imagine the implication of this judge’s
decision in this pretrial hearing if the decision is used as a precedent. In
the short term, Monday’s ruling is indeed a victory for Budi. But, in the
long term, it is a fatal loss not only for the KPK, but also for the National
Police, and all law enforcement agencies. If all suspects challenge their
cases at court, the police will have to allocate a lot of resources just to
face the pretrial hearings alone. The courts will be flooded with pretrial
hearings.
Thus a draft revision of KUHAP is urgent. For a long time,
this was considered insignificant and not a priority for lawmakers. But since
Monday’s decision by the South Jakarta District Court the government needs to
respond swiftly.
The Supreme Court should issue a circular, Surat Edaran
Mahkamah Agung (SEMA), to stipulate limitations on pretrial hearings related
to decisions on naming suspects. The Supreme Court, the House of
Representatives and the President must now clean up this mess.
In our current struggle for legal certainty we have failed
as a civilized nation. The conflict involving Comr. Gen. Budi Gunawan has
opened a Pandora’s box, and our nation must pay a huge price. ●
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