Corporations as Rights Holders in Criminal Proceedings: Special Reference to the Right against Self-Incrimination

auteur Ana María Neira Pena
tijdschrift RIDP (ISSN: 0223-5404)
jaargang 2018
aflevering The Role of Corporations in Criminal Justice
onderdeel Criminal Compliance, Internal Investigations and Human Rights
publicatie datum 31 mei 2019
taal English
pagina 271
samenvatting

The irruption of legal persons as criminally liable subjects requires rethinking their position in
criminal proceedings. It is necessary to reflect on what their procedural legal status should be in order
to guarantee their right of defence and their right to the due process of law, but without disregarding
their special nature, clearly different from that of human beings. The recognition of the right against
self-incrimination to legal persons is especially controversial. On the one hand, this right has a
personal nature; it is highly connected with human dignity and aimed at preventing torture. These
features provide arguments for denying it to legal persons. However, on the other hand, the connection
of the right against self-incrimination with the right of defence and the presumption of innocence,
which are structural principles of criminal proceedings, advocate for its recognition to legal persons
as criminal defendants. In the search for a balanced solution between the inclusion and the exclusion
of legal persons from the scope of protection of this fundamental right, it seems appropriate to establish
certain limits to its exercise, taking into account the special nature of corporations but also
considering its need of protection within criminal proceedings.