Taiwan High Prosecutors Office

Taiwan High Prosecutors Office
臺灣高等檢察署
Established1989 (current form)
LocationJudicial Building, Taipei, Taiwan
Authorised byCourt Organization Act
WebsiteTaiwan High Prosecutors Office [1]

The Taiwan High Prosecutors Office (THPO; Chinese: 臺灣高等檢察署; pinyin: Táiwān Gāoděng Fǎyuàn Jiǎnchá Shǔ) is located in Taipei, Taiwan. It has branch offices in Taipei, Taichung, Tainan, Kaohsiung and Hualien. It is one of the two high prosecutors offices in Taiwan.

The prosecutorial system runs parallel to its court system. As such, the jurisdiction of the THPO and its branch offices covers only Taiwan and its islands. Kinmen, Wuchiu and Matsu fall under the jurisdiction of the Kinmen Branch of the Fukien High Prosecutors Office. At whatever level, the prosecutors work under the unitary command of the Prosecutor-General of the Supreme Prosecutors Office.

General

According to the Law Governing Organization of Courts, prosecutors’ offices form part of the court at the same level of trial: the Supreme Court has a prosecutors’ office with a number of prosecutors, of whom one is appointed as Prosecutor-General; each of the other High Courts or District Courts have its own prosecutors’ office with a number of prosecutors, of whom one is appointed as the chief prosecutor.[1] The Law Governing Organization of Courts and the Statute Governing Judicial Personnel Administration also state that the qualifications of prosecutors are identical to that of judges. Both of them possess the status of judicial officials. Prosecutors are appointed from those persons who have passed the Examination of Judicial Officials, complete the Training Course for Judicial Officials and possess distinguished records after a term of practice.

Territorial Jurisdiction

The Taiwan High Prosecutors Office in Taipei
Taichung Branch of Taiwan High Prosecutors Office
Tainan Branch of Taiwan High Prosecutors Office
Kaohsiung Branch of Taiwan High Prosecutors Office
Hualien Branch of Taiwan High Prosecutors Office

Functions

1. Review of non-prosecution decisions

2. Trial attendance

3. Review of criminal judgments

4. Enforcement of criminal judgments of last resort

5. Review of post-mortem forensic examination cases

6. A Platform for prosecutorial interaction

7. Assistance in prisoner rehabilitation and victim protection affairs

8. Public service

See also

References

  1. ^ See Shilin District Court Website, A Brief Introduction to the Prosecutorial System of the Republic of China, https://www.slc.moj.gov.tw/293754/293755/293757/362035/post, last visited Sept. 17, 2020.