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The Investigator’s State: When Power Crushes the Right to Defend -By Fransiscus Nanga Roka

A worthy criminal process does not fear the strength of a defense. It depends on it. When brute force is allowed to smash contrary the right of defence, it takes with it not just justice for the accused: but also all moral legitimacy from legal order.

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A criminal justice system becomes grossly disproportionate when the state comes to court with powers of arrest, detention authority, asset seizure mechanisms and institutional investigators armed with every tool that coercion can muster while the defense arrives equipped only argumentative capabilities. That is not equality of arms. Well, that is a managed imbalance wearing the socks of legality.

This is the habitual fraud of modern criminal procedure in many corruption and high-stakes prosecutions, where the law presumes prosecutorial adversaryness as though accurate: one side has already been building its case for months or years through compulsion, surveillance, confiscation; custodial pressure while compelling reaction from a structurally-weak other. The trial does not start off on a level playing field. It starts after the imbalance has already taken place.

That imbalance is not incidental. It is built into the process architecture. Inventories can therefore be summoned, searched, seized and taken to the police station in pieces arsenals; sumptuary goods which are thus tagged by investigators who have it within their power there after commenting on detain them personal voice interrogation arresting freezing assets shred laws create git although indifferent arrangements from ie documentary universe whereafter that case its will is judged later. In contrast, defense counsel does not direct the police, cannot generally compel compliance from state departments with equal force, and sometimes must struggle to get evidence into their hands quickly enough to challenge the prosecution’s case against them. One side constructs reality; the other face is only asked to contradict it.

The investigator’s state is born Not through openly authoritarian fiat, but by having asymmetries of procedure rescaled as a feature rather than a bug in the service sovereignty.

Supporters say that such powers must be granted for serious crime-fighting purposes. Naturally, the state will have to look into that. And, of course it needs to guarantee the preservation of evidence and not provide a basis for obstruction. But just because it is needed does not mean that you entered innocent. Exceptional coercive powers, in the absence of equally serious safeguards for accused persons pose a danger to any legal system. The process itself punishes before ascertaining guilt, when detention is easy, seizure broad and evidentiary access unequal.

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That is the real scandal. In theory, the defendant is innocent until proven guilty. Pretrial coercion works as a form of shadow conviction , reputation destroyed, Property frozen, Freedom curtailed and the public is conditioned to read probe as evidence. The defense doesn’t simply respond to evidence when they enter the courtroom, by that time. It is, in fact, struggling against a state-created atmosphere of suspicion.

In these circumstances, the right to defend is primarily formal. Yes, there is a lawyer. Yes, there is a hearing. There is an opportunity to speak, yes. However, mere formal representation does not equate to substantive equality. If the prosecution has an informational monopoly and can secure evidence without accountability, a constitutional right to a defense is nothing more than jewelry.

This is particularly perilous in corruption cases, where the fuel for outrage burns hot. The prosecution does instantly get a symbolic advantage when the public hear words like “state loss”, “abuse of office” or “public harm”. If investigators also monopolize access to documents, witnesses and the paper trail of money transfers then court rather than being a place that one can go to prove something becomes more like a venue for signing off on it. Judges are not comparing two truly competing cases.

Those consequences extend well beyond that single defendant. When officials, professionals and citizens know that investigators can unleash overwhelming coercive tools while the defence is institutionally weak because of deficiencies in legal protection as above then fear becomes part of governance. The state doesn’t just punish crime; it teaches society that to be on the receiving end of a targeted operation is to enter a process where one cannot count on procedural survival, and parity has become some sort of fiction. That is not the rule of law. That is dressing up coercive superiority in the language of a court.

A mature legal order needs more than just authorization to investigate. It must civilize it. Equality of arms cannot be mere an abstract slogan or something learned from textbooks while real proceedings are determined by systemicdisproportionality. If the state can widely seize, quickly detain and deeply investigate, then defense must be assured untrammeled access to evidence; adequate time and facilities for preparation; workable means of obtaining counter-expertise; judicial scrutiny strong enough to rein in investigative excess. With that balance, fairness can be an illusion.

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The investigator state has a deeper danger than that it convicts the innocent. It is that it distorts the concept of justice itself. Makes courts learn to trust power, the public turn accusation into guilt and legal institutions take imbalance for granted. When that happens, the right of defence is no longer a bastion of justice. It is just the last courtesy as they shut down the machine.

A worthy criminal process does not fear the strength of a defense. It depends on it. When brute force is allowed to smash contrary the right of defence, it takes with it not just justice for the accused: but also all moral legitimacy from legal order.

Fransiscus Nanga Roka

Faculty of Law University 17 August 1945 Surabaya Indonesia

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