Public Prosecutors Office (Japan) Explained

Public Prosecutors Office
Formed:[1]
Preceding1: of the Courts
Jurisdiction:Japan
Employees:11,863 (2020–21)[2]
Minister1 Name:Nobuo Inada
Minister1 Pfo:Prosecutor-General
Deputyminister1 Name:Toru Sakai
Deputyminister1 Pfo:Deputy Prosecutor-General
Chief9 Name:-->

The [3] is the agency for conducting prosecution in Japan. It is an under the .[4] It consists of four tiers of offices: the Supreme Public Prosecutors Office; the High Public Prosecutors Offices (8), the District Public Prosecutors Offices (50); and the Local Public Prosecutors Offices (438).[5]

History

In 1872, Japan introduced a modern prosecution system following the French system.[6] The 1880 Act provided that public prosecutors had exclusive power of prosecution and it was enforced in 1882. However, the then system adopted preliminary hearings and collection of evidence was placed on pretrial judges. The prosecution department was attached to the courts in 1890.

After the World War II, Japan enacted the new Constitution in 1946, which stipulates the principle of separation of powers, and thus, the prosecution department needed to be separated from the courts. The, which established the current prosecution organisations, was enforced on the same day as the new Constitution, 3 May 1947.

People

Prosecutors

The law provides that the Public Prosecutors Office is where the work of is unified.[7] It lays down five ranks of public prosecutors: the Prosecutor-General, the Deputy Prosecutor-General, the Superintending Prosecutors, Public Prosecutors and Assistant Prosecutors.[8]

The prosecutors' independence and impartiality are protected by law with some exceptions under Article 25 of the PPO, such as retirement age, physical/mental disability or supernumerary officials.[9]

Prosecutor-General, Deputy Prosecutor-General and Superintending Prosecutors

The heads the Supreme Public Prosecutors Office.[10] The belongs to the Supreme Public Prosecutors Office and assists the Prosecutor-General.[11] The Prosecutor-General supervises all the staff of the Public Prosecutors Office. Although the Minister of Justice may give general directions on criminal investigation and trial to prosecutors, the Minister can direct only the Prosecutor-General regarding a specific case.[12]

The head the High Public Prosecutors Offices and supervise the staff within the jurisdiction.[13]

The appointment and removal of these offices (10 prosecutors) are decided by the Cabinet and attested by the Emperor.[14]

The retirement age of the Prosecutor-General is 65, while that of all the other prosecutors is 63, including the Deputy Prosecutor-General and the Superintending Prosecutors.[15]

Public Prosecutors

are assigned to one of the Public Prosecutors Offices and engaged in prosecution. They have the power to investigate any crimes,[16] as well as issue orders to the police about specific investigations.[17] Also, they have the authority to prosecute criminal cases.[18] The Japanese law allows a public prosecutor not to prosecute a suspect when the prosecution is unnecessary due to the circumstances such as his/her age or the gravity of the offence.[19] A suspect will be prosecuted if and only if it is obvious based on evidence that he/she has committed a crime in question and the prosecutor finds it necessary to prosecute him/her.[20]

Public Prosecutors are usually appointed from those who have passed the and finished the .[21] [22], 1,788 Public Prosecutors work for the Public Prosecutors Office, while 153 are posted to other ministries or agencies.[23]

Each District Public Prosecutors Office is headed by a assigned among experienced Public Prosecutors.[24]

Assistant Prosecutors

are assigned to one of the Local Public Prosecutors Offices.[25] They have the same authority to investigate and prosecute crimes as Public Prosecutors, though they usually deal with less serious cases.

Assistant Prosecutors are appointed from those who were particular public officials such as prosecutors' assistant officers and police officers and have passed the exam to become assistant prosecutors.[26] [27], 770 Assistant Prosecutors work for the Public Prosecutors Office.

Assistant Officers

There are more than 9,000 in the Public Prosecutors Office. They assist public prosecutors in conducting investigations and trials, and also carry out investigations themselves under public prosecutors' direction.[28] [29] They assume a wide-ranging role in the Public Prosecutors Office, including work related to prosecution, such as safekeeping of evidence, and general affairs, such as accounts.[30]

Organisation

Supreme Public Prosecutors Office

The is located in Tokyo.[31] It is the counterpart of the Supreme Court. It deals with criminal cases in which the High Courts' judgements have been appealed to the Supreme Court.

Location

Structure

The SPPO is structured as of 2021:[31]

Executives

, executives of the Supreme Public Prosecutors Office are as follows:[33] [34]

OfficeExecutiveDate of appointmentPrior office
Prosecutor-GeneralNobuo InadaSuperintending Prosecutor, Tokyo High Public Prosecutors Office
Deputy Prosecutor-GeneralToru SakaiSuperintending Prosecutor, Sendai High Public Prosecutors Office
Director-General, General Affairs DepartmentNaomi UnemotoDirector-General, Inspection and Guidance Department, Supreme Public Prosecutors Office
Director-General, Inspection and Guidance DepartmentTaiji OyamaDirector-General, Criminal Affairs Bureau, Ministry of Justice
Director-General, Criminal Affairs DepartmentYoshikazu OchiaiChief Prosecutor, Saitama District Public Prosecutors Office
Director-General, Public Security DepartmentHideaki YamagamiDeputy Superintending Prosecutor, Tokyo High Public Prosecutors Office
Director-General, Trial DepartmentMasaki WadaDirector-General, Immigration Bureau, Ministry of Justice

High Public Prosecutors Offices

The are located in 8 major cities in Japan: Tokyo, Osaka, Nagoya, Hiroshima, Fukuoka, Sendai, Sapporo and Takamatsu. Some of the High Public Prosecutors Offices have their branches. These locations correspond to those of the High Courts and their branches.

The High Public Prosecutors Offices deal with criminal cases appealed to the High Courts. In addition, the Tokyo High Public Prosecutors Office is responsible for the detention of a fugitive for the purpose of extradition upon a request from a foreign country.[35]

List of High Public Prosecutors Offices! High Public Prosecutors Office! Superintending Prosecutor! Deputy Superintending Prosecutor! District Public Prosecutors Offices within the jurisdiction
TokyoHiromu KurokawaShin KukimotoTokyo, Yokohama, Saitama, Chiba, Mito, Utsunomiya, Maebashi, Shizuoka, Kofu, Nagano and Niigata
OsakaKazuo SakakibaraTsuyoshi UnemotoOsaka, Kyoto, Kobe, Nara, Otsu and Wakayama
NagoyaMakoto HayashiYumiko KawaseNagoya, Tsu and Gifu
- Kanazawa BranchFukui, Kanazawa and Toyama
HiroshimaRyoichi NakaharaYuriko TsunekawaHiroshima and Yamaguchi
- Okayama BranchOkayama
- Matsue BranchTottori and Matsue
FukuokaHiroshi InoueTakafumi SatoFukuoka, Saga, Nagasaki, Oita and Kumamoto
- Miyazaki BranchKagoshima and Miyazaki
- Naha BranchNaha
SendaiRyotaro ObaMiyuki SatoSendai, Fukushima, Yamagata, Morioka and Aomori
- Akita BranchAkita
SapporoHiroshi KataokaTomoaki NittaSapporo, Hakodate, Asahikawa and Kushiro
TakamatsuYukio KaiHisashi YoshidaTakamatsu, Tokushima, Kochi and Matsuyama

District Public Prosecutors Offices

The are located in all the prefectural capitals (47) and 3 large cities in Hokkaido besides Sapporo. Most of them have their branches. These locations correspond to those of the District and the Family Courts and their branches.

Public prosecutors in the District Public Prosecutors Offices carry out investigations and trials of criminal cases. Most cases are referred to prosecutors by the police and other organisations such as customs, but some serious and complex cases are investigated by public prosecutors on their own.[36] Some large District Public Prosecutors Offices have a dedicated investigation department (the or the) for serious cases. In particular, many well-known cases are prosecuted by the .[37]

List of District Public Prosecutors Offices! District Public Prosecutors Office! Chief Prosecutor! Location! Branches
TokyoTetsuya SogiChiyoda, TokyoTachikawa
YokohamaAtsushi KitamuraYokohama, KanagawaKawasaki, Sagamihara, Yokosuka and Odawara
SaitamaSeiji YoshidaSaitama, SaitamaKoshigaya, Kawagoe, Kumagaya and Chichibu
ChibaMasamichi KamimuraChiba, ChibaSakura, Ichinomiya, Matsudo, Kisarazu, Tateyama, Yokaichiba (Sosa) and Sawara (Katori)
MitoTakashi NishitaniMito, IbarakiHitachi, Tsuchiura, Ryugasaki, Aso (Namegata) and Shimotsuma
UtsunomiyaMasahiro OnoUtsunomiya, TochigiMoka, Otawara, Tochigi and Ashikaga
MaebashiAkira OzuMaebashi, GummaNumata, Ota, Kiryu and Takasaki
ShizuokaHisashi TakahashiShizuoka, ShizuokaNumazu, Fuji, Shimoda, Hamamatsu and Kakegawa
KofuHiroshi TakeuchiKofu, YamanashiTsuru
NaganoHaruhiko UkawaNagano, NaganoUeda, Saku, Matsumoto, Suwa, Iida and Ina
NiigataShinji IwayamaNiigata, NiigataSanjo, Shibata, Nagaoka, Takada (Joetsu) and Sado
OsakaYasuhiro TanabeOsaka, OsakaSakai and Kishiwada
KyotoKatsuhiro HirokamiKyoto, KyotoSonobe (Nantan), Miyazu, Maizuru and Fukuchiyama
KobeMotoko TanakaKobe, HyogoItami, Amagasaki, Akashi, Kaibara (Tamba), Himeji, Yashiro (Kato), Tatsuno, Toyooka and Sumoto
NaraHideyuki YamaguchiNara, NaraKatsuragi (Yamatotakada) and Gojo
OtsuMasayoshi KimuraOtsu, ShigaHikone and Nagahama
WakayamaYukihiro YamamotoWakayama, WakayamaTanabe, Gobo and Shingu
NagoyaYasushi YoshidaNagoya, AichiIchinomiya, Handa, Okazaki and Toyohashi
TsuYutaka MatsumotoTsu, MieMatsusaka, Iga, Yokkaichi, Ise and Kumano
GifuKenzaburo YazawaGifu, GifuOgaki, Tajimi, Mitake and Takayama
FukuiTakashi IshiiFukui, FukuiTakefu (Echizen) and Tsuruga
KanazawaMakoto UemuraKanazawa, IshikawaKomatsu, Nanao and Wajima
ToyamaTakeru TanojiriToyama, ToyamaUozu and Takaoka
HiroshimaIwao KatayamaHiroshima, HiroshimaKure, Onomichi, Fukuyama and Miyoshi
YamaguchiNobuhiko FuruyaYamaguchi, YamaguchiShunan, Hagi, Iwakuni, Shimonoseki and Ube
OkayamaTadatsugu YamotoOkayama, OkayamaKurashiki, Niimi and Tsuyama
TottoriShunsuke OkaTottori, TottoriKurayoshi and Yonago
MatsueHiroshi KatsuyamaMatsue, ShimaneIzumo, Hamada, Masuda and Saigo (Okinoshima)
FukuokaToshiaki KataokaFukuoka, FukuokaIizuka, Nogata, Kurume, Yanagawa, Omuta, Yame, Kokura (Kitakyushu), Yukuhashi and Tagawa
SagaFumihiko KoyubaSaga, SagaTakeo and Karatsu
NagasakiHirotsugu YoshiikeNagasaki, NagasakiOmura, Shimabara, Sasebo, Hirado, Iki, Goto and Izuhara (Tsushima)
OitaMunio NagahataOita, OitaKitsuki, Saiki, Taketa, Nakatsu and Hita
KumamotoYasumasa KimuraKumamoto, KumamotoTamana, Yamaga, Aso, Yatsushiro, Hitoyoshi and Amakusa
KagoshimaKoji IshizakiKagoshima, KagoshimaNaze (Amami), Kajiki (Aira), Chiran (Minamikyushu), Sendai (Satsumasendai) and Kanoya
MiyazakiToshiharu KatoMiyazaki, MiyazakiNichinan, Miyakonojo and Nobeoka
NahaTakashi NakamuraNaha, OkinawaOkinawa, Nago, Hirara (Miyakojima) and Ishigaki
SendaiKazuaki MorimotoSendai, MiyagiOgawara, Furukawa (Osaki), Ishinomaki, Tome and Kesennuma
FukushimaYukinobu HayakawaFukushima, FukushimaSoma, Koriyama, Shirakawa, Aizuwakamatsu and Iwaki
YamagataHiroko MatsushitaYamagata, YamagataShinjo, Yonezawa, Tsuruoka and Sakata
MoriokaYasushi IijimaMorioka, IwateHanamaki, Ninohe, Tono, Miyako, Ichinoseki and Mizusawa (Oshu)
AkitaMariko SuzukiAkita, AkitaNoshiro, Honjo (Yurihonjo), Odate, Yokote and Omagari (Daisen)
AomoriMakoto TakahashiAomori, AomoriGoshogawara, Hirosaki, Hachinohe and Towada
SapporoHideyuki HayashiSapporo, HokkaidoIwamizawa, Takikawa, Muroran, Tomakomai, Urakawa, Otaru and Iwanai
HakodateTakashi MoriHakodate, HokkaidoEsashi
AsahikawaToshiyuki YamadaAsahikawa, HokkaidoNayoro, Mombetsu, Rumoi and Wakkanai
KushiroHiroki OzakiKushiro, HokkaidoObihiro, Abashiri, Kitami and Nemuro
TakamatsuHisayoshi NishimuraTakamatsu, KagawaMarugame and Kanonji
TokushimaMasaaki OzawaTokushima, TokushimaAnan and Mima
KochiKoichi TakahashiKochi, KochiSusaki, Aki and Nakamura (Shimanto)
MatsuyamaIsao ShirakiMatsuyama, EhimeOzu, Saijo, Imabari and Uwajima

Local Public Prosecutors Offices

The deal with criminal investigations and trials of less serious offences. There are 438 offices throughout the country. Their locations correspond to those of the Local Courts.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 戦後の検察組織. Prosecution Organisations after WWII. Ministry of Justice. ja. 13 February 2020.
  2. Web site: 法務省所管 一般会計歳出予算各目明細書. Details of Budget, Ministry of Justice. Ministry of Justice. ja. 20 February 2020.
  3. Web site: Names of Government Organizations and Positions . Cabinet Secretariat . 2013-12-20.
  4. Web site: Extraordinary Organs. Ministry of Justice. 13 February 2020.
  5. Web site: 検察庁の組織. Structure of Public Prosecutors Office. Public Prosecutors Office. ja. 13 February 2020.
  6. Web site: 我が国の検察制度の沿革. History of Japanese prosecution system. Public Prosecutors Office. ja. 16 February 2020.
  7. Public Prosecutor's Office Act, Art 1(1).
  8. Art 3.
  9. https://www.unafei.or.jp/publications/pdf/CJSJ_2014/03chapter1.pdf
  10. Art 7(1).
  11. Art 7(2).
  12. Art 14.
  13. Art 8.
  14. Art 15(1).
  15. Art 22.
  16. Art 6(1).
  17. Code of Criminal Procedure, Art 193(3).
  18. Public Prosecutor's Office Act, Art 4.
  19. Code of Criminal Procedure, Art 248.
  20. Web site: 検察官はどのように起訴・不起訴を決めるのですか?. How does a prosecutor decide whether to prosecute a case or not?. Public Prosecutors Office. ja. 20 February 2020.
  21. Public Prosecutor's Office Act, Art 18.
  22. Web site: 検事に採用されるまで. Process to be Appointed as Public Prosecutors. Ministry of Justice. ja. 20 February 2020.
  23. Web site: 検察官在職状況統計表. Statistics on Prosecutors' Workplaces. Cabinet Secretariat. ja. 20 February 2020.
  24. Public Prosecutor's Office Act, Art 9(1).
  25. Art 16(2).
  26. Art 18(2).
  27. Web site: 検察官への採用情報. Information on Appointment of Prosecutors. Public Prosecutors Office. ja. 20 February 2020.
  28. Public Prosecutor's Office Act, Art 27(3).
  29. Web site: 検察事務官の職務内容. Assistant Officers' Work. Public Prosecutors Office. ja. 20 February 2020.
  30. Web site: 検察事務官の幅広い職場と仕事. Assistant Officers' Wide-Ranging Work. Ministry of Justice. ja. 20 February 2020.
  31. Web site: 最高検察庁について:最高検察庁.
  32. Web site: 各検察庁の所在地等一覧. List of Locations of Public Prosecutors Offices. Public Prosecutors Office. ja. 13 February 2020.
  33. Web site: 最高検察庁幹部一覧. List of Executives of the Supreme Public Prosecutors Office. Public Prosecutors Office. ja. 13 February 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200213225112/http://www.kensatsu.go.jp/content/001310132.pdf. 2020-02-13.
  34. Web site: 法曹界人事. Personnel Affairs of Legal Circles. Westlaw Japan. 4 October 2019 . ja. 20 April 2020.
  35. Web site: 逃亡犯罪人引渡法第五条. Act of Extradition, Art. 5. e-gov.go.jp. ja. 14 February 2020.
  36. Web site: 刑事事件の手続について. Procedure of Criminal Cases. Public Prosecutors Office. ja. 14 February 2020.
  37. Web site: 17年ぶりの政界汚職捜査を進める東京地検特捜部:「最強の捜査機関」の歴史. Special Investigation Dept. of the Tokyo Dist. Public Prosecutors Office investigating a bribery scandal for the first time in 17 years: History of the "Strongest Investigative Authority". Saito. Katsuhisa. nippon.com. 31 January 2020. 14 February 2020.