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The Indonesian criminal justice system finds itself under considerable pressure. Heavy caseloads and backlogs have become a central issue for the Indonesian prosecution service. Pretrial detention and prison sentences lead to overcrowding of prisons. Recent research moreover found that most of the backlog of cases in the Supreme Court are appeals of criminal cases filed by prosecutors. This makes case management highly important given that theoretically, the prosecutor’s discretion has a significant role as a criminal case filter. However, since the 1960s, when Suharto’s regimes started using the public prosecution as its instrument for political stability, public prosecutors perform as administrators rather than as officials exercising discretion with caution and care. By adopting a socio-legal approach, I explain the prosecutors’ way of thinking and their influence on how discretion is exercised. This study investigates the implications of the public prosecutions bureaucratic culture on the managing of criminal caseloads in Indonesia and demonstrates why the public prosecutor misuses the appellate procedures in the hopes of gaining success on the court. This chapter offers important insight into prosecutors as the justice system postman in Indonesia.
This chapter determines the extent to which Daniel S. Lev’s academic legacy remains relevant in the District Courts of greater Jakarta during Indonesia’s ‘Reform’ (reformasi) era from 1998 onwards. In other words, is modern Jakarta District Court ‘culture’ recognisable from Lev’s early works, authored during the Sukarno and Suharto eras? The regency or municipality-level District Courts (pengadilan negeri) try both civil and criminal cases across the Indonesian archipelago. However, this chapter’s case study focuses exclusively on sentencing decisions in criminal cases at first instance, which tend to dominate the case dockets of the District Courts. Criminal punishment, as a subject attracting strong views and even cultural fascination, and unconstrained in Indonesia’s predominantly civil law criminal justice system by formal case law precedents or sentencing guidelines, forms an ideal vehicle through which to analyse a jurisdiction’s ‘internal’ legal culture, as it manifests here in the attitudes and customs of judges. In brief, this chapter’s findings on Lev’s continuing influence are mixed: some of Lev’s earlier observations mirror the current attitudes and behaviours of greater Jakarta District Court judges in criminal cases, yet other observations are either no longer relevant after reformasi, or at the very least, may not be relevant at the District Court level or within greater Jakarta as a geographical region and cultural space.
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