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Rights of the accused

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Criminal procedure
Criminal investigation
Arrest warrant  · Search warrant
Probable cause  · Knock and announce
Exigent circumstance
Search and seizure  · Arrest
Right to silence  · Miranda warning (U.S.)
Grand jury
Criminal prosecution
Statute of limitations
Bill of attainder  · Ex post facto law
Criminal jurisdiction  · Extradition
Inquisitorial system  · Adversarial system
Arraignment  · Indictment
Nolo contendere (U.S.)  · Plea bargain
Rights of the accused
Right to a fair trial
Presumption of innocence
Jury trial  · Speedy trial
Habeas corpus  · Bail
Exclusionary rule (U.S.)
Self-incrimination  · Double jeopardy
Verdict and sentencing
Acquittal  · Conviction (law)>Conviction
Not proven (Scot.)
Mandatory sentencing
Suspended sentence
Parole  · Probation
Tariff (UK)  · Life licence (UK)
Dangerous offender (Can.)
Cruel and unusual punishment
Capital punishment  · Execution warrant
Related areas of law
Criminal law  · Evidence
Civil procedure
Portals:  ·
The rights of the accused is a class of rights that apply to a person in the time period between when they are formally accused of a crime and when they are either convicted or acquitted. Rights of the accused are generally based on the maxim of "innocent until proven guilty" and are embodied in due process.

Promotion of the rights of the accused sometimes comes into conflict with promotion of victim's rights. One example of this is conflict between the right of the accused to personally confront his accusers and the law that protects child witnesses from the intimidation that they may feel in the courtroom.

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