The establishment and the kind of legal incapacitation always depends on the court’s decision and only the court is the qualified executive of this decision. The legal character of the expert psychiatrist’s decision clearly affects the court’s final decision. In the range of the judgement of the factual state (the case facts), the court is still the partial reproducer of the expert psychiatrist’s decision, nevertheless in the range of the judgement of intentionality and justness of the decision, the court is the decisive executive.
The establishment and the kind of legal incapacitation always depends on the court’s decision and only the court is the qualified executive of this decision. The legal character of the expert psychiatrist’s decision clearly affects the court’s final decision. In the range of the judgement of the factual state (the case facts), the court is still the partial reproducer of the expert psychiatrist’s decision, nevertheless in the range of the judgement of intentionality and justness of the decision, the court is the decisive executive.
Criminal analysis in law enforcement agencies’ work has been around for many years. Initially, it was used by police offi cers in a nonformalised way, its main purpose being to try to understand and systematise crimes. Attempts to draw conclusions from the collected data contributed to greater effectiveness of the detection process. Nowadays, the need for effi ciency in processing the increasing amount of data, and the far-reaching professionalisation of criminal groups have resulted in the fact that criminal analysis is no longer a cure-all for a lack of thinking, but an indispensable tool in the effective fi ght against crime. Considering the above, the article presents the need for the effective use of criminal analysis in combatting mainly organised crime of an economic nature.
JavaScript jest wyłączony w Twojej przeglądarce internetowej. Włącz go, a następnie odśwież stronę, aby móc w pełni z niej korzystać.