THE CONCEPT OF COORDINATION REFORM BETWEEN POLRI INSTITUTIONS AND THE PUBLIC PROSECUTOR^S OFFICE IN PRE PROSECUTIONst Try to Submit This Sample Abstract Dani Durahman, Maryadi Wijaya, Asep Dahlan Koswara
Universitas Langlangbuana
karapitan no.116 Bandung
danni_dur[at]yahoo.com
Abstract
Coordination between the Attorney General^s Office and the Police in the pre-prosecution process is experiencing problems. Currently, the Criminal Procedure Code and other related laws and regulations only regulate the period of time for the Public Prosecutor to study, examine, and arrange for Investigators to complete the examination program file. The purpose of this study is to produce a concept so that coordination between the prosecutor^s office and the police can run well so that the pre-prosecution process does not hinder the law enforcement process, because, currently, the pre-prosecution can take a long time due to the back and forth of cases. Coordination between the Public Prosecutor^s institution and investigators since the start of an investigation stage or case title, so that the different approaches between investigators and prosecutors have been elaborated since the beginning of the investigation. Or it can be said that the relationship between investigators and public prosecutors is a communication space, not like a post box between investigators and public prosecutors. If this happens, back-and-forth examination of case files becomes unnecessary or very minimal, because investigators and public prosecutors already have aligned views and needs for proof. So that in carrying out an investigation, the two can complement each other, there is no need to wait until the end of the investigation process which is only limited in time to 14 days. Conceptually, ideal relations between public prosecutors and investigators can be carried out if the inter-subsystems are not limited by sub-system partitions (functional differentiation). There needs to be a regulation in the Criminal Procedure Code regarding the limit for returning case files from the prosecutor^s office to the police three to four times the return of case files after exceeding the limit, the prosecutor must take a stand regarding the case.