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  4. Intercepting with Interpreters​ - Intercepter avec des interprètes
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Project Title
Intercepting with Interpreters​ - Intercepter avec des interprètes
Principal Investigator
Capus, Nadja  
Status
Completed
Start Date
December 1, 2019
End Date
August 31, 2023
Investigators
Hohl Zürcher, Franziska  
Griebel, Cornelia  
Havelka, Ivana  
Bally, Elodie  
Organisations
Chaire de droit pénal et de procédure pénale  
Fonds National Suisse
Project Web Site
http://www.unine.ch/nadja.capus/home/recherche/interpretes.html#cidfb28e382-af48-4d65-a963-0f9c873ff165
Identifiants
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/20.500.14713/2934
-
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/123456789/30554
Keywords
criminal law language evidence translation studies
Description
Intercepting wire, oral, or electronic communication is an important element of criminal investigations. The goal is to transform communication intercepts into evidence of probable cause. This measure of secret surveillance is technically and legally possible, but expensive, and of course, only of use if the content of the conversations can be understood, that is, made available by interpreters.

Hence, criminal justice is completely dependent on good performances of interpreters. Interpreters lay the very foundation for subsequent interrogations and decisions by the Public Prosecutor to take further coercive measures or not.

According to the Swiss Criminal Procedure Code, jurisprudence and legal doctrine have so far neglected the significant and powerful role of these interpreters, whose activities are very different from those of courtroom or police interrogation interpreters. Scientific research has also mostly focused on courtroom interpreting, presumably because its context makes it more accessible.

However, interpreters involved in interception face specific challenges and must have different qualities than courtroom interpreters, including special linguistic skills such as dialect knowledge, voice recognition skills, criminal investigation flair, even insider knowledge. Interpreters listen, select extracts, interpret, and transcribe. They are important contributors to the inevitable “entextualization” process—that is, the ways in which parts of intercepted conversations are categorized as incriminating and thus converted into criminal evidence.

The „Intercepting with interpreters“ project is designed to investigate legal, sociolegal, sociolinguistic, and ethnomethodological questions under the direction of Prof. Dr. Nadja Capus, (socio)legal researcher at the Law Faculty of the University of Neuchâtel.
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