1.
Subject to the
provisions of paragraph 2, within a
reasonable time after the
person's
surrender or
voluntary appearance before the
Court, the
Pre-Trial Chamber shall hold a
hearing to confirm the
charges on which the
Prosecutor intends to
seek trial. The
hearing shall be held in the
presence of the
Prosecutor and the
person charged, as well as his or her
counsel.
2. The
Pre-Trial Chamber may, upon
request of the
Prosecutor or on its own motion, hold a
hearing in the
absence of the
person charged to confirm the
charges on which the
Prosecutor intends to
seek trial when the
person has:
(a) Waived his or her
right to be present; or
(b) Fled or cannot be found and all
reasonable steps have been taken to secure his or her
appearance before the
Court and to inform the
person of the
charges and that a
hearing to confirm those
charges will be held.
In that
case, the
person shall be represented by
counsel where the
Pre-Trial Chamber determines that it is in the
interests of
justice.
3. Within a
reasonable time before the
hearing, the
person shall:
(a) Be provided with a
copy of the
document containing the
charges on which the
Prosecutor intends to bring the
person to
trial; and
(b) Be informed of the
evidence on which the
Prosecutor intends to rely at the
hearing.
5. At the
hearing, the
Prosecutor shall
support each
charge with sufficient
evidence to
establish substantial grounds to believe that the
person committed the
crime charged. The
Prosecutor may rely on
documentary or
summary evidence and need not call the
witnesses expected to testify at the
trial.
6. At the
hearing, the
person may:
(a)
Object to the
charges;
(b)
Challenge the
evidence presented by the
Prosecutor; and
7. The
Pre-Trial Chamber shall, on the basis of the
hearing, determine whether there is sufficient
evidence to
establish substantial grounds to believe that the
person committed each of the
crimes charged. Based on its
determination, the
Pre-Trial Chamber shall:
(a) Confirm those
charges in
relation to which it has
determined that there is sufficient
evidence, and commit the
person to a
Trial Chamber for
trial on the
charges as confirmed;
(b)
Decline to confirm those
charges in
relation to which it has
determined that there is insufficient
evidence;
(c) Adjourn the
hearing and
request the
Prosecutor to consider:
(i) Providing further
evidence or
conducting further
investigation with
respect to a particular
charge; or
(ii)
Amending a
charge because the
evidence submitted appears to
establish a different
crime within the
jurisdiction of the
Court.
8. Where the
Pre-Trial Chamber declines to confirm a
charge, the
Prosecutor shall not be precluded from subsequently requesting its
confirmation if the
request is
supported by additional
evidence.
9. After the
charges are confirmed and before the
trial has begun, the
Prosecutor may, with the
permission of the
Pre-Trial Chamber and after
notice to the
accused,
amend the
charges. If the
Prosecutor seeks to
add additional
charges or to substitute more
serious charges, a
hearing under this
article to confirm those
charges must be held. After
commencement of the
trial, the
Prosecutor may, with the
permission of the
Trial Chamber,
withdraw the
charges.
10. Any
warrant previously issued shall cease to have
effect with
respect to any
charges which have not been confirmed by the
Pre-Trial Chamber or which have been withdrawn by the
Prosecutor.
11. Once the
charges have been confirmed in
accordance with this
article, the
Presidency shall
constitute a
Trial Chamber which,
subject to paragraph 9 and to
article 64, paragraph 4, shall be
responsible for the
conduct of
subsequent proceedings and may
exercise any
function of the
Pre-Trial Chamber that is
relevant and capable of
application in those
proceedings.