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What circumstances need to enter the interrogation room of the public security bureau?

Under normal circumstances, entering the interrogation room of the public security bureau is to ask about the case; Usually it is to report a case or arrest a suspect and then go to the interrogation room of the public security bureau for interrogation. If it is the informant, it is to know the situation of the case. If it is a suspect, it is to interrogate the motive of the crime and let him explain the case. The interrogation room is an ordinary room with a desk and a chair opposite it, which is convenient for the police to record conversations with people.

1, interrogation room of investigation organ (public security, procuratorate), with tables and chairs. However, the suspect's chairs are usually specially made, which may be iron or relatively strong materials, and most of them are fixed on the ground. There will be a baffle between the two armrests of the chair. After people sit on it, the baffle is locked, and people can't stand up and run. There is generally no iron fence or tempered glass between police and prisoners.

In the interrogation room of the detention center, the chairs are specially made, most of which are made of iron and fixed on the ground. There is a baffle between the two armrests of the chair. After people sit on it, the baffle is locked and people can't stand up. There is usually an iron fence or tempered glass between the police and the prisoners. The investigation organ may sometimes use different interrogation rooms according to different suspects. The looser interrogation room is an ordinary room, an ordinary desk and chair. Don't think that interrogation rooms are decorated like execution rooms for interrogating Jiang Jie. Now when it comes to human rights, there are no instruments of torture in the interrogation room, and the law does not allow prisoners to extort confessions by torture.

legal ground

Procedures for handling criminal cases by public security organs

Chapter VIII Investigation

Section 2 Interrogation of Criminal Suspects

Article 193 With the approval of the person in charge of the case-handling department, the public security organ may summon a criminal suspect to a designated place in his city or county or to his residence for interrogation.

Article 194 When summoning a criminal suspect, he shall show his summoning card and the investigator's work permit, and order him to sign the summoning card and press his handprint.

After the criminal suspect arrives at the case, he shall fill in the time of arrival on the summons card. At the end of the summons, the time of the end of the summons shall be filled in the summons card. If the criminal suspect refuses to fill it out, the investigator shall indicate it on the summons card.

For the criminal suspect found at the scene, the investigator can show his work permit and summon him orally, and inform the summoned person of the reasons and basis. The interrogation record shall indicate the way in which the criminal suspect arrived at the case, and the time of arrival and the end time of summoning shall be indicated by the criminal suspect.

Criminal suspects who voluntarily surrender or the masses surrender to public security organs may be summoned according to law.

Article 195 The time limit for summoning shall not exceed 12 hours. If the case is particularly serious and complicated and requires detention or arrest, the time for summoning shall not exceed 24 hours with the approval of the person in charge of the case-handling department. A criminal suspect shall not be detained in disguised form by continuous summons.

If the summons period expires and no other compulsory measures are decided, the summons shall be terminated immediately.

Article 196 When summoning, coercing or interrogating a criminal suspect, the criminal suspect shall be guaranteed food and drink and necessary rest time, and shall be recorded.

Article 197 The interrogation of a criminal suspect must be conducted by investigators. During interrogation, there shall be no fewer than two investigators.

Interrogation of criminal suspects in the same case shall be conducted individually.

Article 198 When an investigator interrogates a criminal suspect, he should first ask whether the criminal suspect has committed a crime, and inform the criminal suspect of the legal provisions that his crime can be given a lighter or mitigated punishment, so that he can state the circumstances of his guilty or innocent plea, and then ask him questions.

A criminal suspect shall truthfully answer the questions of investigators. However, we have the right to refuse to answer questions irrelevant to this case.

The first interrogation of the suspect's name, alias, previous name, date of birth, domicile, current residence, native place, nationality, occupation, education level, family situation, social experience, whether he is a deputy to the National People's Congress or a member of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, whether he has been subjected to criminal punishment, administrative treatment, etc.

Article 199 When interrogating a deaf-mute criminal suspect, people familiar with deaf-mute gestures shall participate, and the interrogation record shall indicate the deaf-mute situation of the criminal suspect and the name, work unit and occupation of the interpreter.

For criminal suspects who are not familiar with the local language, translators should be provided.

Article 200 Investigators shall truthfully record the questions, statements or excuses of criminal suspects. When making interrogation transcripts, materials that can keep handwriting for a long time should be used.

Article 201 The interrogation record shall be submitted to the criminal suspect for verification or read to him. If there are omissions or errors in the records, the criminal suspect shall be allowed to supplement or correct them, and his fingerprints shall be pressed. After the transcript has been checked by the criminal suspect, it shall be signed page by page, printed by hand, and stated on the last page that "I have read (or read to me) the above transcript, which is consistent with what I said". If the respondent refuses to sign or fingerprint, the investigator shall indicate it in the record.

The items listed in the interrogation record shall be filled in according to the regulations. Investigators and translators shall sign the interrogation record.

Article 202 If a criminal suspect asks him to write a confession, he shall be allowed to do so. When necessary, investigators may also ask the criminal suspect to write a confession in person. The criminal suspect shall sign the handwritten confession page by page and press his handprint. After receiving it, the investigators should write "received on a certain day, a certain month, a certain year" on the top right of the home page and sign it.

Article 203 When interrogating a criminal suspect, audio or video recordings may be made at the same time as writing a transcript. For cases that may be sentenced to life imprisonment or death penalty or other major criminal cases, the interrogation process shall be recorded or videotaped.

The term "cases that may be sentenced to life imprisonment or death penalty" as mentioned in the preceding paragraph refers to cases in which statutory punishment or sentencing grades include life imprisonment and death penalty. "Other major criminal cases" refer to crimes that seriously endanger public order and seriously infringe on citizens' personal rights, organized crimes of underworld nature, serious drug crimes and other major intentional crimes that cause serious injuries and deaths.

If the interrogation process is recorded or videotaped, it should be continued during each interrogation process to maintain its integrity. No selective records, no editing or deletion.

Article 204 The public security organ shall carefully check the facts of the crime, the facts of innocence or light crime, arguments and disproof confessed by the criminal suspect, and the evidence provided by the criminal suspect to prove his innocence or light crime; Relevant evidence, whether accepted or not, should be truthfully recorded and properly kept, with verification certificates attached.