The Department of Justice’s Office of Prosecutorial
Development and Training (OPDAT), with the support of the Department of State’s
International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Division (INL), celebrated the
release of “Reflections on the Accusatory System: Shared Experiences” in the
Salón Marqués-Conde of the Hotel Marquis Reforma in Mexico City on the evening
of Nov. 7.
This volume, authored by a cohort of judges from the Puerto
Rican Judiciary, the Federal Judiciary of the United States, and the Judiciary
of Colombia, gathers the insights of OPDAT’s closest judicial partners on the
role of judges within Mexico’s new accusatory criminal justice system. These judges have generously volunteered
their time and expertise to work with OPDAT’s Judicial Studies Institute (JSI)
in Mexico and Puerto Rico since 2016.
The Honorable Edgardo Rivera García, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court
of Puerto Rico, and the Honorable Gustavo Gelpí, Chief Judge of U.S. District
Court for the District of Puerto Rico, have been especially instrumental in
supporting OPDAT’s programming. The JSI program, funded by the Merida
Initiative, strengthens the effectiveness of hundreds of Mexican federal
appellate and amparo judges.
“The exchange among our dear friends at the Puerto Rican
Supreme Court and the Puerto Rican federal courts, gave us a completely
distinct outlook from the judicial trainings in countries like Chile and
Colombia,” said Justice of the First Chamber of the Mexican Supreme Court
Justice, the Honorable Jorge Mario Pardo Rebolledo. “The shared experience [of the Mexico-Puerto
Rico Judicial Studies Institute] has been and continues to generate the most
useful knowledge for Mexico’s new accusatory criminal justice system.”
This event commemorated the commitment of OPDAT and its
partners to supporting Mexico’s judicial sector in the face of the challenges
presented by transnational organized crime.
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