Does the police have anything to do with "forensic reports"?
Forensic assessment means that someone is assessed to determine whether they are mentally ill or mentally healthy.
If the person is mentally ill, it means that the judges order placement in a psychiatric hospital (for life) for an indefinite period according to Section 63 of the Criminal Code.
This also means that the perpetrator will never leave the psychiatric hospital alive again, forever until December 31, 9999
If the perpetrator is mentally healthy, he must expect a prison sentence and he will get out of there at some point, and as quickly as possible.
And my question now is, does the police have anything to do with the forensic report?
I’m thinking that in a crime committed, I’m telling the police about the crime.
For e.g., there could now be an exaggerated delicacy where the killing was carried out in the monkey or whether it was a planned murder.
Depending on the case, a certain planning and preparation must be carried out, for example, which then excludes an affect action.
… this seems to me to be an extremely limited understanding of the term “forensics” and thus “forensic opinion”.
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forensics
And therefore, the answer: law enforcement authorities (police, prosecutors) naturally have to do with forensic advice (even if the judges ordered by legal medicine, laboratories or are prepared).
No, compile an expert opinion, as the name says.
“Policists” are not judges but “policyists”
the police don’t have anything to do with it, but that’s what the court asks.
Such expert opinions provide psychiatric physicians and can also revise if after a time stay in specialist clinic improves the condition