Allocation (right)

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A feed is a term from the Special Administrative Law and referred to by an authority arranged transfer of a service person subject to a service (so-called movement) against the declared will. The reason for a transfer is the failure to appear for a summons, a draft or a start of service. The most common case is absenteeism from military service or alternative service despite a draft notice .

In Germany, this is often done by the local police ( state police ) as part of an aid to enforcement of the requesting authority (z. B. summons for court hearing ) or by the military police in unauthorized absence from military service or again by police for community service . The issuing authority does not reimburse the costs. However, the conscript is liable to pay a fee in the event of negligence.

Conscripts , especially total conscientious objectors , are picked up by the local police from a known place of residence (usually home) and taken to the relevant office without further request. Soldiers are sent to the next military police command, civilian service to the employment agency. The Federal Office for Family and Civil Society Tasks orders the transfer for those doing community service . For soldiers, the parent unit in question orders the feed. If the person is not found, one is wanted person on the local police initiated.

With the suspension of compulsory military service as of July 1, 2011, the right to conscripts was no longer available.

Switzerland

Transfer is understood as the transfer of a person by the police to the public prosecutor's office (Art 219 StPO)

GDR

In the GDR , the transfer was a preliminary stage of an arrest or arrest. No justification was necessary for the allocation. After interrogation, the victim was either formally arrested or released.

Legal bases

See also

Individual evidence

  1. Addition of the Swiss Code of Criminal Procedure
  2. Allocation to jugendopposition.de