@opal111 Türkiye Dışındaki Ülkelerden Adli Sicil Kaydı Almak içinde söyledi:
opal111
Merhabalar. yutdışından adli sicil kaydı için sırbistan ve hırvatistan bu belgeyi veriyor mu acaba
Evet, iki ulkeden de alabiliyorsun belgeleri... Asagidaki ilgili sayfada bulunan "Police, Court, Prison Records" adli kisimlari incelemelisiniz...
Hirvatistan
Fees: 40 HRK
Document Name: Potvrda o osuđivanosti (Certificate on criminal convictions)
Issuing Authority: Ministarstvo pravosuđa Republike Hrvatske, Uprava za kazneno pravo i probaciju, Odjel za kaznene evidencije, Pododsjek za upravne poslove, Vukovarska 49, Zagreb (Ministry of Justice of the Republic of Croatia, Administration for Criminal Law and Probation, Department for Criminal Record, Administrative Section, Vukovarska 49, Zagreb).
Special Seal(s) / Color / Format: Typewritten document with Ministry of Justice seal
Issuing Authority Personnel Title: Administrative Clerk.
Procedure for Obtaining: Application is submitted in person, by mail or by legal representative.
Certified Copies Available: Certified copies are available.
Comments: A certificate on criminal convictions (Potvrda o osuđivanosti) issued by the Ministry of Justice shows whether the applicant has been convicted of any crimes and the articles of law he was convicted under. Due to Croatia’s law on expungement, criminal history certificates frequently do not accurately represent an applicant’s criminal history. Depending on the type of crime and length of punishment, records are expunged after 3, 5, 10, 15, or 20 years. No criminal offenses are exempt from expungement.
Sirbistan
Available. Citizens of Serbia may obtain police certificates (Izvod iz kaznjene evidencije) from the Ministry for Internal Affairs (MUP - Ministarstvo unutrasnjih poslova); that is, the police authority, at a person's permanent residence. For citizens born in a different district from where they reside, the police authority will request information from the person's town of birth, and the response time will vary. Based on input from the place of birth, police at the place of residence will issue the final official version of the certificate.
The police certificate documents whether the applicant has been convicted of any crimes and the articles of law involved. Note that in many cases, convictions can be expunged after ten years. Thus, the record may not be complete beyond ten years, but it is the best and only record available. It should include any convictions in other former Yugoslav republics prior to their independence, so that if someone lived in one of those republics after their independence they must also obtain a police record from that country. This certificate should not be confused with the certificates issued by courts (Sudsko uverenje) that cover only that specific court and indicate the absence of any current investigation, charge or conviction in that period.
NOTE : A second party, such as the Embassy, may not request police certificates on individuals to independently verify someone's background. Consular officers must rely on certificates requested by the individual in person. The potential for fraudulent documentation exists, but is not common; if there is doubt about the authenticity of the certificate, the police station that issued it can usually confirm whether a document it purportedly issued is authentic.
According to the Ministry of Internal Affairs, non-citizens who once resided in Serbia, and are now in their native country, may apply for police certificates with their local Ministry of Foreign Affairs who will then, through diplomatic channels, contact the Embassy of Serbia in that country.
Non-citizens who once resided in Serbia, and are in a third country now, may apply with their Embassy in that country, who will then, through diplomatic channels, contact the Embassy of Serbia.