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Rules on the application of ne bis in idem in the EU – Is further legislative action required?
Within a relatively short period of time, the European Court of Justice (ECJ) has had the opportunity to address the issue of a transnational ne bis in idem principle in several cases in the EU, and a legislative proposal was also put forward on this matter.1 The increased attention paid to the transnational application of the ne bis in idem principle shows that the judicial authorities of the EU Member States are facing a growing number of cases that simultaneously involve several jurisdictions. The present article focuses on the ne bis in idem principle in the context of an Area… Read more
Mutual Recognition of Judicial Decisions in Criminal Matters with Regard to Probation Measures and Alternative Sanctions
I. Creation of an Area of Mutual Recognition of Judicial Decisions in Criminal Matters The adoption of Council Framework Decision 2008/947/JHA of 27 November 2008 on the application of the principle of mutual recognition to judgments and probation decisions with a view to supervision of probation measures and alternative sanctions is a next step in the process of creating a common criminal procedural area within the European Union.1 The principle of mutual recognition is fast becoming a foundation of cooperation in criminal matters among the EU Member States. From the present stage of development of the European Union, it has… Read more
Le Mandat européen d’obtention de preuves et l’avenir de la protection des intérêts financiers de l’Union Européenne
The author argues that the European Evidence Warrant (EEW) has the potential to speed up national investigations in the areas of the protection of the financial interests of the European Union. This is because the legislator has taken care to include a wide range of related offences, exempting them from the requirement of double criminality. Evidence will have to be produced within 60 days of receipt of the EEW. However, it must be remembered that the EEW only concerns a narrow range of evidence and that further mutual recognition provisions will have to be adopted if a wider range of… Read more
The Constitution says yes [but…] to the Lisbon Treaty The Judgment of the Second Senate of the Federal Constitutional Court of the 30 June 2009
The German Federal Constitutional Court was asked to decide upon the constitutional compatibility of the changes foreseen by the Treaty of Lisbon and its implementation via various acts of legislation by the German parliamentary organs.1 Above all, the complainants (inter alia, a number of Members of the German Bundestag and the parliamentary group “DIE LINKE”) argued for constitutional breaches because, in their view, the federal government delegated powers to the EU that it was not competent to do and to such an extent as to undermine the authority of the Federal parliamentary organs (the Bundestag and the Bundesrat). The Constitutional… Read more
The Approximation of National Substantive Criminal Law on Fraud and the Limits of the Third Pillar
OLAF is the only Community body whose tasks include administrative investigations on behaviour detrimental to the financial interests of the EU that may have “criminal” and “trans-national” aspects simultaneously. Trans-national European crime requires new solutions to be found in what is commonly referred to as European criminal law. For this reason the protection of financial interests has been the motor of the emerging European criminal law and continues to play a vital role.1 Even before the existence of OLAF, its predecessor, the unit charged with the protection of the financial interests within the Commission (UCLAF), put forward first instruments on… Read more