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Articles found: 361 of 361
Dr. Maxime Lassalle Dr. Maxime Lassalle / Dr. Salomé Lannier Dr. Salomé Lannier

EncroChat – A Judicial Chronology Interpretations from Paris, Strasbourg and Luxembourg Courts

16 April 2026 // english

The EncroChat investigation marks a turning point in European criminal justice, revealing unprecedented legal and technical challenges that arose from the hacking of encrypted communication devices (“cryptophones”). The operation originated in France and escalated with the deployment of Trojan-style malware, which enabled the collection of data from over 66,000 cryptophone users worldwide. This article provides a detailed timeline of the case, tracing its development from national proceedings to significant rulings by the European Court of Justice and the European Court of Human Rights. It examines the former’s interpretation of the Directive on the European Investigation Order and the latter’s rejection of challenges arising from the European Convention on Human Rights. By bridging French and European case law and literature, this article fills a gap in existing literature and contributes to ongoing discussions on digital surveillance, privacy, and procedural safeguards in transnational criminal investigations.

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 Thomas Wahl Thomas Wahl

What Remains of the ordre public in Transnational Surveillance? A Commentary on the Decisions of the Federal Court of Justice and the Federal Constitutional Court in the ANOM Proceedings

16 April 2026 // english

ANOM was an undercover law enforcement operation in which the American FBI distributed encrypted mobile phones with a hidden backdoor, allowing authorities to monitor previously untraceable criminals’ communication in real time. Many details of the operation were kept confidential by law enforcement. The intelligence gathered led to hundreds of arrests worldwide, major drug seizures, and disruption of organised crime networks.
Continuing the discussion initiated by Lassalle and Lannier (in this issue), who retrace the EncroChat police operation in France, this article analyses two rulings by Germany’s highest courts (the Federal Court of Justice and the Federal Constitutional Court) that approved the use of chat data obtained from the ANOM operation. Despite many differences between EncroChat and ANOM, both courts saw no reason to depart from the evidence-friendly case law they had each already established in the German EncroChat cases. The author argues that the approach adopted by the courts with regard … Read more

Dr. Ali Bounjoua Dr. Ali Bounjoua

La coopération judiciaire pénale euro-marocaine pour la lutte contre la criminalité organisée et le terrorisme État des lieux et défis actuels

22 January 2026 (updated 2 months, 1 week ago) // french

This article examines the judicial cooperation between Europe and Morocco in combatting organised crime and terrorism. Despite Morocco’s strategic role and its expertise in anti-drug and counter-terrorism efforts, there is currently no specific formal legal framework on the part of the European Union that governs judicial cooperation with the Kingdom of Morocco. This article analyses the relevant political and legal instruments, such as the EU-Morocco Association Agreement, the advanced status under the European Neighbourhood Policy, the EuroMed Justice and Police programmes, and initiatives by Eurojust and Europol. The analysis reveals how mutual trust is gradually being established through the convergence of Euro-Moroccan judicial and police practices. However, it also identifies structural limitations, including the heterogeneity of bilateral agreements with EU Member States and procedural divergences. While EU-Morocco judicial cooperation lacks a binding legal framework at the Union level, recent operational developments are promoting a pragmatic and effective partnership. This is … Read more

Editorial Guest editorial eucrim 3-2025

19 January 2026 (updated 2 months, 1 week ago) // english

Dear Readers, According to the Japanese scholar and art historian Kakuzō Okakura, “The art of life lies in a constant readjustment to our surroundings.” This call for gradual and prudent reform can serve as a guiding principle for judicial cooperation and is particularly well-suited to the role that our agency, Eurojust, plays. The current system of judicial cooperation and mutual recognition, and Eurojust, are, in the meantime, the grown-up children of the 1999 Tampere Programme. Decades of experience show that, in principle, they are working well. In matters of cooperation, this is illustrated by the experience gathered in our daily… Read more

Dr. Alba Hernández Weiss Dr. Alba Hernández Weiss

EPPO Caught Between EU and National Law: A Catch-22 Comments on the ECJ’s Judgment in EPPO v. I.R.O and F.J.L.R (Case C-292/23)

16 January 2026 (updated 2 months, 1 week ago) // english

On 8 April 2025, the Grand Chamber of the European Court of Justice (ECJ) delivered its second judgment interpreting the EPPO Regulation: EPPO v. I.R.O. and F.J.L.R. (Case C-292/23). This is the Court’s first ruling on Art. 42(1) of the Regulation, which addresses the scope of ex post judicial review of EPPO procedural acts before national courts. The case arose from a Spanish preliminary reference concerning the compatibility of Ley Orgánica 9/2021 (the Spanish law implementing the EPPO Regulation) with Art. 42(1). In particular, the reference dealt with the Spanish law’s limitations on judicial review of acts carried out by Spanish European Delegated Prosecutors.
The ECJ’s judgment clarifies which acts undertaken by the EPPO must be subject to review by national courts. More broadly, it has implications for the effective judicial protection of individual rights in EPPO proceedings. This article first outlines the relevant background of the case and then the … Read more