Laure Baudrihaye-Gérard, Fair Trials
The question of who has the power
to issue a European Arrest Warrant (“EAW”) has been addressed again by the
Court of Justice of the EU (“CJEU”). The answer to this question has far-reaching
consequences for the flagship EU measure of judicial cooperation, which is used
by authorities across the continent thousands of times every month to obtain
the surrender of persons found in another EU Member State either for the
purposes of criminal investigations (e.g. interrogation) or to serve a
custodial sentence.
Courts in Luxembourg and the
Netherlands suspended the execution of EAWs issued by prosecutors in Belgium,
France and Sweden, so that they could ask the CJEU, through the urgent
preliminary reference procedure, whether they qualified as “judicial
authorities” for the purposes of issuing EAWs. The questions were raised in
relation to EAWs issued by the Belgian public prosecutor for the purposes of
executing a custodial sentence (case
C-627/19 PPU), and in relation to EAWs issued by French (case
C-625/19 PPU) and Swedish prosecutors (joined
cases C-566/19 and C-626/19 PPU) for the purposes of conducting a criminal
investigation.
More specifically, the Dutch and
Luxembourg courts sought clarification of the CJEU’s rulings of 27 May 2019 in
relation to the German and Lithuanian prosecutors (cases
C-508/18 and C-82/19 PPU), discussed further here.
The CJEU had ruled that German public prosecutors do not provide a
sufficient guarantee of independence from the executive when issuing an EAW,
while the Prosecutor General of Lithuania does provide such a guarantee of
independence. As a result of this ruling, only judicial authorities deemed
completely independent from the executive will be able to issue EAWs.
The CJEU confirmed that the
Belgian, French and Swedish prosecutors were sufficiently independent from the
executive to be able to issue EAWs. In its analysis, the CJEU clarified, first,
the scope of the concept itself of an “issuing judicial authority” for the
purposes of issuing an EAW under the Framework
Decision on EAWs and second, the notion of effective judicial protection
for individuals who are the subjects of EAWs.
Concept of issuing judicial authority: two, not three conditions to be
met
The principle of procedural
autonomy and Article 6 of the EAW Framework Decision leave it up to Member
States to designate competent “issuing judicial authorities” for the purposes
of the EAW, but the CJEU recognised that a uniform and autonomous
interpretation is, nevertheless, necessary.
Public prosecutors will qualify
as an issuing judicial authority where two conditions are met:
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First, public prosecutors must administer or
participate in the administration of justice. An authority, such as a public
prosecutor’s office, which is competent, in criminal proceedings, to prosecute
a person suspected of having committed a criminal offence so that that person
may be brought before a court, must be regarded as participating in the
administration of justice of the relevant Member State.
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Second, public prosecutors must be in a position
to act in an independent way, specifically with respect to the executive. The
CJEU requires that the independence of public prosecutors be organised by a
statutory framework and organisational rules that prevent the risk of prosecutors
being subject to individual instructions by the executive (as was the case with
the German prosecutor). Moreover, the framework must enable prosecutors to
assess the necessity and proportionality of issuing an EAW. In the French
prosecutor judgment, the CJEU specifically indicated that:
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Even though the Minister of Justice can issue
general instructions of criminal policy to prosecutors, French law expressly prohibits
individual instructions. In so far as general instructions cannot prevent a
prosecutor from exercising their own appreciation of the proportionality of a
decision to issue an EAW, they are not incompatible with the EU notion of an
“issuing judicial authority”.
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Hierarchical subordination of prosecutors, as is
the case in France, does not prevent independence. The CJEU is concerned about prosecutors
being shielded from external instructions coming from the executive; not about
internal instructions coming from other prosecutors, which are necessary for
the organisation of the public prosecutor office.
Importantly, the CJEU made clear
that the existence of a procedure to challenge the decision itself to issue an
EAW does not constitute a condition for a national authority to qualify as an
“issuing judicial authority” for the purposes of the EAW Framework Decision. In
the Swedish and French cases, the CJEU specified that effective judicial
protection is not a statutory or organisational rule that applies to
prosecutors, but is a separate issue that relates to the issuing procedure of
the EAW. The CJEU’s approach in respect of the concept of “effective judicial
protection” is developed further below.
The CJEU adopts, in these
judgments, a formalistic approach towards the concept of independence. The
Court focuses on the national legal framework to assess prosecutorial
independence, and is satisfied where statutory and organisational rules
formally prevent the government from issuing individual instructions to the
prosecuting authority. However, the CJEU does not seek to enquire into the
practice or other potential forms of influence of the executive over
prosecutors. The scope of the CJEU’s assessment of the independence of
prosecutors is moreover limited to decisions to issue EAWs, and not to the
exercise of prosecutorial powers more broadly, which is beyond the scope of EU
law.
It is notable that, in the
decision relating to the French prosecutor, the reasoning of the CJEU appears
to be founded on the inquisitorial tradition of the criminal justice system,
built on the concept that prosecutors are “impartial” and exercise their powers
in an “objective manner”, taking into account all exculpatory and inculpatory
elements. This approach does not reflect the system in several EU Member States
and stands at odds with the current evolution of European criminal justice
systems, where we see a trend towards an increasing role of defence lawyers
during the investigative phase, typical of accusatory systems. For instance, the
Directive on the European Investigation Order (“EIO”) foresees, in Article
1(3), that the defence may initiate a request for an EIO in the context of a
cross-border investigation. The CJEU’s reliance on abstract concepts of
“impartiality” and “objectivity”, without addressing the evolution of
inquisitorial systems and the way in which this may have impacted the
prosecutor’s role, gives the ruling a certain artificiality which requires
further refinement.
Effective judicial protection
The CJEU had already ruled (see
its judgment in relation to the German and Lithuanian prosecutors) that persons
subject to an EAW must benefit from a two-tier system of judicial protection of
procedural safeguards and fundamental rights: (i) in the context of the
adoption of the national arrest warrant; and (ii) in relation to the decision
to issue an EAW, in particular, whether, in the light of the particular
circumstances of each case, it is proportionate to issue that warrant.
The executing authority must
verify that the decisions to issue EAWs have been subject to prior judicial
protection, i.e. that a court or judge assessed the proportionality of the EAW
and that the conditions for issuing the EAW have been met. In other words, the
decision of a prosecutor, who is not a judge, to issue an EAW, must be capable
of being the subject, in the Member State, of judicial proceedings which meet
in full the requirements inherent in effective judicial protection.
But the CJEU leaves it up to
Member States to organise such effective judicial protection, which, by virtue
of the principle of procedural autonomy, may vary from one national system to
another. One possibility is for Member States to provide for an appeal
procedure against the decision to issue an EAW. But this is only one
possibility, and the CJEU considered that each of the examined national systems
in Belgium, France and Sweden also met the requirement for effective judicial
protection:
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In the Swedish case, national law requires that
the decision to issue an EAW be preceded by a court decision to order pre-trial
detention. The CJEU confirmed that effective judicial protection is ensured when
the court verifies the conditions and the proportionality of the EAW before it
is issued by the prosecutor, i.e. during the hearing in relation to pre-trial
detention. The Court also noted that the pre-trial detention order can be
challenged after it is issued, and where the challenge is successful, the EAW
is automatically invalidated. For the CJEU, this system satisfies the
requirement for effective judicial protection, even in the absence of a
stand-alone appeal procedure against the decision to issue an EAW by the
prosecutor.
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In the French case, the CJEU considered that in
French law, EAWs for the purposes of criminal investigations may only be issued
after a judge, typically an investigative judge (juge d’instruction), issues a national arrest warrant. In this
case, the CJEU noted that the judge who issued the national arrest warrant also
requested that the public prosecutor issue an EAW at the same time. It is at
this point in the procedure that the judge assessed that the conditions for
issuing the EAW were met, including its proportionality. In the CJEU’s view, this
procedure demonstrates that the proportionality of the EAW may be assessed at
the time the national arrest warrant is issued, which happens prior or at the
same time as the issuing of the EAW, and noted that, further, the decision to
issue an EAW may also subsequently be subject to an annulment challenge.
Therefore, the French system satisfies the requirement for effective judicial
protection.
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Where the EAW is issued for the purposes of
serving a custodial sentence, as in the Belgian case, the EAW stems from the
court decision sentencing the person to a custodial sentence. The sentence, in
the CJEU’s view, reverses the presumption of innocence that the person benefits
from during the criminal proceedings. The existence of judicial proceedings
leading to the finding of the person’s culpability enables the executing
authority to presume that the decision to issue an EAW stems from a national
procedure in which the rights of the person were upheld; and the
proportionality of the EAW results from the requirement in the EAW Framework
Decision that an EAW may only be issued in relation to sentences of at least 4
months’ imprisonment. In such circumstances, the requirement for effective
judicial protection is satisfied by the decision to sentence the person.
The CJEU failed to take this
opportunity to set meaningful standards around the concept of “effective
judicial protection”, and in particular how executing judicial authorities must
exercise their oversight over the proportionality of EAWs. This approach fails
to recognise that it is extremely difficult for persons arrested and detained
under an EAW to obtain legal assistance in order to challenge the decision to
issue the EAW in the issuing state, prior to being surrendered. Fair Trials has
documented the problems with the EAW system that continue
to this day, with considerable impact on the lives and rights of ordinary
people.
In the Swedish and French cases,
the CJEU argued that effective judicial protection is further guaranteed by
other instruments of EU law, most notably the Access to a Lawyer Directive (2013/48/EU),
which requires the Member State who is asked to execute the EAW to inform the
person that they have a right to appoint a lawyer in the country that has issued
the EAW. This is, indeed, a requirement of EU law, however, the CJEU fails to
take into consideration the lack of effective implementation of this
requirement across the EU – which seriously undermines the reality of such an
“effective judicial protection”. The new laws enacted by the EU guaranteeing
suspects’ rights, while extremely beneficial to improving fair trials at the
national level, have not been sufficient. The problems with the EAW go beyond
the rights guaranteed in those laws, and the laws themselves still need better
implementation.
Fair Trials, working with lawyers
across the EU in the context of the Legal and Experts Advisory Panel (“LEAP”),
continues to document the lack of access to a lawyer in the issuing State for
persons arrested under EAWs. The European Commission itself, in its implementation
report of 26 September 2019 on the Access to a Lawyer Directive, expressly
states that “[t]he legislation in four
Member States does not at all reflect the right of requested persons to appoint
a lawyer in the issuing Member State. Some five Member States do not clearly
ensure that requested persons receive information about this right without
undue delay (Article 10(4) of the Directive). Moreover, the cooperation mechanism
set out in Article 10(5) of the Directive is often not subject to specific
rules. In seven Member States, the legislation lacks the requirement that the
competent authority in the executing Member State promptly informs the
competent authority in the issuing Member State in cases where requested
persons who do not already have a lawyer in the issuing Member State wish to
appoint one. Furthermore, the legislation in 10 Member States does not
transpose the requirement for the competent authority of the issuing Member
State to provide without undue delay the requested persons with information to
help them appoint a lawyer there”.
We welcome the CJEU’s recognition
that the EU procedural rights directives, including the Access to a Lawyer
Directive, participate in ensuring effective judicial protection for people who
are subject to EAWs. But to date, the case law of the EU’s Court of Justice has
not been sufficient to resolve the EAW’s flaws. The CJEU needs actively to
support the effective implementation of the procedural safeguards for suspects
and accused persons enshrined in EU law. For more on our work to promote and
support the effective implementation of EU law, please refer to our materials
available here: https://www.fairtrials.org/publication/eu-law-materials.
JHA4: chapter II:3
Barnard & Peers: chapter 25
Photo credit: Wikicommons
This superbly informative article should be required reading for any practitioner in the field of criminal law and extradition. In the UK, we are about to commence a dark age in the development of EU criminal law and cross-European cooperation in criminal investigations and prosecutions. Where will the UK stand on these questions in just a few weeks time? Paul Garlick QC
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