Jacob Öberg, Professor of EU law, University of Southern Denmark
Photo credit: EPPO
The aim of this blog post is to
summarise the key argument of a recent article published by the author in 50(6)
2025 European Law Review titled “The European Public Prosecutor's Office -
supranationalism, sovereignty and legitimacy”.
For readers not acquainted with
the European Public Prosecutor’s Office (“EPPO”) it could be briefly stated
that the EPPO is a centralised European public prosecutor tasked with
prosecuting and investigating crimes against the EU’s financial interests (as
defined in the PIF Directive)
following its mandate in Art 86 TFEU. EPPO
which commenced its operation in June 2021, is undoubtedly the pinnacle to date
of supranational criminal law in the history of European integration. It
represents a significant achievement in terms of its potential for a
fundamental system change for EU criminal policy, departing markedly from the
conventional Member State-centric view that intergovernmental cooperation
should remain the dominating principle of governance in this field (Öberg, 2021).
It is well-known that the EPPO
was established in October 2017 through the EPPO Regulation on
the basis of the new Art 86 , which
provides the Council with a competence to ‘establish a European Public
Prosecutor’s Office’ which shall ‘be responsible for investigating,
prosecuting, and bringing to judgment … the perpetrators of, and accomplices
in, offences against the Union’s financial interests’ and ‘exercise the
functions of prosecutor in the competent courts of the Member States in
relation to such offences’. The final EPPO Regulation had been preceded by
politically protracted negotiations over four years, involving the highest
number of official negotiation documents in the Council on criminal law to date
(Eurocrim database) and a Yellow Card from
national parliaments (Commission Communication, 2013).
Because of far-reaching objections from
Member States to the creation of the office, the EPPO Regulation ultimately had
to be adopted by means of an enhanced cooperation procedure involving 20 Member
States under Art 86(1) 2nd para, TFEU.
In light
of this brief account of the genesis of the EPPO, this blog offers a critical
analysis of the evolution, structure and functioning of the EPPO on the basis
of three theoretical frameworks: the theory of supranationalism, the concept of
sovereignty and the critical approach of legitimacy. The first part of the
analysis accounts for the current design of the EPPO along the
supranational-intergovernmental (Stone Sweet and Sandholtz, 1997)
spectrum based on the general literature on EU law and integration (Cappeletti, Seccombe and Weiler, 1986,
Pescatore, 1974). Secondly, the analysis proceeds to examine the
governance of the EPPO in attempting to ascertain the extent to which Member
States have been capable of maintaining control of its operation. Finally, we
consider the EPPO from the perspective of legitimacy, with a specific focus on
judicial review of the EPPO’s activities.
First, we reflect on the
institutional structure of the EPPO. The key argument here is that the
establishment and operationalisation of the EPPO marks a significant
transformation from a ‘cooperative’ philosophy in EU criminal justice towards
an integrated ‘supranational’ criminal justice system based on formal powers
exercised by the EPPO (Monar, 2013). The
EPPO Regulation nonetheless captures an intricate compromise between a
supranational and intergovernmental conception of the EPPO (Schmeer, 2023). The
central feature for the supranational characterisation is the creation of a
European prosecutor with binding decision-making powers in respect of criminal
investigations and prosecutions in the area of crimes against the EU’s
financial interest (Art 86(2) TFEU and Art 13(1) of the EPPO Regulation), with
jurisdiction transcending the territorial borders of the EU Member States (Art
23 of the EPPO Regulation). However, the complicated rules in the EPPO
Regulation on the exercise of competence (Arts 25-27 of the EPPO Regulation),
the removal of exclusive competence and the inclusion of a ‘national link’ in
the EPPO’s governance structure (Art 13 of the EPPO Regulation) present limits
to the ‘supranationalisation’ of the EPPO. A review of the first years of the
EPPO’s activities nonetheless suggests that the body operates de facto as a
highly supranational body without being restrained by the legal framework
surrounding its operations. The limited evidence available indicates that the
EPPO in practice defines its mandate broadly (both in terms of the PIF offences
and in respect of ‘ancillary offences’) and that national law enforcement
agencies acting on behalf of the EPPO act seemingly in a spirit of loyalty
towards the EPPO’s interests (see Recital 69 of the EPPO Regulation). This
lends some support to the contention that the EPPO – based on its legal powers
and operational practice – is the most ‘supranational’ EU body created to date
within the context of EU integration (Öberg, 2021).
The establishment of the EPPO, in
conjunction with the adoption of the new PIF Directive, makes a compelling
argument for holding that the EU appears to have adopted a ‘federal vision’ of
criminal law, at least when it comes to protecting its financial interests (Herlin Karnell and Gomez-Jara,
2013). This development asks more fundamental questions about
legitimacy and state sovereignty and if the EPPO stand as a role model for the
creation of a ‘European criminal justice system’. It is important to observe
that the EPPO exerts significant powers with severe implications for the
fundamental freedoms of individuals and that the exercise of those powers also
markedly encroaches on ‘core state powers’. Whilst there is a strong normative
justification for conferring these enforcement powers to the EPPO (Öberg, 2024, ch 5),
these powers need to be accompanied with strong fundamental rights safeguards
both at national and EU level.
This brings us to the final
observation which relates to the key fundamental rights challenges for a
European ‘supranational’ prosecutor. While the establishment of the EPPO is a
welcome step towards a ‘federalisation’ of EU criminal justice in this area,
the EPPO cannot function effectively without some degree of harmonisation of
national criminal procedures and national criminal laws. The recent case law of
the Court (G.K. and others, Case C-281/22) highlights
the implications of this incomplete centralisation of national criminal
procedures which makes it more cumbersome for the EPPO to fulfil its task of
combatting crimes against the EU’s financial interests. The ‘output’
(legitimacy) perspective aside, another central tenet of legitimacy for the
EPPO is that there should be structures and mechanisms established to hold that
body responsible and accountable for its actions. Not only must the legality of
the EPPO’s decisions be subject to review by the Court of Justice, as follows
from Art 263 TFEU, but national courts must also have the comprehensive ability
to request preliminary rulings as per Art 267 TFEU. Therefore, the EPPO
Regulation needs to be reformulated to make clear that the Court of Justice’s
Treaty-based jurisdiction cannot be restricted by reference to secondary law.
Furthermore, stronger common EU measures for protecting the rights of the
defendant, along with effective safeguards that form the basis for the exercise
of the EPPO’s powers, should be a central feature of a potential future
amendment of the EPPO Regulation.
As suggested in the analysis, the
Court can have an important role to play in this regard. First, the Court should
expand its jurisdiction, following Art 47 of the Charter, to ensure robust
judicial review of the actions of the EPPO, and by developing common standards
constituting the basis for the EPPO’s operation through the autonomous
interpretation of key provisions in the EPPO Regulation. Secondly, the Court
can contribute to the development of a system of EU judicial remedies against
actions undertaken by the EPPO in its operational activities. As demonstrated
by G.K. and Others (Parquet européen) and EPPO
v I.R.O. & F.J.L.R. (Case C‑292/23), the CJEU has
taken a nuanced approach to judicial remedies, carefully balancing the need for
an effective supranational system of criminal enforcement with judicial
safeguards for defendants. To conclude, a supranational prosecutor such as the
EPPO does not only need to have institutional structures, tools and resources
to fight effectively against the EU’s financial interests effectively (output).
It also needs a robust legal framework surrounding the EPPO’s operational
action, combined with strong legal safeguards for individual defendants, is
imperative for ensuring the (throughput) legitimacy of this new unique
supranational prosecutor.
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