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Samenvatting

Summary Tutorials European Criminal Law (CRI4007)

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This document includes an as complete as possible summary of the materials from week 1-7, including jurisprudence, answers to the tutorials, lectures, the paper, and answers to a mock-exam. Good luck! Dit document bevat een zo compleet mogelijke samenvatting van alle stof van week 1 t/m 7. Het bevat de jurisprudentie, uitwerkingen van de tutorials, colleges, de paperopdracht en antwoorden bij een oefententamen. Succes!

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Voorbeeld van de inhoud

Session 1 – An introduction: The context of European criminal law
Week of 5th February 2020

Index
Literature
- André Klip, European Criminal Law, 3rd edition 2016, Chapters 1-2 and Chapter 3, Sections 1-
4.2, pp. 1-94.
- Michele Caianiello, Dum Romae (et Brucsellae) Consulitur…Some Considerations on the
Taricco Judgment and Its Consequences at National and European Level, 24 European Journal
of Crime, Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Issue 1/2016.

Case Law
- C- 68/88, Commission v. Greece, Rep. 1989 (2965)
- C-105/14, 8 September 2015, criminal proceedings against Ivo Taricco and others
- C-42/17, 5 December 2017, criminal proceedings against M.A.S., M.B. (Taricco II)
- C-574/15, 2 May 2018, criminal proceedings against Scialdone
- C-310/16, 17 January 2019, criminal proceedings against Petar Dzivev and Others

Questions
1. How would you understand/define European criminal law and how would you determine
its scope/limits? Can we find it in national law?
Definition: European criminal law is explained as a multi-level field of law (case law and legislation), in
which the European Union has a normative influence on substantive criminal law, criminal procedure
and on the co-operation between Member States.

 It is supplemented (aangevuld) by the areas where the EU directly enforces criminal law:
competition law and the European Public Prosecutor’s Office.
With regards to national law:

- In the past: competences in criminal law were exclusively the realm of the individual MS.
- Since the entry into force of the Treaty of Lisbon  many competences have been conferred
upon the EU.
 However, most of the competences are not exclusive, but shared (jointly exercised with the
MS);
 Example: the Union prohibition of insider trading, which must be enforced by the MS
through their own national criminal law;
 In other words: the norms have been formulated at the EU level, but their implementation
and enforcement takes place at the national level.
Nature of EU-law

- Van Gend & Loos  EU law has direct effect, no matter the national system of dualism or
monism  it is a “New Legal Order”
 A citizen can directly rely on an article, as long as the provision is:
 Clear
 Precise
- Costa/ENEL  Union Law has priority over national law. Voorrang van Europees recht, het
moet in alle LS hetzelfde zijn

2. What is meant by ‘normative influence’ in the definition of European criminal law in the
literature? How can Union law norms influence national criminal norms? How can
national criminal norms influence EU law?
The EU drafts criminal norms by making use of its competences as granted by the treaties.
EU law influences national criminal law due to the obligations of the MS for the enforcement of Union
law. Meaning that MS might have to enforce Union law by creating criminal law rules or set criminal
law aside because they conflict with Union law.
1

, 3. What is harmonisation and approximation in criminal law matters and what are their
effects?
Integration does not need to take place in a “legal” form.

Harmonisation = it has a legal connotation (distinguish it from integration and mutual recognition)

- Definition: ‘the convergence of the legal practice of the various legal systems based upon a
common standard.’ (de convergentie (naar elkaar toe groeien) van de juridische praktijk van de
verschillende rechtsstelsels op basis van een gemeenschappelijke norm.)
- It can be seen as a legal means for achieving the political objective of integration
 Harmonisation implies differences, otherwise there would be nothing to harmonise
 Tries to reduce differences, but does not want to eliminate them
- Goal: to arrive at common rules
Effects of harmonisation = harmonization of rules focuses on the implementation of the European rule
into a national setting.

Forms of harmonisation:

- Positive integration means that the Union harmonises the substantive law in a certain field and
as a consequence the discretion of the MS becomes more limited.
- Negative: union law does not force MS to implement specific legislation, but certain actions
may not be hindered/limited/impediment. E.g. the 5 freedoms trigger negative harmonisation.
 The consequences of negative integration are thus more determined by the situation in national
law.
 Negative integration has more influence on national law.
Legal bases for harmonisation: art. 114-118 TFEU: in policy area the MS must respect the stated
minimum obligations.

Approximation = allows the MS more discretion in the choice of means with which to comply to their
Union Obligations. The line between harmonisation and approximation is not set explicit by Treaties,
law, or the Court.

Artt. 82 and 83 TFEU delineate the areas in which approximation may take place.

Effects:

- Contextual consequences: Harmonisation may result in optimal or unwanted side effects.
Because Criminal law is a closed system (individuals cannot create own criminal law), it may be
difficult to harmonise just a few aspects of criminal law without affecting the system as a whole.
- Will it lead to harmonisation of enforcement when enforcement mechanisms have not been
harmonised
4. Do states have an obligation to enforce Union law via the drafting of national criminal
law?
MS must adopt all measures of national law to implement legally binding acts. But e.g. concerning
directive: the result is binding but MS is free to choose the means to do this. Generally this requires
implementation into national law. But they can choose to use administrative enforcement, civil or
criminal law enforcement. Thus, it depends on the type of secondary legislation.

5. What are the Maize-judgment1 criteria and when are they used?
Greek Maize is undoubtedly the leading case on the requirements of European law on national
enforcement. Greek Maize was about the failure of the Greek state to fulfil those obligations to initiate
all the criminal or disciplinary proceedings provided for by national law against the perpetrators of

1
P. 74 literature.
2

, fraud. The Court ruled that Article 4(3) TEU requires the Member States to take all measures necessary
to guarantee the application and effectiveness of Community law. (Enforcement criteria can be deduced
from art. 4, par. 3 TFEU).

Facts: The Commission had brought proceedings against Greece for failing to establish and pay to the
Community resources that were fraudulently being withheld from the Community budget. This related
to maize imported into Greece from the non-Member State Yugoslavia without a levy being collected,
subsequently declaring the maize to be of Greek origin and then transporting it to another MS, Belgium.
This incident had its origin in allegations of fraud (false declarations) and corruption (bribery and the
frustration of investigations and prosecution).

Why relevant that the goods are transported from MS to MS?  because of the free movement of goods

But: it came from a third MS!  Yugoslavia, so taxes had to be paid. And the EU is a protective system
for those that are inside the EU.

VAT fraud?

- Within the EU: exempted
- Outside the EU: should be imposed
! Important, because the EU earns money like this

A number of principles to assess the activity of a MS can be deduced from this judgement:

- Assimilation principle
- Effective
- Proportionate
- Dissuasive
- Same diligence
Assimilation principle

The obligation to pay respect to the assimilation principle requires MS to use the same or similar means
of legislation that they would use with regard to similar violations of national law . It is related to the
same diligence principle, but assimilation relates to legislation, and diligence with what MS do with
legislation they have in place.

See example in book: penalty of 6 years and a fine of million euros, prevents it from making it an
administrative penalty.

Problem = what are similar infringements? But since art 83 TFEU = criminalizes certain behavior, the
importance of assimilation has diminished.

Effective

- Must be distinguished from dissuasive. Effective means that if violations occur, the system is
capable of responding to it. It can react to violations of Union law.
- Rules laying down penalties are effective where they are framed in such a way that they do
not make it practically impossible or excessively difficult to impose the penalty provided for
and, therefore, to attain the objectives pursued by Community law. 2
- Taricco case: statute of limitations in Italy would make it impossible to impose sanction on a
large part of VAT offences interruption of criminal proceedings concerning serious fraud in
relation to VAT has the effect of extending the limitation period by only a quarter of its initial
duration, are liable to have an adverse effect on the fulfilment of the Member States’ obligations
under Article 325(1) and (2) TFEU if those national rules prevent the imposition of effective

2
Case: Berlusconi, AG Kokott
3

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Ik heb de masters Strafrecht (Criminologie, Forensica en Rechtspleging) en Staats- en Bestuursrecht gedaan, waarvan ik cum laude ben afgestudeerd. Hoewel ik mijn uiterste best doe de samenvattingen zo correct en volledig mogelijk te maken, kan ik niet garanderen dat er ergens een (taal)foutje ingeslopen is. Mocht je hier iets van opmerken in één van de documenten: laat het me vooral weten! Heel veel succes :-)

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