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9 - Digital Evidence in Criminal Matters

Belgian Pride and Prejudice

from Part II - Digital Evidence and the Cooperation of Service Providers in EU Criminal Investigations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2025

Vanessa Franssen
Affiliation:
Université de Liège, Belgium
Stanisław Tosza
Affiliation:
Université du Luxembourg
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Summary

Chapter 9 analyses the extent to which lawmakers have taken the peculiarities of e-evidence into account and highlights flaws in the resulting legal regime. It addresses the Belgian preservation of general data retention and the possibility to use unlawfully retained and/or accessed data. Next, it delves into the wide spectrum of duties for (internet) service providers to cooperate in criminal proceedings. It discusses the broad interpretation of the territorial scope of the Yahoo! and Skype case law from Belgian courts and its codification in subsequent legislation, including how voluntary cooperation with law enforcement remains important in practice. It briefly examines the legal framework for cross-border cooperation, often perceived as ineffective and needlessly time-consuming. Lastly, it sheds light on the potential impact of the EU e-Evidence Regulation, concluding that, under domestic legislation, a coherent, completely fundamental-rights-proof legal framework is still lacking. It shows Belgium’s support for a pan-EU regime and better international cooperation, provided its law enforcement can maintain the possibility of direct cooperation in a sufficiently effective way.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2025

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