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E-raamat: Criminal Justice and Data Protection: Communication Metadata under EU Human Rights Law

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This book inquires how communications metadata can be used in criminal proceedings, having regard to the principles of legality and fairness.



The use of traffic and location data in criminal justice is now a common prac-tice in the EU and beyond. Although metadata do not reveal the contents of communications, they allow to draw precise conclusions on the private lives of users, like their everyday habits, places of residence, daily movements and ac-tivities, social relationships, and frequented environments. For this reason, they are largely used by law enforcement to identify promising targets of investiga-tion or as evidence in criminal trials. In the EU, national legislation often pro-vides for the indiscriminate retention of such data, but the compatibility of these mass surveillance regimes with the European human rights framework has been questioned in the case law of the European Court on Human Rights (ECtHR) and the European Court of Justice (CJEU), as well as legal scholar-ship. Nevertheless, the use of unlawfully retained data in criminal proceedings is not usually sanctioned in national criminal procedural systems. This book addresses this problem by inquiring about how communications metadata can be used in criminal proceedings, having regard to the principles of legality and fairness. In particular, through the lens of fairness, the analysis seeks to find some common ground between privacy and data protection regimes on the one hand and criminal procedural rules on the other. To this end, it employs both an interdisciplinary doctrinal research method and a comparative analysis be-tween a limited number of EU Member States. By identifying different stand-ards of fairness for the preventive context, the investigation, and the trial phase, the book highlights gaps in protection and attempts to reconcile these two separate, yet closely related, regimes.

Introduction; Part I: Setting the Scene of the Analysis in a Complex
Legal Framework;
1. Communications Metadata and Fundamental Rights in the
Criminal Domain;
2. Methodology: Aligning Privacy, Data Protection And
Criminal Procedure through Fairness; Part II: Preventive Acquisition of
Communications Metadata;
3. Preventive Surveillance in the Convention;
4.
Preventive Surveillance in the European Union;
5. Interception and Retention
of Communications Metadata in Europe; Part III: Communication Metadata in
Criminal Investigations;
6. From Preventive Operations to Criminal
Investigations;
7. Access and Interception of Communications Metadata; Part
IV: Communication Metadata as Evidence at Trial;
8. The Admissibility of
Communications Metadata as Evidence;
9. Effective Remedies for the Fair Use
of Communications Metadata as Evidence;
10. Conclusion.
Isadora Neroni Rezende is a research fellow in Criminal Procedure at the University of Bologna. She received her PhD in Law, Science and Technology from the University of Bologna, the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, and the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven in 2023, within the framework of the Marie Skodowska-Curie Actions. Her research topics include the application of AI technologies in criminal justice, digital investigations, privacy and data protection, and surveillance.