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Review of European Administrative Law (REALaw)
2024 / 2 (juli) 1
  • Rob Widdershoven

    Editorial online pdf
Article
  • Argyro Karagianni - Assistant professor of public economic law, Utrecht University

    Ne bis in idem at the intersection between prudentialand AML/CFT supervision online pdf
  • Roos Entius - PhD candidate, Institute for Management Research / Research Centre for State and Law (SteR), Radboud University Nijmegen, Henri de Waele - Professor of International and European Law, Research Centre for State and Law (SteR), Radboud University Nijmegen; Guest Professor in EU law, University of Antwerp, Pieter Kuypers - Radboud Business Law Institute (OO&R), Radboud University Nijmegen; Lawyer-Partner, AKD Brussels

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  • Justina Nasutavičienė - PhD, Senior advisor in the Judicial Research Department of the Supreme Administrative Court of Lithuania and Lecturer in the Institute of International and European Union Law, Mykolas Romeris Law School, Mykolas Romeris University

    Navigating Asylum Seekers’ Mobility Restrictions in Emergency Situations – Insights from the Supreme Administrative Court of Lithuania online pdf
  • Pietro Mattioli - PhD Researcher at the University of Liège, Belgium

    The Quasi-Judicial Role of National Competent Authorities: an Ambiguity that the Principle of Effective Judicial Protection could help address? online pdf
Case Law Analysis
  • Aart de Vries - Assistant Professor, Willem Pompe Institute for Criminal Sciences and Criminology and Utrecht Centre for Regulation and Enforcement in Europe (RENFORCE), Utrecht University

    The Principle of Ne Bis In Idem (Article 50 of the Charter) at the Cross-Border Interface of Punitive Administrative and Criminal Proceedings in the European Union online pdf
  • Celestia Tavormina - Postgraduate researcher, Department of Transboundary Legal Studies, University of Groningen, Tobias Nowak - Assistant Professor, Department of Transboundary Legal Studies, University of Groningen

    OP v Commune d’Ans: Court Says No to Public Display of Religion for Public Employees online pdf

Ne bis in idem at the intersection between prudentialand AML/CFT supervision

Toon als PDF
Argyro Karagianni - Assistant professor of public economic law, Utrecht University*


Abstract

The ne bis in idem principle, a fundamental right under Article 50 CFR, generally limits the possibility of a person being prosecuted or sanctioned twice for the same act, offense, or facts. At the same time, in EU law, it is often the case that a natural or legal person’s factual conduct could potentially give rise to double response: one under criminal law and one under (punitive) administrative law. It may even be the case that a certain factual conduct can be judged and sanctioned under different regulatory regimes. The policy areas of prudential supervision and of the supervision of the anti-money laundering legal framework are a prime example of this phenomenon. When different authorities (prudential, AML/CFT supervisors and national judicial authorities), branches of law (administrative, criminal) and legal orders may be simultaneously competent to impose punitive sanctions for legal violations that stem from the same facts, how can the ne bis in idem be safeguarded? Does the current legal framework foresee rules to coordinate different sets of parallel or consecutive punitive proceedings? How can excessive sanctioning be prevented and is there a need for an integrated approach to ne bis in idem in EU law?

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