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Cross-border crime in Belgium
Authors:Brice De Ruyver  Willy Bruggeman  Patrick Zanders
Affiliation:(1) the Department of Criminal Law, University of Ghent, Universiteitstraat 4, 9000 Ghent, Belgium;(2) Colonel of the State Police, Regional Commander East and West Flanders, Belgium;(3) Major of the State Police, Director International Relations, Belgium
Abstract:Conclusion In summary we can state that judicial assistance stands to lose further ground with respect to police cooperation. The Schengen Agreement authorized and legitimized the autonomy of the police which they themselves had already assumed in the legal assistance process. At national level the situation is worsened by the insufficient statutory regulation of the investigation prior to prosecution and by the absence of a well functioning judicial control thereof. Above all the research indicated that not all magistrates/prosecutors showed the same amount of interest in direct involvement in the international legal civil system, a disturbing conclusion in the light of the increasing internationalization of crime phenomena (De Ruyver, 1992).The manner in which the judicial assistance functions fails to deal with geographically determined and limited types of group crime, as in the study area. Crime organized in a businesslike manner and at the same time requiring greater expertise and cooperation with respect to the investigation prior to prosecution, remains a fortiori beyond concern.
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