Other

#2002-1110Decree No. 2002-1110 of August 30, 2002, on Sample Collection Procedures

🇫🇷France··Other·Medium Impact·View source ↗

AI-generated summary for informational purposes only. Not legal advice. See the original source for the authoritative text.

🇬🇧 English

This French law outlines how customs agents must collect samples for potential legal expertise. It focuses on maintaining the integrity and proper documentation of these samples. The procedure must involve the owner or holder of the merchandise and ensure samples are sealed and well-documented for legal proceedings.

AI-generated summary. May contain errors. Refer to official sources for legal decisions.

Key Changes

  • Customs agents must collect two identical samples
  • Samples are sealed and documented for court use
  • Sample collection must be witnessed by related parties or witnesses

Obligations

What this law requires

high

Customs agents must collect exactly two identical samples when conducting sample collection under Article 389 bis of the Customs Code

Customs agents (agents verbalisateurs)
operational
high

Both samples must be sealed and preserved until final settlement of the case

Customs agents and customs administration
operational
high

The first sample must be transmitted to the investigating judge or instance judge; the second sample must be retained by the customs service

Customs administration
operational
high

Sample collection must be conducted in the presence of either the merchandise owner, holder, their representative, or failing that, two witnesses not belonging to the customs administration

Customs agents (agents verbalisateurs)
operational
high

Each sample must bear an identification label containing: owner/holder name and address (if applicable), exact merchandise description, date/time/location of collection, sequential sample number, and signatures of collecting agents

Customs agents
disclosure

Affected Parties

Customs agentsMerchandise owners or holders

Tags

customs,sample collection,legal procedure