#2025-885 DCLaw Aiming to Extract France from the Trap of Drug Trafficking
AI-generated summary for informational purposes only. Not legal advice. See the original source for the authoritative text.
The law aims to address and combat drug trafficking in France by implementing various measures affecting intelligence gathering and law enforcement procedures. It modifies existing regulations to facilitate communication between intelligence services, introduces a new prosecutorial role for organized crime, and establishes penalties for the violation of administrative closure orders of establishments linked to drug-related offenses. Additionally, it seeks to prevent the misuse of cash payments in rental operations for vehicles, enhancing monitoring capabilities within the framework of national security.
AI-generated summary. May contain errors. Refer to official sources for legal decisions.
Key Changes
- Modifies the code of security to ease information sharing between intelligence services without prior authorization under certain conditions.
- Establishes a new prosecutor role dedicated to tackling organized crime, allowing for concurrent jurisdiction in major criminal cases.
- Introduces penalties for failing to comply with administrative closure orders related to establishments involved in drug trafficking.
Obligations
What this law requires
Intelligence services must obtain authorization from the Prime Minister after consultation with the National Commission for Control of Intelligence Techniques (CNCTR) before transmitting intelligence between services, except in cases where this requirement is removed by the law
Establishments linked to drug-related offenses that receive administrative closure orders must comply with those orders, with violations subject to penalties
Vehicle rental operators must implement monitoring and prevent misuse of cash payments in rental operations as part of national security framework
A new prosecutorial role for organized crime must be established within the prosecutorial structure to handle organized crime cases
Intelligence services must enhance communication capabilities between services subject to constitutional protections of the right to privacy