<Commission>{LIBE}Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs</Commission>
LIBE_OJ(2018)1127_1
<TitreType>DRAFT PROGRAMME</TitreType>
Hearing
Tuesday 27 November 2018, 14.30 – 18.30
Brussels
Room: Jozsef Antall JAN 4Q2
ELECTRONIC EVIDENCE IN CRIMINAL MATTERS
Order of business
Introduction and presentation of the EP study
14.30 - 14.35 Welcoming and opening remarks by Claude MORAES, Chair of the Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs of the European Parliament
14.35 - 14.40 Introduction by the rapporteur Brigit SIPPEL
14.40 – 14.55Prof. Dr. BÖSE, Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn
Presentation of the study "An assessment of the Commission’s proposals on electronic evidence", commissioned by the EP Policy Department for Citizens' Rights and Constitutional Affairs at the request of the LIBE Committee
SESSION I
Obtaining e-evidence today: Practitioners’ experience with current instruments
15h00-16h00
15.00 - 15.10Markus HARTMANN, public prosecutor and head of the cybercrime central unit in North-Rhine Westphalia, Cologne
15.10 – 15.20Peter SCHNEIDERHAN, Deutscher Richterbund (German Judges' Association, author of their opinion)
15.20 – 15.30Jan KERKHOFS, Federal Magistrate at the Belgian Federal Prosecutor’s Office, Anti-Terrorism Section
15.30 – 15.40Iain G. MITCHELL QC, Chair of the CCBE surveillance working group, Council of Bars and Law Societies of Europe
15.40 – 16.00Q & A
SESSION II
E-evidence vis-à-vis current instruments:
Fundamental rights, necessity/proportionality and data protection issues
16h00-17h10
16.00 - 16.10Prof. Dr. Marko BOŠNJAK, Judge, European Court of Human Rights (ECHR)
16.10 - 16.20Albin DEARING, Programme Manager Research - Criminal Law and Criminal Justice, EU Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA)
16.20 – 16.30Joe MCNAMEE, EDRi
16.30 – 16.40 Wojciech WIEWIÓROWSKI, Assistant Supervisor, EDPS
16.40 – 16.50Emilie Brunet,Commission Nationale de l'Informatique et des Libertés (CNIL), France
16.50 – 17.10Q & A
SESSION III
Future implications of the new e-evidence instrument: the role of telecommunication providers (issues of legal certainty, feasibility for SMEs etc.)
17.10 – 17.20Eleni KYRIAKIDES, Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), United States
17.20 –17.30Laure WAGENER, Vodafone, Senior Advisor Data Regulation
17.30 –17.40Dr Maximilian SCHUBERT, EuroISPA, Vice Chair
17.40 – 18.00 O & A
18.00 –18.30 Final remarks and conclusion of the hearing
PRACTICAL GUIDELINES
The meeting is open to the public. However, for security reasons, participants who do not have a European Parliament access badge must obtain a pass in advance. Those wishing to obtain such a pass should register before 21 November close of business on the LIBE webpage for the hearing (http://www.europarl.europa.eu/committees/en/libe/events-hearings.html). Without proper registration, the Security Service will not provide entry passes.[1]
PRACTICAL GUIDELINES FOR THE DEBATE
• During the discussion, so as to make it possible for the highest number of parliamentarians to intervene, speaking time of speakers will be limited to the specified time allocated and speaking time of the Members to two minutes per contribution or question in order to ensure a fruitful discussion.
• Speakers wishing to supplement their speeches may do so in writing by submitting a document (preferably in English or French) in advance to the secretariat (email: libe-secretariat@europarl.europa.eu). These documents will be circulated during the meeting.