Dozens of white-collar-crime suspects are spending months in pre-trial custody, the outlet has reported
Numerous members of the Polish business community who have openly criticized the country’s authorities are being held in detention facilities for months without being charged with any crime, the Financial Times reported on Tuesday, citing legal pundits and entrepreneurs.
An increasing number of white-collar-crime suspects have been detained and held in pre-trial custody since the right-wing Law and Justice party came to power in 2015, according to experts interviewed by the paper. The measure is usually reserved for potentially violent criminals.
Przemyslaw Rosati, the head of the Polish Bar Council, described the current legal situation as a “catastrophe” reminiscent of the communist era. He told the FT that “the standards for detaining people have been lowered tragically,” and the basic rights of those arrested, including the presumption of innocence, are being trampled upon.
Last October, for example, Polish authorities arrested Maciej Witucki, the president of the Lewiatan confederation, the country’s leading employers’ organization. The entrepreneur, who had gained a reputation for criticizing the government’s economic policies, emerged as a suspect in an extortion case. However, he was never charged and was released 48 hours after his arrest following a massive outcry from the business community.
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Witucki told the FT that he was among the “lucky less than 10%” of suspects who were released by a court. However, according to Court Watch Poland, an NGO that monitors the Polish judiciary, 90% of detention requests are authorized despite judges having only 24 hours to rule on the matter.
According to the Helsinki Foundation for Human Rights (HFHR), the deep-seated legal practices also affected the length of time suspects spend in custody. According to the HFHR and Polish Bar Council data, in 2022, 240 people spent between 12 months and two years in pre-trial detention compared to just 39 in 2013.