Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Gavel
Gavel - Credit: Brian Turner / Flickr - License: CC-BY
Crime
source protection
journalist
journalism
Public Prosecution Service
confidentiality
Ficq & Partners
OM
DJI
lawyer client confidentiality
Tuesday, 30 April 2024 - 09:30

Share this article:

Opens in a new window Opens in a new window Opens in a new window Opens in a new window Opens in a new window Opens in a new window

Prosecutor to stop spying on journalists without court approval; Lawyers also had enough

The Public Prosecution Service (OM) has adjusted its rules for spying on journalists’ conversations with suspects. From May 1, the authorities can only listen in on a conversation between a journalist and a suspect if an examining magistrate approves it beforehand, NOS reports. Lawyers have also had enough of being watched by the authorities, especially when talking to their clients in high-security prisons, law firm Ficq & Partners told AD.

The reason behind the OM’s change in policy is a conversation that reporters from De Correspondent had in 2022 with the three directions of the Stichting Hulptroepen Alliantie about what would later become known as the dodgy face mask deal. Last year, it turned out that the OM had tapped that conversation because of a criminal investigation into Sywert van Lienden and his business partners. De Correspondent chief editor Rob Wijnberg considered it a violation of journalistic source protection and threatened to take the matter to court.

At the time, the OM argued that it was spying on the suspects, not the journalists and that the prosecutors only found out shortly in advance that journalists would be involved in the conversation. The OM now says that “the course of events has raised questions among journalists,” and so it will tighten the rules.

Before a prosecutor can listen in on a conversation involving a journalist, they must get permission from the examining magistrate, the chief public prosecutor, and the Board of Attorneys General.

Lawyers have also had enough of being watched by the authorities, law firm Ficq & Partners told AD after a recent incident in which prison employees monitored their lawyer Juriaan de Vries while he met with a client - one of the convicts in the Marengo trial.

According to the law firm, De Vries was having a confidential conversation with his client when the prison guards suddenly pulled him out of the room to ask if he was okay, describing his behavior in the room - including that he was pacing and had raised his voice - as a reason for concern. That clearly shows that they were monitoring him, the law firm said.

Ficq & Partners has therefore decided that its employees will no longer talk to prison staff when they visit their clients in prison. They will also communicate with their clients even more circumspectly than before.

More like this

Image
Police guard in a detention center
Suspect arrested for attack on PowNed journalists at Sunneklaas celebration
Image
View from the train of the SABIC plant at Chemelot industrial park in Geleen, Limburg
Criminal investigation launched against SABIC over PFAS dumping in Dutch surface water
Image
Tata Steel in IJmuiden
Tata Steel to be prosecuted for intentional and unlawful pollution, Prosecutor announces
Image
De Paulusschool in Zoetermeer.
Primary school caretaker sentenced to 7 years in prison for sexual abuse of six children
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Trump administration starts campaign to "isolate" ICC for its "war" on U.S.
  • OLVG hospital in Amsterdam starts trial with late abortions
  • One killed in stabbing on Roermond street; Suspect arrested
  • Netherlands to start military exercises with Ukraine, help design new air defense system
  • Netherlands has Europe’s highest highway gasoline prices; Spain is cheapest

Top stories

  • OLVG hospital in Amsterdam starts trial with late abortions
  • One killed in stabbing on Roermond street; Suspect arrested
  • Netherlands to start military exercises with Ukraine, help design new air defense system
  • Ter Apel asylum center area declared safety risk zone after recent stabbings, fights
  • Suspect in ABN Amro worker's fatal stabbing also harassed four other women

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content