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White‑collar Crime in Poland (2026): Corporate Exposure, Illegal‑evidence Rules & Pre‑trial Detention

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

The landscape of white-collar crime in Poland shifted materially in the first quarter of 2026 with two distinct legislative events: piecemeal amendments to the Penal Code (Kodeks karny) that took effect on 29 January 2026, and a far broader criminal procedure reform package that the President vetoed on 27 March 2026. Together, these developments have left corporate defendants, compliance officers and boards navigating a patchwork of new substantive rules on one hand and frozen procedural reforms on the other. Parliament’s ongoing attempts to overturn the veto only deepen the uncertainty, making immediate action essential for any organisation that operates in, or is exposed to enforcement by, Poland’s prosecutorial authorities.

What this means for business right now:

  • Corporate exposure is rising. The January 2026 Penal Code amendments broadened the scope of selected economic offences and adjusted penalty thresholds, increasing the personal liability surface for directors and senior managers.
  • Evidence rules remain in flux. The vetoed reform would have introduced a statutory framework for excluding illegally obtained evidence. Without it, prosecutors retain broad discretion to introduce contested materials at trial.
  • Pre‑trial detention practices are unchanged, for now. Proposed caps on pre‑trial detention for economic offences were part of the vetoed package, meaning current rules, and their liberal application, continue to apply to white collar investigations.

Criminal Procedure Reform Poland 2026: Legislative Timeline and Current Status

Understanding the current state of white-collar crime Poland enforcement requires mapping the two parallel tracks of reform. One set of provisions is already in force; the other remains stalled pending a constitutional override vote.

Key dates and legislative status

  • 29 January 2026, Penal Code amendments enter into force. Published in the Dziennik Ustaw (Poland’s official journal of laws), these provisions amend selected articles of the Penal Code relating to economic offences, including adjusted thresholds for significant damage in fraud (Art. 296 k.k.) and expanded definitions within the money-laundering provisions (Art. 299 k.k.).
  • 27 March 2026, Presidential veto of the criminal procedure reform act. The President refused to sign the comprehensive reform of the Code of Criminal Procedure (Kodeks postępowania karnego), citing concerns over the separation of powers and the scope of proposed evidence-exclusion rules. The veto was formally communicated via the Office of the President.
  • April–May 2026, Parliamentary override proceedings. The Sejm must secure a three-fifths majority to overturn the veto. As of 7 May 2026, that vote has not yet occurred, and the required majority is not assured.

Summary timeline of 2026 legislative acts

Date Legislative event Current status
29 Jan 2026 Penal Code amendments (selected economic offences, penalty thresholds, money-laundering definitions) In force
27 Mar 2026 Presidential veto of Code of Criminal Procedure reform (evidence exclusion, detention caps, prosecutorial powers) Vetoed, pending parliamentary override vote
Apr–May 2026 Sejm override proceedings (three-fifths majority required) Ongoing, outcome uncertain

The practical effect is a split regime. Substantive criminal law now carries broader offence definitions and stiffer penalties for economic misconduct, while the procedural safeguards that were designed to accompany those changes, including evidence-exclusion guardrails and detention limits, remain unavailable to defendants. Industry observers expect this imbalance to increase compliance risk across all sectors with significant operations in Poland.

Illegal Evidence Poland: Current Rules, Vetoed Provisions and Practical Consequences

The admissibility of illegally obtained evidence is the single most contested issue in the criminal procedure reform Poland 2026 debate. For corporate defendants and their counsel, the treatment of evidence dictates investigation strategy, internal review design and the defensibility of privileged materials.

What is “illegal evidence” under Polish law, the baseline

Polish criminal procedure, as codified in the Code of Criminal Procedure (Kodeks postępowania karnego, or k. p. k. ), does not contain a broad exclusionary rule comparable to the Fourth Amendment framework in the United States. The general principle under Article 170 k. p. k. is that a court may admit any evidence relevant to establishing the facts of a case, provided it was not obtained through the use of prohibited methods listed in Article 171 k. p. k. (such as coercion, unlawful threats or hypnosis). Beyond those narrow prohibitions, courts have historically exercised wide discretion.

The Supreme Court (Sąd Najwyższy) has repeatedly held that the manner in which evidence was obtained does not automatically render it inadmissible, a position that significantly favours the prosecution in white collar investigations.

What the vetoed reforms would have done

The criminal procedure reform package vetoed on 27 March 2026 would have introduced a new provision requiring courts to exclude evidence obtained in a manner that constituted a gross violation of statutory rules or fundamental rights. In practical terms, this would have created a statutory basis for defence motions to suppress evidence gathered through, for example, surveillance conducted without proper judicial authorisation, or data seized in breach of professional privilege rules. The reform also proposed an explicit prohibition on the use of evidence obtained through entrapment that exceeded the scope authorised by the supervising court.

Had the veto not been issued, the likely practical effect would have been a fundamental shift in the dynamics of illegal evidence Poland disputes: defence lawyers would have possessed a codified tool to challenge improperly obtained financial records, intercepted communications, and materials from cross-border requests that failed to comply with mutual legal assistance protocols.

How prosecutors and courts are likely to treat evidence obtained in contested ways

With the veto in place, the pre-reform framework continues. Prosecutors retain the ability to introduce evidence that may have been gathered in procedurally questionable circumstances, and courts will assess admissibility on a case-by-case basis without a bright-line exclusionary rule. Early indications suggest this creates several operational risks for corporate defendants:

  • Internal investigation materials. Documents produced during a company’s own internal review may be requisitioned by prosecutors and introduced at trial, even if privilege was claimed over them.
  • Cross-border data. Evidence obtained via international cooperation mechanisms that did not fully comply with local procedural safeguards may still be admitted.
  • Surveillance products. Wiretap data or electronic monitoring outputs that exceeded the original court order’s scope face a lower threshold for admission than the vetoed reform would have imposed.

Evidence types and likely admissibility treatment

Evidence type Risk of exclusion (current law) Practical defence steps
Wiretap / electronic surveillance exceeding court-order scope Low, courts typically admit unless Art. 171 k.p.k. directly violated Challenge authorisation scope; file constitutional complaint if fundamental rights breached
Internal investigation documents requisitioned by prosecutors Very low, no general privilege shield Engage external counsel from the outset; separate privileged legal advice from factual work-product
Cross-border evidence (MLAT or European Investigation Order) Low to moderate, depends on compliance with bilateral treaty Audit compliance with applicable MLAT or EIO requirements; challenge at the admissibility hearing
Financial records obtained during tax audits and transferred to prosecutors Low, administrative-to-criminal data transfers are broadly permitted Ensure proper documentation of data-transfer authority; contest scope of initial audit authorisation
Whistleblower statements / anonymous tips Minimal, content is assessed for reliability, not legality of source Challenge factual reliability and test the chain of custody of corroborating materials

Corporate Criminal Liability Poland: Exposure Under the 2026 Rules

Poland’s regime for corporate criminal liability operates through two principal channels: the Act of 28 October 2002 on the Liability of Collective Entities for Acts Prohibited Under Penalty (Ustawa o odpowiedzialności podmiotów zbiorowych), and the personal criminal liability of directors and officers under the Penal Code. The January 2026 amendments affect the second channel directly by adjusting penalty ranges for economic offences and widening select definitions.

Modes of corporate liability

  • Entity-level liability. Under the 2002 Act, a collective entity (company) may face sanctions, including fines of up to PLN 5 million, if a natural person acting on its behalf commits an offence and the entity failed to exercise due diligence in supervision. A prerequisite is a prior conviction of the natural person, although proposed reforms (separate from the vetoed package) seek to remove this requirement.
  • Managerial personal liability. Articles 296, 296a and 299–306 of the Penal Code impose direct criminal liability on directors and officers for mismanagement causing significant damage, corrupt payments, money laundering and tax offences. The January 2026 amendments adjusted the qualifying thresholds for “significant damage” and broadened the predicate offence list for money-laundering prosecutions under Art. 299 k.k.
  • De facto management doctrine. Courts may also attribute liability to persons exercising actual managerial control, even without formal board appointments, a risk for shadow directors and controlling shareholders.

Compliance risk Poland: what immediate steps should companies take?

For boards, CFOs and general counsel, the combined effect of broader substantive offences and unrestrained prosecutorial evidence-gathering powers demands concrete, documented action:

  • Conduct an immediate gap analysis of internal controls against the amended Art. 296 and Art. 299 k.k. thresholds.
  • Review anti-money-laundering procedures to reflect the expanded predicate-offence definitions effective 29 January 2026.
  • Confirm that D&O insurance policies respond to criminal defence costs and are adequate for the revised penalty environment.
  • Establish or refresh a direct reporting line from the compliance function to the supervisory board or audit committee.
  • Document board-level oversight of risk management decisions to demonstrate due diligence if entity-level liability is ever alleged.
  • Engage specialist external counsel to advise on pre-investigation preparedness.

Corporate exposure comparison by entity type

Entity type Typical reporting / liability exposure Practical mitigation
Public company (listed) High disclosure obligation; greater regulatory scrutiny; higher D&O reputational risk Strengthened internal controls, fast escalation to board, immediate investor communications plan
Private company Director personal liability risk; less market pressure but similar prosecutorial tools Tight financial controls, vendor due diligence, privileged internal review
State‑owned enterprise Political scrutiny; possible special enforcement priorities Engage specialist counsel early; document chain of command and decision-making

Pre‑Trial Detention Poland: Thresholds, Practice and Defence Strategies

Pre-trial detention remains one of the most powerful, and most feared, tools in white collar investigations in Poland. For executives and directors, the risk of arrest during an investigation can be professionally and personally devastating, even if charges are ultimately never proven.

What changed or was proposed for detention in 2026

The January 2026 Penal Code amendments did not directly alter the pre-trial detention rules, which are governed by Articles 249–265 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. However, the vetoed reform package included several significant proposals affecting pre-trial detention Poland practice:

  • A proposed absolute cap on pre-trial detention for economic offences at 12 months during the investigation phase (the current law permits extensions beyond this with court approval).
  • A mandatory judicial review hearing at which the suspect must be present and represented by counsel before any detention beyond 3 months could be authorised.
  • A prohibition on using the severity of the anticipated sentence as the sole ground for detention, a provision aimed directly at economic cases where prosecutors routinely cite high statutory penalties to justify keeping suspects in custody.

All of these proposals were suspended by the 27 March 2026 veto. The existing framework, under which courts may extend detention repeatedly on broad grounds including the severity of the anticipated penalty and the complexity of the investigation, remains fully in effect.

Practical impact on directors and executives

In practice, prosecutors in white collar investigations typically seek pre-trial detention on the grounds of flight risk, risk of evidence tampering, or the severity of the anticipated sentence. For executives of companies under investigation, the risk factors include:

  • International travel patterns. Frequent travel or foreign residency increases the assessed flight risk.
  • Access to company systems and staff. Prosecutors may argue that a director in their position could destroy evidence or influence witnesses.
  • Asset seizure accompaniment. Detention applications often coincide with property-freezing orders, compounding the financial pressure on individuals.

Defence and mitigation strategies

Defence counsel should prepare for the possibility of detention applications from the earliest stages of an investigation. Key mitigation tactics include:

  • Proactive voluntary surrender of travel documents and a formal undertaking to remain within the jurisdiction.
  • Early engagement with the prosecutor to demonstrate cooperation and reduced flight risk.
  • Preparation of a detailed bail-and-supervision proposal with property sureties, electronic monitoring, and a prohibition on contact with co-suspects.
  • Immediate challenge of detention orders through zażalenie (interlocutory appeal) to the competent court, emphasising the proportionality requirements under the European Convention on Human Rights.

How to Run a White Collar Investigation in Poland: Steps, Privilege and Illegal‑Evidence Risk

When a company becomes aware of potential criminal exposure, whether through a whistleblower report, a regulatory inquiry, or media coverage, an internal investigation must be designed to protect the organisation without inadvertently handing prosecutors material they can use against individuals or the entity itself.

Step-by-step: preservation, counsel and forensic protocols

  • Immediate preservation. Issue a litigation-hold notice covering all potentially relevant documents, electronic communications and financial records. Poland does not have a statutory document-preservation obligation equivalent to US litigation holds, but destruction of evidence after becoming aware of an investigation may constitute obstruction.
  • Engage external counsel. Appoint specialist criminal defence counsel to direct the investigation. In Poland, attorney-client privilege (tajemnica adwokacka) attaches to communications with a qualified adwokat or radca prawny, but does not extend to documents created by non-lawyers working at the lawyer’s direction unless specific conditions are met.
  • Define scope and forensic standards. Commission forensic data collection by qualified providers. Ensure chain-of-custody documentation meets evidentiary standards should the materials later be disclosed to authorities.

Data collection, cross-border evidence and privilege

Multinational companies face particular challenges. Data transfers out of Poland must comply with GDPR requirements, while materials brought into Poland from other jurisdictions via European Investigation Orders or MLATs must satisfy the procedural requirements of the sending state. Under the current evidence regime, where the vetoed exclusionary rule does not apply, prosecutors may seek to use materials that were lawfully collected abroad but arrived in Poland through channels that did not meet every Polish procedural safeguard. Defence counsel should audit the chain of acquisition for any cross-border evidence and identify procedural defects early.

Privilege remains narrow. In-house counsel communications may not attract the same protection as external-lawyer advice, and corporate internal investigation reports that contain factual findings (as opposed to pure legal analysis) are routinely considered discoverable by prosecutors.

Reporting to authorities, benefits and risks

Factor Self-reporting Remaining silent
Prosecutorial goodwill / sentencing credit Possible mitigation at sentencing; cooperation may reduce likelihood of detention for individuals No credit; risk of harsher treatment if misconduct is later discovered independently
Control over narrative Company can frame facts and demonstrate remediation Narrative controlled entirely by prosecutors
Privilege waiver risk High, self-reporting typically requires disclosure of investigation findings Lower, but evidence may be requisitioned anyway
Regulatory consequences May reduce fines under sector-specific regulators (e.g., KNF for financial institutions) Full exposure to statutory penalties

How does the March 27, 2026 veto affect ongoing investigations?

For companies that have an internal investigation in progress, the veto means that any expectation of stricter evidence-exclusion rules protecting internally generated materials is now unfounded. All documents produced during the investigation remain potentially accessible to prosecutors under existing requisition powers. Compliance risk Poland teams should reassess their investigation protocols immediately, ring-fencing pure legal advice from factual findings and limiting the circulation of interim reports.

Compliance and Governance Checklist for Boards, CFOs and General Counsel

The following checklist reflects the combined effect of the 29 January 2026 Penal Code amendments and the unchanged procedural landscape following the 27 March 2026 veto. It is designed for board and audit committee use.

  1. Map all economic-offence exposure points against the amended Penal Code provisions (Art. 296, 296a, 299–306 k.k.).
  2. Update the corporate anti-money-laundering programme to incorporate the expanded predicate-offence definitions.
  3. Review and test the whistleblower channel for compliance with the Polish Whistleblower Protection Act and EU Directive 2019/1937 transposition.
  4. Confirm that D&O liability insurance covers criminal defence costs under Polish law, including pre-trial detention hearings.
  5. Establish an escalation protocol with defined triggers for engaging external criminal counsel.
  6. Conduct board-level training on director liability under the amended Penal Code, including scenarios for fraud, bribery and AML violations.
  7. Implement document-retention and litigation-hold policies that can be activated within 24 hours of an investigation trigger.
  8. Audit cross-border data-transfer mechanisms (GDPR, MLAT, EIO) and assess vulnerability to contested-evidence arguments.
  9. Review supply-chain and third-party due diligence procedures, particularly for agents and intermediaries in high-risk jurisdictions.
  10. Appoint a designated crisis-response team with pre-agreed authority levels for dealing with prosecutorial dawn raids or search warrants.
  11. Test the communication plan for investor relations (listed companies) and media management in the event of a criminal probe.
  12. Schedule a semi-annual compliance risk Poland review at the supervisory board or audit committee level, with documented minutes.

Practical Legal Scenarios: Board‑Level Responses

Scenario 1, Tax fraud allegation. A regional tax office refers a case to the prosecutor’s office alleging that a company’s CFO approved fictitious invoices to reduce VAT liability. Immediate steps: engage external criminal counsel; issue a litigation hold on all financial records for the relevant period; suspend the CFO’s signing authority pending preliminary review; notify the supervisory board and D&O insurer. The defence path focuses on demonstrating that the invoices reflected genuine transactions and challenging the evidentiary basis of the referral.

Scenario 2, Alleged bribery in a subsidiary. An anonymous whistleblower reports that a subsidiary’s country manager authorised facilitation payments to local officials. Immediate steps: preserve all communications and payment records; engage counsel with expertise in both Polish and local anti-corruption law; commission an independent forensic review. The criminal consequences for executives in bribery cases can include personal imprisonment, making rapid containment critical.

Scenario 3, Suspicious payments and AML exposure. The compliance team identifies a pattern of transactions that may constitute layering under the expanded Art. 299 k.k. definitions effective 29 January 2026. Immediate steps: file a suspicious transaction report with the General Inspector of Financial Information (GIIF); suspend the relevant transaction channel; conduct a privileged legal review to assess the company’s reporting obligations and potential liability exposure.

Recommendations: A 30/60/90‑Day Playbook for White‑Collar Crime Poland Preparedness

  • Days 1–30. Commission a legal gap analysis of the 29 January 2026 Penal Code amendments and their impact on your organisation. Confirm D&O coverage. Brief the board.
  • Days 31–60. Update internal investigation protocols to reflect the current evidence regime (no exclusionary rule). Train the compliance team and in-house counsel on the revised thresholds for economic offences.
  • Days 61–90. Stress-test the crisis-response plan with a tabletop exercise simulating a dawn raid. Review cross-border data flows. Schedule the first semi-annual compliance review at board level.

Organisations with operations in Poland should not wait for the parliamentary override vote to act. Whether the veto stands or falls, the substantive Penal Code changes are already in force, and the prosecutorial powers Poland authorities wield under the existing procedural code remain formidable. Consulting a specialist lawyer through the Global Law Experts directory is the prudent first step toward protecting your board, your executives and your business from the evolving landscape of white-collar crime Poland enforcement.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Maciej Zaborowski at Kopeć & Zaborowski Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Office of the President of the Republic of Poland
  2. Sejm, Legislation Portal
  3. ISAP, Internetowy System Aktów Prawnych (Dziennik Ustaw)
  4. Ministry of Justice (Poland)
  5. Prokuratura Krajowa (National Public Prosecutor’s Office)
  6. CriminalLawPoland
  7. Chambers Global Practice Guides, White-Collar Crime 2025: Poland
  8. Dudkowiak & Putyra, Corporate Criminal Liability

FAQs

What changes to criminal procedure were vetoed on March 27, 2026 and how do they affect evidence rules?
The President vetoed a comprehensive reform of the Code of Criminal Procedure that would have introduced a statutory basis for excluding evidence obtained through gross violations of procedural rules or fundamental rights. Because the veto stands, courts continue to apply the pre-existing, permissive admissibility framework, and there is no bright-line exclusionary rule for illegally obtained evidence in Poland.
Under current law, Poland does not have a general exclusionary rule. Evidence obtained through prohibited methods (coercion, threats, hypnosis) under Article 171 k.p.k. is excluded, but evidence gathered through other procedural irregularities is assessed on a case-by-case basis. Unless parliament overturns the veto, this position is unlikely to change in 2026.
The proposed caps on pre-trial detention for economic offences, including a 12-month maximum during the investigation phase, were part of the vetoed reform package. Until the veto is overturned or new legislation is passed, courts may continue to extend detention beyond 12 months, and prosecutors can cite anticipated sentence severity as a ground for detention.
Companies should conduct a gap analysis of the January 2026 Penal Code amendments, update AML procedures, confirm D&O coverage, establish a direct compliance-to-board reporting line, prepare document-retention protocols, and engage specialist criminal defence counsel on a standby basis.
Yes. In Poland, the scope of attorney-client privilege is narrower than in common-law jurisdictions. Factual findings in internal investigation reports, as distinct from pure legal analysis, are generally accessible to prosecutors through requisition orders. Companies should structure investigations to separate privileged legal advice from factual work-product.

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White‑collar Crime in Poland (2026): Corporate Exposure, Illegal‑evidence Rules & Pre‑trial Detention

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