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On 24 March 2026, Portugal’s Minister of Justice presented a draft bill on the exchange of information on crime and criminal activities to the Assembleia da República, opening a parliamentary debate that will reshape how Portugal shares law‑enforcement data with EU partners. For criminal defence practitioners, the exchange of information Portugal framework under discussion introduces faster data‑sharing channels, broader categories of transmissible evidence, and new automated processes, all of which narrow the window available to raise privilege objections or challenge admissibility. The bill arrives against a backdrop of wider European moves toward integrated criminal data exchange, yet existing public commentary remains dominated by tax‑focused AEOI explainers and high‑level policy summaries, leaving a critical gap in practical, defence‑oriented guidance.
This article fills that gap with a section‑by‑section analysis of the draft provisions, a detailed assessment of fair‑trial risks, and an actionable tactical checklist that defence counsel can deploy immediately.
The draft Exchange‑of‑Information Bill would create a unified domestic legal basis for Portuguese authorities, principally the Polícia Judiciária (PJ), the Polícia de Segurança Pública (PSP), the Guarda Nacional Republicana (GNR), and the Ministry of Justice’s central authority, to share offence‑related data with counterparts across the EU under the law‑enforcement cooperation framework. The government’s stated objectives include aligning Portugal with the EU Directive on information exchange between law‑enforcement authorities, accelerating response times for cross‑border evidence requests, and establishing minimum data‑protection safeguards for processing criminal intelligence.
Industry observers expect the most significant operational shift to be the introduction of a dual‑track system: automatic sharing of certain offence‑related metadata (suspect identifiers, offence classifications, and investigative status flags) alongside a retained exchange‑on‑request channel subject to judicial oversight. From a defence perspective, the practical effect is twofold:
To understand the draft bill’s significance, defence practitioners must distinguish between the tax‑focused automatic exchange of information (AEOI) regime and the law‑enforcement exchange channels the bill targets. Portugal has participated in the OECD’s Common Reporting Standard (CRS) since 2016, exchanging financial‑account information automatically with over 100 jurisdictions under the Global Forum on Transparency and Exchange of Information for Tax Purposes. The OECD’s Second Round Peer Review of Portugal assessed the country’s tax‑exchange framework as “Largely Compliant,” and a 2025 update confirmed continued adherence to CRS standards. As PwC’s Portugal tax summary notes, this AEOI framework covers financial‑institution reporting obligations and cross‑border tax transparency, it does not govern criminal‑evidence sharing.
On the law‑enforcement side, judicial cooperation Portugal has historically relied on a patchwork of instruments: bilateral MLA treaties, the Council of Europe’s 1959 Convention on Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters, the 2000 EU Convention on Mutual Assistance, the European Investigation Order (EIO) regime, and the European Criminal Records Information System (ECRIS). Eurojust has served as the coordinating body for complex multi‑jurisdictional cases, while Europol provides intelligence‑sharing infrastructure. More recently, the EU’s legislative efforts on e‑evidence, including the European Production Order and the European Preservation Order, have further expanded the channels through which Portuguese authorities may request or provide digital evidence.
Portugal has also enacted domestic legislation transposing EU directives on combating terrorism and serious crime. A recent example is the decree‑law enhancing Portugal’s framework to combat the dissemination of terrorist content online, which imposed removal obligations on hosting‑service providers and established cooperation protocols with foreign authorities, as analysed by CMS. These successive layers mean that the draft bill does not enter a vacuum, it seeks to consolidate and streamline an already complex web of judicial cooperation Portugal relies on.
| Date / Period | Instrument | Effect on Evidence Flows |
|---|---|---|
| 1959 (accession) | Council of Europe MLA Convention | Established formal MLA channel for criminal matters; request‑based, typically slow |
| 2000 (transposition) | EU Convention on Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters | Expanded MLA scope to include controlled deliveries, joint investigation teams, and interception of telecommunications |
| 2012 | ECRIS operational launch | Enabled systematic exchange of criminal‑record data between EU Member States |
| 2016 | CRS / AEOI implementation | Automatic tax‑related financial data exchange (not criminal evidence) |
| 2017–2018 | European Investigation Order (EIO) transposition | Created a single legal instrument for requesting cross‑border investigative measures within the EU |
| 24 Mar 2026 | Draft Exchange‑of‑Information Bill, parliamentary debate | Proposes unified domestic basis for automatic and on‑request criminal data exchange under EU law‑enforcement cooperation framework |
The Minister of Justice’s speech on 24 March 2026 set out the government’s rationale: Portugal must domestically implement the EU directive requiring law‑enforcement authorities to share information “quickly and systematically” while maintaining proportionality and fundamental‑rights protections. The core architecture of the draft bill, as described during the parliamentary debate, includes the following headline provisions:
Three areas of the draft merit particular scrutiny from defence counsel. First, the definition of “crime and criminal activities”, if interpreted broadly, routine criminal‑investigation data from minor offences could enter the automatic‑exchange pipeline, creating disproportionate surveillance risks. Second, the data categories eligible for automatic exchange: the inclusion of telecommunications identifiers and digital metadata without prior judicial approval represents a significant expansion compared with the current EIO regime, which requires dual‑authority endorsement.
Third, the urgency provisions: retrospective judicial validation is a familiar mechanism in Portuguese procedural law (compare the existing rules on urgent searches), but the time window for retrospective review and the standard of justification required will determine whether these provisions survive constitutional scrutiny under the Portuguese Constitution’s protection of fundamental rights.
The most consequential dimension of the draft bill for criminal defence practice lies not in its institutional architecture but in how evidence obtained through these accelerated channels will be used in Portuguese courtrooms and in coordinated prosecutions across EU Member States. Evidence circulation in the EU has long been governed by the principle of mutual recognition, but mutual recognition without harmonised procedural safeguards creates structural asymmetries that defence counsel must address proactively.
Under the current MLA and EIO framework, the defence typically learns of cross‑border evidence only at the disclosure stage or when the prosecution introduces it in court. The draft bill’s automatic‑exchange mechanism could compress this timeline dramatically: evidence may be transmitted, processed, and acted upon by Portuguese authorities before the defence has any notice. This raises fundamental questions about equality of arms under Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR).
As eucrim has analysed, the fragmented nature of procedural remedies across EU Member States means that a defendant often cannot effectively challenge the legality of evidence gathering in the issuing state. If Portuguese authorities receive data from a German or French investigation, the defendant in Portugal may have no standing or mechanism to raise a procedural deficiency in the originating jurisdiction. The draft bill does not appear to create a domestic remedy for challenging foreign‑evidence gathering, a gap that early indications suggest defence practitioners will need to address through constitutional arguments and direct applications to the ECHR.
Defence counsel should demand, at the earliest possible stage, full disclosure of the chain of custody: the legal basis under which data was initially collected, the authority that authorised its transmission, the route of exchange (automatic or on‑request), and any processing or analysis carried out before it entered the Portuguese file. Without this chain, meaningful admissibility challenges are impossible.
Perhaps the most sensitive risk is that the broad data categories eligible for automatic exchange, particularly telecommunications identifiers and digital metadata, could capture lawyer‑client communications or derivative metadata revealing the fact, timing, and participants of privileged consultations. Portuguese procedural law (Code of Criminal Procedure, Articles 135–137) protects professional secrecy, and the Portuguese Bar Association has consistently defended the principle that communications between lawyers and clients are inviolable. At the European level, the CCBE’s March 2026 Contribution to the Rule of Law Report specifically warned about the risk that new information‑exchange regimes could erode legal professional privilege if adequate filtering mechanisms are not embedded at the point of transmission.
Defence counsel must proactively flag privileged material. The likely practical effect will be that passive reliance on post‑transmission judicial review will be insufficient, once metadata has been transmitted to a foreign authority, practical confidentiality is lost regardless of any subsequent exclusion order. Pre‑emptive confidentiality orders, registered privilege logs, and early notification to the competent judge are essential tools.
Portuguese law provides several procedural avenues for challenging improperly obtained evidence. Article 126 of the Code of Criminal Procedure prohibits the use of evidence obtained through methods that violate fundamental rights, and Article 32 of the Portuguese Constitution guarantees the right to a fair trial and the presumption of innocence. When evidence enters the Portuguese file through the new exchange mechanism, defence counsel should consider motions grounded in the following arguments:
Sample exclusion‑motion language: “The defence respectfully moves the court to exclude from the trial file all data items received under the automatic‑exchange channel pursuant to [reference to draft bill / enacted provision], on the grounds that said data was transmitted without prior judicial authorisation as required by Article 32 of the Constitution of the Portuguese Republic and Article 6 ECHR, and that its admission would violate the defendant’s right to a fair trial and equality of arms.”
Sample preservation‑request language: “The defence requests that the court order the competent authority to preserve, in unaltered form, all chain‑of‑custody records, transmission logs, and processing annotations pertaining to data received from [foreign authority / Member State] under the exchange‑of‑information mechanism, so as to enable meaningful review of the lawfulness of its collection, transmission, and use.”
The draft bill does not replace existing judicial cooperation instruments, it adds a layer. Defence lawyers must understand which channel will be used when, because different mechanisms carry different procedural safeguards and different points of intervention for the defence. ECRIS Portugal currently handles the automated exchange of criminal‑record data and will continue to do so; the new bill would supplement ECRIS by enabling the exchange of investigative data, intelligence, evidence, and metadata, that ECRIS was never designed to transmit. Eurojust will retain its coordination role in complex multi‑jurisdictional cases, and the MLA channel will continue for requests that require the exercise of coercive powers (searches, seizures, compelled testimony).
The European Production Order and European Preservation Order, once fully operational, will create additional direct channels for obtaining digital evidence from service providers.
| Scenario | Likely Primary Mechanism | Defence Intervention Point |
|---|---|---|
| Routine sharing of suspect identifiers and offence classification with another EU Member State | Automatic exchange under the new bill | Limited, pre‑emptive privilege flags and post‑transmission chain‑of‑custody review |
| Request for content of communications (emails, messages) from a foreign investigation | EIO or formal MLA (judicial authorisation required) | Challenge dual‑authority compliance; request redactions and limited‑use orders before transmission |
| Multi‑jurisdiction coordinated investigation (organised crime, terrorism) | Eurojust coordination + combination of new bill (metadata) and EIO (intrusive measures) | Notify co‑defence counsel across jurisdictions; apply for Eurojust coordination in defence interests; challenge scope of joint investigation team mandate |
| Criminal‑record check for sentencing or extradition proceedings | ECRIS (unchanged) | Verify accuracy of records; request rectification of errors through ECRIS‑TCN channel |
| Urgent threat (terrorism, imminent harm) | Expedited exchange under the new bill (no prior judicial authorisation) | Demand retrospective judicial validation within statutory time window; challenge if validation is delayed or deficient |
Regardless of the exact timing of enactment, the legislative direction is clear. Defence practitioners with active or anticipated cross‑border cases involving Portugal should take the following immediate steps:
| Provision / Mechanism | Likely Effect for Defence | Immediate Recommended Response |
|---|---|---|
| Automatic sharing of offence‑related metadata with EU partners | Faster cross‑border tracing, reduced lead time for evidence production, may bypass traditional MLA delays | File early preservation requests; flag privilege issues; demand disclosure of legal basis and chain logs |
| Exchange on request (judicial channel) | Maintains judicial oversight but can be used to seek remote access or copies of evidence | Seek judicial review of scope; request redactions and limited‑use orders |
| Use of Eurojust coordination | Increased multi‑jurisdiction coordination; risk of parallel investigations and evidence duplication | Notify co‑defence counsel across jurisdictions; use Eurojust channels to request coordination in defence interests |
| Urgency provisions (no prior judicial authorisation) | Immediate data transmission in imminent‑threat situations; retrospective validation only | Challenge adequacy and timeliness of retrospective judicial validation; demand full disclosure of urgency justification |
| Data‑protection and retention safeguards (GDPR / LED import) | Potential limits on retention and purpose; but enforcement depends on CNPD oversight capacity | File CNPD complaints where data is retained beyond stated purpose; seek deletion orders post‑proceedings |
The draft Exchange‑of‑Information Bill represents the most significant expansion of Portugal’s cross‑border evidence sharing capacity in over a decade. Defence lawyers cannot afford to wait for enactment to prepare. The tools exist now, preservation requests, privilege logs, confidentiality orders, admissibility challenges grounded in constitutional and ECHR principles, and should be deployed immediately in every active cross‑border matter. As the bill progresses through committee and plenary stages, practitioners should track amendments closely, engage with the CNPD and the Portuguese Bar Association, and coordinate with defence colleagues across the EU to ensure that the fundamental guarantees of a fair trial are not collateral damage in the pursuit of faster judicial cooperation.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Specific matters should be discussed with a qualified legal professional. Last updated: 1 June 2026.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Vânia Costa Ramos at Carlos Pinto de Abreu e Associados, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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