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how to contest preventive arrest Romania

How to Appeal Preventive Arrest (arestare Preventivă) in Romania, Step‑by‑step (2026)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 4 days ago

Understanding how to appeal preventive arrest in Romania is critical for anyone facing detention or advising a person who has just been placed under arestare preventivă. Preventive arrest is the most severe pre‑trial measure available under the Romanian Codul de procedură penală (Criminal Procedure Code), and the law provides a narrow but decisive window, 48 hours from ruliing, in which to file a formal appeal. This guide sets out the complete procedure, from the moment the judge’s decision is ruled through the appeal hearing and its possible outcomes, including the documents needed, the applicable deadlines, indicative costs and the tactical considerations that have become especially important in 2026 as EPPO and anti‑corruption enforcement activity has intensified across Romania.

Overview of the Preventive Arrest Process and Who It Applies To

Preventive arrest (arestare preventivă) is ordered by a judecător de drepturi și libertăți (judge for rights and liberties) during the criminal investigation stage, or by the trial court after the case has been sent for trial. It may be imposed only when there is reasonable suspicion that the person committed a serious offence and at least one of the following statutory grounds is met: the accused poses a flight risk, there is a concrete risk that the accused will obstruct the investigation, or there is a risk to public order.

The measure applies to any individual, Romanian or foreign national, suspected or charged with an offence punishable by imprisonment. In 2026, industry observers expect that prosecutors are proposing preventive arrest more frequently in white‑collar and corporate‑fraud investigations, particularly in cases coordinated by the European Public Prosecutor’s Office (EPPO). This makes early, well‑prepared appeals essential for executives and corporate clients.

Upon ruling, the detained person has the right to be informed of the factual and legal grounds for arrest, the right to immediate access to defence counsel, and, for foreign nationals, the right to consular notification. The sections that follow explain who may file a preventive arrest appeal in Romania, the step‑by‑step procedure, the documents needed, the timeline and key deadlines, costs, 2026 practice changes and common pitfalls.

Eligibility and Requirements for Appealing Preventive Arrest

Who may file the appeal

The appeal (contestație) against a preventive arrest order may be filed by the detained person personally, by their chosen or court‑appointed defence counsel, or by a legal representative. The prosecutor also has the right to appeal an order that refused the arrest proposal. Where the detained person is a foreign national, the same standing applies; the court must provide interpretation and allow consular access.

When the appeal is allowed (legal basis)

An appeal is admissible against the decision of the judecător de drepturi și libertăți ordering arestare preventivă. The legal basis for the appeal is found in the Codul de procedură penală, which provides that the contestație must be filed within 48 hours from ruling. The appeal lies to the competent higher court, typically the relevant Curte de Apel (Court of Appeal) or the next‑level tribunal, depending on which court issued the original order. The appeal is also available against decisions extending preventive arrest.

The requirements for filing are that the decision must have been formally ruled or communicated, the 48‑hour deadline must not have expired, and the appeal must be submitted in writing (oral declarations recorded in the minutes at ruling may also constitute a valid filing).

Step‑by‑Step Procedure to Appeal Preventive Arrest in Romania

The following numbered steps describe the full preventive arrest appeal procedure from ruling to outcome. Use the summary table below for a quick reference, then read each step for tactical detail.

Step Who Does It Typical Duration
1. Obtain certified copy of the decision and instruct counsel Defence / detainee / legal counsel Immediately, within hours of ruling
2. Prepare and file the appeal (contestație) Defence counsel (or detained person) Within 48 hours from ruling
3. Court transmits appeal and requests prosecutor materials Court of Appeal (or competent court) 24–72 hours after filing
4. Appeal hearing before the appellate panel Appellate court (panel of judges) Usually within 5 working days from filing (practice: approximately 3–7 days)
5. Decision on appeal (release / alternative measure / confirmation) Appellate court At the hearing or shortly after

Step 1, Obtain the certified decision and instruct defence counsel

Immediately after the judge rules the arestare preventivă order, the detained person or their representative should request a copie certificată (certified copy) of the decision from the grefă (court registry). This document is essential: it contains the legal and factual reasoning that must be challenged on appeal. If no defence counsel has been retained, the court is obliged to appoint one. However, a court‑appointed lawyer may have limited time and resources; engaging experienced private counsel at the earliest opportunity significantly improves prospects. Confirm the exact time of ruling, every hour matters because the 48‑hour appeal deadline starts running at that precise moment.

Step 2, Prepare and file the appeal within 48 hours

The written appeal (contestație) must be filed within 48 hours from the moment of ruling. This is the single most important deadline in the process. The appeal is filed with the court that issued the original order; that court then transmits it to the competent appellate panel. Defence counsel typically drafts the appeal, but the detained person may also file it directly, including by recording an oral appeal in the court minutes at the ruling hearing. The appeal should set out clearly: the factual and legal grounds for challenge, the specific defects in the court’s reasoning, any supporting evidence (attached as exhibits), and the remedy sought (revocation of preventive arrest and, preferably, the specific alternative measure requested).

Ensure the appeal is signed, dated and accompanied by a power of attorney if filed by counsel. Filing can be done at the court registry or, in urgent circumstances, through the detention facility’s administrative channels.

Step 3, Court transmits appeal and requests prosecutor case materials

Once the appeal is registered, the court transmits the file to the competent appellate panel. The appellate court requests the prosecution’s case materials, including the evidence relied upon to justify the arrest. This transmission typically occurs within 24 to 72 hours. Defence counsel should monitor the file’s progress and, if there are delays, formally request expedited handling. During this phase, counsel should also prepare supplementary evidence, witness statements, employment records, medical reports, that was not available at the initial hearing. The detained person remains in custody pending the appeal decision unless the court orders otherwise.

Step 4, Appeal hearing and possible outcomes

The appellate court hears the appeal in a closed session. The detained person has the right to attend (in person or by video link from the detention facility), to be heard, and to present arguments through counsel. The prosecutor also participates. The court examines both the legality and the merits of the preventive arrest order. Possible outcomes include:

  • Revocation of preventive arrest and release. The court finds the arrest was unjustified or no longer necessary and orders immediate release.
  • Replacement with an alternative measure. The court substitutes detention with judicial control (control judiciar), judicial control on bail (control judiciar pe cauțiune), or house arrest (arest la domiciliu).
  • Confirmation of preventive arrest. The court upholds the original decision in full.
  • Partial modification. The court may amend conditions or reduce the period of detention.

The appellate decision is final and takes effect immediately. If preventive arrest is confirmed, the detention continues for the period ordered (up to 30 days initially, subject to further extensions). Requesting a specific detention alternative, not merely release, is a critical tactical choice that increases the realistic prospects of success.

Step 5, Tactical grounds for challenging the preventive arrest order

An effective appeal targets the weaknesses in the court’s original reasoning. The most common and persuasive grounds include:

  • Lack of factual necessity. The prosecution’s evidence of flight risk, obstruction risk or danger to public order is speculative, not concrete. Argue that the accused has a stable residence, family ties and employment in Romania.
  • Disproportionality. Preventive arrest is the most restrictive measure; the court must justify why less intrusive alternatives (judicial control, house arrest, bail) are insufficient. Provide evidence that alternatives would adequately address any identified risk.
  • Defective or insufficient motivation. The court’s reasoning is formulaic or fails to address the specific circumstances of the case. Romanian appellate courts have reversed arrest orders where the reasoning was generic.
  • Evidentiary gaps. The prosecution’s case is based on incomplete or unreliable evidence. Highlight contradictions, retracted statements or lack of corroboration.
  • Health and humanitarian grounds. The detained person has a serious medical condition incompatible with detention. Attach medical certificates and specialist opinions.
  • Corporate mitigation. For executives, demonstrate cooperation with the investigation, voluntary disclosure, suspension from the corporate position, or ongoing internal compliance reviews, all reducing alleged risks.

Documents Needed to Appeal Preventive Arrest in Romania

Assembling the correct documents quickly is essential. The table below lists each required or recommended document in both English and Romanian, together with practical filing notes.

Document (English / Romanian) Notes
Certified copy of the preventive arrest order / hotărârea de arestare preventivă (copie certificată) Issued by the court at ruling. Request immediately from the grefă (court registry). This is the foundation of the appeal.
Power of attorney / împuternicire avocat Signed by the detainee or legal representative. Notarisation is not normally required for an emergency appeal, but check local court practice.
Identity document / act de identitate (ID card or passport) National ID or passport. Essential for identifying counsel and the detained person on the court file.
Medical certificate / certificat medical If the detainee’s health supports a non-detention argument. Obtain from the prison medical unit or an independent specialist.
Employment and corporate documents / documente societare și de angajare Employment contract, company statement, travel records. Used to rebut flight-risk allegations, particularly for executives.
Evidence list and supporting exhibits / înscrisuri probatorii Compiled by counsel with an index page. Attach copies of all exhibits referenced in the appeal.
Translator or consular letter / traducere și notificare consulară Required for foreign nationals. Confirm consular notification has been made; attach any consular correspondence.
Written appeal / contestație Drafted by counsel. Must include grounds for challenge, evidence references, and the specific remedy requested (release or named alternative measure).

Practical filing checklist

  • Confirm the exact time of ruling and calculate the 48‑hour deadline to the minute.
  • Collect the certified copy of the arrest decision from the grefă immediately.
  • Execute and file the power of attorney (împuternicire avocat) with counsel’s details.
  • Gather any medical, employment or corporate documents that support non‑detention arguments.
  • Prepare an indexed exhibit list and attach copies of all supporting evidence.
  • Draft, sign and date the written appeal (contestație), clearly stating the remedy sought.
  • File the appeal at the court registry and retain a stamped copy confirming the filing date and time.
  • For foreign nationals: confirm consular notification and arrange interpretation if required.

Timeline and Key Deadlines for the Preventive Arrest Appeal

The timeline for appealing preventive arrest in Romania is extremely compressed. Missing the appeal deadline of 48 hours risks the appeal being declared inadmissible, so every action must be planned against the clock. The table below summarises the key deadlines and practical notes on how to count them.

Action Deadline Practical Notes
File appeal against preventive arrest decision Within 48 hours from ruling The countdown begins at the exact moment the decision is ruled or communicated. Weekends and public holidays are included in the count. Instruct counsel immediately.
Court schedules appeal hearing Usually within 3–7 calendar days (practice) Many practitioners report that hearings are typically scheduled within approximately 5 days. Emergency applications may be heard sooner. Track the local court’s scheduling practice.
Prosecutor transmits case materials to appellate court 24–72 hours after receiving the appeal The appellate court commonly requests the full prosecution file. Defence counsel should monitor and request expedition if materials are delayed.
Appellate decision takes effect Immediately on ruling If the court orders release or an alternative measure, the decision is effective from the moment it is ruled. The detainee should be released without delay.
Motion for reconsideration or extraordinary remedies Depends on grounds and local practice If the 48‑hour deadline is missed, consult counsel immediately about available procedural remedies, including motions to restore the procedural term.

When counting the 48‑hour deadline, use absolute times. For example, if the decision is ruled at 14:30 on a Monday, the deadline expires at 14:30 on Wednesday, regardless of whether Wednesday is a public holiday. Record the ruling time precisely and confirm it against the court minutes.

Costs, Fees and Financial Considerations

The direct court costs of filing an arestare preventivă appeal are generally minimal. Urgent appeals against preventive measures do not typically attract significant filing fees in Romanian courts. The primary financial consideration is legal representation. The table below provides indicative cost ranges.

Item Indicative Amount / Notes
Court filing fees (appeal against preventive arrest) Typically nominal or waived for urgent preventive-measure appeals. Confirm with the local court registry.
Defence counsel, emergency appearance and appeal drafting Approximately EUR 300–2,500+, depending on firm, case complexity and urgency. An advance retainer is standard. Rates vary significantly between Bucharest and regional courts.
Interpreter / translator Variable, hourly or flat fee. The detention facility or court may provide one; private engagement offers greater reliability.
Certified copies and court registry fees Small administrative charges. Confirm current rates at the issuing court’s registry.
Bail deposit (if judicial control on bail is ordered) Amount set by the court at its discretion. Can range from modest sums to significant amounts in high‑value cases.

Court‑appointed counsel is available at no direct cost to the detainee, but the quality and availability of appointed lawyers in an emergency context varies. Retaining experienced private counsel as early as possible remains the most effective investment.

What Changes in 2026: EPPO Enforcement and Procedural Developments

Several developments in 2026 have altered the practical landscape for how to appeal preventive arrest in Romania. The European Public Prosecutor’s Office (EPPO) has continued to expand its operational activity in Romania, leading to a higher volume of cross‑border fraud, corruption and financial‑crime cases in which prosecutors seek preventive arrest at an earlier stage of the investigation. Early indications suggest that prosecutors are relying more heavily on preventive arrest proposals in white‑collar matters, sometimes before the suspect has had meaningful opportunity to cooperate voluntarily.

At the same time, Romanian courts and defence practitioners report that appellate panels are scrutinising proportionality arguments more closely, particularly where the prosecution’s risk assessment is based on the abstract severity of the offence rather than concrete, individualised evidence. The likely practical effect is that well‑prepared proportionality challenges, supported by robust employment documentation, voluntary cooperation records and offers to accept alternative measures, carry greater weight than in prior years.

Tactical implications for corporate clients

For companies whose executives face preventive arrest in EPPO or DNA (Direcția Națională Anticorupție) investigations, early coordination between criminal defence counsel, in‑house legal teams and crisis‑management advisers is essential. Key tactical steps include: engaging Romanian defence counsel before an arrest proposal is anticipated; preparing corporate‑cooperation documentation in advance; suspending the executive from sensitive functions to reduce obstruction‑risk arguments; commissioning parallel internal investigations that can be presented to the court as evidence of good faith; and preparing public‑relations statements that do not prejudice the criminal proceedings. The goal is to demonstrate to the appellate panel that detention alternatives are both sufficient and immediately enforceable.

Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

  • Missing the 48‑hour deadline. This is the most critical error. Instruct counsel within hours, not days, of ruling. Record the exact time of the decision and set a hard internal deadline well before the 48 hours expire.
  • Failing to obtain the certified decision copy. Without the copie certificată, counsel cannot identify the specific reasoning to challenge. Request it from the grefă immediately after ruling.
  • Weak factual rebuttals to flight risk. Generic assertions of “stable residence” are insufficient. Provide documentary proof: property deeds, employment contracts, family ties, passport surrender offers.
  • Inadequate medical evidence. If health is a factor, obtain a detailed medical certificate from a specialist, not just a general practitioner’s note. Attach imaging results or hospital records where available.
  • Relying solely on court‑appointed counsel. Appointed lawyers perform a vital role but may be handling multiple cases simultaneously. Engage experienced private counsel for a preventive arrest appeal wherever possible.
  • Not requesting an expedited hearing. The appeal hearing should occur promptly. If the court has not scheduled a hearing within a reasonable period, file a formal request for expedition.
  • Submitting evidence in improper form. Exhibits must be properly copied, indexed and translated (if in a foreign language). Unorganised evidence weakens the appeal and may be disregarded.
  • Failing to propose a specific alternative measure. Simply requesting release is less persuasive than offering a concrete alternative, judicial control, house arrest or bail, with conditions the court can impose immediately.

Need Legal Advice?

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

FAQs

How can I appeal a preventive arrest (arestare preventivă) decision in Romania?
File a written appeal (contestație) against the court’s decision ordering arestare preventivă within 48 hours from the moment the decision is pronounced. Instruct defence counsel immediately to draft and file the appeal. The competent appellate court, typically the Curte de Apel or next‑level tribunal, ordinarily schedules the hearing within approximately 5 working days. The detailed step‑by‑step procedure is set out above.
You have exactly 48 hours from the moment of pronouncement. This deadline runs continuously, including weekends and public holidays. Count the hours precisely from the time recorded in the court minutes. Seek counsel immediately, the drafting, evidence collection and filing process must all be completed within this window.
At a minimum, you need: the certified copy of the arrest order, a power of attorney for counsel, identity documents, and a reasoned written appeal setting out the grounds for challenge. Supporting documents, medical certificates, employment records, corporate statements, strengthen arguments of disproportionality and lack of necessity. The full documents checklist and filing steps are detailed in the required documents section above.
Romanian law provides several alternatives to preventive arrest: judicial control (control judiciar), judicial control on bail (control judiciar pe cauțiune), house arrest (arest la domiciliu), reporting obligations, and travel restrictions. Requesting a specific named alternative, rather than simply asking for release, is a core tactical aim of any preventive arrest appeal.
Yes. Foreign detainees have the same procedural rights as Romanian nationals, including the right to counsel, the right to file the appeal within 48 hours, and the right to consular notification under the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations. The court must provide interpretation and translation services. Consular officials can assist with evidence gathering, communication with family, and coordination with foreign counsel.
Missing the deadline risks the appeal being declared inadmissible. If this occurs, consult defence counsel immediately. Depending on the circumstances, it may be possible to file a motion for restoration of the procedural term, raise the issue in subsequent extension hearings, or pursue extraordinary remedies. However, none of these alternatives is guaranteed, which is why meeting the 48‑hour deadline is paramount.
An initial preventive arrest order can be imposed for a maximum of 30 days. The prosecution may request extensions, each of up to 30 days, but the total duration of preventive arrest during the criminal investigation may not exceed 180 days. Each extension must be separately justified and is subject to its own appeal. The lawyer directory can help identify experienced Romanian criminal defence practitioners for ongoing representation.

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How to Appeal Preventive Arrest (arestare Preventivă) in Romania, Step‑by‑step (2026)

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