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When a Romanian prosecutor or investigating judge orders the seizure of corporate bank accounts, real estate, vehicles, or company shares, affected companies and executives must act within hours, not days, to protect their interests. This guide explains, step by step, how to challenge an asset seizure in Romania under the Criminal Procedure Code (Codul de procedură penală), who is eligible to bring a challenge, what documents are needed, and which deadlines apply. It reflects practice developments through early 2026, including evolving judicial approaches to compensation for unlawful seizures and supervised asset management.
Whether you are a general counsel, CFO, compliance officer, or company director confronting a freeze notice for the first time, the procedural sequence below is designed to move you from notification to informed action as quickly as possible.
Asset seizure in Romania, referred to in statute as sechestru asigurător (precautionary seizure) or poprire (garnishment of accounts), is a preservative measure ordered during criminal investigations to prevent the dissipation of assets linked to alleged offences. It is governed primarily by the Criminal Procedure Code, with confiscation rules set out in the Criminal Code (Codul penal). Seizure can target bank accounts, movable property (vehicles, inventory, equipment), real estate, receivables, and corporate shares.
The measure may be ordered by a prosecutor during the investigation stage or by a judge once the case proceeds to trial. It is distinct from administrative enforcement carried out by the National Agency for Fiscal Administration (ANAF), which enforces tax debts through its own garnishment procedures. Understanding which authority issued the seizure order is the first step in selecting the correct challenge route.
Parties with standing to challenge a criminal seizure include the registered owner of the asset (whether an individual or a legal entity), the company’s legal representative, an authorised agent acting under a power of attorney, and, in limited circumstances, a third party who can demonstrate independent ownership rights over the seized property. Both companies and their executives may challenge a seizure, and in many cases both should, because the grounds available to each may differ.
A company whose assets have been frozen may file a challenge through its legal representative (typically the administrator named in the Trade Registry). An executive whose personal assets are seized in connection with allegations of corporate criminal liability has a separate, personal right to contest the measure. Where prosecutors allege that corporate assets are the proceeds of crime committed by an individual director, both the company and the director should consider filing parallel challenges: the company to argue that the assets are legitimately acquired corporate property, and the director to contest the causal link between the alleged conduct and the specific assets.
Standing issues can become complex when assets are held in nominee structures, joint ventures, or through subsidiaries. In every case, the challenger must demonstrate a legally recognisable interest in the seized asset, mere contractual expectancy is generally insufficient.
Before any formal challenge can be drafted, several prerequisites must be satisfied urgently:
It is critical to distinguish between a criminal seizure and an ANAF seizure at this stage. ANAF enforcement follows administrative procedures, is challenged before fiscal courts, and involves different deadlines. A criminal seizure is challenged before the investigating judge or the competent tribunal under the Criminal Procedure Code. Applying to the wrong forum wastes time and may result in missed deadlines.
The seizure appeal procedure in Romania follows a broadly sequential path, though several steps may run in parallel depending on urgency. The table below summarises the full process; the numbered subsections that follow provide operational detail for each stage.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Immediate triage: obtain seizure order, instruct counsel, preserve evidence | In‑house GC / company executive + external criminal counsel | 0–48 hours |
| 2. Request access to case file and obtain certified copies | External counsel requests from prosecutor / investigating judge | 2–7 days (often immediate in practice) |
| 3. Apply for interim release or narrowing of measure before investigating judge | External counsel | 7–30 days (varies by urgency and court calendar) |
| 4. File judicial appeal / contestation before Tribunal | External counsel (litigation team) | File within statutory appeal window (typically 15–30 days); hearing 2–8 weeks |
| 5. Parallel civil injunctive relief for urgent operational funds | Civil counsel (may be same firm) | 3–14 days (fast‑track injunctive relief possible) |
| 6. Forensic valuation and expert reports | Forensics and valuers (instructed by counsel) | 2–6 weeks (shorter for bank accounts) |
| 7. Cross‑border preservation / MLA coordination | External counsel + foreign counsel / competent authorities | Weeks to months (depends on foreign jurisdiction) |
| 8. Final confiscation / compensation proceedings | Courts (criminal / civil) | Months to years (confiscation often determined at trial; compensation claims post‑judgment) |
Within the first 48 hours of receiving notice that assets have been frozen in Romania, the following actions should be completed:
External counsel should file a formal request with the prosecutor or investigating judge for access to the criminal case file. Under the Criminal Procedure Code, the defence has a right of access to the file, although the prosecutor may restrict access to certain materials during the investigation stage where disclosure could compromise the inquiry. In practice, access is often granted within days. Counsel should obtain certified copies of the seizure order, any supporting evidence cited by the prosecutor, and any prior rulings related to the seizure.
Once the case file has been reviewed, counsel may apply to the investigating judge (during the investigation stage) or to the trial court (after indictment) for one or more of the following forms of interim relief:
The investigating judge considers these applications in a closed hearing, typically within days to weeks. Early indications suggest that Romanian courts have become more receptive to interim release motions for operational funds, particularly where the affected entity can demonstrate that a total freeze threatens the viability of a lawful business and the jobs of employees who are not subjects of the investigation.
If the investigating judge declines to lift or narrow the seizure, or if the seizure was ordered by the court itself, the affected party may file a formal appeal (contestație) before the competent Tribunal. The appeal must typically be filed within the statutory window, practitioners generally work within a 15‑ to 30‑day period from service of the decision, though the precise deadline must be confirmed from the case file and the applicable procedural provisions.
The grounds most commonly invoked include:
The Tribunal will schedule an oral hearing. Counsel should prepare written submissions, a bundle of supporting evidence (see the documents checklist below), and, where possible, expert reports on valuation and legitimate origin. If the Tribunal upholds the seizure, a further appeal to the Court of Appeal may be available depending on the procedural stage.
In certain situations, parallel civil proceedings may provide faster relief than the criminal appeal track. Where assets frozen in Romania are needed for urgent operational purposes, such as meeting a contractual obligation or averting insolvency, civil injunctive relief (ordonanță președințială) can be sought on an expedited basis, sometimes within days. This is particularly relevant when the seizure affects accounts at banks that may be willing to segregate operational funds from investigative holds.
Where the seizure originates from ANAF (an administrative, tax‑related freeze rather than a criminal one), the challenge must follow the administrative‑fiscal litigation route. Counsel should verify the origin of the freeze before filing, as an application to the wrong forum will be rejected and valuable time lost.
Independent expert evidence frequently determines the outcome of a seizure challenge. Key reports to commission include:
Instruct experts at Step 1 or Step 2 to ensure reports are ready before the hearing at Step 4. Early forensic accounting often reduces overall litigation costs by narrowing the scope of the dispute.
Where assets are located abroad, or where Romanian authorities have requested foreign jurisdictions to freeze assets under mutual legal assistance (MLA) treaties or EU instruments, additional coordination is required. Counsel should:
Cross‑border coordination adds weeks or months to the seizure timeline in Romania and typically involves significant additional cost. The EU Anti‑Fraud Knowledge Centre has published good practices on cross‑border asset management that can inform strategy.
If the criminal case proceeds to trial, the preliminary seizure may convert into a final confiscation order. Defence at this stage requires a full trial strategy and is beyond the scope of an interlocutory seizure challenge. However, preparatory work done at Steps 1–6, particularly forensic accounting and valuation, forms the evidentiary foundation for the confiscation defence.
Where a seizure is ultimately declared unlawful (either because the criminal case is dropped, the defendant is acquitted, or the court finds the seizure disproportionate), the affected party may pursue a compensation claim. Compensation for unlawful seizure is addressed further in the 2026 developments section below.
Assembling the right evidence bundle early is critical. The table below lists the core documents needed to contest a seizure, who issues each document, and practical notes on format and validity.
| Document | Notes (who issues it, format, validity) |
|---|---|
| Certified copy of the seizure order / decision | Issued by prosecutor or investigating judge. Request a certified copy from the prosecutor’s office. Essential to identify legal grounds and the specific assets covered. |
| Land Registry / Vehicle Registry extract (A.N.C.P.I. / RCC) | Shows registered ownership of real estate or vehicles. Digital or certified extract; should be no older than 30 days at the time of filing. |
| Bank account statements and freeze notification | Issued by the bank. Include full transaction history and the written freeze notice. Certified printouts and electronic statements both accepted. |
| Corporate documents (Articles of Association, shareholder register, board minutes) | Issued by the company. Certified true copies. Required to prove ownership structure and authorised signatories. |
| Contracts and invoices proving legitimate origin of funds | Company records: client contracts, commercial invoices, tax returns. Original or certified copies. |
| Power of attorney for counsel | Signed by the company’s legal representative. Apostille required if submitting in a foreign jurisdiction. |
| Forensic accounting report / expert valuation | Commissioned from an independent expert. Must include scope, methodology, and conclusions. |
| Identification documents of company representatives | IDs or passports of directors; company registration certificate issued by the Trade Registry (ONRC). |
| Tax clearances / ANAF correspondence (if relevant) | Issued by ANAF. Useful when arguing the assets are not connected to a tax‑enforcement seizure. |
| Prior court rulings relating to the case | Certified copies of any prior judicial decisions from prosecutor, tribunal, or the High Court of Cassation and Justice (ICCJ). |
Maintain two parallel bundles: an immediate bundle (seizure order, bank statements, corporate documents, power of attorney) assembled within the first 48 hours, and a litigation bundle (forensic reports, valuation, contracts, tax clearances) prepared over the following weeks for the formal contestation hearing.
Missing a deadline in a seizure challenge can extinguish an otherwise viable remedy. The table below sets out the principal time‑critical actions and their typical windows. Because practice varies with the investigating judge, local tribunal backlog, and the procedural stage (investigation versus post‑indictment), every deadline must be verified against the case file and the applicable Criminal Procedure Code provisions.
| Action | Deadline to act (typical) | Who must act |
|---|---|---|
| Request certified copy of seizure decision | Immediately on notice, within 48 hours recommended | Affected party / counsel |
| File interlocutory motion to lift seizure before investigating judge | As soon as possible; many practitioners aim within 7–15 days | Counsel |
| File formal appeal / contestation of seizure order | Typically within 15–30 days from service of the decision (confirm with case file) | Counsel |
| Commence civil injunctive relief for urgent operational funds | Immediately, injunctions are emergency remedies | Civil counsel |
| Submit expert valuation or forensic report | Within court‑ordered deadlines or before the contestation hearing | Counsel / instructed experts |
| File compensation claim for unlawful seizure | After final court decision; within civil prescription windows (verify applicable rules) | Counsel |
The most common consequence of a missed appeal deadline is the loss of the interlocutory remedy; the seizure remains in force until the criminal case reaches a final resolution, which may take years. Extraordinary relief avenues exist but are considerably harder to invoke. The single most effective risk‑mitigation step is to instruct experienced criminal counsel within the first 48 hours of notification.
The costs of challenging an asset seizure in Romania vary widely depending on the value and complexity of the seized assets, the number of jurisdictions involved, and whether the case proceeds to a full confiscation defence. The table below provides indicative ranges, verify current amounts with counsel and the official court fee schedules.
| Item | Amount (typical) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Emergency criminal counsel (retainer) | EUR 2,500 – 15,000+ | Depends on complexity, asset value, and need for immediate court attendance. |
| Litigation fees / court stamps | RON 50 – 1,000+ (varies by filing) | Court fees depend on claim type and value; consult the official court fee schedule. |
| Expert valuation and forensic accounting | EUR 1,000 – 20,000+ | Bank account forensics are at the lower end; property valuations and complex forensic accounting cost more. |
| Translation / notarisation / apostille | EUR 50 – 500 | For cross‑border documents and foreign‑language evidence. |
| Foreign counsel / MLA coordination | EUR 2,000 – 50,000+ | Depends on foreign jurisdiction and urgency. |
| Potential tax exposure (if ANAF case) | Varies | If seizure follows a tax investigation, underlying tax liabilities and penalties may apply; coordinate with tax counsel. |
Practitioner tip: commissioning forensic accounting early, even before the formal contestation is filed, often reduces overall litigation costs by narrowing the range of assets genuinely in dispute and providing a credible factual foundation for settlement discussions or judicial submissions.
Late‑2025 and early‑2026 judicial practice has brought two developments of direct relevance to any party considering how to challenge an asset seizure in Romania.
Compensation for unlawful seizures. Industry observers expect the trend that became visible in late‑2025 rulings, in which courts applied stricter scrutiny to valuation methodology and proof burdens in compensation claims arising from unlawfully maintained seizures, to continue through 2026. The likely practical effect is that affected parties who commission independent valuations at the earliest opportunity will be better positioned to recover losses if a seizure is later overturned. Practitioners should factor compensation strategy into the initial challenge, not treat it as an afterthought.
Supervised asset management. Courts have shown increasing willingness to approve active management plans for seized assets, allowing, for example, continued operation of a business under judicial supervision or the release of defined sums for payroll and essential costs. This aligns with good practices documented by the EU Anti‑Fraud Knowledge Centre, which emphasises the importance of preserving asset value during extended investigations. Early indications suggest that well‑documented management proposals, supported by forensic evidence and clear governance safeguards, are more likely to succeed.
Actionable takeaway: instruct an independent valuer immediately upon seizure, and consider filing an early application to the court for a supervised asset management plan or limited fund release, before asset value deteriorates.
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.
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