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Article 706-88 of the French Code of Criminal Procedure

For the application of articles 63,77 and 154, if the requirements of the investigation or inquiry relating to one of the offences falling within the scope of Article 706-73 requires it, a person’s police custody may, exceptionally, be extended by two additional twenty-four-hour periods each. These extensions are authorised, by written and reasoned decision, either, at the request of the public prosecutor, by the liberty and custody judge, or by…

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Article 706-88-1 of the French Code of Criminal Procedure

If it emerges from the initial elements of the investigation or from police custody itself that there is a serious risk of imminent terrorist action in France or abroad, or that the requirements of international cooperation make this imperative, the juge des libertés may, exceptionally and in accordance with the procedures set out in the second paragraph of Article 706-88, decide that the current police custody of a person, based…

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Article 706-89 of the French Code of Criminal Procedure

If the requirements of the flagrante investigation relating to one of the offences falling within the scope of Articles 706-73 and 706-73-1 so require, the liberty and custody judge of the judicial court may, at the request of the public prosecutor, authorise searches, domiciliary visits and seizures of exhibits to be carried out outside the hours provided for in Article 59.

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Article 706-90 of the French Code of Criminal Procedure

If the needs of the preliminary investigation relating to one of the offences falling within the scope of Articles 706-73 and 706-73-1 so require, the liberty and custody judge of the judicial court may, at the request of the public prosecutor, decide that searches, home visits and seizures of exhibits may be carried out outside the hours provided for in Article 59, when these operations do not concern residential premises….

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Article 706-91 of the French Code of Criminal Procedure

If the requirements of the information relating to one of the offences falling within the scope of articles 706-73 and 706-73-1 require it, the examining magistrate may authorise judicial police officers acting on a letter rogatory to carry out searches, home visits and seizures of exhibits outside the hours provided for in Article 59, when these operations do not involve residential premises. In urgent cases, the investigating judge may also…

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Article 706-92 of the French Code of Criminal Procedure

On pain of nullity, the authorisations provided for in articles 706-89 to 706-91 are given for specific searches and are the subject of a written order, specifying the nature of the offence for which proof is sought and the address of the premises in which the visits, searches and seizures may be carried out; this order, which may not be appealed, shall be reasoned by reference to the factual and…

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Article 706-93 of the French Code of Criminal Procedure

The operations provided for in articles 706-89 to 706-91 may not, on pain of nullity, have any purpose other than the investigation and establishment of the offences referred to in the decision of the liberty and custody judge or investigating judge. The fact that these operations reveal offences other than those referred to in the decision of the liberty and custody judge or investigating judge does not constitute a cause…

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Article 706-94 of the French Code of Criminal Procedure

Where, during a flagrante delicto investigation or an investigation into one of the offences falling within the scope of Articles 706-73 and 706-73-1, the person whose home is to be searched is in police custody or is being held in another place and it seems advisable to avoid taking him there due to the serious risk of either disturbing the peace or escaping, or of evidence disappearing during the time…

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Article 706-95 of the French Code of Criminal Procedure

If the requirements of the investigation in flagrante delicto or the preliminary investigation relating to one of the offences falling within the scope of Articles 706-73 and 706-73-1 so require, the liberty and custody judge of the judicial court may, at the request of the public prosecutor, authorise the interception, recording and transcription of correspondence sent via electronic communications in accordance with the procedures set out in the second and…

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Article 706-95-1 of the French Code of Criminal Procedure

If the requirements of the investigation into a crime or one of the offences falling within the scope of Articles 706-73 and 706-73-1 so require, the liberty and custody judge may, at the request of the public prosecutor, authorise by reasoned order remote access, without the knowledge of the person concerned, to correspondence stored by electronic communications accessible by means of a computer identifier. The data to which access has…

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