Movilidad, soberanìa e “interoperabilidad” de los sistemas penales en la Unión Europea
Abstract
The political integration in the EU, made the rules of the mutual legal
assistance insufficient. The old model of mutual assistance was replaced approaching
the judicial cooperation within the EU to the cooperation between judges from the
same State. For this purpose it was necessary to find a balance between unification and
diversity. The selective interoperability between the diverse legal systems of the
Member States was the solution to the problem of the fragmentation of the criminal
Justice in the European Union. Not all the judicial decisions are interoperable, but only
those that were defined as equivalent resolutions in the European common rules. In
this system the recognition is widely guaranteed by establishing a compulsory
distribution of the competences between executing and issuing judicial authorities,
preventing the examination of the internal aspects and basis of the issued resolution by
the judge of the executing State, and establishing a strong limitation of the grounds for
refusal and of the elements that can be considered by the executing judge. All this
together with some limited possibilities offered to the States to reduce the impact of
the mutual recognition to protect the national legal identity.