
A court has cancelled the European Arrest Warrant (EAW) issued by Poland for an opposition politician and former government minister, Marcin Romanowski, who fled to Hungary and claimed asylum instead of facing charges in his homeland.
In his justification, judge Dariusz Ćubowski made a series of dramatic accusations against the Polish government, accusing it of âviolating human rights and civil libertiesâ, including the presumption of innocence. He even suggested that a âcrypto-dictatorshipâ was being established in Poland.
The decision has been condemned by justice minister Waldemar Ć»urek, who called the judgeâs argumentation âastonishingâ and accused him of âa lack of objectivityâ.
Polish prosecutors want to charge Romanowski over 11 alleged crimes â including participating in an organised criminal group, using crime as a source of income, and abuse of power â from his time as a deputy justice minister in the former Law and Justice (PiS) government.
However, after an arrest warrant was issued for him in December last year, it turned out that Romanowski had fled to Hungary, whose ruling Fidesz party is an ally of PiS. The politician was then granted political asylum later the same month.
Meanwhile, Warsawâs district court issued an EAW for Romanowski. Hungary has, however, refused to comply with the warrant, as it argues that Romanowski would not receive a fair trial in Poland. That prompted a diplomatic row which resulted in Poland withdrawing its ambassador from Budapest.
Today, Romanowskiâs lawyer, Bartosz Lewandowski, announced on social media that the same judge at the same court has now withdrawn the EAW. Lewandowski shared extracts of the judgeâs justification for his decision.
âIt is impossible not to note the extremely dangerous interference of the highest-ranking representatives of the executive branch in the sphere of judicial independence, an unprecedented phenomenon for a democratic state governed by the rule of law,â wrote the judge, Ćubowski.
He said that there had been âcontinuous public statements regarding ongoing court proceedings and the issuing of judgments before they have been issued by the courtâ. This, he added, is âviolates the most fundamental human rights of all accused persons, namely the presumption of innocenceâ.
âThe courtâŠconsiders it completely unjustified to publicly present the image of Marcin Romanowski as a guilty person who, after being brought to the country, will be convicted and imprisoned,â added Ćubowski.
Such âvile statements are incompatible with the basic standards of a democratic state of lawâ and âdirectly infringe on the sphere of judicial independenceâ. Therefore, âthere are serious concerns that the current situation in Poland could be classified as a crypto-dictatorshipâ.
âIn this situation, continuing to uphold the EAW against a leading opposition representative, after he has been publicly âconvictedâ by the most important representatives of the executive branch, would result in a complete loss of credibility of the Polish justice system,â concluded the judge.
The decision was welcomed by Romanowski, who declared that âthe narrative of [Prime Minister Donald] Tuskâs gangsters and their liesâŠis completely falling apartâ.
It means that Romanowski is free to move within the European Schengen area without fear of arrest. However, he cannot travel beyond Schengen as the Polish authorities have invalidated his passport.
Ć»urek quickly issued a statement condemning the judgeâs decision, which he said had been made âduring a non-public session, without the knowledge or notification of the prosecution, which raises serious procedural concernsâ.
Moreover, the justification presented by the judge is âinternally inconsistent and stands in obvious conflict with the case filesâ, added Ć»urek, who serves as both justice minister and prosecutor general.
âThe prosecution is not backing down from pursuing Marcin Romanowski and will file a renewed application for a European Arrest Warrant. If the case returns to the same judge, a motion will be filed to recuse him due to lack of objectivity,â he added.
Lewandowski, however, responded by saying that, by trying to remove a judge who had issued an unfavourable ruling, Ć»urek was simply âconfirming the courtâs assessment that we are dealing with a âcrypto-dictatorship'â.
Ćubowski is an experienced judge who has headed the international proceedings section of Warsawâs district court since 2018. It was he who made the decision in October not to extradite to Germany a Ukrainian man accused of involvement in sabotage of the Nord Stream pipelines.
Today, the National Prosecutorâs Office (PK) also confirmed that Ćubowski had decided to overturn the EAW on the basis of ânew circumstancesâ, namely: Hungaryâs decision to grant asylum to Romanowski, Interpolâs decision not to issue a Red Notice for him, and the governmentâs âviolations of human rightsâ.
The PK noted that it had not been notified of the date of the court hearing and said that it âconsiders [the judgeâs] decision to be manifestly unfoundedâ.
Since replacing PiS in power in December 2023, the current government has made holding former PiS officials to account for alleged crimes one of its priorities.
However, PiS has argued that the Tusk administration is simply pursuing a âpolitical vendettaâ against its opponents, and that it is using unlawful methods to do so.
In May this year, a group of five Republican members of the US House Committee on the Judiciary wrote to the European Commission expressing âdeep concernâ about the rule of law in Poland, in particular that the government is âweaponising the justice systemâ against the conservative opposition.
Posted by BubsyFanboy
2 comments
The differences between prosecutors and judges is one of the first signs of a country losing its independence in the judiciary system. This will not end well for Poland.
So the same judge who issued that warrant suddenly had a change of heart and now claims itâs unlawful and a tool of a so-called “crypto-dictatorship”??
Where exactly is the problem supposed to be? He is accused of committing 11 crimes, including defrauding âŹ25.4 million from the Justice Fund, a special reserve originally intended to help victims of crime, as well as attempting to defraud another âŹ13.7 million. On top of that, he fled before he could stand trial.
Why shouldnât he face this warrant?
What the hell does this even have to do with the government? This guy is very likely just a criminal, regardless of which party happens to be in power at the moment.
It seems far more likely that the judge is afraid of a future governmentâs cleanup strategy, like the one they ran before, where judges were replaced with people more closely aligned with the non-crypto PiSs dictatorship. A cleanup that might next time be carried out by the former Deputy Minister of Justice who is himself accused of these crimes.
Or did Opus Dei threaten him with denial of communion?
This is so Poland.
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