[09SOFIA133] BULGARIA’S JUDICIARY: WEAKEST LINK IN A POORLY PERFORMING LEGAL SYSTEM

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Published by Wikileaks & Bivol.bg
 C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 SOFIA 000133    SENSITIVE  SIPDIS    EUR/NCE FOR YEAGER  INL FOR CARROLL AND POMEROY  DEPARTMENT PASS TO USAID  DOJ FOR OPDAT, ICITAP, CEOS,AND CRD    E.O. 12958: DECL: 03/27/2020  TAGS: PHUM, KCRM, KWMN, SMIG, KFRD, ASEC, PREF, ELAB, BU  SUBJECT: BULGARIA'S JUDICIARY:  WEAKEST LINK IN A POORLY  PERFORMING LEGAL SYSTEM    Classified By: Ambassador Nancy McEldowney for reasons 1.4 (b) and (d).    1.   (C) Summary.  On paper, Bulgaria's judiciary system  meets most international and EU standards.  But in practice,  it is in shambles.  Polls show that within the EU, Bulgarians  have the least confidence in public institutions, with the  judicial system at the bottom of the heap.  The police and  investigative service have 14 percent approval, prosecutors  13 percent, and, shockingly, judges 12 percent.  Key reasons  for distrust:  excessively long trials with unpredictable  outcomes, even with the best evidence at hand; and known  criminals flaunting their impunity.  A running joke is that  OC figures do not even need a good defense attorney; bribing  (or intimidating) a judge is cheaper.  Bulgarians and  international partners continue to demand tangible results,  especially a groundbreaking conviction of an organized crime  figure or corrupt political figures and senior public  officials.  But expectations are low.  Many critics believe  the judicial system will not change without a purge of the  old guard, which remains beholden to the gray economy and  political interests.  End Summary.    Long Road of Reform, with Limited Impact On Delivering Justice  --------------------------------------------- -----------------    2.  (C) On paper, the judicial system meets many  international and EU norms.  Following communism's collapse,  Bulgaria painfully revamped its judicial and legal systems,  but many old features remained intact.  Many reforms  streamlined internal management and other mechanical,  procedural, or training issues.   In the five years preceding  EU accession, the Bulgarian government rushed many more  changes, adopting constitutional and legislative amendments  to ensure the independence of the judiciary and improve its  functioning, but some changes were not well thought out.  Among the more notable changes:  defining the role of the  Supreme Judicial Council (SJC) and establishing an  inspectorate within the SJC to investigate misconduct  allegations and recommend disciplinary actions.  The  government made modest improvements to the Criminal Procedure  Code and adopted a new Civil Procedure Code to reduce  opportunities for continuances in civil cases.    3.  (SBU) Over the past decade, the government also took key  personnel steps:  increasing salaries to an average of around  1,200 leva (more than twice the 2008 average salary of 524  leva and sufficient to attract qualified personnel);  establishing competitive hiring and promotions; and limiting  immunity for magistrates.  With support from USAID, the  government developed the National Institute of Justice to  train magistrates (judges, prosecutors, and investigators)  and thirty-two model courts adopted improved court  procedures.  The courts also implemented random case  assignment, which reduced the opportunities for manipulation  of the system.  Major undertakings also included the  introduction of: separate administrative courts to address  appeals of government decisions, a separate business registry  system outside the courts, and private bailiffs to improve  enforcement of court decisions.  Along the way, the  Bulgarians received over $7.5 million in EU pre-accession  funds (PHARE), with the biggest donors being Austria, the  United Kingdom, and Spain, for code reform and judges,  training.  The United States provided approximately $22  million to the judiciary to support reforms.    Key Challenges  --------------    4.  (C) The most basic problem in the judiciary system is the  hardest to tackle:  lack of political will to make tough  decisions.  Police, prosecutors and judges routinely play a  finger-pointing, blame-laying game.  Ordinary Bulgarians see  judges as the biggest stumbling block to convictions in high  profile cases.  Beyond political will is structure and  process.  The judicial system is highly formalistic; it has  confusing and at times contradictory precepts and procedures.   Courts are often idiosyncratic and ego-driven.  Management  of each court is largely based on the personality and  leadership style of the court chair, appointed by the Supreme  Judicial Council (SJC) for five years.  In a court system  governed by seniority, younger and more reform-minded court  chairs are hard to find.  It is extremely difficult to purge  the system of the old guard, who after five years of service    SOFIA 00000133  002 OF 002      as judges are tenured and cannot be removed until they  resign, retire at the age of 65, or are dismissed for  criminal activity, inability to perform their duties, or  conduct damaging the prestige of the judiciary.    5.  (SBU) From 2000 to 2008, the number of judges increased  15 percent, reaching levels comparable to other newer EU  members, but often judges had inadequate training, seasoning,  or background.  Appointments sometimes depended more on  personal and political connections rather than professional  qualifications.  Despite the increase in judges, case  completion rates stayed static, exacerbated by the shortage  of courtrooms and the uneven distribution of cases.  During  that time, investments in the judicial sector increased from  0.2 percent in 2001 to 0.8 percent.  The court system now  consists of 2,370 judges in 182 courts, including regional  courts, district courts, appellate courts, the Supreme Court  of Cassation and the Supreme Administrative Court.  In the  biggest court in the country, Sofia Regional court, 100  judges are housed in a building once planned for a prison,  far exceeding its capacity.  In 2008, a civil judge in that  court reviewed on average 700 civil cases and a criminal  judge reviewed 430 cases.    6.  (C) An overly formalistic Criminal Procedure Code means  any defendant with a reasonably competent defense attorney  can avoid sentencing.  All too often, judges accede to  defense requests to delay hearings.  The case of the  notorious OC figures the Margini brothers, arrested in  October 2005 on the eve of EU accession for contract killings  and money laundering, is an example.  With 18 continuances,  mostly for purported illnesses, the Margini brothers continue  to enjoy their lives while on bail.  Throughout the system,  the most common excuses for continuances are:  unavailability  of the defense attorney, irregularities in the summoning, and  multiple requests for expert opinions.  A new cottage  industry has sprung up:  closely watching court proceedings  and counting the continuances in the document fraud and EU  agricultural funds abuse case against Mario Nikolov, whose  company is rumored to have bankrolled the Bulgarian Socialist  party.    7.  (C) Problems are also prevalent in lower profile fields.  Bulgarian administrative judges have sway over key public  sector and public integrity decisions important to business  -- they rule on appeals of public procurements,  government-awarded contracts for mining, use of dams, beaches  and other natural goods.  Some judges are on personal terms  with key gray economy figures, who have increasingly moved  into legitimate businesses.  Ample anecdotal evidence  substantiates cases of flagrant abuses and conflicts of  interests:  participating in known illegal schemes; deciding  on cases involving their family members; and deciding cases  involving their business associates.  Privately, judges  routinely acknowledge that some of their colleagues accept  bribes, but in a culture where colleagues are hesitant to  punish colleagues, they refuse to name names.    8.  (C) The SJC, which has the power to appoint, discipline  and dismiss judges, has been slow to establish discipline in  the system.  Many question the SJC's structure and argue that  political appointments within the SJC allow for political  interference.  After a highly politicized process to select  members of the SJC and some initial false starts, the SJC  reviewed 102 requests for disciplinary sanctions in 2008,  including 16 initiated by the Inspectorate.  Between 2008 and  early 2009, the SJC dismissed four judges, two for drunk  driving, including a vehicular death; one on charges of  conspiracy to defraud the state revenue; and one for abuse of  position.  Given the scale of observable problems, this  amounted to a rather thin record of oversight and  accountability.  This year the SJC faces another critical  challenge as the mandates of 162 magistrates in management  positions throughout the system (108 judges, 32 prosecutors,  and 22 investigators) expire between April and December 2009  and the SJC appoints their replacements.    10.  (C) Comment.  With national elections on the horizon,  the prospect for immediate legislative action to correct and  reform the judicial system is dim.  Realistically,  substantive change will be the province of a new government.  End Comment.  McEldowney 
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