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Lebois v. Bulgaria

Doc ref: 67482/14 • ECHR ID: 002-11727

Document date: October 19, 2017

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Lebois v. Bulgaria

Doc ref: 67482/14 • ECHR ID: 002-11727

Document date: October 19, 2017

Cited paragraphs only

Information Note on the Court’s case-law 211

October 2017

Lebois v. Bulgaria - 67482/14

Judgment 19.10.2017 [Section V]

Article 8

Article 8-1

Respect for correspondence

Respect for family life

Respect for private life

Undue restrictions on foreign national’s rights to visits and to use a telephone during pre-trial detention: violation

Facts – The applicant, a French national, was arrested in Bulgaria on sus picion of breaking into vehicles. In the Convention proceedings, he complained, inter alia , that for twelve days after his arrest he was unable to contact his family or anyone else to inform them of his deprivation of liberty, and that during his time in p re-trial detention he was not provided with sufficient possibilities to receive visits or to speak on the telephone to his family and friends.

Law – Article 8

(a) Initial twelve-day period – The applicant’s complaint relating to the initial twelve-day per iod after his arrest was lodged more than six months after that period came to an end and so was out of time. The Court commented, however, that the fact that the applicant had not been able to inform anyone of his deprivation of liberty for twelve days di d raise a potentially serious issue under Article 8. In that connection, it noted that (i) the applicant had been kept in handcuffs throughout his (roughly twenty-four-hour) stay in police custody and had not been allowed to use the telephone; (ii) the app licant did not speak Bulgarian and no proper interpretation facilities appeared to have been available; (iii) the applicant had no money on him when he was arrested with which to buy a phonecard and (iv) it had only been with the help of a co-detainee that he had been able to contact the French consulate, which had in turn informed his parents of his arrest and detention.

Conclusion : inadmissible (out of time).

(b) Subsequent period – The restrictions on the visits which the applicant could receive while in pre-trial detention could be seen as an interference with his “private life”. Further, since under Bulgarian law the applicant had the right to make telephone calls while in pre-tr ial detention and since inmates in the detention facility had access to a card phone, the limitations on his possibility to use that card phone had likewise to be seen as an interference with his “private life” and “correspondence”.

The internal orders set ting out the practical details of how inmates in the pre-trial detention facility in which the applicant was kept could exercise their statutory rights to receive visits and use the telephone were not published or made accessible to the detainees in a stan dardised form. The Government had not established that the applicant was made adequately aware of them, especially given that he did not speak Bulgarian. The restrictions on his visits and use of the card phone appeared to have flowed precisely from the in ternal arrangements in the pre-trial detention facility, which were governed by those orders. The interference with the applicant’s rights under Article 8 was therefore not based on adequately accessible rules and not “in accordance with the law”.

Conclusion : violation (unanimously).

Article 41: EUR 1,000 in respect of non-pecuniary damage; claim in respect of pecuniary damage dismissed.

© Council of Europe/European Court of Human Rights This summary by the Registry does not bind the Court.

Click h ere for the Case-Law Information Notes

© European Union, https://eur-lex.europa.eu, 1998 - 2025

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