Abstract:
The exponential growth of cross-border e-commerce and the rapid expansion of international postal flows have transformed small parcels into a preferred vector for the smuggling of narcotics, tobacco, counterfeit goods and other prohibited items. In this context, controlled delivery, referred to in the legislation of the Republic of Moldova as (controlled delivery) and in Romanian legislation as (supervised delivery), has become one of the most efficient special investigative techniques, enabling the authorities to trace illicit consignments up to their final addressees, rather than seizing them at the customs border. The present study analyses the dual nature of this technique, situated at the intersection between procedural efficiency and the fundamental right to respect for correspondence enshrined in Article 8 ECHR. Drawing upon the legislation of the Republic of Moldova and Romania, EU instruments (Naples II, Regulation 515/97, the 2000 EU Convention) and UN standards (the Palermo Convention, the WCO Nairobi Convention), as well as on the case-law of the European Court of Human Rights (Klass, Malone, Iordachi, Roman Zakharov) and of the national courts, the article identifies the normative safeguards required by the Convention: a foreseeable legal basis, prior judicial oversight, proportionality, subsequent notification, and proposes de lege ferenda solutions for harmonising domestic provisions with the European procedural acquis. UDC: 343.57:351.816(4+478+498); JEL: K14, K33, K42
Description:
ANTOCI, Albert and Alexandru-Stelian SPÎNU. Controlled Delivery in Combating Postal Smuggling: Between Procedural Efficiency and the Requirements of Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights. Online. In: Development Through Research and Innovation IDSC-2026: International Scientific Conference: The 7th Edition, May 15-16th, 2026: Collection of scientific articles. Chişinău: SEP ASEM, 2026, pp. 675-682. ISBN 978-9975-182-29-4 (PDF). Disponibil: https://doi.org/10.53486/dri2026.83