With the development of technology, especially the emergence and expansion of the internet over the past two decades, many traditional crimes have acquired new methods and means of execution, such as the use of computers, mobile phones, or other devices. In response to these new ways of committing c...

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Egile Nagusiak: Joko Dragojlović, Maja Petrović
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author Joko Dragojlović
Maja Petrović
author_facet Joko Dragojlović
Maja Petrović
date_str_mv 2024-12-01T00:00:00Z
description With the development of technology, especially the emergence and expansion of the internet over the past two decades, many traditional crimes have acquired new methods and means of execution, such as the use of computers, mobile phones, or other devices. In response to these new ways of committing crimes, the international community, within the framework of the Council of Europe, adopted the Budapest Convention in 2001, specifically addressing cybercrime. After ratifying the convention, the domestic legislator passed the Law on the Organization and Competencies of State Bodies for the Fight against High-Tech Crime, incorporating legal provisions from the convention. This law has not been significantly changed or amended since its adoption. However, the provisions in this law, especially in terms of jurisdiction, have proven to be inadequate and overly broad. The wide range of criminal offenses covered by this law has made it relatively ineffective and has overburdened the prosecutor’s office responsible for prosecuting high-tech criminals. Moreover, the approach taken by the legislator in 2005, which concentrated jurisdiction in the High Public Prosecutor’s Office and the High Court in Belgrade, is no longer justifiable in today’s age of widespread technology, internet access, and social networks. This paper aims to provide a brief overview of the Budapest Convention, which served as the foundation for the adoption of national regulations, and to highlight the shortcomings and unsustainability of the legal solutions proposed by the domestic legislator when national regulations in this field were established in 2005.
doi_str 10.5937/ptp2404134D
format Article
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issn_str_mv 0352-3713
2683-5711
language_str_mv EN
oai_datestamp_str 2025-01-01T16:32:09Z
oai_identifier_str oai:doaj.org/article:6d5a8f0cb1834afe8971d7fb31f71784
publisher_str University Business Academy in Novi Sad Faculty of Law for Commerce and Judiciary
relation_str_mv https://casopis.pravni-fakultet.edu.rs/index.php/ltp/article/view/842
https://doaj.org/toc/0352-3713
https://doaj.org/toc/2683-5711
source_str JOURNAL_A
source_txt Pravo, Vol 41, Iss 4 (2024)
spellingShingle REFERENCE TO THE COMPETENCE AND SPECIALIZATION OF AUTHORITIES FOR THE PROSECUTION OF PERPETRATORS OF HIGH-TECH CRIMINAL OFFENSES
Joko Dragojlović
Maja Petrović
subject_str_mv high-tech crime
criminal law
jurisdiction
specialization
Criminal law and procedure
K5000-5582
Civil law
K623-968
Commercial law
K1000-1395
title REFERENCE TO THE COMPETENCE AND SPECIALIZATION OF AUTHORITIES FOR THE PROSECUTION OF PERPETRATORS OF HIGH-TECH CRIMINAL OFFENSES
type_str article
url https://doaj.org/article/6d5a8f0cb1834afe8971d7fb31f71784