Case study
Forged documents in organized crime
Full acquittal, release after one month, and residence permit obtained.
Outcome obtained
- Release secured after just one month of pre-trial detention
- Full acquittal on every charge
- Long-term residence permit obtained shortly afterwards
Initial situation
Our client, Mr. B., a foreign national resident in France, was placed under formal investigation and remanded in pre-trial detention as part of a judicial investigation into a large alleged network producing and selling forged identity documents: French and Italian identity cards, driving licences, and other official documents. The forged documents were said to be used to allow undocumented persons to register on ride-hailing and home-delivery platforms.
Mr. B. was prosecuted for forgery and use of forged documents as part of an organised criminal group, as well as for facilitating unauthorised entry and residence. The stakes were twofold: criminal, with the risk of a heavy conviction for offences that carry very high penalties when committed as part of an organised group; and administrative, since the criminal proceedings had frozen the processing of his long-term residence permit application.
Immediate action: securing release
Instructed after Mr. B. had been remanded in custody, the firm immediately analysed the conditions of detention and identified the procedural and substantive arguments available to secure a swift release. In complex investigation cases, pre-trial detention can last many months unless specific action is taken.
The release application was filed within the first days of the firm's instruction. It challenged the statutory conditions of the placement, relied on a personality file demonstrating Mr. B.'s ties to France, and offered strong guarantees of appearance. Release was secured after just one month of pre-trial detention.
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01 84 60 92 47Defence on the merits: unwinding a complex case
1. Isolating Mr. B.'s role in a case with many defendants
The case involved many defendants playing very different roles within the alleged network. The defence conducted a careful, item-by-item review to show that the acts attributed to Mr. B. did not match the constitutive elements of the offences charged against him.
2. Challenging the organised-group qualification
The organised-group qualification considerably increased the sentences faced. The defence demonstrated that the evidence was insufficient to characterise Mr. B.'s participation in a structured group within the meaning of Article 132-71 of the Criminal Code.
3. Acquittal on the immigration charge: lack of intent
The defence secured an acquittal on this count by showing the absence of any deliberate intent to assist unauthorised residence, an essential element of the offence.
The administrative dimension: securing the residence permit
The acquittal handed down at the hearing was the starting point of a parallel administrative process. The firm engaged with the prefecture authorities to have the judicial decision recognised in the file relating to Mr. B.'s long-term residence permit, which had been blocked for years by the criminal proceedings. The long-term residence permit was issued in the months following the acquittal.
This case illustrates how decisive immediate action at the pre-trial detention stage can be, and how essential it is to link the criminal defence with the administrative stakes that may flow from it. The criminal acquittal was not an end in itself: it was the lever that allowed an administrative situation, stalled for years, to be resolved.
What the law says: forgery in an organised group
Forgery and use of forged documents are defined at Articles 441-1 and following of the Criminal Code. Article 441-9 provides for a sentence of ten years' imprisonment and a one million euro fine where the offences are committed as part of an organised group. That qualification requires the existence of a structured group within the meaning of Article 132-71 of the Criminal Code, that is, a group formed or an agreement made with a view to preparing offences, characterised by a division of tasks.
Article L. 622-1 of the Code on the Entry and Residence of Foreign Nationals and the Right of Asylum punishes facilitation of unauthorised residence with one year's imprisonment and a 15,000 EUR fine. Establishing this offence requires deliberate intent to help a foreign national to reside unlawfully in France.
Learn more about international cases and arrest warrants
This case study is published for educational purposes. Names and identifying details have been anonymised. It does not constitute a guarantee of result, as every case is unique in its facts and legal context.
