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UODO Requests Polish Law Enforcement Directive Amendments

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Summary

The President of Poland's Personal Data Protection Office (UODO) has formally requested that the Minister of the Interior and Administration and the Minister of Justice initiate legislative work to fully implement the EU Law Enforcement Directive (Directive (EU) 2016/680) into Polish law. The request identifies critical gaps including: incomplete coverage of personal data processing for criminal justice purposes; absence of fundamental data subject rights in criminal procedure legislation (right to information, access, rectification, erasure, restriction of processing, and the right to lodge complaints); inadequate supervision mechanisms for courts and the Public Prosecutor's Office that fail to meet the Directive's requirement for independent oversight; and the lack of sanctioning instruments for the UODO President despite Article 57 requiring effective, proportionate, and dissuasive penalties.

Why this matters

Polish law enforcement authorities processing personal data under the Law Enforcement Directive should monitor legislative developments arising from this UODO request. While non-binding, the request signals regulatory expectation that the current Act will be strengthened to include independent supervisory mechanisms, data subject rights (access, rectification, erasure, complaint procedures), and enforcement sanctions. Entities should assess whether their current data protection governance structures—including DPO notification practices—would need adjustment under a more directive-aligned framework.

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GovPing monitors Poland UODO (alt) for new data privacy & cybersecurity regulatory changes. Every update since tracking began is archived, classified, and available as free RSS or email alerts — 3 changes logged to date.

What changed

The UODO President has submitted a formal request to the Polish Ministers of Interior and Justice seeking legislative amendments to implement the EU Law Enforcement Directive (Directive (EU) 2016/680). The request identifies that the current Act implementing the Directive does not cover all areas of personal data processing for law enforcement purposes, leaving criminal procedure proceedings without data protection guarantees. Specifically, the request highlights that criminal procedure legislation lacks fundamental data subject rights including the right to information, access, rectification, erasure, restriction of processing, and the right to lodge complaints with an independent supervisory authority and obtain effective judicial remedy. The request also raises concerns about supervision of data processing by courts and the Public Prosecutor's Office, noting these currently do not meet the Directive's requirement for fully independent oversight. Additionally, the request points out that the Act does not grant the UODO President sanctioning instruments despite Article 57 requiring Member States to provide effective, proportionate, and dissuasive sanctions. Polish government agencies, courts, the Public Prosecutor's Office, law enforcement authorities, and Data Protection Officers should monitor this legislative development as amendments could significantly expand data protection obligations in criminal proceedings and create new supervisory mechanisms.

Archived snapshot

Apr 24, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

News and events

07.04.2026

Legislative amendments required to the Act implementing the Law Enforcement Directive

In its current form, the Act on the Protection of Personal Data Processed in Connection with preventing and combating crime does not provide full guarantees for the protection of the rights of individuals whose data are processed.

The President of the Personal Data Protection Office has submitted a request to the Minister of the Interior and Administration and to the Minister of Justice to initiate legislative work to ensure the proper implementation, within the Polish legal order, of the provisions of the **Law Enforcement Directive (Directive (EU) 2016/680).**

In his letter to Minister Marcin Kierwiński and Minister Waldemar Żurek, the President of the Personal Data Protection Office, Mirosław Wróblewski, pointed to the problems associated with the implementation of the Law Enforcement Directive. He had raised these concerns earlier—both during the consultation stage of the draft Act and during the European Commission’s evaluations of the Directive (in 2021 and 2025).

Exclusions in national law mean that not all areas of personal data processing for the purposes of identifying, preventing, detecting and combating criminal offences—covered by the Law Enforcement Directive—are included. As a result, personal data contained in case files and processed during procedural activities are not subject to any national provisions guaranteeing data protection. Criminal procedure legislation lacks fundamental rights of data subjects, such as the right to information, the right to lodge a complaint, the right of access, rectification, erasure, restriction of processing, as well as the right to lodge a complaint with an independent supervisory authority and to an effective judicial remedy against that authority’s decisions.

The President of the Personal Data Protection Office addressed the issue of supervision over the proper processing of personal data by courts in the exercise of judicial functions, emphasising the need to protect judicial independence. Supervision should be entrusted exclusively to specialised bodies within the justice system of each Member State. Clarifying national provisions and developing uniform interpretative guidelines could enhance transparency and ensure consistent application of data protection provisions, particularly in the context of establishing an independent supervisory authority, other than the President of the Personal Data Protection Office, located outside the judiciary.

Concerns were also raised regarding supervision of data processing by the Public Prosecutor’s Office, which is currently exercised solely by its internal organisational units, all subject to hierarchical subordination. This model contradicts the Directive’s requirement for supervision by a fully independent authority.

The absence of provisions designating independent bodies with inspection powers in the field of data protection deprives data subjects of protection and fails to respect their right to privacy.

The regulations governing access to data in large‑scale EU information systems are also problematic. The processing of personal data by national authorities is not subject to independent national supervision. The broad exclusions from data protection safeguards have serious consequences not only for the national system but also for the EU‑wide data‑protection framework, particularly regarding the functioning of large‑scale EU information systems and the integrity of the EU legal order.

Under Article 57 of the Law Enforcement Directive, Member States must adopt provisions establishing sanctions for infringements of national rules implementing the Directive and ensure their effective enforcement. These sanctions must be effective, proportionate and dissuasive. However, the Act does not equip the President of the Personal Data Protection Office with any sanctioning instruments of this nature.

The President of the Personal Data Protection Office also highlighted the need to regulate the role of the Data Protection Officer (DPO) . Current provisions define the tasks of the DPO in a manner inconsistent with the Directive and imprecisely regulate the obligation to notify the supervisory authority of DPO appointments, creating difficulties for entities required to comply.

Attention was also drawn to the lack of implementation of the Directive’s provisions on indirect access.

Named provisions

Article 57

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
UODO
Published
April 7th, 2026
Instrument
Consultation
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive
Document ID
Directive (EU) 2016/680

Who this affects

Applies to
Government agencies Law enforcement Legal professionals
Industry sector
9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Personal data processing Criminal procedure data rights Legislative amendments
Geographic scope
PL PL

Taxonomy

Primary area
Data Privacy
Operational domain
Compliance
Compliance frameworks
GDPR
Topics
Criminal Justice Sanctions

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