In both my mother’s and my case, Bulgaria’s Prosecutor’s Office referred to identical, flamboyant charges – money-laundering. In reality, they were trying to criminalize the purchase of two properties in transparent transactions, duly declared to the tax authorities – I had bought a flat and my mom had bought a house with money directly given to us by my father via official and personal bank transfers, prior to any of the above-mentioned events.
In both our pre-charge decrees, the Prosecutor’s Office argued this was money-laundering because my mom and I unconditionally and undisputedly knew that my father was implicated in serious criminal activity. No crime against my father has been proven to this day, and at the time of purchase there had been no criminal investigation against him.
While we challenged my mom’s Red Notice and my Diffusion separately, the CCF came out with a joint decision, declaring that both were non-compliant with Interpol’s Rules on Processing Data and ordering their deletion. We argued lack of evidentiary basis, unlawfulness, and political persecution. The CCF examined the lack of evidentiary basis first and stated that it would not examine the other arguments as it could reach its decision on the first submission alone.
The CCF cited Article 2(1) of Interpol’s Constitution in conjunction with Article 12 of the RPD, which stipulates the requirements for “quality” of data. The CCF concluded that all the Prosecutor’s Office had demonstrated was that it was “plausible” that my mom and I bought properties with money directly received from my father. Ultimately, the CCF “[did] not find there to be any concrete element as to a criminal intent or illicit act…”.