- Date of creation
- Name of project
- TREIO Training on European Investigation Order
- Practice area
- Criminal lawDigitalisationEU law
- Type of self-learning material
- Handbooks and guidelinesTrainer’s materialSelf-learning material
- Target group
- BailiffsCourt interpreters and translatorsCourt staffJudgesLawyersProsecutorsTrainers
- Languages
- English
- Links to language versions
Description
The training framework built up by TREIO is modular, each part can be used autonomously from the others. This means that each stakeholder can decide how to organize their training into the national context by combining the different tools that are available in the TREIO Toolkit. To serve the various purposes of competent authorities across the EU and to ensure its sustainability, the TREIO Toolkit has been realized with the aim to be both transferable and reusable.
Judicial professionals (judges, prosecutors, investigative judges) and court staff responsible for the day-to-day EIO exchanges on national level could be interested in exploring the training opportunities offered by the project on both EIO and/or the use of the e-Evidence Digital Exchange System for EIO exchanges.
Competent authorities, judicial training authorities, and dedicated trainers who want to organize a training on EIO in their national environments have at their disposal:
(1) TREIO Training for Trainers refers to a person-to-person training framework and accompanying training sets, delivering flexible training modalities to reflect on competent authorities and trainers’ needs
(2) TREIO Online Courses on EIO exchanges and the use of the e-Evidence Digital Exchange System (eEDES) in this regard
(3) TREIO eEDES Simulator of the EIO business workflow
(4) TREIO Action Plan for Future Adoption.
Policy makers might be interested in the TREIO Action Plan and/or the methodology the project implements.
TREIO Toolkit and its building blocks are developed by the 'TRaining on European Investigation Order' (TREIO) Project (04/2020 - 01/2024), GA 882068, that was funded by the European Union's Justice Programme (2014-2020).