Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05SOFIA1874
2005-11-02 04:44:00
UNCLASSIFIED
Embassy Sofia
Cable title:  

FY 2006 PROPOSALS FOR INL-MANAGED SEED FUNDED

Tags:  SNAR KCRM KJUS EAID ASEC PGOV BU 
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UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 07 SOFIA 001874 

SIPDIS

DEPARTMENT FOR INL/AAE (BONE),EUR/SCE (BRANDON)
DOJ FOR OPDAT & ICITAP (JONES, ALEXANDRE, DELCORE)
E.O. 12958: N/A

TAGS: SNAR KCRM KJUS EAID ASEC PGOV BU
SUBJECT: FY 2006 PROPOSALS FOR INL-MANAGED SEED FUNDED
LAW ENFORCEMENT AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE DEVELOPMENT PROJECTS
FOR BULGARIA

REF: STATE 183148 SOFIA 766

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 07 SOFIA 001874

SIPDIS

DEPARTMENT FOR INL/AAE (BONE),EUR/SCE (BRANDON)
DOJ FOR OPDAT & ICITAP (JONES, ALEXANDRE, DELCORE)
E.O. 12958: N/A

TAGS: SNAR KCRM KJUS EAID ASEC PGOV BU
SUBJECT: FY 2006 PROPOSALS FOR INL-MANAGED SEED FUNDED
LAW ENFORCEMENT AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE DEVELOPMENT PROJECTS
FOR BULGARIA

REF: STATE 183148 SOFIA 766


1. SUMMARY: Post herein submits proposals to continue
four INL-managed projects using FY 2006 funding:
Resident Legal Advisor (RLA); Forensics Laboratories
Project; the Criminal Law Liaison (CLL); and Embassy Rule
of Law Assistant. Post also proposes transforming the
Regional Criminal Justice Initiative (RCJI) to the
National Criminal Justice Training Initiative (NCJTI),
which will support training initiatives at the Bulgarian
Police Academy. Opportunities may also arise to work
with a new Prosecutor General, to be appointed in
February 2006. All projects will focus on reforming
Bulgarian criminal justice institutions and strengthening
its law enforcement capabilities. The total amount of FY
2006 SEED funding allocated by Post to INL-managed
projects is USD 2,366,000. As FY06 will be the last year
of SEED funding for Post's criminal justice assistance,
the projects will place particular emphasis on building
legacies and leaving self-sustaining criminal justice
institutions. END SUMMARY.


2. Like many countries in the region, Bulgaria suffers
from substantial organized crime and corruption, which
law enforcement and judicial institutions have been
unable to counter effectively. Weaknesses in Bulgaria's
criminal justice institutions represent a grave threat to
its future democratic development and successful entry
into the EU, scheduled for 2007. Reform of Bulgaria's
judicial system and modernization of its criminal justice
institutions therefore constitute post's most urgent
assistance priority. In our opinion, Bulgaria will
require additional criminal justice assistance after
expiration of SEED funding, and our continued support
will serve important US interests. Bulgarian criminal
activity already has a direct and increasing impact on
the United States, which is unlikely to abate after
Bulgaria's entry into the EU. RefTel Sofia 766. Post
therefore renews the request, originally made in Sofia
766, for funding to continue criminal justice assistance

to Bulgaria after expiration of SEED funding.

-------------- --------------
PRIORITY 1 OF 5 - RESIDENT LEGAL ADVISOR (RLA): USD
885,000
-------------- --------------


3. Goal(s): Government of Bulgaria (GoB) establishes a
self-sustaining anti-human trafficking regime; GoB
manifests long-term capacity to apply criminal justice
reform legislation; Prosecutor General takes significant
steps toward reform of prosecutorial function; United
States rule of law and law enforcement assistance
activities leave self-sustaining justice-sector
institutions in place when SEED funding expires.


4. Background: The DOJ/OPDAT Resident Legal Advisor
(RLA) stands at the center point of Post's strategy of
strengthening the rule of law in Bulgaria. The RLA
serves as Post's coordinator for USG rule of law and law
enforcement assistance activities. In that capacity, the
RLA chairs Post's Rule of Law and Law Enforcement Task
Force and provides extensive guidance and oversight to
Post's INL criminal justice portfolio. The RLA also
administers a program of criminal justice assistance,
focused on combating human trafficking and other forms of
organized and transnational crime; and on development and
implementation of criminal justice reform legislation.
In FY06, the RLA will also develop training modules on
application of Bulgarian intellectual property law for
police and prosecutors. In addition, a new Prosecutor
General will be appointed in FY06, presenting a window of
opportunity to work for reform of the prosecutorial
function in Bulgaria.


5. Project Description:
Rule of Law Coordinator -- The RLA will continue to serve
as overall Embassy coordinator for rule of law and law
enforcement assistance activities carried out under the
Embassy's banner, and will serve as in-country Project
Manager for the RCJI/NCJTI, Priority Project 3.
Combating Trafficking in Persons -- The RLA will provide
technical assistance to the National Anti-Trafficking
Commission. The RLA will also provide training to
justice sector personnel on investigation and prosecution
of human trafficking cases, with an emphasis upon using
money laundering and asset forfeiture statutes to
dismantle human trafficking organizations; and on
identification of and assistance to victims of human
trafficking. The RLA will continue to empower a core of
selected Bulgarians to be the country's primary anti-
trafficking trainers; and will continue to serve as
coordinator of an international donors human trafficking
working group.
Development and Implementation of Criminal Justice Reform
Legislation -- The RLA will continue to assist the GOB in
the drafting, passage and implementation of criminal law
reform legislation. Such assistance seems likely to
include support for development of legislation addressing
specialized investigative techniques (SITs) and reform of
the penal code; and implementation of new witness
protection, probation, and victims' protection
legislation, and the new criminal procedure code.
Intellectual Property -- In collaboration with the
Federal Law Enforcement Training Center (FLETC) and other
sections at Post, the RLA will develop training modules
on investigation and prosecution of intellectual property
cases.
Prosecutorial Function: The RLA will provide technical
assistance as needed, to a new Prosecutor General, who
will take office in the second quarter of FY06. The
nature of such assistance may be governed, in part, by
the results of the findings of the ABA/CEELI
Prosecutorial Function Reform Index, discussed in
paragraph 27. Assistance may also include additional
training for prosecutors in light of such factors as
institutional changes to the Prosecutorial General's
office and the new responsibilities of prosecutors under
the new criminal procedure code, as supervisors of the
investigation.

6. Timeline: The RLA project will continue until the
expiration of SEED funding, expected on or around
September 30, 2007.

7. Sustainability: Successful completion of the
project should result in more robust and sustainable
justice sector institutions in Bulgaria. One of the
RLA's principal tasks will be to assure that all SEED-
funded rule of law and law enforcement activities
concentrate upon leaving sustainable justice sector
institutions upon expiration of SEED funding. Further,
by the end of the project, the National Trafficking
Commission, and the local commissions it establishes,
should be a major vehicle for a comprehensive assault on
human trafficking. The Bulgarian trainers utilized in
OPDAT trainings should be in a position to carry the
responsibility of training fellow Bulgarians on the
investigation and prosecution of human trafficking cases,
and on inter-acting with the local anti-trafficking
commissions and NGOs in providing assistance to
trafficking victims. Current increases in the number of
human trafficking cases coming to trial and resulting in
convictions should continue, with some traffickers
convicted on money laundering charges. By the end of the
project, Bulgaria should also be implementing a wide
variety of new criminal justice legislation developed
with SEED assistance.


8. Performance indicators:

Combating Human Trafficking:

-- Bulgarian prosecutors return indictments in at least
three trafficking cases.

-- The National and local Anti-Trafficking Commissions
develop mechanisms and structures for providing
assistance to victims of trafficking.

Criminal law reform legislation:

-- Revised criminal procedure code implemented.

-- Revised SITs legislation drafted and entered on path
toward enactment.

Prosecutorial Function:

-- Prosecutor General implements at least one
recommendation of CEELI Prosecutorial Function Reform
Index.


9. Evaluation: The RLA will submit weekly activity
reports and quarterly progress reports to OPDAT HQ, INL
and the Embassy. In addition, at the completion of the
project, the RLA will submit an end-of-mission report to
the GoB which includes recommendations for sustainability
of all SEED funded rule of law and law enforcement
assistance projects.

-------------- --------------
PRIORITY 2 OF 5 - FORENSICS LABORATORIES: 550,000 USD
-------------- --------------


10. Goal(s): Upgrade capabilities to analyze potential
evidence at the Research Institute for Forensic Science
and Criminology (RIFSC) in Sofia, and the Basic Forensics
Laboratories (BFL)and Regional Forensics Laboratories
(RFL) throughout the country; RIFSC accredited by
European Network for Forensic Science Institutes
(ENFSI)and licensed to meet International Standardization
Organization (ISO) 9000 standards (a series of five
standards for developing a total quality management
system, developed by the International Organization for
Standardization based in Geneva, Switzerland).


11. Background: Since 1st quarter FY03, the Forensics
Laboratories project has focused on upgrading the ability
of forensic laboratories to analyze potential evidence,
especially in cases involving counterfeiting, narcotics,
cyber crime and missing persons. Through the project's
activities, Bulgarian law enforcement is already able to
better investigate complex crimes and provide evidence
needed to successfully prosecute complex and serious
crimes. The project has always sought to complement
other USG rule-of-law activities, particularly the RCJI
and the Criminal Law Liaison Program (priorities 3 and
4).


12. Project Description: A TDY contractor, provided by
DOJ/ICITAP, in close collaboration with the Director of
the RIFSC, will manage the upgrading of equipment at the
RIFSC and its satellite labs throughout the country. The
contractor will coordinate required training for the new
equipment and update procedures and processes. The
project will work with the RIFSC to achieve full ENFSI
accreditation and licensing to meet ISO 9000 standards.
The project will continue to collaborate and complement
the work of the RCJI/NCJTI and Criminal Law Liaison
program activities. Specific activities include:

-- Installation of hardware and software to support an
operational Laboratory Information Management System
(LIMS) system at RIFSC.

-- Training of BFL and RFL personnel to be self-
sufficient in analyzing potential evidence instead of
sending such evidence to the RIFSC.

-- Attendance by RIFSC representatives at international
forensic information sharing and workshop conferences and
annual European Network for Forensic Science Institutes
(ENFSI) conference.


13. Timeline: Project activities will be carried out
throughout FY 2006, with end results expected in FY 2007.


14. Sustainability: Full accreditation of the RIFSC by
the ENFSI will help ensure sustainability through regular
assessments and the enforcement of strict guidelines. The
automated evidence-tracking LIMS system will provide a
capability of linking all BFLs and RFLs into a nation-
wide LIMS. The practice of replacing 2/3-year old
equipment at RIFSC and sending it to upgrade BFLs or RFL
will lead to enhanced regional forensic capacities.


15. Performance indicators:

-- RIFSC accredited by the European Network for Forensics
Science Institutes (ENFSI) and licensed to meet the
International Standardization Organization (ISO) 9000
standards.

-- Reduction in the analysis time of potential evidence
at the RIFSC and in satellite labs.

-- Upgraded equipment transferred by the RIFSC to an
appropriate BFL or RFL and BFL/RFL personnel trained to
be self-sufficient in analyzing potential evidence

-- Fully operational Laboratory Information Management
System at RIFSC accommodating an automated evidence
tracking system.

-- Further upgrades of RFLs to BFL status.


16. Evaluation: Submission of monthly to bi-monthly
activity reports and quarterly progress reports by the
technical advisor to ICITAP HQ, INL and the Embassy.

-------------- --------------
PRIORITY PROJECT 3 OF 5 - NATIONAL CRIMINAL JUSTICE
TRAINING INITIATIVE (NCJTI),AS SUCCESSOR TO REGIONAL
CRIMINAL JUSTICE INITIATIVE (RCJI): 551,000 USD
-------------- --------------


17. Goal: Nationalize and institutionalize successful
RCJI police training initiatives at the Bulgarian Police
Academy, and provide additional technical assistance to
the Academy.


18. Background: Beginning in 4th quarter FY03, the RCJI
worked at the local level, seeking to: 1) encourage
institutional cooperation in the investigation and
prosecution of cases; 2) improve case management
procedures; and, more generally, 3) generate "bottom up"
criminal justice reform. The program assigned an
experienced American prosecutor (provided by ABA/CEELI)
and an experienced American investigator (provided by
DOJ/ICITAP),to work with local counterparts. It began
work in the pilot jurisdiction of Blagoevgrad. The
program shifted operations to Plovdiv in FY05, while
keeping contact with Blagoevgrad authorities. The RCJI
will continue to work in these areas in FY06, using FY05
funding.


19. The RCJI also developed or is the process of
developing several important police training initiatives.
These include:

-- basic investigative skills for police investigators;
-- arson investigation; and
-- precinct and crisis management (at the request of
the Bulgarian Ministry of Interior).

The RCJI will offer trainings in these areas in the RCJI
jurisdiction in FY06, using FY05 funding, in
collaboration with the Bulgarian Police Academy.

In the last year of SEED funding, the NCJTI seeks to
capitalize upon these training initiatives by
nationalizing them and incorporating them into the
curriculum of the Police Academy, and by further
strengthening the Academy's curriculum.


20. Project Description: Based on lessons learned in
the training initiatives in the areas enumerated in
paragraph 19 -- basic investigative skills for police
investigators; arson investigation; and precinct and
crisis management - the project will institutionalize
such training on a national basis through incorporation
into the curriculum of the Police Academy. The project
will also provide additional technical assistance to the
Police Academy, as needed. The project will place
particular emphasis upon expanding the scope of in-
service training available at the Academy, including
offering travel grants so that officers may come to Sofia
for training, and selected in-service training in
regional locations. In addition, the project will seek
to develop a more practical, problem-solving approach to
Police Academy training in selected additional areas, and
to incorporate the perspective of the public prosecutor,
the supervisor of the investigation under the new
Bulgarian Criminal Procedure Code, into the Academy's
curriculum. The project will be administered through a
full-time, in-country DoJ/ICITAP police technical
advisor, supported by additional international experts as
appropriate.

21: Timeline: The RCJI will complete its activities,
using FY05 funding, on or about September 30, 2006.
NCJTI activities should be completed with the expiration
of FY06 funding, on or about September 30, 2007.

22. Sustainability: All NCJTI training programs will
have a "train-the-trainers" component to support
sustainability, and will be integrated into the permanent
curriculum of the Police Academy. In addition, the NCJTI
will collaborate with an EU Phare twinning project whose
purposes include improving the methodology and practice
for conducting police investigations, which should
provide additional external support to secure
sustainability of NCJTI training initiatives.

23. Performance Indicators:
-- Bulgarian Ministry of Interior (MoI) and Police
Academy incorporate academy-tested Basic Criminal
Investigation Course into national curriculum.

-- Bulgarian MoI and Police Academy incorporate academy-
tested Arson investigative course into its national
training curriculum.

-- Up-to-date, pragmatic curriculum combined with adult
learning methodologies in at least two additional areas
implemented at the Bulgarian Police Academy.


24. Evaluation: Submission of bi-weekly activity reports
and quarterly progress reports by the ICITAP technical
advisor to ICITAP HQ, INL and the Embassy. Further, the
NCJTI will use a variety of instruments to evaluate the
effectiveness of trainings - immediately after the
training and approximately six months later. In
addition, the RLA will act as in-country evaluator of the
NCJTI program.

-------------- --------------
PRIORITY PROJECT 4 OF 5 - CRIMINAL LAW LIAISON (CLL):
USD $340,000
-------------- --------------


25. Goal(s): Increase the capacity of the Bulgarian
government to combat cyber crime; increase justice sector
institutions' capacity to provide victim protection and
compensation in accordance with Bulgarian law.


26. Background: Since 1998, the Sofia office of the
Central European and Eurasian Law Initiative (CEELI),a
public service project of the American Bar Association
(ABA),has supported criminal justice reform in Bulgaria.
Presently, CEELI is the only international donor
organization working to improve Bulgaria's capacity to
investigate and prosecute cyber crime. Its Criminal Law
Liaison (CLL) program has played a key role in several of
the major criminal justice reform initiatives in
Bulgaria: it was involved in the early effort to build a
stronger legislative infrastructure to combat financial
crime, helping to establish Bulgaria's Financial
Intelligence Unit and to develop Bulgaria's present money
laundering statute, "Measures Against Money Laundering
Act." CEELI assisted the OPDAT RLA in establishing the
inter-agency anti-trafficking working group which
subsequently constructed one of the strongest legislative
frameworks in the Balkans for combating human
trafficking.


27. CEELI also worked with two separate Bulgarian
prosecutors' associations to gain approval for the first
Bulgarian Prosecutorial Ethics Code, which is presently
in force and binding on all prosecutors. CEELI's work on
legal ethics led to the inclusion of ethics in coursework
at law faculties. CEELI published ethics codes and
commentaries for judges, prosecutors, investigators and
police, and there is currently a prosecutor in each of
Bulgaria's 28 districts who serves as an ethics
`consultant' as a result of CEELI's work. Further, at
the request of Embassy Sofia, CEELI is presently using
FY05 funding to develop a Prosecutorial Reform Index
similar to the indices that it has developed for the
judicial function and the legal profession. This
publication will provide international benchmarks to
assess the prosecutorial function in Bulgaria and
identify potential areas for future reform.


28. CEELI's assistance to the GoB on cyber crime has led
to several successful enforcement actions. Additionally,
CEELI facilitated the donation of EnCase software
licenses to trace suspicious or illegal e-mail messages
to their source. The Institute for Computer Technologies
(ICT) is now fully equipped and trained, and capable of
using this software during cyber crime investigations.
Currently, CEELI is preparing trainings for law
enforcement personnel on routine cyber crime forensic
work to prevent delays in investigations.
CEELI assistance was instrumental in the creation of a
cyber crime unit within the Bulgarian MoI and in
development of a cyber crime manual that will soon be
published. Further, CEELI assisted in the development of
new Bulgarian cyber crime legislation through the
involvement of computer experts from the international
and national private sector, probably the first example
of such public-private collaboration on legislative
drafting in Bulgaria.


29. Project Description: The project will fund a
Criminal Law Liaison, an experienced American prosecutor,
and two Bulgarian staff attorneys to promote criminal law
and criminal procedure reform. The project will
coordinate its activities closely with the OPDAT RLA.
The project will work in the area of cyber crime,
computer-based intellectual property violations, and
implementation of Bulgaria's new victims' assistance law.

Cyber Crime - The project will concentrate upon improving
the capacity of the Bulgarian government to detect,
investigate, prosecute and prevent cyber crime by:
supporting trainings based on the cyber crime manual
developed with CEELI assistance that will set forth
streamlined guidelines for cyber crime investigation and
prosecution; providing trainings for law enforcement
personnel on cyber crime forensic work; developing anti-
phishing sites and phishing reporting mechanisms
((phishing is the use of e-mails to procure an
individual's financial information for purposes of fraud
and identity theft; promoting continuing cooperation
between the public and the private sector in combating
cyber crime via working groups and assistance on specific
issues of mutual interest; and promoting the inclusion of
cyber crime coursework in law faculty curricula.

Computer-based intellectual property -- The project will
also collaborate with the OPDAT RLA in improving the
capacity of the Bulgarian government to investigate
computer-based intellectual property violations by
sponsoring trainings on investigating and prosecuting
computer-based intellectual property violations; and
promoting continuing cooperation between public and
private sector in the area of computer-based intellectual
property violations.

Victims' Assistance Law -- The project will assist in the
implementation of the Bulgarian law on victim protection
and compensation, including: assistance in the creation
and development of a centralized victim protection unit
and a victim compensation fund; provision of training on
protection and compensation; and assistance in drafting
of secondary protection and compensation legislation.


30. Timeline: The CLL project will continue until
expiration of SEED funding, expected on or around
September 30, 2007.


31. Sustainability: The streamlined cyber crime
investigation and prosecution guidelines for all law
enforcement units should become part of the internal
operating rules and regulations of the law enforcement
units charged with cyber crime enforcement authority.
The training component of this project is designed to
replicate itself by teaching criminal justice sector
personnel how to train their own ranks, and by requiring
that participants do so as part of their involvement in
the project.


32. Performance Indicators:

-- Inclusion of cyber crime courses in the curriculum of
at least one Bulgarian law faculty.

-- Law enforcement and the Prosecution Service develop
and implement cyber crime investigation and prosecution
guidelines.

-- Law enforcement agencies and the Prosecution Service
include cyber crime investigation and prosecution
guidelines in internal rules and regulations.

-- 10 % increase in detection, investigation and
prosecution of cyber crimes and intellectual property
violations over 2005/2006 baseline.

--At least 1 anti-phishing Web site is developed and
implemented.

--At least 2 law enforcement personnel in each of the 28
Bulgarian judicial districts are trained on forensic
cyber crime investigative techniques.

-- Quarterly meetings of the cyber crime working group
that spans the public and private sectors.


33. Evaluation: The CLL will submit monthly activity
reports to CEELI HQ, INL and the Embassy.

-------------- --------------
PRIORITY PROJECT 5 OF 5 - EMBASSY RULE OF LAW ASSISTANT:
USD 40,000
-------------- --------------


34. The Embassy Rule of Law Assistant position began
early in FY04. Since that time, the incumbent has proven
essential to the Embassy's rule of law mission through
provision of written and oral analyses of rule of law and
legal issues in Bulgaria for Embassy officials. The
incumbent has been a major drafter of cables on key rule
of law subjects, such as human trafficking, organized
crime, human rights, and treatment of minorities in
Bulgaria. The Rule of Law Assistant has developed
extensive contacts with the NGO and international donor
communities, and has served as an important link between
the Embassy and Bulgarian justice-sector officials. The
incumbent will continue to execute these functions using
FY06 funding.

--------------
SUMMARY OF PROJECTS
--------------


35. Total funding for the five projects for FY 2006 is
USD 2,366,000 in country SEED funds.

PROJECT FY 2006 FUNDING FUNDING TO DATE
-- RLA USD 885,000 USD 3,388,629
-- Forensics USD 550,000 USD 1,486,200
-- RCJI/NCJTI USD 551,000 USD 1,406,000
-- CLL USD 340,000 USD 1,042,345
-- Pol/Ec Assistant USD 40,000 USD 125,000
TOTAL USD 2,366,000 USD 7,448,174

BEYRLE