kb-criminal-procedure-ksa
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name: kb-criminal-procedure-ksa
description: Use when advising on Saudi criminal procedure, including arrest and detention rights, the role of the Public Prosecution (Niyaba 'Amma), investigation procedures, right to counsel, bail and pre-trial detention, the court structure (criminal courts, Court of Appeal, Supreme Court), trial procedure, sentencing under Sharia categories (hudud, qisas, ta'zir), and the special procedures for financial crimes and cybercrime. Essential for any client facing criminal exposure in Saudi Arabia.
license: MIT
metadata:
id: kb.criminal-procedure-KSA
category: kb
practice_area: Criminal Law & Procedure
jurisdictions: [KSA]
priority: P2
intent: [Saudi criminal procedure, criminal law KSA, arrest, detention, Public Prosecution, Sharia law, Saudi courts]
related: [kb-aml-fatf-mena, kb-criminal-procedure-uae, kb-corporate-law-ksa]
source: Louis — HAQQ Legal AI (github.com/sboghossian/mini-claude-for-legal)
version: "1.0"
Knowledge Pack — Criminal Procedure in Saudi Arabia (KSA)
Scope
This pack covers the framework of Saudi criminal procedure and substantive criminal law relevant to commercial and regulatory matters. Saudi criminal law is unusual internationally because it is based primarily on Islamic Sharia, applied through a partially codified modern procedure. This pack covers:
- Primary legal sources and their interaction
- Court structure
- Investigation and arrest
- Right to counsel
- Pre-trial detention and bail
- Trial procedure
- Sentencing categories (Sharia + ta'zir)
- Special procedures for financial crimes, cybercrime, and AML
Primary legal sources
Sharia as the constitution
The Basic Law of Governance (Royal Decree A/90 1992) states that the Holy Quran and the Sunnah are the Constitution of Saudi Arabia. This means Sharia principles are the primary source of law, including for criminal matters.
Key codes and statutes
| Instrument | Scope |
|---|---|
| Code of Criminal Procedure (Royal Decree M/39 1422H / 2001 and amendments) | Procedural rules: arrest, investigation, trial |
| Penal Law for Ta'zir crimes (Council of Ministers Resolution 2021 — Governance of Ta'zir penalties) | Codifying discretionary punishments |
| Anti-Money Laundering Law (Royal Decree M/20 1442H) | AML criminal offences |
| Cyber Crimes Law (Royal Decree M/17 1428H) | Cybercrime offences |
| Anti-Corruption Law / Combating Bribery (Royal Decree M/36 1412H as amended) | Corruption offences |
| Labor Law (Royal Decree M/51) | Labor-related criminal provisions |
Court structure
| Court | Jurisdiction |
|---|---|
| General Courts (Mahakim 'Amma) | First instance for most criminal matters |
| Criminal Courts (Mahakim Jaza'iyya) | Specialized criminal chambers within the court system |
| Commercial Courts | White-collar and commercial crime in some jurisdictions |
| Specialized Criminal Court (SCC) | Terrorism and security matters; also handles some anti-corruption |
| Court of Appeal (Mahakim Isti'naf) | Appellate review of first-instance decisions |
| Supreme Court (Mahakim 'Ulya) | Final appeal on legal questions; review of death sentences |
Investigation and arrest
Authority to investigate
- Bureau of Investigation and Public Prosecution (BIP) / Niyaba 'Amma: the Saudi Public Prosecution; has primary investigative and prosecutorial functions; took over some functions from the previous investigative authority under 2017 reforms
- General Directorate of Investigations (Mabahith): internal security; investigates national security and terrorism cases
- SAFIU: investigates AML/CFT matters; refers to BIP for prosecution
- Zakat/Tax/Customs Authority (ZATCA): investigates fiscal crimes
Arrest
- Arrest requires a warrant from BIP except in flagrante delicto situations
- Persons arrested must be informed of reasons for arrest
- Initial detention: up to 5 days initially; BIP may extend to 6 months for investigation
- Detained persons have the right to contact family and legal counsel
Search
- Search of premises requires judicial authorization (search warrant)
- Personal searches can be conducted on arrest
- Electronic devices: increasingly addressed under Cyber Crimes Law provisions
Right to counsel
- Accused persons have the right to a lawyer
- Lawyer must be licensed by the Saudi Bar Association (Al-Hai'a al-Sa'udiyya lil-Muhamin)
- Foreign lawyers: must work through licensed Saudi counsel
- Access: the right to counsel during investigation proceedings has been strengthened in recent years; BIP interrogation procedures provide for counsel presence
- Practical concern: timing of access to counsel at initial stages can be delayed in practice, particularly in security-related matters
Pre-trial detention and bail
- Pre-trial detention periods: up to 5 days initially; BIP can extend; extended detention requires judicial authorization
- Bail (kafala): available for non-serious offences; cash bail, personal surety, or property pledge
- Bail not available for serious offences: hudud crimes, offences carrying death penalty, terrorism
- Travel ban: may be imposed independent of formal detention; significant tool in financial crime investigations
Sharia criminal law categories
Saudi criminal law distinguishes three categories of offences:
Hudud (حدود) — fixed punishments
Offences with punishments fixed in the Quran and Sunnah. They include:
- Theft (sarqa): amputation of the hand (strict proof requirements; rarely applied in practice)
- Highway robbery (hiraba): various penalties
- Unlawful sexual intercourse (zina): severe penalties (strict proof requirements)
- False accusation of zina (qadhf): 80 lashes
- Consumption of alcohol (shurb al-khamr): 80 lashes
- Apostasy (ridda): penalties debated; rarely prosecuted in commercial context
Proof standard for hudud: Extremely high — confession (that can be retracted) or witness evidence meeting strict Islamic standards. In practice, most criminal prosecutions proceed under ta'zir.
Qisas (قصاص) — retaliatory punishments
For bodily harm and homicide:
- Life for life, injury for injury
- Victim or heirs can accept diya (blood money) in lieu of retaliation
- Widely relevant to traffic accidents and assault cases; diya amounts set by government and updated periodically
Ta'zir (تعزير) — discretionary punishments
The dominant category for commercial and regulatory crimes. Includes all offences not covered by hudud or qisas, with punishments set by the legislature and judges at their discretion. Since 2021, ta'zir penalties have been progressively codified.
Commercial ta'zir offences include:
- Money laundering: up to 10 years imprisonment + heavy fines
- Fraud: imprisonment + fines
- Bribery: imprisonment + fines + disqualification
- Cybercrime: imprisonment + fines (up to SAR 5M+)
- Employment law violations: fines + operational restrictions
Trial procedure
- BIP refers case to court — indictment filed
- Initial hearing — accused formally charged; right to plead
- Evidence phase — BIP presents evidence; defence challenges
- Witness examination — oral testimony; cross-examination in adversarial style but adapted to Islamic procedural tradition
- Closing arguments — BIP + defence
- Judgment — written; may be rendered immediately after hearing or within a period
- Sentencing — follows judgment
Admission (iqrar)
Confession carries significant evidentiary weight in Saudi procedure. A valid confession may be sufficient for conviction. Retracting a confession has different consequences depending on the offence category.
Financial crime and AML special procedures
For AML and financial crime matters, investigation typically involves:
- SAFIU conducting financial intelligence analysis
- SAFIU refers to BIP for prosecution
- Asset freezing: BIP and SAFIU can apply for asset freeze orders during investigation
- International cooperation: Saudi Arabia has MLA (mutual legal assistance) treaties with multiple countries; INTERPOL cooperation
Penalty exposure (AML as example):
- Up to 10 years imprisonment
- Fines of multiple amounts of proceeds of crime
- Asset confiscation
- Corporate liability: entities can be fined/dissolved
Cybercrime (Cyber Crimes Law)
Key offences:
- Unauthorized access to computer systems
- Computer fraud and data theft
- Publishing content that disturbs public order or infringes religious values
- Online defamation and libel
Penalties: up to 4 years + SAR 3M fine for basic offences; higher for financial fraud via electronic means.
Note: Saudi cybercrime law has been used to prosecute online speech, including social media posts — relevant for businesses and individuals with public communications.
Practical guidance for foreign nationals and businesses
- Travel ban risk: a preliminary step in investigations is a travel ban; may be imposed without formal arrest. Always verify travel ban status before senior management travel to KSA during any dispute or investigation
- Visa sponsorship: employment sponsorship (iqama) means employees can be subject to sponsor's cooperation in any investigation; structural considerations for expatriate management
- Corporate liability: companies can be prosecuted and fined/dissolved; directors + managers face personal liability
- Privilege: communications with Saudi lawyers protected; foreign lawyer communications less clear
- Language: all proceedings in Arabic; translation costs and timing should be planned for
How to use this pack
Load this pack when:
- A client or their employees face criminal investigation or charges in Saudi Arabia
- Advising on white-collar crime, AML, bribery, or cybercrime exposure in KSA
- Structuring corporate compliance programs for KSA operations
- Conducting due diligence that requires understanding KSA criminal exposure
Caveats & currency
Saudi criminal procedure has been significantly reformed since 2017 under Vision 2030 judicial reform. The ta'zir codification (2021) is a major development. BIP's powers and procedures continue to evolve. This pack reflects the framework as of knowledge cutoff — always verify current procedure with KSA-licensed counsel for active matters.
Related skills
- [[kb-aml-fatf-mena]] — AML/CFT regime and SAFIU reporting
- [[kb-criminal-procedure-uae]] — UAE criminal procedure for comparison
- [[kb-corporate-law-ksa]] — KSA corporate law context