kb-criminal-procedure-uae

Category: Coding Risk: Unknown ★ 3.9 · Rating 3.9/5 (8) sboghossian/mini-claude-for-legal MIT

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name: kb-criminal-procedure-uae
description: Use when advising on UAE criminal procedure under the Federal Penal Code and Code of Criminal Procedure, including arrest and detention rights, the role of the Public Prosecution, bail, court structure (Criminal Courts of First Instance, Court of Appeal, Court of Cassation, Federal Supreme Court), DIFC/ADGM civil-only jurisdiction, cybercrime, financial crime, AML criminal exposure, drug offences, and the distinct rules applicable in free zone vs onshore contexts. Essential for any individual or corporate facing criminal exposure in the UAE.
license: MIT
metadata:
id: kb.criminal-procedure-UAE
category: kb
practice_area: Criminal Law & Procedure
jurisdictions: [UAE]
priority: P2
intent: [UAE criminal procedure, criminal law UAE, arrest, detention, Public Prosecution, UAE courts, cybercrime, financial crime]
related: [kb-aml-fatf-mena, kb-corporate-law-uae, kb-criminal-procedure-ksa, kb-banking-regulation-cbuae]
source: Louis — HAQQ Legal AI (github.com/sboghossian/mini-claude-for-legal)
version: "1.0"

Knowledge Pack — Criminal Procedure in the UAE

Scope

This pack covers the UAE criminal procedure framework and the key substantive criminal laws relevant to commercial practice and individual conduct. UAE criminal law is a hybrid system: civil-law influenced code, overlaid with Islamic law for certain offences, with separate common-law regimes in DIFC and ADGM (civil only — no criminal jurisdiction in the free zones). This pack covers:

  • Primary legislation
  • Court structure
  • Investigation, arrest, and detention
  • Right to counsel
  • Trial procedure
  • Key substantive offences relevant to business
  • DIFC/ADGM criminal jurisdiction distinction
  • Practical guidance

Primary legislation

Statute Scope
Penal Code (Federal Law 3/1987 as amended) General criminal offences; most commercial crimes
Code of Criminal Procedure (CPC) (Federal Law 35/1992 as amended) Procedural rules; investigation; trial
Federal Decree-Law 34/2021 (Combating Rumours and Cybercrime) Cybercrime; digital offences; replaced 2012 cybercrime law
Federal Decree-Law 20/2018 (AML/CFT) Money laundering and terrorist financing offences
Federal Decree-Law 32/2021 (Economic Crimes) Financial and commercial crimes; fraud; breach of trust
Law 4/2016 (Counter-Terrorism) Terrorism offences; Specialized Federal Terrorism Court
Dubai Law 4/2022 (VARA) Virtual asset offences in Dubai

Court structure

Federal courts

Court Jurisdiction
Court of First Instance (Criminal Division) Most criminal matters first instance
Specialized federal courts Economic crimes, AML, terrorism, cybercrime (in Dubai and Abu Dhabi)
Court of Appeal Appeal on facts and law
Court of Cassation (emirate level) Further review on legal grounds
Federal Supreme Court Final review; constitutional matters; disputes between emirates

Emirate-level structure

Each emirate (Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Sharjah, etc.) has its own courts:

  • Dubai courts: significant caseload; dedicated circuits for financial crime, cybercrime, commercial fraud
  • Abu Dhabi courts: federal circuit courts + Abu Dhabi local courts
  • DIFC Courts: civil and commercial only — no criminal jurisdiction; criminal matters arising in DIFC are handled by Dubai courts
  • ADGM Courts: civil and commercial only — no criminal jurisdiction

Investigation, arrest, and detention

Investigative authorities

  • Public Prosecution (Niyaba al-'Amma): principal investigative and prosecutorial authority; conducts investigations; decides to charge or dismiss
  • Police (Shurta): initial arrests; preliminary investigation; report to Public Prosecution
  • State Security (Amn al-Dawla): national security matters; terrorism; some financial crime with national security nexus
  • CBUAE: investigates financial crime with referral to Public Prosecution
  • UAE FIU (goAML): AML intelligence unit; refers to Public Prosecution for prosecution

Arrest

  • Police may arrest without warrant in flagrante delicto
  • Arrest warrants issued by Public Prosecution for pre-arrest investigations
  • Detained persons must be informed of reasons for arrest

Detention periods

Stage Duration
Police custody Up to 48 hours before Public Prosecution review
Public Prosecution detention Up to 21 days initially; renewable by court
Judicial pre-trial detention Court-ordered; renewable periods; can extend for months in complex financial crime cases
Maximum pre-trial detention Case-dependent; serious charges can result in extended detention

Right to bail

  • Bail available for most offences (except: serious felonies, terrorism, repeat offenders at judge's discretion)
  • Forms: cash bail, personal surety, property pledge
  • Travel ban imposed alongside or as alternative to detention

Right to counsel

  • Right to a lawyer from time of arrest (CPC guarantee)
  • Lawyer must be licensed by UAE Ministry of Justice
  • Foreign lawyers: must associate with UAE-licensed lawyer for court proceedings; can advise outside court
  • Access to counsel during Police custody: CPC requires that the accused be informed of the right to a lawyer; in practice, access during initial custody varies
  • During Public Prosecution investigation: lawyer has access to client and investigative documents (subject to Public Prosecution's procedural orders)

Trial procedure

  1. Public Prosecution referral: case referred to court with indictment (orders of prosecution)
  2. Initial hearing: defendant formally charged; prosecution and defence appearances
  3. Evidence phase: documents, witness testimony, expert reports presented
  4. Cross-examination: adversarial examination of witnesses
  5. Closing arguments: prosecution and defence submissions
  6. Judgment: written; issued at hearing or reserved for a later date
  7. Sentencing: follows conviction; some offences have mandatory minimums

Standard of proof

Convinced beyond doubt (equivalent to beyond reasonable doubt) — courts apply this standard through the judge's personal conviction (iqtina').


Key substantive offences — business-relevant

Financial fraud and breach of trust

Penal Code + Federal Decree-Law 32/2021 (Economic Crimes):

  • Fraud (ihtial): obtaining property by deception — imprisonment + fine
  • Breach of trust (khayanat al-amana): misappropriation of entrusted property — imprisonment + fine
  • Forging commercial documents: imprisonment + fine
  • Issuing bounced cheques (cheque fraud): civil and criminal; imprisonment + fine; though decriminalization of bounced cheques was implemented (civil remedy now primary) — verify current rules as reforms have been staged

Money laundering

Federal Decree-Law 20/2018: criminal penalties for money laundering + terrorist financing:

  • Imprisonment up to life for most serious offences
  • Fines up to AED 50 million
  • Asset confiscation
  • Corporate criminal liability: institutions can be fined + operations restricted

Cybercrime

Federal Decree-Law 34/2021 (Combating Rumours and Cybercrime):

  • Unauthorized access to computer systems: 1–5 years + fine
  • Online fraud and electronic deception: imprisonment + fine
  • Publishing false information that disturbs public order or damages state reputation: imprisonment + fine
  • Cyberstalking, blackmail: imprisonment
  • Content offences (indecent, hate speech, content violating public morals): imprisonment + fine

Important for businesses and individuals: UAE cybercrime law has been applied to social media posts, messaging apps, and online content that is perceived as harmful to the UAE's reputation or public order. Expatriates have faced criminal charges and deportation for online speech.

Drug offences

UAE Narcotics and Psychotropic Substances Law (Federal Law 14/1995 as amended) — strict enforcement:

  • Possession of any quantity of prohibited substances: up to 4 years
  • Trafficking: up to 15 years (potentially life for large quantities)
  • Being under influence: criminal offence
  • Treatment alternative: available for first-time users (not traffickers)

Important: Trace quantities of drugs detected in blood/urine can result in prosecution. Prescribed medications containing controlled substances from other jurisdictions must be accompanied by medical documentation and UAE Health Authority clearance.

Immigration and residency offences

  • Overstaying visa: fines + deportation
  • Employing workers without valid work permits: fines for company; deportation for workers
  • "Freezone company with mainland activity" — commercial fraud risk

DIFC and ADGM criminal jurisdiction

DIFC and ADGM Courts have civil and commercial jurisdiction only. They do not have criminal jurisdiction.

If a criminal act occurs within DIFC or ADGM (e.g., fraud, assault, cybercrime), the matter is handled by:

  • Dubai Police and Dubai Public Prosecution — for matters arising in DIFC
  • Abu Dhabi Police and Abu Dhabi Public Prosecution — for matters arising in ADGM

DIFC and ADGM financial regulators (DFSA and FSRA) have enforcement powers for regulatory breaches (fines, licence revocation, bans) but refer criminal matters to the relevant prosecution authorities.


Practical guidance for businesses and individuals

Travel ban risk

UAE authorities routinely impose travel bans as part of financial or commercial investigations. This can happen without formal arrest. Senior management of companies involved in disputes should:

  • Check UAE travel ban status before travel
  • Avoid sending key individuals to the UAE during a live dispute or investigation

Corporate criminal liability

UAE law allows companies to be held criminally liable, in addition to individual officers and managers. AML and cybercrime laws explicitly provide for corporate fines and licence restrictions.

Privilege

  • UAE lawyer-client privilege: recognized; lawyer-client communications protected
  • Foreign lawyers: less clear; UAE courts may not extend privilege to communications with foreign lawyers unless associated with UAE counsel
  • Practical advice: all sensitive internal communications should route through UAE-licensed counsel during investigations

Arbitration clauses do not exclude criminal liability

An arbitration clause in a commercial contract does not prevent criminal prosecution for fraud, breach of trust, or other offences arising from the same facts.

Cheque fraud reform

The UAE decriminalized dishonored cheques in phases (most recent reform: UAE Decree-Law 2020) — civil enforcement is now the primary remedy for bounced cheques. Criminal liability may still apply for cheques issued in bad faith with intent to defraud.


How to use this pack

Load this pack when:

  • A client or their employees face criminal investigation or charges in the UAE
  • Advising on white-collar crime, AML, cybercrime, or financial crime exposure in UAE
  • Structuring corporate compliance programs for UAE operations
  • Advising on travel ban risk management
  • Conducting due diligence requiring understanding of UAE criminal exposure

Caveats & currency

UAE criminal law has been significantly reformed since 2020 (Economic Crimes Law, Cybercrime Law, AML Law). Cheque fraud decriminalization reforms occurred in stages. Always verify the current state of specific offences with UAE-licensed criminal counsel for active matters.

  • [[kb-aml-fatf-mena]] — AML/CFT criminal exposure in UAE
  • [[kb-corporate-law-uae]] — UAE corporate context
  • [[kb-criminal-procedure-ksa]] — KSA criminal procedure for comparison
  • [[kb-banking-regulation-cbuae]] — CBUAE enforcement framework