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Viktoriia V. Samonova
Electronic Evidence in Administrative Proceedings
using electronic evidence. Most electronic gadgets are now permanently or
intermittently connected to other digital devices or networks (internal or
Internet). Traces of created les and history logs can form a large volume of
electronic evidence (Weir and Mason, 2017).
The collection of digital evidence is relevant in all types of judicial
proceedings. Public authorities have powerful legal opportunities to collect
the necessary evidence, including digital (Kasper and Laurits, 2016). The
functioning of the national system of administrative justice has certain
features that distinguish it from other judicial proceedings. The purpose
of administrative proceedings is to eectively protect the rights, freedoms
and interests of individuals, the rights and interests of legal entities from
violations by power entities (Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine, 2005). Therefore,
individuals and legal entities are not on an equal footing with the state in
obtaining and using the necessary electronic evidence to protect their rights
and interests.
Besides, the case law is ambiguous in deciding which electronic evidence
(in what form or on what medium) to consider admissible instruments of
evidence. The issue of electronic evidence research is becoming increasingly
important in view of the frequent controversial debate among lawyers and
the ambiguous case law on the relevance and admissibility of electronic
evidence in administrative proceedings. The procedure for registration,
submission and examination of electronic evidence remains unregulated
(Manzhula, 2020).
In judicial proceedings in general, electronic evidence means a proof
that is stored in electronic form by the service provider or on their behalf
at the time of its request and consists of: data on the signatory, access
data, transaction data and content data (Tosza, 2020). In this regard,
the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe emphasizes on the
necessity of appropriate and secure manner of collecting the electronic
evidence as the risk of destruction or loss of this type of evidence is much
higher than of non-electronic ones, so the specic procedure of collecting
and seizing the electronic evidence must be developed.
Evidence in electronic or printed form is a dierent type of independent
complete evidence that can be used in administrative proceedings (Alian
Geraldi Fauzi et al., 2021).
However, electronic evidence can be found in emails, digital photos,
ATM transaction logs, in text documents, messenger histories, les saved in
accounting programmes, spreadsheets, in the history of Internet browsers,
on a computer hard drive, in tracks of the global positioning system (GPS),
logs of hotel electronic door locks, video or audio les. However, digital
evidence has no physical weight, but it is dicult to destroy it without
leaving electronic traces. At the same time, they are easy to change, copy
and easier to access (Dubey, 2017).