The Advent of AI: Reshaping Criminal Procedure
Programme
PDF
8th November
- The Use of Facial Recognition Technology by Law Enforcement in France
Prof. Juliette Lelieur, University of Strasbourg - Deepfake Evidence in Criminal Proceedings
Clementina Salvi, Doctoral researcher in Criminal Law and AI, Queen Mary University of London - Data Protection Standards and the Use of AI for Investigation and Prosecution
Prof. Paul de Hert, Vrije Universiteit Brussel - Challenges Raised by AI Evidence: Lessons from the US Criminal Justice System
Jumana Musa, Director of the Fourth Amendment Center at the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers - Rules on Expert Testimony based on a Comparative Perspective on Device Evidence
Prof. Sabine Gless, University of Basel - Rule 702 Amendments and their Impact on Admissibility of AI Evidence
Prof. Brandon Garrett, Duke University School of Law (online)
7th November (morning)
- The Advent of AI: Reshaping Criminal Procedure – Introduction
Prof. Katalin Ligeti, Dean of the Faculty of Law, Economics and Finance, University of Luxembourg - Global (regulatory) challenges of AI
Prof. Jean-Louis Schiltz, University of Luxembourg; Senior partner at Schiltz & Schiltz - The EU AI Act
Prof. Mark Cole, University of Luxembourg - Framework Convention on Artificial Intelligence and Human Rights, Democracy and the Rule of Law
Ambassador Thomas Schneider, Chair of the Council of Europe’s Committee on Artificial Intelligence (2022-2024) - The UK’s Approach on AI and its Use in the Legal Domain
Rudi Fortson, Barrister, KC., Visiting Professor of Law at QMUL and the University of Liverpool - After the US Election: The Future of the AI Executive Order and US AI Policy
Marc Rotenberg, Executive Director and Founder of the Center for AI and Digital Policy, Adjunct Professor of Law at
Georgetown University - Transparency and Human Oversight of Automated Decisions in the Case Law of the CJEU: Is There a Need for Explainability of the Black Box?
Judge François Biltgen, Court of Justice of the European Union
7th November (afternoon)
- Unpacking AI Evidence and (Re)- Defining Procedural Safeguards in Digital Investigations
Prof. Katalin Ligeti, Dean of the Faculty of Law, Economics and Finance, University of Luxembourg - Algorithmic Criminal Procedure in the Netherlands
Prof. Rick Robroek, Utrecht University - AI for the Detection of Child Sexual Abuse Materials in Germany
Prof. Dominik Brodowski, University of Saarland - AI Evidence and the Role of Forensic Experts
Karsten Theiner, Director at Grant Thornton Austria - Do we Need Harmonised European Standards for Digital Forensics?
Prof. Radina Stoykova, University of Groningen - Trade Secrecy and Algorithmic Forensics in the US
Prof. Natalie Ram, University of Maryland (online)