Glossary entry (derived from question below)
Spanish term or phrase:
O.I.P.
English translation:
Incoming EIO (European Investigation Order)
Added to glossary by
Charles Davis
Jul 28, 2019 13:17
4 yrs ago
32 viewers *
Spanish term
O.I.P.
Spanish to English
Law/Patents
Law (general)
law enforcement, police
That's all I have.
DILIGENCIAS: O.I.P. Núm xxx/2019
It is a report formulated by the Spanish Civil Guard judicial unit for the public prosecutor's office, having to do with surveillance carried out on two British subjects in Spain, as requested by a British court.
DILIGENCIAS: O.I.P. Núm xxx/2019
It is a report formulated by the Spanish Civil Guard judicial unit for the public prosecutor's office, having to do with surveillance carried out on two British subjects in Spain, as requested by a British court.
Proposed translations
(English)
4 +3 | Incoming EIO | Charles Davis |
Change log
Jul 29, 2019 18:00: Charles Davis Created KOG entry
Jul 29, 2019 18:00: Charles Davis changed "Edited KOG entry" from "<a href="/profile/1321043">Charles Davis's</a> old entry - "O.I.P."" to ""Incoming EIO""
Proposed translations
+3
2 hrs
Selected
Incoming EIO
I think it means "Orden de Investigación (Europea) Pasiva", which fits the context (surveillance of foreign suspects).
"7.2 Asistencia judicial internacional: Actividad de las Fiscalías en relación con el auxilio judicial internacional [...]
A la hora del análisis cuantitativo los datos utilizados son los que proporciona el registro de Expedientes de Cooperación Internacional (CRIS) que además este año se actualizó con la incorporación de mejoras que permiten mejor explotación estadística y con la adicción de dos nuevos tipos de expedientes, la Orden Europea de Investigación Activa (OIA) y la Orden Europea de Investigación Pasiva (OIP)."
https://www.fiscal.es/memorias/memoria2018/FISCALIA_SITE/cap...
On the new European Investigation Order (EIO):
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN-ES/TXT/?uri=CELEX...
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2017/730/pdfs/uksitn_2017...
http://www.eurojust.europa.eu/Practitioners/operational/EIO/...
"Activa" and "pasiva" refer respectively to EIOs issued by or received and executed by the country in question. It doesn't refer to whether the Guardia Civil is active or pasive! Italy uses the same terms:
"The Law governs both the case of EIOs issued by foreign authorities ("Passive
Procedure") and the case of EIOs issued by Italian authorities ("Active Procedure"):"
https://onlineservices.cliffordchance.com/online/freeDownloa...
But in English "active" and "passive" don't seem to be used. Instead, the "passive" EIO is called "incoming":
"Incoming European investigation order (other than relating to a request for the temporary transfer of a prisoner)
84.—(1) This regulation applies in relation to a European investigation order received before commencement day by a central authority in the United Kingdom, to the extent that the order does not relate to a request for the temporary transfer of a prisoner or an EU prisoner. "
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukdsi/2019/9780111178102/part/...
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Note added at 2 hrs (2019-07-28 15:40:09 GMT)
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Great! I just looked to see whether "Orden de Investigación Pasiva" comes up on Google, and found this previous question! But you would find it unless you already knew what OIP stands for:
https://www.proz.com/kudoz/spanish-to-english/law-general/66...
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Note added at 2 hrs (2019-07-28 15:46:43 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------
(I meant "you wouldn't find it unless...", of course.)
"7.2 Asistencia judicial internacional: Actividad de las Fiscalías en relación con el auxilio judicial internacional [...]
A la hora del análisis cuantitativo los datos utilizados son los que proporciona el registro de Expedientes de Cooperación Internacional (CRIS) que además este año se actualizó con la incorporación de mejoras que permiten mejor explotación estadística y con la adicción de dos nuevos tipos de expedientes, la Orden Europea de Investigación Activa (OIA) y la Orden Europea de Investigación Pasiva (OIP)."
https://www.fiscal.es/memorias/memoria2018/FISCALIA_SITE/cap...
On the new European Investigation Order (EIO):
https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN-ES/TXT/?uri=CELEX...
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2017/730/pdfs/uksitn_2017...
http://www.eurojust.europa.eu/Practitioners/operational/EIO/...
"Activa" and "pasiva" refer respectively to EIOs issued by or received and executed by the country in question. It doesn't refer to whether the Guardia Civil is active or pasive! Italy uses the same terms:
"The Law governs both the case of EIOs issued by foreign authorities ("Passive
Procedure") and the case of EIOs issued by Italian authorities ("Active Procedure"):"
https://onlineservices.cliffordchance.com/online/freeDownloa...
But in English "active" and "passive" don't seem to be used. Instead, the "passive" EIO is called "incoming":
"Incoming European investigation order (other than relating to a request for the temporary transfer of a prisoner)
84.—(1) This regulation applies in relation to a European investigation order received before commencement day by a central authority in the United Kingdom, to the extent that the order does not relate to a request for the temporary transfer of a prisoner or an EU prisoner. "
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukdsi/2019/9780111178102/part/...
--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 2 hrs (2019-07-28 15:40:09 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------
Great! I just looked to see whether "Orden de Investigación Pasiva" comes up on Google, and found this previous question! But you would find it unless you already knew what OIP stands for:
https://www.proz.com/kudoz/spanish-to-english/law-general/66...
--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 2 hrs (2019-07-28 15:46:43 GMT)
--------------------------------------------------
(I meant "you wouldn't find it unless...", of course.)
Note from asker:
Brilliant!! that is totally it. There is EIO all over the place, but I had no idea about the active/passive aspect. Thank you so much, will grade when period opens. |
Peer comment(s):
agree |
philgoddard
: Well done. I would spell it out in full, as not all readers will know what it means.
32 mins
|
Thanks, Phil! You're probably right about that.
|
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agree |
AllegroTrans
3 hrs
|
Thanks, Chris!
|
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agree |
James A. Walsh
: Nice work!
17 hrs
|
Many thanks, James ;-)
|
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
Comment: "Spot on, thank you so very much."
Discussion
2. It's an internal reference, and there's no way of knowing what it means