Police and regulatory law / right of assembly

The averting measures usually carried out by the police include complex situations in everyday life in which you can be confronted with law enforcement authorities.

As soon as you have been classified as a so-called “troublemaker”, the authorities have various legal instruments at their disposal to restrict your rights. This can include expulsions, detention or so-called identification treatment. The subsequent effects of security measures can also sometimes be significant. Using general evaluation criteria, such as the principle of proportionality and correct “troublesome selection,” such regulatory measures must be questioned, submitted to administrative courts for review, and the effects (e.g. data storage) must then be eliminated. Particularly in connection with gatherings in public spaces, expulsions, detentions and identification processing are now part of everyday life. In connection with the additional often unlawful assembly law requirements of the assembly authorities, there has recently been a significant need for legal work and advice. We have been successfully advising and representing those affected in court for years.

Useful links in the area of ​​administrative law