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On 18 March 2026, the French government introduced the S.U.R.E. Bill — Sanction Utile, Rapide et Effective (Useful, Swift and Effective Sentencing) — currently under discussion before the Senate. The text seeks to address two distinct but related issues: the severe backlog affecting criminal courts, and the erosion of public confidence in the effective enforcement of criminal sentences.
The provision attracting the most debate is that set out in Article 9 of the bill: the creation of a guilty plea procedure extended, for the first time, to criminal offences.
Under current French law, the most serious offences (crimes) are subject to a particularly protective procedural framework, including a full judicial investigation conducted by an independent investigating judge, followed by trial before a criminal court, either a jury court (cour d'assises) or a Departmental Criminal Court (cour criminelle départementale).
The proposed reform does not remove these safeguards but introduces, at the end of the investigation, the possibility of a negotiated resolution where the accused acknowledges the facts
The analogy with plea bargaining in common law systems is plain. What Article 9 proposes draws on that model, while remaining firmly rooted in French legal logic: where an accused acknowledges the facts at the conclusion of a judicial investigation, the prosecutor may propose a sentence not exceeding two-thirds of the maximum applicable penalty, capped at 30 years for offences carrying a potential life sentence, subject to judicial approval and paired with a restorative justice process.
However, a number of offences are expressly excluded from its scope: crimes against humanity, war crimes, terrorist offences, cases falling within the jurisdiction of specially composed courts (such as those involving judges or members of parliament), proceedings involving multiple co-defendants or accomplices referred to the same criminal court, and cases involving minors or individuals not criminally responsible. The Senate's judicial committee further expanded these exclusions to cover certain particularly serious sexual offences, including rape of a minor under 15, aggravated rape, and child prostitution.
The reform forms part of a broader trend in French criminal justice policy over the past decade, aimed at improving efficiency while maintaining procedural safeguards.
On the budgetary front, the investment has been substantial. The government has confirmed that 2026 alone will see an additional €200 million allocated to justice, alongside 1,600 new positions. These figures follow several years of progressive increases, though most observers agree that the judiciary remains significantly understaffed relative to the volume of cases it is expected to handle.
On the procedural front, notable milestones include the introduction of the Guilty Plea Procedure (Comparution sur Reconnaissance Préalable de Culpabilité, CRPC) for misdemeanours in 2004, the introduction of the Public Interest Judicial Agreement (Convention Judiciaire d'Intérêt Public, CJIP) in 2016, enabling negotiated settlements for legal entities only, and the generalisation of the Departmental Criminal Courts (Cours Criminelles Départementales, CCD) in 2022, which introduced panels of professional judges as an alternative to the traditional jury court (cour d'assises) for intermediate-level criminal offences.
While the CCD succeeded in reducing this practice by offering a viable alternative within the criminal track, they have in turn become subject to significant backlogs and have struggled to absorb the full volume of criminal cases in recent years. It is partly against this backdrop that the extension of the guilty plea procedure to criminal offences is now being proposed.
While these reforms have improved case processing in certain areas, they have also contributed to ongoing debates regarding the balance between efficiency and procedural guarantees.
The proposed extension of a guilty plea mechanism to criminal offences has prompted significant debate among legal practitioners and institutional stakeholders, including marked opposition from the legal profession.
French bar associations have expressed their concerns through public statements and collective action, including a nationwide strike day on 13 April 2026 (“journée de justice morte”), coinciding with the examination of the bill before the Senate.
Three main concerns are generally put forward. First, questions relate to the conditions under which an accused person may consent to a negotiated sentence in relation to the most serious offences, given the potential severity of the penalties involved. Second, critics argue that the procedure risks marginalising victims, who would no longer have the opportunity to be heard in open court and whose role in the process would be reduced to a mere right of opposition. Third, some practitioners consider that delays in criminal proceedings primarily arise during the investigation phase, which the bill does not directly address, thereby potentially limiting the impact of the reform on overall case processing times.
At the same time, the draft text incorporates a number of safeguards intended to preserve the fundamental guarantees applicable to criminal matters. The procedure would only be available following a full judicial investigation, conducted under the supervision of an independent investigating judge. It would require a voluntary acknowledgment of the facts by the accused, and the victim would retain the right to oppose its application. In addition, the proposed sentence would be capped at two-thirds of the maximum applicable penalty and at 30 years for offences carrying a potential life sentence and would remain subject to approval by a judge. The procedure would also be combined with a restorative justice component, reflecting an intention to distinguish it from purely negotiated settlement mechanisms. Finally, a significant category of offences would be expressly excluded from the scope of the procedure. Following the Senate debates, and in what appears to be a response to the opposition expressed by the legal profession, the Minister of Justice Gérald Darmanin announced an expansion of these exclusions, adding a number of particularly serious sexual offences to the list of crimes for which the procedure would remain unavailable.
Beyond the flagship measure, several provisions aim at strengthening the effective enforcement of sentences:
The S.U.R.E. bill was introduced by the government under an accelerated procedure before the Senate, where it was first examined by the judicial committee (commission des lois) before being brought to the Senate floor for its first reading, which is currently underway. Even if passed by the Senate in its current form, the text will need to be debated and voted upon by the National Assembly. This legislative process, combined with the intensity of the debates the bill has already generated, makes further developments to the text highly likely before it is ultimately enacted and brought into force.
Authored by Jean-Pierre Picca, Jean-Lou Salha, and Yasser Benali.