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ORCID

Ahmed Saim Pehlivanli – 0009-0008-9804-7726

Zeki Emre Kurt – 0000-0002-1476-8489

Keywords

dawn raids; digital evidence deletion; obstruction of inspections; strict liability; proportionality

Abstract

Dawn raids remain a cornerstone of competition law enforcement, yet their execution has grown complex in the digital era. Messaging platforms and remote devices increase the risk of on-site deletions, prompting authorities in Türkiye and the EU to adopt a strict-liability stance: any deletion after inspections begin is treated as obstruction per se, regardless of intent, recoverability or probative loss. While this maximises deterrence, it raises concerns of proportionality, privacy and legal certainty. This article argues that enforcement can remain effective and proportionate by shifting towards a harm-sensitive model. Drawing on Turkish and EU decisions, it highlights outlier cases in which penalties were reduced or waived, interpreting them through Strasbourg jurisprudence on foreseeability, necessity, and privacy. It advances a proportional enforcement approach structured around four factors: foreseeability and scope control, privacy safeguards, probative loss, and corporate posture, enabling calibrated penalties while preserving deterrence and aligning dawn-raid enforcement with fundamental rights.

Acknowledgements

Funding

This article received no funding.

Declaration of Conflict of Interests

The author declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship and publication of this article.

Declaration about the scope of AI utilisation

The author did not use AI in the preparation of this article.

Page Count

22

Received Date

08.11.2025

Accepted Date

30.03.2026

DOI

10.7172/1689-9024.YARS.2026.19.33.5

JEL Code

K21; K42; L40

Publisher

University of Warsaw

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