The Prosecutor Vetting Commission has published today the reasoned reports on the integrity evaluation of Victor Furtuna, Chief Prosecutor of the Office for Combating Organized Crime and Special Cases (PCCOCS), and Mihail Ivanov, prosecutor within the Anti-Corruption Prosecutor’s Office.

The report on Chief Prosecutor Victor Furtuna presents the relevant facts and the grounds on which the conclusion of Panel A was based. It examines aspects of ethical integrity, including the prosecutor’s role in several proceedings that were subsequently examined by the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR).

The report on Prosecutor Mihail Ivanov provides an in-depth assessment of both financial and ethical integrity, including the prosecutor’s involvement in two criminal cases that resulted in ECHR applications and other relevant proceedings. The document also reviews the acquisition of two vehicles declared as donations as well as other donations received from his parents.

Based on the information collected by the Commission and the materials submitted by both prosecutors, Panel A concluded that Victor Furtuna and Mihail Ivanov both meet the ethical and financial integrity criteria established by the legislator under Article 11 of Law No. 252/2023 and therefore recommend that they pass the external evaluation.

The publication of the reports complies with the provisions of Law No. 252/2023, which stipulates that evaluation reports must be made public within three days after the expiry of the period for appealing the decision of the Superior Council of Prosecutors (SCP). On 22 September 2025, the Prosecutor Vetting Commission issued the evaluation reports for both prosecutors. Subsequently, on 21 October 2025, the Superior Council of Prosecutors accepted the conclusions and confirmed that Victor Furtuna and Mihail Ivanov successfully passed the integrity evaluation.