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Oct 28, 2025

Interpol Red-Notice Arrest in Gdańsk Underscores Poland’s Tougher Migration Screening

Interpol Red-Notice Arrest in Gdańsk Underscores Poland’s Tougher Migration Screening
Border-Guard officers detained a 45-year-old Moldovan national at the Pomeranian Voivodeship Office in Gdańsk on 27 October after database checks revealed an active Interpol Red Notice for fraud, the agency confirmed on 28 October. The individual was taken into custody and now faces extradition proceedings to Moldova. The arrest forms part of Poland’s stepped-up document-verification campaign launched after June’s immigration-law overhaul, which mandates biometric identity checks during all residence-permit appointments.

Under the digitalised system, voivodeship offices now interface directly with Interpol and Schengen Information System (SIS) databases, allowing real-time alerts when wanted persons attempt to file for work permits or visa extensions. According to Border Guard statistics, 180 fugitives have been intercepted at Polish administrative offices since January—an 18 % increase year-on-year. Employers sponsoring foreign staff are therefore advised to perform enhanced due diligence, as harbouring a wanted individual can trigger fines of up to PLN 10 000 and suspension of sponsorship privileges.

For international assignment managers, the case illustrates why applicants must attend appointments in person with original passports and clean criminal-record extracts. Third-party agents should be instructed not to submit forged clearances: digital cross-checks make detection likely, and penalties can derail entire mobility programmes. Companies with operations in the Tri-City area should also expect sporadic security audits at regional immigration desks as authorities scale the new screening model nationwide.

Although the arrest does not directly alter visa categories, it signals Poland’s intent to blend immigration processing with law-enforcement objectives. Multinationals should update compliance protocols, ensuring that HR and global-mobility teams coordinate closely with legal counsel on background-check requirements before filing residence or work applications.
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