At the request of an applicant, the judicial authorities may issue an
interlocutory injunction to prevent an "imminent infringement" of intellectual property rights or to prevent a continuing infringement. In the latter case, the order may be followed with a recurring penalty payment or lodging of a guarantee intended to compensate the rights holder (paragraph a). An injunction can also be issued, under the same conditions, against an intermediary, but these are covered in Article 8(2) of the
Information Society Directive and are, in principle, subject to national law. Apart from the ordinary injunctions of the previous paragraph there also exist the so-called
Mareva injunctions in Article 9(2). In common law, these are
ex parte and
in personam orders used to freeze assets (including bank accounts) to prevent abuses of process. They can be issued as worldwide injunctions, preventing worldwide dispersal. In that case, their effectiveness depends on their
in personam character, as a party who is found to be guilty of disposing of assets will be held to be in contempt of court. Like
Anton Piller orders, their use is confined mostly to the UK. Article 9(2) provides that, in the case of an infringement on a commercial scale, judicial authorities may order a precautionary seizure of "movable and
immovable property" which includes freezing the bank accounts and other assets. This may only be done if the applicant demonstrates that it is likely that recovery of damages will be endangered. Further to that, documents relating to banking and other financial transaction may be communicated. ==Implementation==