7 FAM 1630
EXTRADITION OF FUGITIVES FROM THE UNITED STATES
(CT:CON-816; 06-20-2018)
(Office of Origin: CA/OCS)
7 FAM 1631 FIRST STEPS IN FOREIGN
EXTRADITION CASES
7 FAM 1631.1 Provisional Arrest
Requests Received
7 FAM 1631.1-1 Usual Routing
(CT:CON-595; 08-06-2015)
a. Like U.S. requests to foreign authorities, foreign
authorities may initiate extradition either by seeking provisional arrest or by
submitting a formal extradition request. Most extradition treaties stipulate
that provisional arrest is available in cases of urgency. U.S. courts
generally agree that whether urgency exists is left to the discretion of the
executive branch. Reasons for urgency may include the fact that the fugitive
is a flight risk, is in country for only a short period of time, or is deemed
to be a danger to society. Absent urgency, a formal extradition request should
be submitted.
b. A foreign countrys embassy in Washington, DC
usually submits a provisional arrest request by diplomatic note, hand-carried
to the Department (L/LEI), often with a copy delivered simultaneously to the
Department of Justice (DOJ), Criminal Division, Office of International Affairs
(OIA). Several modern treaties allow countries to make direct requests through
the Justice ministries (see 7 FAM 1621.2-3),
but not all of countries use this channel routinely.
c. The request, whether received by diplomatic or
direct channel, rarely comes to the attention of the U.S. Foreign Service post
until the fugitive has been arrested in the United States and the deadline
approaches for submission of the formal extradition request. The post then
becomes involved if it must certify the foreign countrys documents (see 7 FAM 1633) or,
under modern treaties, receive the formal request for extradition in order to
meet the treaty time requirements.
7 FAM 1631.1-2 Redirecting
Provisional Arrest Requests Originally Made to Posts
(CT:CON-595; 08-06-2015)
a. A few countries, especially those not experienced in
extradition relations with the United States, may submit a diplomatic note to
post asking for a provisional arrest. The post, unless it perceives the
possibility of an adverse reaction by the host government, should redirect the
request and suggest that the appropriate channel is through the countrys
embassy in the United States to the Department (L/LEI).
b. Another reason for a posts declining to accept a
provisional arrest request is that the note may not contain enough information to
support a warrant for the fugitives arrest. L/LEI may have to ask for further
information or clarification; this is best done in Washington DC, particularly
if the foreign embassy has a lawyer on its staff with whom L/LEI may consult on
deficiencies in the request.
c. If the requesting countrys embassy in Washington,
DC does not have a resident officer with legal expertise, OIA may communicate
directly with the Ministry of Justice or request further information through
the INTERPOL channel.
d. Although truly rare, it could happen that a post
cannot redirect a request, but instead feels compelled to accept the direct
request from the host government for provisional arrest. If that happens, the
post should email the foreign governments request to L/LEI, along with any
other information it has about the case. Post may also opt to send a telegram
that attaches a PDF of the request. If the information provided by the note is
sufficient and the fugitive can be located, L/LEI and OIA will act on the request
as soon as possible.
7 FAM 1631.2 Delay in Action,
Pending Availability of Documents
(CT:CON-595; 08-06-2015)
a. L/LEI and OIA may refuse, or delay action on, a
provisional arrest request if it has reason to doubt that the foreign
prosecutor will be able to prepare acceptable documents in time to meet the
treaty deadline following the fugitives arrest. It may also question the
sufficiency of the requesting states case or the extraditability of the
charged crime.
b. In some instances, OIA may ask to review an advance
copy of the foreign documents. If deficiencies are identified, OIA provides
guidance or examples to their counterparts to assist the foreign prosecutor in
improving the request.
c. If OIA is unable to act immediately on a
provisional arrest request, OIA may ask the U.S. Marshals Service or another
appropriate government agency to keep the fugitive under surveillance. It will
proceed after it has received either an acceptable provisional arrest request
or a formal extradition request with acceptable documents.
d. Even when the provisional arrest request was not
made through the post, it may be necessary for the post to ask for additional
details or documents. Commonly, OIA will contact the foreign justice agency
directly, or through an INTERPOL channel. In rare instances, however, L/LEI
may notify post via telegram or directly.
e. At the earliest possible time during the extradition
process, if a post has reason to believe that a foreign request for provisional
arrest or extradition of a fugitive is motivated by political rather than law
enforcement reasons, the post should report its assessment of the request
immediately, using a classified message if appropriate.
7 FAM 1631.3 Execution of
Provisional Arrest Requests
(CT:CON-595; 08-06-2015)
a. Upon receipt from a foreign embassy of a request for
the provisional arrest of a fugitive, L/LEI reviews and transmits it to OIA for
action, unless it perceives an objection or gross defect. If OIA determines
that the provisional arrest request is facially sufficient, it refers the
request to the U.S. Attorney in the district where the fugitive is believed to
be located. An Assistant U.S. Attorney (AUSA) seeks a warrant for provisional
arrest from a federal district judge or magistrate judge ("extradition
judge"). The judge will review the request and, if satisfied that there
is a sufficient showing, will issue a warrant for the fugitives arrest. The
local office of the U.S. Marshals Service arrests the fugitive.
b. The arrested fugitive is brought before the
extradition judge and informed of the reason for his arrest. An AUSA
represents the requesting government during this and all later judicial
proceedings, including any litigation of habeas corpus proceedings. The
fugitive may be represented by counsel of his own choosing, but if he cannot
afford counsel the court will appoint a lawyer to represent him.
c. At this hearing, the court may either consider bail
or, if the fugitive is not represented by an attorney or unprepared to make a
bail application, commit the fugitive to custody and defer the issue of bail to
a later hearing. Under current U.S. law and practice, it is extremely rare
that an extradition judge will release on bail a person sought in international
extradition. The Supreme Court has held that bail is allowed only in
"special circumstances," which lower courts narrowly construe to
apply only to extraordinary and unusual cases, such as when the fugitive has
serious medical problems that cannot be adequately addressed in jail.
7 FAM 1631.4 Waiver of Extradition
Proceedings
(CT:CON-595; 08-06-2015)
a. At the first or a later court appearance, the
fugitive may decide to not contest extradition. If so, the fugitive and his
counsel, in the presence of the extradition judge, will generally sign a waiver
document. In it, the fugitive acknowledges that he or she is the individual
wanted by the foreign country. The fugitive also acknowledges that he or she
is waiving the right to a hearing under U.S. law and to not be returned to the
requesting country unless a judge certifies extraditability and the Secretary
of State authorizes the surrender. The extradition judge will require, and
take steps to ensure, that the fugitives waiver of those rights is knowing and
voluntary.
b. When the fugitive waives extradition proceedings,
the extradition judge orders the U.S. Marshal to retain custody of the fugitive
and to surrender the fugitive to the custody of the escort agents of the
requesting country. OIA makes the arrangements directly with the authorities
of the requesting country. L/LEI has no role in the transfer, as the waiver
has obviated the need for formal extradition proceedings and a surrender
warrant.
c. It is the U.S. position that a fugitive who waives
extradition is not protected by the rule of specialty. (See 7 FAM 1612.)
For this reason, some fugitives, although they do not intend to seriously
contest extradition, will not waive extradition at the time of their
provisional arrest. Instead, they may consent to extradition; in effect, they
concede that the requirements of extradition are met, and ask the extradition
judge to certify extraditability to the Department of State. Under the U.S.
position, it is the issuance of a surrender warrant by the Secretary, or his or
her delegate that triggers the protection of the rule of specialty. Posts
should take note of the U.S. position on the effect of a waiver on the rule of
specialty, in the event this question arises after the return of the fugitive
to the requesting country.
7 FAM 1631.5 Notification of
Provisional Arrest
(CT:CON-595; 08-06-2015)
When a fugitive is provisionally arrested in the United
States in response to a foreign request, OIA immediately notifies the foreign
government, informally by telephone to the Justice Ministry of the requesting
country, with a reminder of the deadline for submission of the formal
extradition request with supporting documents. Some treaties require that
notification of arrests be made through the diplomatic channel. In this case,
L/LEI will notify the foreign embassy through diplomatic note. Rarely is a
U.S. embassy or consulate involved in the notification process.
7 FAM 1632 RECEIPT OF FOREIGN
EXTRADITION DOCUMENTS BY POST
(CT:CON-595; 08-06-2015)
a. In foreign countries, the prosecutor or examining
magistrate in the local jurisdiction is responsible for preparing extradition
documents. Many foreign countries submit excellent documentation in support of
their extradition requests, but others do not. Unlike OIA in the United
States, the Justice Ministries of some countries may not advise or assist local
prosecutors or examining magistrates. As a result, the quality of foreign
extradition documents can vary widely.
b. The documents in support of an extradition request
must be in English or translated into English. They generally may include the
following:
(1) An indictment, complaint, or other document
reflecting that the fugitive has been accused of a crime;
(2) A warrant for the fugitives arrest;
(3) Copies of the statutes that define the crime,
specify its punishment, and state any time limitations on initiation of
prosecution;
(4) The prosecutors affidavit or legal statement;
(5) Unless the fugitive has been convicted, evidence
establishing probable cause (or, in some instances, establishing a prima facie
case) to believe that a crime was committed (such as reports by investigative
and arresting officers, affidavits of victims and witnesses, autopsy reports,
and chemical analyses);
(6) Evidence of identity of the fugitive (such as
photograph, fingerprint card, and/or physical description); and
(7) Different requirements exist where extradition is
sought for a fugitive who has already been convicted. Because the specific
documents required in support of an extradition request are treaty-based and
vary from country to country, posts should familiarize themselves with the
requirements laid out in the bilateral extradition treaty applicable to them,
if any.
c. In some countries, the investigating magistrate can
only initiate an indictment or charge the defendant in the persons actual
presence. In those instances, where the pronouncement of a formal charge is a
procedural step requiring the presence of the charged defendant, U.S. courts
recognize that the magistrates accusation meets the requirement of a charge.
Additionally, U.S. courts are flexible in interpreting the requirement of an
arrest warrant.
d. Typically, when completed and translated by the
requesting country, the documents are authenticated and certified by that
countrys Justice and/or Foreign Ministries and presented (usually by the
Foreign Ministry) to the post for its certification, if necessary. (See 7 FAM 1633 for
certification requirements.)
e. Before certifying the original foreign documents,
the post should try to determine if the requesting state has also prepared at
least one identical copy of the original. Though the treaty may not require
it, delivery of copies (that will not be certified and ribboned) along with the
certified and ribboned original request facilitates the extradition. The
certified original is filed, with ribbon uncut, with the extradition court.
The prosecutor representing the requesting state needs his own complete set of
the extradition documents, as does L/LEI, the fugitive or his attorney, and
OIA. Photocopying is difficult after the documents are ribboned together by
the post.
7 FAM 1633 CERTIFICATION OF FOREIGN
EXTRADITION DOCUMENTS
7 FAM 1633.1 Certification
Automatically Renders the Documents Admissible
(CT:CON-816; 06-20-2018)
a. U.S. law (18 U.S.C. 3190) provides
"[D]epositions, warrants, or other papers or copies thereof offered in
evidence upon the hearing of any extradition case shall be received and
admitted as evidence for all the purposes of such hearing if they shall be
properly and legally authenticated so as to entitle them to be received for
similar purposes by the tribunal of the foreign country from which the accused
party shall have escaped, and the certificate of the principal diplomatic or
consular officer of the United States resident in such foreign country shall be
proof that the same, so offered, are authenticated in the manner
required."
b. In other words, certification by the principal U.S.
diplomatic or consular officer will guarantee the admissibility of the
requesting countrys documents into evidence at the extradition hearing. It is
possible that the court may accept the requesting states documents that are
authenticated by other means, but the preferable manner is to follow the provisions
of the statute. Otherwise, unless the extradition treaty specifically sets out
the alternative method of authentication, the admissibility of these essential
documents will certainly become a serious issue at the hearing.
NOTE: At present only Austria,
Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland,
France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania,
Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia,
Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Thailand and the United Kingdom, by reason of
special treaty language that provides a manner of authentication that is
different than that set out in the statute, are exempt from having its
extradition documents certified under 18 U.S.C. 3190.
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c. For countries not familiar with U.S. extradition
procedures, posts should make a special effort to ascertain that its Foreign
and Justice Ministries are aware of the U.S. certification requirement,
providing them with a copy of 18 U.S.C. 3190. Liaison with a specific post officer
should be established for certification purposes so that the documents are
delivered directly to that officer.
NOTE: Some ministries, apparently
believing that a routine consular authentication is sufficient, send
extradition documents by messenger to a posts notarial unit without
signifying that they are to be used in a U.S. extradition proceeding. This
will result in a post employee preparing the standard authentication, and a
consular officer may sign it, without examining the documents and perceiving
the need for their certification, rather than authentication.
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d. The authorities of some countries may think
incorrectly that their extradition documents have been duly certified if
covered with the apostille of the Convention Abolishing the Requirement of
Legalization for Foreign Public Documents, done at The Hague on October 5,
1961. Posts should advise host country authorities when necessary that, in
acceding to the 1961 Convention on December 24, 1980, the United States made a
declaration stipulating that the Convention does not supersede or override the
provisions of 18 U.S.C. 3190 for certification of extradition documents by the
principal diplomatic or consular officer of the United States in the requesting
country. Posts may provide copies of the text of the U.S. declaration of
December 24, 1980 to host country officials who may not be aware of the
requirement. (See 7 FAM Exhibit 1633.1(d) and the Internet home page for the Hague
Conference on Private International Law, Hague Legalization Convention, Status
table, and go to the declarations for the United States of America.)
e. Thus, if L/LEI receives a foreign extradition
request with supporting documents that bear only a consular authentication or
the apostille of The Hague Legalization Convention, it will return the
documents to the foreign embassy or to the appropriate Foreign Service post for
proper certification. Such delay can be avoided by close attention to this
onerous but essential detail.
f. Some countries submit documents that, though
properly certified under 18 U.S.C. 3190, are also cluttered with consular
authentications and/or The Hague Legalization Convention apostilles. Neither
serves any purpose. A post noting such practice should clarify to host country
officials that the additional authentications and apostilles are unnecessary.
7 FAM 1633.2 Form of Certification
(CT:CON-595; 08-06-2015)
a. To certify foreign extradition documents, the post
uses Form DS-36, "Certificate to be Attached to Documentary Evidence
Accompanying Requisitions in the United States for Extradition" (formerly
Form FS-36). The post should not complete the Form DS-36 unless the documents
are properly certified and authenticated by host country authorities.
b. Form DS-36 is available on the Department of State
Intranet Directives Management Forms page.
7 FAM 1633.3 Certification
Procedures
(CT:CON-595; 08-06-2015)
a. Only the original set of the documents and
translation must be certified.
(1) If the translation is included within or
physically attached to the original set of documents, only one Form DS-36 is
needed.
(2) If the translation is provided as a separate set
of documents, the post should prepare a second, separate, certification.
b. In preparing the Form DS-36, the post ensures that
the name of the fugitive typed on the form is spelled precisely as in the
foreign documents.
(1) The "annexed papers" may be described
simply as "supporting documents."
(2) The "crime," if defined in a long
technical description in the foreign documents, may be reduced to a simple
term, such as "fraud" or "narcotic drug trafficking." The
"tribunals" are always those of the requesting country, not the
United States.
c. The Form DS-36, when typed and signed, is placed on
top of the set of documents and secured by a red ribbon passing through the
upper left corner of the certificate and through each and every piece of paper
in the set. The two ends of the ribbon are brought down to the lower left
corner of the certificate and affixed to the certificate under a red wafer
seal, which is then impressed with the posts seal. (See 7 FAM 800.)
d. If the documents are too voluminous to be
conveniently certified as one set, they may be divided into two or more sets,
each set being certified with a separately prepared but identical Form DS-36 as
described in the preceding paragraph.
e. The certificate must be signed by the
"principal diplomatic or consular officer resident" in the requesting
state. When possible, the certificate is signed by the U.S. ambassador (few
defense lawyers will argue that the ambassador is not the principal diplomatic
officer). If the ambassador is temporarily out of the country, the Form DS-36
may be signed by the charg daffaires ad interim over that officers specific
title. When the ambassador is temporarily out of the capital city, but still
within the country, at the time the documents are presented to the post, hold
the certification for signature, pending the return of the ambassador to the embassy.
f. Alternatively, the principal consular officer
resident in the country may certify the documents. However, be aware that in
some multi-post countries, the principal officer at a constituent consular post
may outrank the senior consular officer at the U.S. embassy. If so, it may be
necessary to delay certification until the ambassador or charg is available.
There are only three exceptions to this rule: Canada, Germany and Italy, where
the chief consular officer at the Embassy has been administratively designated
as "principal consular officer of the United States" in the country
for the purpose of certifying extradition documents.
g. Certification of foreign extradition documents is
not listed in 22 CFR 22.1, the Tariff of Fees, Foreign Service of the United
States, and the post does not charge a fee for the certification service. On
the basis of reciprocity, foreign consular officers authenticate U.S.
extradition documents gratis.
h. Upon completion of the certification, the post
returns the documents to the Foreign Ministry for transmission to its embassy
in Washington, DC and submission to the Department of State (L/LEI) with a
formal request for the extradition of the fugitive.
i. In the same manner used in processing the basic
documents, the post certifies, assembles, and submits to the Foreign Ministry
any supplemental documents subsequently prepared by the requesting country.
7 FAM 1633.4 Direct Presentation
(CT:CON-595; 08-06-2015)
a. Certain extradition treaties and certain situations
allow for formal requests for extradition which are under tight deadlines to be
presented to the U.S. Embassy in the requesting country. In such cases, the
formal documentation should be presented by the host government under cover of
diplomatic note requesting extradition, accompanied by an informal English
translation of the note.
b. Typically, L/LEI will be in contact with Post before
a deadline package would be presented in order to outline next steps. If a
country presents a formal extradition request to Post without advance notice
from L/LEI, Post should accept the package and contact L/LEI for guidance.
c. If L/LEI determines the request should not have
been presented to Post in a specific case, Post will be asked to return the
request to the host government with instructions for proper submission under
the specific treaty.
d. If L/LEI determines the request was sufficiently
submitted to Post, they will provide Post with a Fed Ex shipping label for
forwarding of the request to L/LEI and further processing pursuant to 7 FAM 1634.
7 FAM 1634 U.S. EXTRADITION PROCESS
7 FAM 1634.1 Transmission of
Extradition Request to OIA for Action
(CT:CON-595; 08-06-2015)
a. When a foreign embassy submits to the Department an
extradition request, with supporting documents, L/LEI sends a copy of the request
and documents to the Department of Justice (OIA).
L/LEI then reviews whether the request and documents meet the applicable treaty
requirements. If it appears that the request meets the treaty requirements and
L/LEI and OIA decide jointly to move forward with the request, L/LEI transmits
the original request and documents to OIA for action under cover of a brief
affidavit in "declaration" format.
b. This declaration confirms that the foreign request
was received through diplomatic channel, that an extradition treaty is in force
with the requesting country, that the offenses for which extradition is sought
are covered by the treaty, and that the foreign documents are properly
authenticated under 18 U.S.C. 3190 (or otherwise properly authenticated as allowed
for by treaty). The L/LEI declaration may be used by the prosecutor at the
extradition hearing to refute possible allegations by the defense questioning
the validity of the foreign extradition request.
c. OIA gives the foreign documents a detailed review.
When the documents are found to be acceptable for extradition proceedings, OIA
transmits them, with the L/LEI declaration, to the Assistant United States
Attorney (AUSA) in the jurisdiction where the fugitive is sought or has been
provisionally arrested.
d. If the fugitive has not already been provisionally
arrested, the AUSA files an application for the fugitives arrest. Practice
varies by district; some prosecutors will file the extradition request when
applying for the arrest warrant, others will merely refer to the request in the
affidavit accompanying the application for the warrant and submit the actual
request at the extradition hearing. The ensuing procedures are the same as
those for provisional arrest (7 FAM 1631.3),
except that, since the request is prepared and filed, there is no bar to
conducting an extradition hearing.
7 FAM 1634.2 The Extradition
Hearing
(CT:CON-595; 08-06-2015)
a. An extradition hearing is a public proceeding,
presided over by a federal judicial officer sitting as an extradition judge.
Anyone may attend as observers, including consular officers of the requesting
state or the country of the fugitives nationality. The hearing is not a
trial, and the ordinary procedural and evidentiary rules applicable to trials
do not apply.
b. To certify extraditability, the extradition judge
must find that the person before the court is the person sought; that there is
a treaty in force and that the crimes for which extradition is requested are
extraditable; that the evidence presented establishes probable cause to believe
that the fugitive committed the charged crimes; and that there are no treaty
barriers to extradition.
c. Although the extradition judge ordinarily will rely
solely on the extradition request and the supporting documents, both the
government and the fugitive may offer additional evidence. The only statutory
prerequisite for documentary evidence is that the evidence be authenticated.
The extradition judge also has the discretion to allow live witness testimony.
The fugitive may introduce evidence or testimony to establish, for example,
that the crime charged is a political offense for which extradition should not
be ordered, or raise other defenses or objections available under the treaty.
It is generally held in U.S. courts that a fugitive may not offer evidence that
"contradicts" the evidence provided by the requesting country, but
the fugitive can offer "explanatory" evidence that does not
contradict but rather provides an exculpatory explanation of the requesting
states evidence. It is also increasingly common for extradition judges to
admit sworn recantations by witnesses whose evidence is included in the
requesting states extradition package.
d. After the hearing, if the extradition judge agrees
that the fugitive is extraditable, he will prepare an extradition order
commonly titled "Certification of Extraditability and Order of
Commitment. In this document, the judge certifies to the Secretary of State
that he or she has conducted the hearing required by law and has found the
fugitive extraditable for the offenses for which the extradition was
requested. If the fugitive had previously been released on bail, the
extradition judge is likely at this point to order that the fugitive be
committed to custody pending surrender.
e. The extradition judges certification should
identify the offenses for which the fugitive has been found extraditable. If
the fugitive is found extraditable for only some of the crimes for which the
fugitive is charged or convicted, the judge may explain why extradition on the
other crimes was not certified.
f. The extradition judges finding is not directly
appealable by either side. If the judge denies extradition on some or all of
the crimes charged, the requesting states only remedy is to make a new
extradition request. The new request may rely on the original documents,
though it will require a new diplomatic note and, perhaps, additional materials
that must be authenticated and certified. On occasion, the U.S. Attorney
representing the requesting state will ask that a different judge hear the
second case. In the interim, however, the fugitive may be released from
custody.
g. L/LEI notifies the embassy of the requesting country
by diplomatic note of the judicial denial of the request, providing a copy of
the magistrates opinion justifying the denial. If there is a legal or factual
basis for disagreeing with the extradition judges decision, or if the
requesting state believes it can remedy the defect that caused the judge to
deny extradition, OIA and the U.S. Attorney will work with the authorities of the
requesting state. The U.S. is generally willing to pursue any reasonable case
even after the first extradition judge denies certification.
7 FAM 1634.3 Judicial Review of a
Finding of Extraditability
(CT:CON-595; 08-06-2015)
a. If the judge finds extraditability on some or all of
the charges, the fugitives judicial remedy is to file a petition for a writ of
habeas corpus.
b. The habeas corpus review is, typically, limited to
an inquiry into whether the extradition judge had jurisdiction, whether the crime
charged is covered by the extradition treaty, and whether there was "any
evidence" in the record to support the extradition judges probable cause
finding.
c. The district courts decision on a habeas petition
is appealable by the losing party -- either the fugitive or the government --
to a U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. If the district court grants the habeas
petition, the government will typically also ask the court to stay its order
pending appeal (in order to keep the fugitive in custody). If the court denies
the stay request, the government may ask the appellate court to issue an order
preventing the fugitives release.
d. After the appellate court issues its decision, the
losing party has two additional avenues of discretionary review. First, the
party may ask the three judge panel or all of the judges in that particular
circuit to rehear the case. If the judges decline to rehear the case the party
may file a petition for a writ of certiorari with the U.S. Supreme Court. The
Supreme Court receives thousands of petitions a year and agrees to hear fewer
than 100 of them, so the likelihood of Supreme Court review is very low.
e. Under U.S. law (18 U.S.C. 3188), a fugitive who has
been certified extraditable and committed to custody may generally petition the
court for release if he or she has not been transferred to the requesting
country within 2 calendar months of such certification and commitment. For
this reason, the Department of State may initiate the final review of the case
as soon as feasible after the receipt of the record of the case. However, if a
fugitive seeks habeas review of the extradition judges finding of
extraditability, the Department suspends its final review of the case. After
the district court denies the petition for habeas corpus, the Department
typically begins or resumes its review process unless a court has stayed the
surrender pending appeal.
7 FAM 1635 FINAL STAGES OF THE
EXTRADITION PROCESS
7 FAM 1635.1 Review of the Case
Record
(CT:CON-595; 08-06-2015)
a. After the extradition judge certifies
extraditability, the clerk of the court is directed to transmit to the
Secretary of State (c/o L/LEI), the "record of the case. This includes
primarily the extradition judges certification, the transcript of evidence given
at the hearing (if any), and the original set of documents submitted by the
requesting country. If further litigation is expected, however, the court may
retain the documents for future use.
b. In the Departments process of reviewing the
judicial finding of extraditability, L/LEI studies the record of the case in
detail. L/LEI also considers any written materials submitted to the Secretary
of State by the fugitive, his or her counsel, family, or interested parties.
L/LEI will consider the likely treatment of the fugitive in the requesting
country, including possible issues under the Convention Against Torture, as
well as questions about political motivation. In this context, L/LEI may
consult with regional bureaus, DRL, relevant posts, etc.
c. After L/LEI completes its review of the record of
the case, the Legal Adviser submits the documents and an internal memorandum to
the Secretary of State, Deputy Secretary of State, or the Under Secretary of
State for Political Affairs for a determination on whether to extradite the
fugitive.
7 FAM 1635.2 Surrender Warrant -
Authority and Process
(CT:CON-595; 08-06-2015)
a. Statutory authority to surrender a fugitive (18
U.S.C. 3186) rests with the Secretary of State. This authority has been
delegated to the Deputy Secretary of State and to the Under Secretary of State
for Political Affairs. Accordingly, the Secretary, the Deputy Secretary, or
the Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs may decide to surrender, or
refuse to surrender, a fugitive certified extraditable, for some or all of the
charges for which they were certified.
b. If the Secretary, the Deputy Secretary, or the Under
Secretary of State for Political Affairs agrees to extradite, he or she signs
the warrant. The surrender warrant authorizes the U.S. Marshal who has custody
of the fugitive to surrender the fugitive to the escort agents of the
requesting country. The signed and dated warrant is sealed by the Departments
Authentication Officer.
c. L/LEI provides copies of the surrender warrant to
OIA and the U.S. Marshals Service and formally notifies the embassy of the
requesting country of the availability of the fugitive, enclosing with its
diplomatic note the sealed surrender warrant and a copy of the extradition
judges certification. If the extradition judge or Secretary of State or his
or her delegate has limited the finding of extraditability, the surrender
warrant approves extradition only those offenses for which the fugitive has
been found extraditable, and this finding is further conveyed in the diplomatic
note.
7 FAM 1635.3 Transfer of a
Fugitive
(CT:CON-595; 08-06-2015)
a. OIA coordinates the arrangements for the transfer of
the fugitive with the embassy of the requesting state and the U.S. Marshals
Service. The escort agents, normally police officers of the foreign country,
travel to the United States and take custody of the fugitive, usually at the
international airport nearest to the fugitives place of detention. The U.S.
Marshals Service transports the fugitive to the airport and assures security
until the departure of the flight.
b. Occasionally, at the request of the foreign country
or when the transfer must be done urgently, U.S. Marshals return the fugitive
to the requesting country on a reimbursable basis (see 7 FAM 1617).
In such cases, L/LEI notifies the appropriate post, providing flight data and
requesting the post to ensure that:
(1) Hotel reservations have been made for the USMS
escorts; and
(2) Local authorities will meet the flight and take
the fugitive into custody.
c. When the transferred fugitive is a U.S. citizen,
L/LEI, by telegram, will inform the post in the requesting country of the
extradition so that a U.S. consular officer may visit the prisoner as soon as
feasible after the extradition has taken place.
d. L/LEI will provide the post with basic information
about the case against an U.S. citizen, particularly of any limitation on
extraditability, so that the consular officer can monitor the proceedings in
the local courts. The post should report by telegram, captioned for L/LEI, if
the fugitive, whether a U.S. citizen or an alien, makes any allegations that he
or she is being prosecuted or punished in the requesting country for offenses
other than those for which the fugitive was extradited, in violation of the
rule of specialty.
7 FAM 1636 TRAVEL DOCUMENTATION for
U.S. CITIZEN fugitives BEING EXTRADITED ABROAD
(CT:CON-595; 08-06-2015)
a. CA/PPT/S/L/LA may authorize the issuance of a
limited validity U.S. passport to the U.S. citizen to be extradited from the
United States. CA/PPT/S/L/LA works with the U.S. law enforcement authorities
on matters related to revocation of previously issued passports of the subject
of an outstanding warrant and issuance of a limited validity passport to the extraditee.
b. If an extraditee refuses to sign a passport
application, a senior passport specialist at a U.S. passport agency/center may
be authorized by CA/PPT/S/L/LA to sign it without recourse. A detailed
explanation of the circumstances of the application and a copy of the
extradition order should be attached to the passport record. A limited
passport should be issued and presented to the U.S. law enforcement escort.
The U.S. law enforcement escort will maintain control of the travel document at
all times.
7 FAM 1637 through 1639 Unassigned
7 FAM Exhibit 1633.1(d)
U.S. Declaration that the 1961 Hague Convention Abolishing the Requirement of
Legalization for Foreign Public Documents Does not Supersede 18 U.S.C. 3190
(CT:CON-161; 03-20-2007)
HAGUE CONFERENCE ON PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW PERMANENT
BUREAU
L.C. A No (81), L.C. ON No 7(81)
CONVENTION ABOLISHING THE REQUIREMENT OF LEGALIZATION FOR
FOREIGN PUBLIC DOCUMENTS (concluded at The Hague 5 October 1961 and entered
into force 24 January 1965)
Subject: Accession
The Permanent Bureau of the Hague Conference on private
international law presents its compliments to the Diplomatic Missions of the
Member States at The Hague and to the National Organs and has the honor to
inform them that, by instrument deposited on 24 December 1980 with the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs of the Kingdom of the Netherlands.
The United States of America acceded to the
above-mentioned Convention.
At the time of the accession the United States of America
made a declaration. The text of this declaration is as follows:
"On the occasion of the deposit by the United States
of America of its instrument of accession to the Convention Abolishing the
Requirement of Legalization for Foreign Public Documents concluded October 5,
1961 (1961 Convention), the Department of State wishes to draw the attention of
States currently Parties to the Convention and eventually of those becoming so
in the future, to the provisions of Title 18, United States Code, Section 3190
relating to documents submitted to the United States Government in support of
extradition requests. It does so for the purpose of preventing possible
misunderstandings by stipulating that the 1961 Convention does not supersede or
override the provisions of Section 3190.
Section 3190 provides:
To the Diplomatic Missions of the Member States at The
Hague.
To the National Organs.
Section 3190 Evidence on (Extradition) Hearing
Depositions, warrants or other papers or copies thereof
offered in evidence upon the hearing of any extradition case shall be received
and admitted as evidence on such hearing for all the purposes of such hearing
if they shall be properly and legally authenticated so as to entitle them to be
received for similar purposes by the tribunals of the foreign country from
which the accused party shall have escaped, and the certificate of the
principal diplomatic or consular officer of the United States resident in such
foreign country shall be proof that the same, so offered, are authenticated in
the manner required.
The requirement of Section 3190 is satisfied by the
certification of the principal United States diplomatic or consular officer
resident in the State requesting extradition that the documents are in such
form as to be admissible in the tribunals of that State. The certification by
apostille under the 1961 Convention does not satisfy this requirement, as it
only certifies the signature, the capacity of the signer, and the seal on the
documents. It does not certify the admissibility of the documents. Thus, the
requirement of Section 3190 is not deemed by the United States to be overridden
by operation of Article 8 of the 1961 Convention.
It should be noted, however, that a certification by the
principal diplomatic or consular officer of the United States as set out in
Section 3190 has also served to legalize such documents, and will continue to
do so without the need for any other legalization by United States officials or
certification by the apostille under the 1961 Convention.
In light of the above, it is recommended that States party
to the 1961 Convention continue as before to cover documents supporting
extradition requests directed to the United States with the special
certification provided for by Section 3190. Failure to cover extradition
documents in this recommended manner could regrettably result in a finding by
the United States judge or magistrate hearing the extradition request that the
documents do not meet the requirements of Section 3190 and thus are not
entitled to be received and admitted as evidence. Such a finding could, in
turn, result in the irrevocable rejection of the extradition request."
In accordance with the terms of Article 12, paragraph 1,
of the Convention any State not mentioned in Article 10 of the Convention (viz.
any State other than Iceland, Ireland, Liechtenstein and Turkey not represented
at the Ninth Session of the Hague Conference on private international law) may
accede to this Convention. In accordance with Article 12, paragraph 2, such
accession shall have effect only as regards the relation between the acceding
State and those Contracting States (at present: Austria, Bahamas, Belgium,
Botswana, Cyprus, Fiji, France, the Federal Republic of Germany, Hungary,
Israel, Italy, Japan, Lesotho, Liechtenstein, Luxemburg, Malawi, Malta,
Mauritius, the Kingdom of the Netherlands, Portugal, Seychelles, Spain,
Surinam, Swaziland, Switzerland, Tonga, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Northern Ireland and Yugoslavia) which have not raised an objection to its
accession in the six months after the receipt of the notification referred to
in sub-paragraph d, of Article 15. For practical reasons this six month period
will in this case run from 16 February 1981 till 10 August 1981.
In accordance with Article 12, paragraph 3, the Convention
shall enter into force as between the acceding State and the States which have
raised no objection to its accession on the sixtieth day after the expiry of
the six month period, i.e. on 15 October 1981.
The Permanent Bureau avails itself of this opportunity to
renew to the Diplomatic Missions of the Member States and to the National
Organs an assurance of its highest consideration and esteem.
THE HAGUE, 26 February 1981
(Seal of the Hague conference)