Skip to main content
Category

Extradition

Overturning an Extradition Order – the firm successfully represents a shareholder of an international trading company before the Court of Appeal

Sector: Extradition; Regulatory; International law

Practice Area: Dispute Resolution, Private Client

In what is a rare complete overturn of an extradition order, the Court of Appeal fully accepted the firm’s arguments, and finally resolved the relevant matter, resisting to extradite the individual to the requesting state.

The Court of Appeal was faced with a first instance decision ordering an extradition of a high-net-worth individual, a shareholder in an international trading business, as requested by an extradition request from a CIS country. The firm appealed the first instance decision, raising a number of arguments why both the extradition request and extradition order are contrary to the legal order of the Republic of Serbia, rules of international law, European Convention on Human Rights and the Constitution. The Court of Appeal accepted the arguments of the defence and has completely overturned the first instance decision, producing a final judgment on this matter, with the result that the private client will not be extradited to the relevant country. With respect to one of the main points of the appeal – the interpretation of the “duality” requirement, the Court of Appeal correctly found that while this requirement does not require a strict formal and grammatical identity between the foreign and domestic norms, that the nature and essence of the norms and offences still have to be the same. This stance taken by the Court of Appeal is a welcome precedent indicating that the domestic courts must rigorously investigate extradition requests which attempt to elevate general misdemeanour offences and non-criminal behaviour as a basis for criminal extradition.

Resisting an Extradition – the firm successfully represents a private client before the Court of Appeal

Sector: Extradition; Regulatory; International law

Practice Area: Dispute Resolution, Private Client

In what was a rare case of the Appellate Court ruling in the favour of the defendant and quashing the First Instance Court on the merits, the firm successfully represented a private client – a shareholder of an international trading company – who was facing an unjustified extradition request from a CIS country.  In May 2023, following what is a strong practice of deferral to reasons provided by the requesting states, the First instance Court – High Court in Belgrade, Special Department for Organized Crime, issued an extradition order.  Following this, the firm appeared before the Court of Appeal, and raised a number of arguments why the extradition request was legally unsound and that the conditions for extradition have not been met.  The firm argued that the first instance decision was contrary to the Constitution, legal order of the Republic of Serbia and the generally accepted rules of international law. The decision of the Court of Appeal reiterated the importance of one of the mandatory conditions for extradition – duality of the criminal offence in both legal systems – and that the condition cannot be interpreted loosely, so that mere regulatory misdemeanours cannot be elevated to the level of criminal offence based on the practice of the requesting state.   

Close Menu

Copyright @Tomanovic 2022