NotEvenWrong
Muse
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2014
- Messages
- 910
Re-read a couple websites and it refreshed my memory on some of this:
It looks like the extradition treaty doesn't specifically mean double jeopardy as it's referred to in the Constitution. It excludes situations where the defendant has been put in jeopardy for the crime in the country from which extradition is being requested. So extradition could not be denied on these grounds, as Knox wasn't tried in the U.S.
I guess a related question would be: Will the U.S. extradite a citizen if the foreign country did something which would have violated the citizen's Constitutional rights if done in the U.S.; i.e. is the U.S. government obligated to protect a U.S. citizen from a foreign government through reasonable means, or must they "obey" the foreign country's process even if common sense says it got the result wrong? I guess the treaty does not explicitly disallow this, but wtf? Wouldn't something like this be a clear case where the letter of the treaty is inadequate?
It looks like the extradition treaty doesn't specifically mean double jeopardy as it's referred to in the Constitution. It excludes situations where the defendant has been put in jeopardy for the crime in the country from which extradition is being requested. So extradition could not be denied on these grounds, as Knox wasn't tried in the U.S.
I guess a related question would be: Will the U.S. extradite a citizen if the foreign country did something which would have violated the citizen's Constitutional rights if done in the U.S.; i.e. is the U.S. government obligated to protect a U.S. citizen from a foreign government through reasonable means, or must they "obey" the foreign country's process even if common sense says it got the result wrong? I guess the treaty does not explicitly disallow this, but wtf? Wouldn't something like this be a clear case where the letter of the treaty is inadequate?
