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Extraction Summary

7
People
6
Organizations
3
Locations
3
Events
2
Relationships
4
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Legal memorandum / court filing exhibit
File Size: 971 KB
Summary

This document is a page from a legal memorandum filed on December 23, 2020, by French lawyer William Julié regarding the extradition of Ghislaine Maxwell. Julié argues that the US-France Extradition Treaty allows France discretion to extradite its own citizens, countering the DOJ's reliance on the 2007 'Peterson case' precedent. The text analyzes the Peterson case, noting it was a discretionary decision by the Ministry of Justice rather than a court ruling, and references a 2007 letter from Senators Obama and Durbin regarding that matter.

People (7)

Name Role Context
William Julié Avocat à la Cour (Lawyer)
Author of the legal opinion regarding French extradition laws.
Ghislaine Maxwell Defendant/Subject
Subject of the potential extradition discussion; the document argues against the DOJ's claim that she would not be ex...
Hans Peterson Precedent Subject
A dual French American citizen whose extradition to the US was denied in 2007, used as a precedent by the DOJ.
Richard J. Durbin US Senator
Co-author of a 2007 letter to the French Minister of Foreign Affairs regarding the Peterson case.
Barack Obama US Senator
Co-author of a 2007 letter to the French Minister of Foreign Affairs regarding the Peterson case.
French Minister of Foreign Affairs Official
Recipient of the 2007 letter from Senators Durbin and Obama.
French Minister of Justice Official
Official who communicated the decision to refuse Peterson's extradition in 2007.

Organizations (6)

Name Type Context
DOJ
US Department of Justice; referred to regarding their memorandum and arguments in the Maxwell case.
French Conseil d’Etat
French Supreme Court for administrative matters.
French Ministry of Justice
Government body that made the discretionary decision in the Peterson case.
European Union
Referenced in relation to the Extradition Treaty with the USA.
United Kingdom Government
Successfully challenged a French extradition refusal in 1993.
Hong Kong Government
Successfully challenged a French extradition refusal in 1993.

Timeline (3 events)

1993-10-15
Conseil d’Etat decision no. 142578
France
United Kingdom Hong Kong French Conseil d’Etat
2007-08
Arrest of Hans Peterson (beginning of August) and subsequent refusal of extradition (August 22nd).
France
2020-12-23
Filing of Document 103-1 in Case 1:20-cr-00330-AJN
Court (US)

Locations (3)

Location Context
Country involved in extradition treaties and decisions.
USA
Requesting country for extradition.
Address of William Julié's law firm.

Relationships (2)

Richard J. Durbin Co-signatories Barack Obama
2007 letter of US Senators Richard J. Durbin and Barack Obama
Ghislaine Maxwell Legal Comparison Hans Peterson
DOJ relies on the case of Mr Hans Peterson to argue regarding Maxwell's extradition.

Key Quotes (4)

"The Treaty between the USA and France gives the French government discretion as to whether or not to extradite its own citizens to the USA."
Source
DOJ-OGR-00002224(1).jpg
Quote #1
"In support of its argument that the French government would not extradite Ms Ghislaine Maxwell to the USA, the government relies on the case of Mr Hans Peterson"
Source
DOJ-OGR-00002224(1).jpg
Quote #2
"The Peterson precedent should only be cited with great caution."
Source
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Quote #3
"This decision is not a Court decision but a discretionary decision from the French Ministry of Justice."
Source
DOJ-OGR-00002224(1).jpg
Quote #4

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (3,287 characters)

Case 1:20-cr-00330-AJN Document 103-1 Filed 12/23/20 Page 3 of 4
WILLIAM JULIÉ
AVOCAT À LA COUR
subsidiarity of domestic law in relation to international instruments as stated by the aforementioned law of 10 March 1927: the legislative provisions on extradition are applicable only in the silence or in the absence of international conventions.”2
It follows from the provisions of Article 696 of the French Code of Criminal Procedure that the key question is whether France may extradite a French national under the Extradition Treaty between the USA and France and/or under the Extradition Treaty between the European Union and the USA, not whether France may extradite its citizens under French legislation.
As previously outlined, the Extradition Treaty between the USA and France does not preclude the French government from extraditing a French national and must therefore be distinguished from a number of other international agreements signed by France which contain a clear prohibition to that extent. The Treaty between the USA and France gives the French government discretion as to whether or not to extradite its own citizens to the USA.
It is noted that the letter of the French Minister does not provide any answer on this issue.
2 The DOJ Memorandum and the Peterson Case
In support of its argument that the French government would not extradite Ms Ghislaine Maxwell to the USA, the government relies on the case of Mr Hans Peterson, a dual French American citizen whose extradition to the US was denied by France in 2007.
The Peterson precedent should only be cited with great caution. First, I am not aware that this case has given rise to a published judicial decision, therefore it should not be interpreted as the support of any legal rule or principle. In addition, in regards to the documents that the DOJ has referred to in its memorandum, I doubt that a judicial decision has ever occurred in this case: as mentioned by the 2007 letter of US Senators Richard J. Durbin and Barack Obama to the French Minister of Foreign Affairs, the French Minister of Justice communicated its decision refusing extradition on August 22nd 2007, only a few days after the suspect was arrested (at the beginning of August 2007). This decision is not a Court decision but a discretionary decision from the French Ministry of Justice. It actually seems very unlikely that a court decision could have been rendered in this timeframe. This indicates that the case must not have been handed on to the court by the Ministry of Justice in the earliest stage of the extradition process.
A refusal to extradite may possibly be challenged by the requesting government before the French Conseil d’Etat, which is the French Supreme Court for administrative matters, as for example the United Kingdom and Hong Kong successfully challenged a decision from the French authorities not to extradite an individual whose extradition they had requested (Conseil d’Etat, 15 October1993, no. 142578). In the Peterson case, the American government did not
2 Circulaire Mandat d’arrêt européen et Extradition n° CRIM-04-2/CAB-11.03.2004 du 11 mars 2004
51, RUE AMPÈRE - 75017 PARIS - TÉL. 01 88 33 51 80 - FAX. 01 88 33 51 81
wj@wjavocats.com - www.wjavocats.com - PALAIS C 1652
DOJ-OGR-00002224

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