Ambassade des Etats-Unis d'Amérique à Paris

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Etats-Unis

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EFTA00018723.pdf

This document is a formal letter dated March 9, 2021, from the French Ministry of Justice to the US Department of Justice, transmitted via Liaison Magistrate Andrew Finkelman. It clarifies French extradition law (specifically Articles 696-2 and 694-4 of the Code of Criminal Procedure), stating definitively that France does not extradite its own nationals and that this constitutes an 'insurmountable obstacle' regardless of whether the nationality was lost after the offense occurred. This is likely in reference to the potential extradition of Jean-Luc Brunel or a similar figure involved in the Epstein case holding French citizenship.

Official correspondence / legal letter
2025-12-25

DOJ-OGR-00001181.jpg

This letter, dated December 11, 2020, is a formal communication from the French Ministry of Justice to the U.S. Department of Justice. It explains that under French law, France is absolutely prohibited from extraditing any individual who was a French national at the time an alleged crime was committed, regardless of dual nationality. The letter further states that when extradition is denied on these grounds, France is obligated by the principle of 'aut tradere, aut judicare' to prosecute the individual in its own courts.

Letter
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00002200.jpg

This is a formal letter dated December 11, 2020, from the French Ministry of Justice to the U.S. Department of Justice. The letter explains that French law absolutely prohibits the extradition of individuals who were French nationals at the time of the alleged offense, regardless of dual nationality. It clarifies that when France refuses an extradition request on these grounds, it is obligated under the principle of 'aut tradere, aut judicare' (either extradite or prosecute) to bring legal proceedings against the person in its own courts.

Legal document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00002200(1).jpg

This document is a formal letter from the French Ministry of Justice to the US Department of Justice, dated December 11, 2020, filed in the case United States v. Ghislaine Maxwell (Case 1:20-cr-00330-AJN). The letter clarifies French penal code, stating that France absolutely refuses to extradite its own citizens (including dual nationals), but under the principle of 'aut dedere aut judicare' (extradite or prosecute), France retains jurisdiction to try its citizens for crimes committed abroad. This is legally significant to the Maxwell case as she held French citizenship.

Legal correspondence / official letter (ministerial)
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00020100.jpg

This document discusses the bilateral extradition treaty between the United States and France signed on April 23, 1996. It outlines the principle of non-extradition of nationals and its application within the European Union framework, as well as the exceptions and conditions related to extradition requests.

Legal document
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00020099.jpg

This document is a formal letter from the French Ministry of Justice to the US Department of Justice, dated December 11, 2020. It explicitly clarifies French law regarding extradition, stating that France is absolutely prohibited from extraditing its own nationals, including dual citizens (likely referencing Jean-Luc Brunel or Ghislaine Maxwell in the context of the Epstein investigation). It further explains that while extradition is refused, France retains jurisdiction to prosecute these individuals domestically under the principle of 'aut tradere, aut judicare' (extradite or prosecute).

Official correspondence / diplomatic note
2025-11-20

DOJ-OGR-00002757.jpg

This is a formal letter dated March 9, 2021, from the French Ministry of Justice to the US Department of Justice (filed in the US v. Maxwell case). The letter, signed by Philippe Jaeglé, explains French extradition laws (Articles 696 et seq.), specifically clarifying that France does not extradite its own nationals (Article 694-4). It asserts that if a requested person held French nationality at the time of the offense, it constitutes an 'insurmountable obstacle' to extradition.

Legal correspondence / official letter
2025-11-20
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