Steve Peers
One of the best-known EU laws created
the European
Arrest Warrant (EAW), which replaced the prior rules governing extradition
between Member States. But on the other hand, in principle EU law has nothing
to do with extradition to non-EU
countries, except where the EU has agreed a treaty on this issue (as it has
with the USA
and Norway
and Iceland), or as regards asylum-seekers (the EU’s asylum
procedures law limits their extradition to their country of origin, because
it’s necessary to determine first if the country which seeks to prosecute them
is in fact persecuting them).
Yesterday’s CJEU judgment in Petruhhin
altered this legal position. EU law does apply to such issues, and the Court
clarified some relevant issues while leaving others open. Furthermore, the
judgment raises the question of future UK/EU relations on extradition following
Brexit.
Background
Extradition between the EU and
non-EU countries is governed by a combination of national law and bilateral and
multilateral treaties – most notably the Council of Europe Convention
on Extradition, which has been ratified by all 47 European countries plus
three non-EU countries. There are four further Protocols to this Convention,
which have been ratified by fewer States.
A key feature of extradition law
is that in principle most States will not extradite their own citizens,
although within the EU, the EAW law has overruled any absolute ban on
surrendering nationals as between Member States. While the refusal to extradite
citizens could run a risk of impunity if those citizens commit criminal
offences in another country, most States avoid that risk by extending their
criminal jurisdiction to cover acts of their citizens committed outside their
territory. In fact many EU laws and international treaties require States to assert such extraterritorial jurisdiction as
regards specific transnational crimes.
The EAW law says a little about
possible conflict between EAWs and extradition requests from third countries. It
states simply that in the case of such a conflict, the national authority
should decide which takes priority ‘with due consideration of all the
circumstances’, including the relevant treaty and ‘the relative seriousness and
place of the offences’, the relevant dates of the requests and whether the extradition
request or EAW aims to obtain custody of a fugitive for trial or to serve a sentence
already imposed.
This compares with the original proposal
for the EAW law, which always gave priority to an EAW if the extradition request
came from a country which was not
party to the Council of Europe Convention. That clause was dropped following intensive
lobbying from the US government, while the law was being negotiated in autumn
2001 (the EAW law was largely motivated by the 9/11 terrorist attacks, although
it is not limited to terrorist offences).
Judgment
The Petruhhin case concerned an Estonian citizen sought by the Russian
government for prosecution for organised crime offences. He was safe from
extradition to Russia as long as he stayed in Estonia, since that country will
not extradite its nationals outside the EU. But at one point he was arrested in
Latvia, which decided to implement the Russian request. While Latvia also
refuses to extradite its own citizens outside the EU, an Estonian citizen prima facie obviously cannot rely on
that protection.
So Mr Petruhhin tried to rely on
his transnational form of citizenship
instead, arguing that since he was an EU
citizen in another Member State, he was entitled to equal treatment with
Latvians – therefore protecting him from extradition from Latvia to Russia,
just like them. (Logically if his argument had worked, he would also be
protected from extradition from any other
Member State which refuses to extradite its own citizens to Russia).
The CJEU ruled first of all that
the despite the absence of EU law on this issue, the dispute fell within the
scope of EU free movement law, since Mr Petruhhin was exercising free movement
rights. Therefore he had a right to equal treatment with nationals of Latvia in
principle. However, a breach of that equality right could be justified on the
grounds of avoiding impunity from prosecution for alleged criminal offences:
Latvia, like most States, extends its criminal jurisdiction to cover acts of
its own citizens abroad, but not the acts of citizens of other countries abroad. This distinction between the position of
Latvians and citizens of other Member States can justify different treatment as
regards protection from an extradition request.
Having said that, the Court added
a crucial rider. To limit the effect of its ruling upon free movement rights
(the proportionality principle), it ruled that Latvia has to contact the
Estonian authorities first, to see if they
wish to prosecute him there on the basis of their
extraterritorial jurisdiction, before handing him over to Russia. That’s an
important proviso, as many people believe they are more likely to be treated
fairly in the courts of their own State. At any rate, this likely means they
will have access to defence and court proceedings in their own language, with
any pre-trial detention closer to friends and family.
Finally, the Court stated that
any extradition to Russia was subject to the ban on torture or other inhuman or
degrading treatment set out in Article 4 of the EU Charter of Fundamental
Rights, which transposes the standards set out in Article 3 ECHR and the
relevant case-law of the European Court of Human Rights on this issue. That
means that if there’s a real risk of such treatment in Russia, the fugitive
cannot be extradited there in any case. It should be noted that the Charter
equally bans extradition to face the death penalty.
Comments
First of all, the Court was correct
to assert the link between EU free movement law and extradition to third
States, although its rather abstract reasoning could be improved upon. The best
argument supporting this part of the ruling is rather that Mr Petruhhin would have
been deterred from leaving Estonia for another Member State if he ran a risk of
being extradited to Russia every time he left the country.
Next, would EU law also apply to
cases where a Member State considers extraditing its own citizen to a non-EU country? The question may not arise often,
since as noted already, many Member States don’t do this at all. But where they
do, logically the case law on citizenship
of the European Union (as distinct from free movement applies). As developed
since the Zambrano
judgment, this prevents citizens of their own
Member State from being forced outside the EU in principle, as they are thereby
deprived of EU citizenship. But logically the same limits apply by analogy:
extradition of citizens can be justified on grounds of preventing immunity, but
that is qualified if the extraditing State subjects its own citizens to
prosecution for acts committed abroad (most do, as noted already).
Third, could there be other
grounds justifying extradition to a non-EU state, besides preventing impunity?
This isn’t clear from the judgment. But logically the judgment would apply by
analogy to cases where a fugitive has already been sentenced to a term of
imprisonment. In such cases, Latvia (say) would contact Estonia to see if the
latter country could take over the punishment imposed by Russia, pursuant to
the Council of Europe treaty on the transfer
of prisoners or another relevant international treaty.
Could there be further grounds preventing extradition to a non-EU state,
besides the Charter ban on the death penalty and torture et al, and the
priority for EAWs? For instance, what if the person concerned has already been tried in a Member State, or
in a third State? The EU has a cross-border
ban on double jeopardy, but it only applies to Member States and Schengen
associates, not to countries like Russia and the USA. Extradition treaties
sometimes address this issue, but don’t always cover every double jeopardy
scenario. A pending
case before the CJEU should clarify this issue.
Next, logically the ruling would
also apply by analogy if a third
Member State could apply its jurisdiction: say an Estonian in Latvia was wanted
by Russia but could potentially be prosecuted or serve a sentence in France, due
to an [alleged] assault against a Russian citizen in France, or a French
citizen in Russia. (Some countries assert criminal jurisdiction where one of
their citizens was a victim of crime).
This brings us to the issue of
conflict between an EAW and an extradition request from a non-EU state. The
CJEU didn’t have to comment on this issue in its judgment, because no EAW had
been issued yet. But the Court’s judgment necessarily means that there is more
likely to be such a conflict in future, if Estonia indeed issues an EAW. And if
that happens, the new judgment implies that the open-ended conflict rule in the
EAW has to give way to the primary law of the Treaties: so the Estonian EAW has
to take precedence over the Russian extradition request. The Court has in
effect enshrined priority for EAWs over (almost) all non-EU extradition
requests, whereas the original Commission proposal, as noted above, would have
given such priority only over extradition requests from non-Council of Europe
states. Perhaps the Americans should also have lobbied the Court of Justice.
But then, the USA has its own extradition
deal already with the EU, as noted at the outset. (The deal with Norway and Iceland
has not been ratified yet). The Court says several times in its judgment that the
general rules it elaborates here are without prejudice to extradition treaties
concluded between the EU and third countries. Presumably it can interpret the
EU/USA treaty, since it can interpret any treaties which the EU signs with
non-EU states. In fact, there’s a pending
case before the CJEU which asks the Court to interpret this very treaty.
Brexit?
This judgment is probably relevant for Brexit. The UK government has recently hinted
that it will seek some continuation of criminal law cooperation with the EU. There
will be transitional issues with EAWs pending on Brexit Day, which the EU/UK withdrawal treaty concluded under Article 50 TEU will hopefully address. In
fact there are already possible complications arising from Brexit in this area,
as there are several challenges
in Ireland to the execution of UK EAWs on the grounds that Brexit is
coming. The CJEU may well be called on to address these issues even before
Brexit Day.
For the position after Brexit, it’s undoubtedly possible
for the EU to conclude an extradition arrangement with the UK, as the Court’s
judgment actively encourages the EU to sign such treaties. In fact, the
judgment might arguably be the basis of an argument for EU exclusive competence over extradition treaties with non-EU countries,
on the basis that any Member State agreements would affect the operation of the
EAW law, at least as regards EU citizens. That would mean that the UK could no
longer sign extradition deals with individual EU countries, but only with the
EU as a whole.
If no deal were reached, the UK
and EU could fall back on the Council of Europe extradition Convention. But as
I have noted
before, this would mean far less extradition (and much slower extradition)
as compared to the EAW.
If there were a UK/EU deal, Member
States may still want to refuse to extradite their own citizens to the UK, as
they have under the treaty with Norway and Iceland. But even if they are willing to extradite them to the UK, on whatever treaty basis, it
may be arguable on the basis of the new judgment that they can’t, as long as the fugitive can be tried or serve her sentence in
the remaining EU. And although the UK can still assist an EU Member State in
prosecuting its own citizens, that will be far more expensive for the UK
authorities than trying the person in the UK.
Barnard & Peers: chapter 25,
chapter 27, chapter 13
JHA4: chapter II:3
Photo credit: www.theregister.co.uk
Does the EAW apply to non european residents?(international students, temporal workers, tourist etc)
ReplyDeleteYes.
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