It's no song and dance, you know. |
Some words on what has gradually become a something of a topic in this case.
Could Knox
(and, if he were not there already, Sollecito) be extradited to Italy if the trial ends in the definite
conviction of both?
My simple
answer to this would be: why on earth not? I suppose, as often happens in high
profile cases, there might well be complications due to political reasons, but
I see no legal barriers here at all.
Let's focus
for the moment on Knox. The Sollecito question, too, might at one point or another
arise, but to answer that question, one would have to know where he would be
staying when any extradition request is made. Since we don't know that, it's
basically useless to ask the question in the first place.
In the case
of Knox, though, it's safe to assume that she'll remain in Seattle (or at least the USA) for the time being.
So: what
about extradition between the USA and Italy?
Well, as by
now just about everyone knows, there is an extradition treaty in place between
the USA and Italy. In sets out in which cases
extradition will or will not be granted when one country (that is, in the
terminology of the Treaty, the "Requesting Party") asks for the
extradition of a person by the other country (the "Requested Party",
as the treaty states).
So, if Italy were to request the extradition of
Knox by the USA, Italy would be the Requesting Party; the USA would be the Requested Party.
Simple, no?
Okay. Now
let's look at what the treaty says.
Firstly, in
Article 1, the general rule is given. It's this:
"Obligation to Extradite
The Contracting Parties agree to extradite to each other, pursuant to the provisions of this Treaty, persons whom the authorities of the Requesting Party have charged with or found guilty of an extraditable offense."
The Contracting Parties agree to extradite to each other, pursuant to the provisions of this Treaty, persons whom the authorities of the Requesting Party have charged with or found guilty of an extraditable offense."
If Knox were found guilty of murder (or of being the accessory to
murder) that would clearly be "an extraditable offense". Article 2
deals with this; an extraditable offence is an offence "punishable under
the laws of both Contracting Parties by deprivation of liberty for a period of
more than one year or by a more severe penalty".
So, Article 1 would essentially mandate the USA to extradite Knox,
if Italy requested her
extradition.
What else does the Treaty say? Well, for example, Article 5 prohibits
extradition when the request is made for "political or military" offences.
This clearly does not apply here. Article 8 states that extradition will not be
granted if the offence has become barred by lapse of time. Again, that does not
apply. There are, looking through the Treaty in general, various rules that
deal with such issues, and indeed various rules that deal with the question of
how an extradition request should be made by the Requesting Party or dealt with
by the Requested Party. None of these, however, have any impact on the
possibility of the extradition of Knox in this case.
So what might nevertheless bar the USA from extraditing
Knox? Well, the only provision in the Treaty that might seem to be of any real
import would be Article 6, which states:
"Non Bis in Idem
Extradition shall not be granted when the person sought has been convicted, acquitted or pardoned, or has served the sentence imposed, by the Requested Party for the same acts for which extradition is requested."
Extradition shall not be granted when the person sought has been convicted, acquitted or pardoned, or has served the sentence imposed, by the Requested Party for the same acts for which extradition is requested."
There is, however, a simple reason why this provision doesn't offer Knox
any solace. It's this: Knox has not been
"convicted, acquitted or pardoned" by any state in the USA; neither has she
already served her sentence anywhere in the USA. (Remember, the USA is the Requested
Party.)
And that's basically it: on the basis of the Treaty, there are no
impediments to extraditing Knox, if she were to be definitely convicted in Italy. None at all.
Of course, things are never quite that simple, and one might wish to argue that extradition would nevertheless be barred for different reasons.
Of course, things are never quite that simple, and one might wish to argue that extradition would nevertheless be barred for different reasons.
There are two that I can think of. The first is a little far-fetched,
and deals with the idea that Knox was somehow "tortured" by the
Italian police. The idea would imply that her conviction was arrived at by
evidence gained through the use of torture, and that therefore that evidence
would not be permissible by international (or US) laws, thereby making the
conviction itself unsound.
I must admit that I have no idea at all how Knox could seriously try and
make such an argument. I realise that she has claimed that she made statements
after having been pressurised by the police, and indeed after one of the police
officers slapped her on the back of her head, but besides the simple fact that
the police have denied this adamantly (and that, even if true, the accusations
hardly amount to "torture" in the first place), it would seem that these accusations have, at
most, a bearing on her conviction of "calunnia" (calumny; that is, of
her false accusations of Patrick Lumumba) and not on the murder trial itself.
This is an argument that holds no legal merit, I would say.
The second argument returns to the "double jeopardy" notion.
The Treaty might, as explained above, not bar extradition for this reason, but
perhaps international laws - or those of the USA - might.
Do they?
Well, international laws certainly don't. Italy, like most
European nations, has signed up to the European Convention on Human Rights, and
to Protocol 7 of that Conventions. Here's what's in Protocol 7:
"No
one shall be liable to be tried or punished again in criminal proceedings under
the jurisdiction of the same State for an offence for which he has already been
finally acquitted or convicted in accordance with the law and penal procedure
of that State."
The key word here is
"finally". Any extradition request made by Italy will only be made if Knox has been "finally" convicted in Italy. The process - that is, her trial - is ongoing, and will reach an
ending only after the appeal court in Florence
(and, perhaps, the Court of Cassation) has dealt with the case. Only once this
has happened will any conviction be final. In the meantime, she may have been
acquitted by the Appeal
Court
in Perugia, but, as is very clear indeed, that acquittal is hardly "final'
(and neither, one might add, is her earlier conviction by the original court).
In other words, an extradition
request by Italy would be fine under European law. And indeed, it would not be barred
by any other international law statute or treaty, since - simply put - there
are none.*
What about the (federal) law of
the USA? Well, the only possible obstacle might conceivably be the Fifth
Amendment of the US Constitution, which states that ".... nor shall any person be subject for
the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb . . .".
I do not,
however, see this as being any obstacle for an extradition of Knox. To put it
simply, Knox hasn't been put in jeopardy "twice"; she's been in
jeopardy once, in a process which, according to Italian law, takes up several
stages. "Twice", in other words, is "finally", as expressed
by the European Convention. They're the same thing.
Is there a simpler way of looking at the above? Yes, if you don't mind a more formal and legal approach. The Court of Cassation annulled the Appeal Court's acquittals. Therefore, those acquittals no longer exist. For that very simply reason alone, there can be no double jeopardy issues.
In closing,
two points.
Firstly, the fact that the notion of double jeopardy is not an American invention. In fact, it was developed by the Romans.
Secondly, the question of whether anyone should care deeply about whether Knox or Sollecito actually serve their sentences. If convicted, I daresay there are reasons why they should be imprisoned for a considerable amount of time. However, even if that does not happen, I would suspect that, in many ways, their lives would be shattered anyway.
Firstly, the fact that the notion of double jeopardy is not an American invention. In fact, it was developed by the Romans.
Secondly, the question of whether anyone should care deeply about whether Knox or Sollecito actually serve their sentences. If convicted, I daresay there are reasons why they should be imprisoned for a considerable amount of time. However, even if that does not happen, I would suspect that, in many ways, their lives would be shattered anyway.
__________
* Well, there's the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, of course. Does that help? No. Article
14 of the Convention states that "No one shall be liable to be tried or punished
again for an offence for which he has already been finally convicted or
acquitted in accordance with the law and penal procedure of each country."
Again, that dastardly word "finally".