619
Extradition Hearing
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The government's case at the hearing consists of moving the formal
request for extradition and all supporting documents into evidence. The
Federal
Rules of Evidence do not apply. Fed. R. Evid. 1101(d)(3). Instead,
admissibility is governed by 18 U.S.C. § 3190. Since an extradition
hearing
is not intended to be a trial on the merits, but is instead a probable cause
hearing, the fugitive's opportunity to present evidence is severely limited
under
existing case law. The district court may assign the case to a Federal
magistrate judge; the fugitive is not entitled to have an Article III judge
preside over the extradition hearing. If the judge or magistrate judge is
unfamiliar with extradition proceedings, the prosecutor may wish to outline
them
in a pre-hearing memorandum. The Office of International Affairs can
provide a
sample. A pre-hearing memorandum is also advisable if the facts are unusual
or
complicated. The fugitive is remanded in custody pending the extradition
judge's
ruling.
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