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Extraction Summary

5
People
4
Organizations
3
Locations
1
Events
1
Relationships
3
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Legal opinion / court filing exhibit
File Size: 818 KB
Summary

A legal opinion filed on December 23, 2020, by French attorney William Julié regarding the extradition of Ghislaine Maxwell. Julié argues that under French law and the Extradition Treaty (referencing a past interpretation by Senators Durbin and Obama), there is no absolute rule against extraditing nationals and that the French government would likely execute an extradition decree against Maxwell. The document also cites the 2010 EU-US extradition agreement as further justification for cooperation.

People (5)

Name Role Context
William Julié Avocat à la Cour (Attorney)
Author of the legal opinion regarding extradition laws.
Ghislaine Maxwell Defendant / Subject of Extradition
referred to as 'Ms. Maxwell'; the document discusses the likelihood of her extradition from France.
Richard J. Durbin US Senator
Co-author of a quoted letter regarding the Extradition Treaty.
Barack Obama US Senator (at time of referenced letter)
Co-author of a quoted letter regarding the Extradition Treaty.
French Minister of Foreign Affairs Government Official
Recipient of the letter from Senators Durbin and Obama.

Organizations (4)

Name Type Context
French Courts
Legal body referenced regarding judicial review.
French Government
Entity with discretion over extradition requests.
United States Senate
Legislative body of Senators Durbin and Obama.
European Union
Party to the 2010 extradition agreement with the USA.

Timeline (1 events)

2010-02-01
Agreement on extradition between the European Union and the United States of America came into force.
N/A

Locations (3)

Location Context
Location of William Julié's law office (51, Rue Ampère).
Requesting state for extradition.
Requested state for extradition.

Relationships (1)

William Julié Legal Analysis Ghislaine Maxwell
Julié provides a legal opinion on the likelihood of Maxwell's extradition.

Key Quotes (3)

"To the extent there is discretion available in such extradition decisions, we urge the French government to exercise that discretion in favor of extradition"
Source
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Quote #1
"it is highly unlikely that the French government would refuse to issue and execute an extradition decree against Ms. Maxwell, particularly if Ms. Maxwell has signed an irrevocable waiver in the USA."
Source
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Quote #2
"A discretionary power is not a legal rule."
Source
DOJ-OGR-00001204.jpg
Quote #3

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (3,029 characters)

Case 1:20-cr-00330-AJN Document 103-21 Filed 12/23/20 Page 16 of 4
WILLIAM JULIÉ
AVOCAT À LA COUR
challenge the refusal before French courts, while such challenge could have led to a judicial review of the request, in accordance with the ordinary extradition procedure.
Secondly, in the absence of a published judicial decision, it is impossible to determine what the outcome of this case would have been if it had come before the courts.
Third, as was rightly pointed out by US Senators Richard J. Durbin and Barack Obama in their aforementioned letter to the French Minister of Foreign Affairs, which the government cites in its memorandum:
“Article 3 of the Extradition Treaty between the United States and France provides in pertinent part that “There is no obligation upon the Requested State to grant the extradition of a person who is a national of the Requested State”. While this Article does not require the extradition of a national to a requesting state, it also does not appear to preclude extradition. To the extent there is discretion available in such extradition decisions, we urge the French government to exercise that discretion in favor of extradition”.
I am satisfied that this is the right interpretation of Article 3, as this is exactly the conclusion I came to in my first report. To the extent that there is a discretion, there can be no absolute rule against the extradition of nationals under French law. A discretionary power is not a legal rule. Indeed, there is no constitutional principle against the extradition of nationals. For these reasons, the Peterson case does not alter my view that under the specific and unique facts of this case, it is highly unlikely that the French government would refuse to issue and execute an extradition decree against Ms. Maxwell, particularly if Ms. Maxwell has signed an irrevocable waiver in the USA.
Finally, if an extradition request were to be issued against a French citizen today, the obligations of the French government under the Extradition Treaty between the USA and France would also need to be read in light of the Agreement on extradition between the European Union and the United States of America, which came into force on February 1st, 2010, several years after the Peterson case. Article 1 of this Agreement, which enhances cooperation between Contracting Parties, provides that: “The Contracting Parties undertake, in accordance with the provisions of this Agreement, to provide for enhancements to cooperation in the context of applicable extradition relations between the Member States and the United States of America governing extradition of offenders”. The existence of this Agreement would need to be taken into account by the French government in the exercise of its discretion as to whether or not to grant the extradition of a French national to the USA.
William JULIE
[Signature]
51, RUE AMPÈRE - 75017 PARIS - TÉL. 01 88 33 51 80 - FAX. 01 88 33 51 81
wj@wjavocats.com - www.wjavocats.com - PALAIS C1652
DOJ-OGR-00001204

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