OPINION
Azra Basié is a Balkan native who came to the United States in 1994 as a refugee to escape the vicious civil war that was tearing apart Yugoslavia in the 1990s. She eventually settled in Kentucky and became a naturalized United States citizen. She now stands" accused in Bosnia and Herzegovina (Bosnia), one of Yugoslavia’s successor states, of crimes ■ committed against ethnic Serbs during the war while Basié was a member of the Croatian army. Bosnia — specifically the Republic of Srpska (ie., the “Serb Republic”), a quasi-independent administrative entity within Bosnia — has asked the United States to extradite Basié so that she can stand trial;
The Department of State filed a Complaint for Extradition in 2011. The complaint was assigned to a United States Magistrate Judge, who certified it after concluding that Basié was extraditable under a 1902 extradition treaty between the United States and the Kingdom of Serbia. See Treaty for the Mutual Extradition of Fugitives from Justice, U.S.-Serb., Oct. 25, 1901, 32 Stat. 1890 [hereinafter Treaty]. 1
Direct appeal is not available in extradition proceedings,
-see Collins v. Mil
I. Extradition of U.S. Citizens
Under the Treaty, each country has a general obligation to honor extradition requests, Treaty, supra at .2, Art. II, but neither country “shall be bound to deliver up its own citizens,” id., Art. V. According to Basié, this provision erects an absolute bar on the extradition of U.S. citizens to Bosnia that can be removed only by the ratification of a new treaty. This is as untenable as it sounds, but we nevertheless provide some analysis.
We begin with the Supreme Court’s decision in
Valentine v. United States ex rel. Neidecker,
which considered nearly identical language in an extradition treaty between the U.S. and France and concluded that U.S., citizens could not be extradited under that treaty.
Congress addressed this lack of power in 1990 by passing 18 U.S.C. § '3196, which provides that
If the applicable treaty or convention does not obligate the United States to extradite its citizens to a foreign country, the Secretary of State may, nevertheless, order the surrender to that country of a United States citizen whose extradition has been requested by that country if the other requirements of that treaty or convention are met.
Bagic contends that this statute is an unconstitutional attempt by Congress to circumvent the treaty-making requirements of Article II, but her argument is premised on the faulty assumption that § 3196 conflicts with the Treaty. It does not.
Valentine
did not address what a
nation
may do under the relevant treaty language, but rather which governmental actors
within the United States government
are empowered (or not) to use their' discretion to extradite U.S. citizens. But we need not rely merely on the logic of the opinion;
Valentine
— on no fewer than five occasions — explained that the executive’s lack of discretionary authority could be remedied either by amending the treaty
or
by enacting a “statute conferring an independent. power” on the executive.
There is no merit to Basic’s contention that Valentine “only sanctions congres-sionally authorized extradition independent of a treaty when it occurs in a foreign country or territory ‘occupied by or under the control of the United States!.’]” Nor is she correct that, “[o]utside of this ‘limited provision!,’] acts of Congress independent of a treaty can only define ‘... the procedure to carry out an existing extradition treaty or convention!.’]” Reply Br. at 2 (citations omitted; ellipsis in original). Indeed, this argument is a gross distortion of what Valentine actually said, casting as normative a passage that was descriptive:
Whatever may be the power of the Congress to provide for extradition independent of treaty, that power has not been exercised save in relation to a foreign country or territory occupied by or under the control of the United States. Aside from that limited provision, the Act of Congress relating to extradition simply defines the procedure to carry out an existing extradition treaty or convention.
The..only support that Basic can muster in support of her position is a district court opinion that.characterized § 3196 as “an unprecedented Congressional action” to “amend” treaties like the one at issue in this case,
Gouveia v. Vokes,
II. Warrant Requirement
Basic has a more plausible argument with respect to the Treaty’s warrant requirement. Under the Treaty, when a nation seeks the extradition of a person who is not a convict but who has been charged with a crime, it must provide “a duly authenticated copy of’the warrant'of arrest in the country where the crime has been committed.” Treaty, supra at 2, Art. III.
Nothing in the record bears the title “Warrant of Arrest.” Instead, Bosnia submitted an October 19, 2006 decision from a Bosnian Court that includes what appears to be a finding of probable cause and an order that Basic be detained. Bosnia also submitted a document .from a Bosnian Prosecutor’s office, dated July 9, 2007, which states that the office was investigating Basic “due to a reasonable doubt that” she committed war crimes, that she had
Basic contends that the 2007 document proves that there is an arrest warrant in this case — the “international arrest warrant” — and that extradition is impermissir ble because that warrant is. not in the record. This enthymeme does not bear up under scrutiny: the unstated premise— that there may be only one arrest warrant — is false. 4 And, more importantly, the documents in the record do, in fact, constitute a valid arrest warrant under Bosnian law.
The Criminal Procedure Code of Bosnia and Herzegovina sets out a two-step.process for the issuance of an arrest warrant. The first step takes place in a court:
(1) Issuance of a warrant may be ordered if the suspect or the accused against whom criminal proceedings have been instigated due to a criminal offense for which it is possible to pronounce a prison sentence of three (3) years or more is on the run, and an order for his apprehension or a decision specifying his detention has been issued.
(2) Issuance of a warrant shall be ordered by the Court____ [And] shall be submitted to the police authorities for the purpose of its execution.
Crim. P.Code, Art. 443 (Bosn. & Herz.), available at http://www.tuzhastvobih.gov. ba/?opcija=sadrzaj&kat=4&id=40& jezik=e. The second step is the actual issuance of the warrant by the “responsible police body designated by the Court.” Id., Art. 446. The district court order and the subsequent directive from the Bosnian Prosecutor’s office satisfy both steps, respectively. These documents, moreover, include the elements of an arrest warrant: a probable cause finding by a neutral magistrate and a direction that “a law-enforcement officer ... arrest and take a person into custody.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1818-19 (10th ed.2014).
Further, a 2011 document,, included in the record, from, the “Ministry of Justice of BiH Sarajevo,” explains that the 20Ó7 “Directive to ... find and arrest Basic,” which was issued “in accordance with the Order of the District Court.... dated October 19, 2006, for detention and issuance of an international arrest warrant” is “ ‘the Arrest Warrant’ in this matter.”
5
We will not second guess this determination.
See Grin v. Shine,
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons,, we affirm the district court’s judgment denying Basié’s habeas corpus petition.
Notes
. On appeal, the parties agree that the 1902 Treaty applies to this case since Bosnia is a successor state of the Kingdom of Serbia.
. An interesting question, not raised in this case, is what limitations (if any) Article I of the Constitution pláces on Congress’ authority "to provide for extradition independent of a treaty.”
. For this reason, Basió’s reliance on
Roeder
v.
Islamic Republic of Iran,
. Whether the international arrest warrant would satisfy the Treaty’s warrant requirement is a question that we do not reach.
. Documents in a similar extradition case,
In re Extradition of Nezirovic,
are consistent with this.
