Ernest Wolfgang Brauch was arrested in Vermont on July 9, 1979, pursuant to the provisional arrest procedures of Article VIII(l) of the Extradition Treaty between the Government of the United States of America and the Government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (“the Treaty”). As required by the Treaty, the government of the United Kingdom subsequently filed a formal request for Brauch’s extradition. On September 13, 1979, a hearing on the extradition request was held before a federal magistrate in New Hampshire. 1 Sitting as a committing magistrate under 18 U.S.C. § 3184, the magistrate found Brauch extraditable on three separate sets of charges and issued a Certificate of Extraditability and Order of Commitment on October 18, 1979. Brauch then brought a petition for habeas corpus in the district court for the District of New Hampshire seeking relief from the magistrate’s order. The district court denied Brauch’s petition on November 2, 1979, and he brought this appeal. The magistrate’s Certificate of Extraditability has been stayed pending the outcome of this appeal.
The Facts
The United Kingdom’s extradition request set forth charges against Brauch for violating three provisions of the English criminal laws: seven counts of violating
A. The Commodities Transactions
From 1967 through 1974, Brauch was engaged in commodities trading on the London Commodities Terminal Markets. At different times during this period Brauch maintained trading accounts at five London brokerage houses in the names of several different trading companies. 5 To open these trading accounts, Brauch was required to make deposits to cover the cost of the initial dealings. Thereafter, if the value of the commodities purchased for the account declined due to market fluctuations, Brauch would receive a “margin call” requiring him to deposit additional funds to cover the decreased value of the assets held by his account.
In 1974 the commodities markets suffered a period of sharp decline. On January 3, 1974, Anthony Gibbs Commodities, Ltd., with whom Brauch had been trading since 1967, made a margin call on the account of one of Brauch’s trading companies, Commodities Investment Trust. Brauch responded by sending Gibbs a check for £80,-000 drawn on the account of another of Brauch’s companies, Neptune Finance, Ltd. The check did not clear, however, and when no further funds were forthcoming, Gibbs, closed out Brauch’s trading accounts, which by then had a deficit of £55,000 owing to Gibbs.
Brauch had also traded since 1967 with the brokerage firm of E. Bailey & Company, Ltd. Although Brauch had had difficulties meeting deficiencies in his account during 1973, Bailey allowed him to open a new account and commence trading under the name of Commodities Investment Trust, with the account personally guaranteed by Brauch. On May 15, 1974, Brauch wrote a check drawn on Neptune Finance to Bailey for £103,000 to meet a margin call, but the bank refused to honor the check for want of proper signature. On May 22, in response to a second margin call, Brauch gave Bailey a check for £300,000, signed by one M. Fulton and drawn on the account of Skokie Investments, Ltd., at the Bank of Montreal in the Bahamas. Brauch told Bailey that the check represented proceeds from the sale of some property to Fulton. When Bailey attempted to cash the check, however, it was informed that there were no funds in the Skokie account. Bailey finally closed out Brauch’s account and liquidated his holdings in mid-June, resulting in a deficit of £527,825.
The forgery charges arise out of Brauch’s dealings with one of these brokers, Cometco Investments, Ltd. As a precondition for allowing Brauch, acting through the name of Histon Developments, Ltd., to establish a trading position, Cometco had demanded that Brauch deposit £84,000. On August 5, 1974, Brauch delivered a check in that amount drawn on the account of Skokie Investments at the Bahamas branch of the Bank of Montreal. On August 7, Cometco learned that the check would not clear and demanded a telex confirmation from the bank that the funds would be received or else Brauch’s trading position would be closed out. That same day Cometco received a telex from Skokie Investments assuring it that the proceeds of the check would be paid by August 13 or 14. On August 9, with Brauch’s account showing a deficit of £20,000, Cometco again asked for assurances. Brauch reported that the London office of the Bank of Montreal had received a telex that the £84,000 was being sent forthwith. When Cometco confirmed that this telex had been received, it once again permitted Brauch to maintain an active trading account. Finally, after Comet-co still had not received the funds by August 15 and Brauch now faced a £60,000 margin call, the Bank of Montreal in London received a third telex stating that the funds were en route to London. Cometco never received the funds, however, and finally closed Brauch’s account on August 20, 1974.
These three telexes form the basis of the three counts of uttering forged documents in violation of section 6(1) of the Forgery Act of 1913. The magistrate, after reviewing the evidence before him, concluded that neither Skokie nor the Bank of Montreal had sent any of the three telexes and therefore that Brauch had “sent or caused to be sent” the telexes.
B. The Currency Transactions
The events forming the basis of the currency charges against Brauch occurred while the Exchange Control Act of 1947 was in force in England. 6 The Act sought to freeze the amount of foreign investments held by residents of England by restricting the flow of money out of the country. The Act created two classes of foreign currency — that subject to the restriction on exportation, and a second class, which came to be known as “investment currency”, that could be invested abroad without obtaining special permission from the Bank of England. Because investment currency could be invested abroad, a market developed for this currency. It was sold at a premium over the exchange rate for ordinary restricted currency. Since all currency looked alike, a system evolved in which “authorized depositories” would certify appropriate currency as being investment currency. Once certified, such currency could be freely traded on the currency market at a premium.
In 1974 Brauch approached a firm of English solicitors and requested that they prepare a power of attorney to him from one Christina Reigleuth,'a British citizen. Using this power of attorney, apparently with a forged signature, Brauch approached
Brauch was indicted under both the Exchange Control Act and section 15(1) of the Theft Act of 1968 for each of ten such transactions. The basis for the charges under the Theft Act is that Brauch dishonestly obtained from the Midland Bank British pounds sterling by falsely representing that the currency he offered in exchange was investment currency.
Requirements for Extradition Under the Treaty
As a threshold matter, we note that habeas corpus review of a magistrate’s extradition order is more limited than direct appeal, which is not available in extradition cases.
Greci v. Birknes,
Article III of the Treaty provides: “(1) Extradition shall be granted for an act or omission the facts of which disclose an offense within any of the descriptions listed in the Schedule annexed to this Treaty, which is an integral part of the Treaty, or any other offense, if:
(a) the offense is punishable under the laws of both parties by imprisonment or other form of detention for more than one year or by the death penalty;
(b) the offense is extraditable under the relevant law, being the law of the United Kingdom or other territory to which this Treaty applies by virtue of sub-paragraph (l)(a) of Article II; and
(c) the offense constitutes a felony under the law of the United States of America.”
This section of the Treaty imposes on all extraditable offenses a requirement of “double criminality” — that is, an offense for which extradition is sought must be a serious crime punishable under the laws of both countries. The requirement that the acts alleged be criminal in both jurisdictions is central to extradition law and has been embodied either explicitly or implicitly in all prior extradition treaties between the United States and Great Britain since the Jay Treaty of 1794.
See Collins
v.
Loisel,
Two interpretive difficulties arise from the double criminality concept: when extradition is sought from the United States, what law should the extradition magistrate apply in determining whether the double criminality test is satisfied; and what degree of congruity is required between the corresponding English and American criminal offenses? The magistrate in this case
A. Choice of Law
Under appellant’s view of the proper extradition procedure, the Treaty language “punishable under the laws of both Parties” requires a magistrate to look first to federal law and then, if there is no federal provision comparable to the offense for which extradition is sought, to state law representing a consensus view of the states. New Hampshire law, he argues, is “idiosyncratic” and therefore inappropriate for determining extraditability under a treaty that refers not to the “law of the place where the fugitive is found”, but to the . “law of the United States”. 7
The Supreme Court decisions construing the predecessor treaties between the United States and Great Britain, while venerable, are hardly clear in defining the proper approach to the choice of substantive law for the purposes of determining extraditability. In
Wright v. Henkel,
In
Factor v. Laubenheimer,
Although it is clear that
Factor
held criminality in the asylum state was not a necessary precondition to extraditability, it is not clear whether the Court also meant that a finding of criminality under that state’s law was always sufficient to justify extradition. Part of the rationale offered by the Court for its decision in
Factor
was a desire to avoid construing that treaty so that “the right to extradition from the
Appellant notes that the trend of modern extradition treaties, in response to the growth of a body of federal and more uniform state substantive law, has been to include provisions referring to the law of the United States rather than to the law of the individual asylum state. Concomitant with this trend, appellant argues, recent cases have declined to apply asylum state law when treaty provisions refer to the law of the United States. Appellant finds particular support for this argument in our decision in
Greci v. Birknes, supra,
We do not view our holding in
Greci
as controlling in this case.
8
Greci
concerned both a different treaty and a different problem. In reaching our conclusion in that case, we noted that during the negotiation sessions prior to adoption of that treaty the parties specifically sought to avoid a probable cause standard that would vary depending on the state from which extradition was sought.
B. Comparability of Offenses
Appellant argues that in addition to determining extraditability by reference to the wrong substantive law, the magistrate did not apply a rigid enough congruity analysis to the offenses for which the government seeks extradition. Specifically, appellant asserts that the magistrate should have determined not only if appellant’s acts would be considered criminal in the United States as well as in England, but that he should also have compared each English offense with a corresponding American offense and determined that the elements, purposes, and punishments of those offenses were “substantially analogous”. According to appellant’s theory, if provisions defining two offenses punish similar conduct but differ in the scope of their liability, the double criminality requirement is not satisfied.
The Supreme Court decisions on this issue do not support the view advanced by appellant. In
Collins v. Loisel, supra,
“The law does not require that the name by which the crime is described in the two countries shall be the same; nor that the scope of the liability shall be coextensive, or, in other respects, the same in the two countries. It is enough if the particular act charged is criminal in both jurisdictions.” Id. at 312,42 S.Ct. at 471 .
Similarly, in
Kelly v. Griffin, supra,
We find Judge Friendly’s opinion in
Shapiro v. Ferrandina, supra,
The Check Charges. The check charges in the English indictment were based upon appellant’s alleged use of bad checks to gain a “pecuniary advantage, namely the evasion of a debt.” The magistrate found that the appellant’s scheme to forestall the liquidation of his commodities trading accounts would constitute a felony under both the New Hampshire consolidated theft statute, R.S.A. 637:4, 11 and the New Hampshire bad check statute, R.S.A. 638:4. 12 Appellant argues that neither of these New Hampshire offenses is comparable to the English offense of engaging in deception to gain a pecuniary advantage, since the latter punishes conduct that would not be criminal under the New Hampshire provisions. Our inquiry, however, is not whether all conduct punishable under the English theft act would be criminal under these statutes, but whether the particular conduct in this case is made criminal under both countries’ laws. Moreover, we need not analyze each of the statutory provisions under which appellant’s acts might be deemed criminal; it is sufficient that there be one such comparable offense. We find that with respect to the check charges, appellant’s conduct falls within the literal scope of R.S.A. 638:4, the New Hampshire bad check statute, and therefore prima facie satisfies the double criminality requirement of the Treaty. 1.
Although we do not accept appellant’s argument that strict congruity of offenses is necessary to meet the test of 'double criminality, we agree that the offenses of the two countries must be substantially analogous. In this instance both of the provisions — section 16(1) of the English theft act and R.S.A. 638:4 — punish conduct
2. The Forgery Charges. The forgery counts in the English indictment, charging appellant with uttering forged documents, on their face fall within the schedule of Treaty offenses, which includes “an offense relating to counterfeiting or forgery”. The magistrate found that appellant’s acts forming the basis of these charges, sending or causing to be sent telexes to Cometco’s London bank assuring it that the check tendered by appellant was backed by sufficient funds, would constitute an offense under both the federal wire fraud statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1343, 13 and the New Hampshire forgery law, R.S.A. 638:1. 14 Appellant argues that the offense of federal wire fraud is completely different from that of forgery, sharing only the single common element of fraud, and therefore cannot satisfy the double criminality standard. With respect to the New Hampshire forgery law, he argues that the forged telexes he allegedly “uttered”'are not within the class of documents the forgery of which constitute a felony under that statute. We find, however, that the magistrate was correct in holding that appellant’s acts come within the reach of the New Hampshire forgery law.
Section 638:1 III provides that the utterance of a forged writing with intent to defraud is a class B felony under the statute if the “writing” is or purports to be “a check, an issue of stocks, bonds, or any other instrument representing an interest in or a claim against property, or a pecuniary interest in or claim against any person or enterprise.” The crucial question is whether the telexes informing the London branch of the Bank of Montreal that funds credited to Cometco’s account were en route to London constituted documents representing a pecuniary interest in property or a claim against the bank. We agree with the
3. The Currency Charges. The government’s argument for extradition for appellant’s acts in connection with his currency transactions rests solely on the English charges that these transactions were violative of section 15(1) of the Theft Act of 1968. The magistrate found the double criminality test satisfied because the acts supporting these charges would also have constituted felonies under the New Hampshire theft statute, R.S.A. 637:4. Appellant argues that even though the English charges are denominated violations of that country’s theft act, they rest solely on the alleged violations of the Exchange Control Act, which was enacted to further monetary policies peculiar to Great Britain and has no analogue in American law. Thus, appellant’s brief asserts that “but for the system of exchange controls, Brauch would have been a shrewd business man.” We reject this argument. The significant common element in section 15(1) of the Theft Act of 1968 and R.S.A. 637:4 is “deception”. It is depriving another of property by means of deception that both statutes proscribe as criminal behavior. We do not think that the double criminality requirement extends so far as to require that the reason particular conduct constitutes deception be some substantive law common to both jurisdictions. 15
Appellant argues further that the currency transactions could not constitute deprivation of property by deception because there was no victim of the deception; no private individual suffered any loss as a result of his fiscal chicanery. He bases this contention on the workings of the Exchange Control Act, which provided that once currency had been certified as “investment currency” it could not thereafter be “unscrambled” from other legitimate currency. Thus, he argues, the initial purchaser from appellant, arid any subsequent purchasers, got exactly what they bargained for: fungible investment currency. The magistrate rejected this argument, holding that there need not be any immediate loss to an identifiable victim, but only the potential for such loss. Because he found in the regulations promulgated under the Exchange Control Act the authority to “unscramble” fraudulent transactions such as those allegedly engaged in by appellant, he concluded that there was a theoretical victim of appellant’s scheme.
We do not find the magistrate’s “theoretical victim” scenario convincing. Nor can we accept the government’s argument that the double criminality requirement is satisfied because the currency scheme comes within the ambit of the crime of obtaining property by false pretenses. It is true that there is some authority for the government’s assertion that the crime of false pretenses does not require that the person from whom the property is obtained (in this case, those individuals who exchanged their pounds sterling for appellant’s falsely certified investment currency) suffer any financial loss.
See United States v. Rowe,
C. Probable Cause
Article IX(1) of the Treaty provides that “[e]xtradition shall be granted only if the evidence be found sufficient according to the law of the requested Party . to justify the committal for trial of the person sought if the offense of which he is accused had been committed in the territory of the requested Party.” The magistrate stated explicitly the evidentiary basis for his findings of extraditability with respect to each of the separate charges against appellant. Our review under these circumstances is limited to determining whether in fact there was “any” evidence providing the magistrate with a “reasonable ground to believe the accused guilty.”
Fernandez v. Phillips, supra,
We have no difficulty in finding that there was sufficient evidence before the magistrate to support his probable cause findings with respect to the charges arising out of the commodities transactions. Appellant argues that there was no factual basis for the check charges, since he had obtained nothing of value in exchange for his “rubber” checks. But the record supports the magistrate’s conclusion that appellant obtained the opportunity to speculate on the commodities markets without further risk of loss to himself, and that his actions therefore deprived his brokers of something of value. Appellant also contends that there was no probable cause to support the forgery charges because no evidence directly connected him with the sending of the telexes. Furthermore, he argues, there is no evidence that the telexes were in fact false. We find neither of these arguments convincing. That the check from Skokie Investments was never paid is sufficient evidence for the purposes of our review that the telexes were false. With respect to the contention that the facts do not link appellant to the telexes, we find the inference drawn by the magistrate— that none of the other parties involved had any plausible reason to send the telexes — to have been a reasonable one based on the underlying facts.
In summary, we affirm the order of extradition for the charges arising under section 16(1) of the Theft Act of 1968 and section 6(1) of the Forgery Act of 1913, but we reverse that part of the order authorizing extradition for charges arising under section 15(1) of the Theft Act of 1968.
Affirmed in part; reversed in part.
Notes
. Brauch was arrested in Vermont but brought before a magistrate in New Hampshire because the arresting agents were assigned to the FBI’s Concord, New Hampshire, office and were unfamiliar with the names or locations of magistrates in Vermont.
. Section 16(1) provides:
“(1) A person who by any deception dishonestly obtains for himself or another any pecuniary advantage shall on conviction on indictment be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding five years.”
. Section 6(1) provides:
“(1) Every person who utters any forged document, seal, or die shall be guilty of an offence of the like degree (whether felony or misdemeanour) and on conviction thereof shall be liable to the same punishment as if he himself had forged the document, seal, or die.”
. Section 15(1) provides:
“(1) A person who by any deception dishonestly obtains property belonging to another, with the intention of permanently depriving the other of it, shall on conviction on indictment be liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding ten years.”
. Brauch maintained accounts in the names of Commodities Investment Trust, Derrible, Ltd., Hellergrange, Ltd., Basin Investments, Ltd., International Colloids, Ltd., and Histon Developments, Ltd.
. The Exchange Control Act was repealed on October 24, 1979.
. Appellant’s use of the term “idiosyncratic” in describing the various provisions of New Hampshire law relied on by the magistrate suggests that these provisions are in some sense exotic and divorced from the mainstream of American jurisprudence. This is not the case. The New Hampshire forgery statute, R.S.A. 638:1, which appellant terms idiosyncratic, is similar or identical to those of sixteen other states. Indeed, appellant’s brief reveals that of the other types of forgery statutes adopted by various states, none has been enacted by as many states as the type of provision in force in New Hampshire. Similarly, although the New Hampshire bad check statute, R.S.A. 638:4, does not represent the view of a majority of the states, eight states do have such statutes. Moreover, as the government notes, the New Hampshire statute is merely one species of the generally recognized crime of obtaining property by false pretenses. See W. LaFave & A. Scott, Handbook on Criminal Law § 92 (1972).
. Nor do we find either of the other recent cases cited by appellant,
Shapiro v. Ferrandina,
. Appellant argues that even if the asylum state’s law is properly considered, because he was arrested in Vermont and “forcibly taken into New Hampshire”, Vermont must be considered the asylum state. To allow the government to invoke New Hampshire law in support of its extradition motion, he argues, would foster forum shopping when the law of the state of a fugitive’s arrest would not support extradition. Whatever merit there may be in that argument, the appellant has not presented any evidence that the FBI agents acted in bad faith by removing him from Vermont to New Hampshire. Nor is there any reason to believe that they moved appellant to New Hampshire for the purpose of taking advantage of that state’s “idiosyncratic” law. At the time Brauch was a resident of Hanover, New Hampshire, which is on the New Hampshire-Vermont border. His presence in Vermont was merely fortuitous.
. Appellant was originally indicted for two separate offenses with respect to each of the ten illegal currency transactions alleged: one for violation of the Exchange Control Act and another for violation of section 15 of the Theft Act. The British government, however, has only sought extradition with respect to the indictments under the Theft Act, apparently recognizing that violations of the Exchange Control Act are not made extraditable by the Treaty.
. R.S.A. 637:4 provides in part:
“I. A person commits theft if he obtains or exercises control over property of another by deception and with a purpose to deprive him thereof.”
. R.S.A. 638:4 provides in part:
“I. A person is guilty of issuing a bad check if he issues or passes a check for the payment of money knowing or believing that it will not be paid by the drawee and payment is refused by the drawer.”
. 18 U.S.C. § 1343 provides in part:
“Whoever, having devised or intending to devise any scheme or artifice to defraud, or for obtaining money or property by means of false or fraudulent pretenses, representations, or promises, transmits or causes to be transmitted by means of wire, radio, or television communication in interstate or foreign commerce, any writings, signs, signals, pictures, or sounds for the purpose of executing such scheme or artifice, shall be fined not more than $1,000 or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.”
. R.S.A. 638:1 provides in part:
“I. A person is guilty of forgery if, with purpose to defraud anyone, or with knowledge that he is facilitating a fraud to be perpetrated by anyone, he:
(b) Makes, completes, executes, authenticates, issues, transfers, publishes or otherwise utters any writing so that it purports to be the act of another, or purports to have been executed at a time or place or in a numbered sequence other than was in fact the case, or to be a copy of an original when no such original existed.
II. As used in this section, ‘writing’ includes printing or any other method of recording information, checks, tokens, stamps, seals, credit cards, badges, trademarks, and other symbols of value, right, privilege, or identification.”
. Nor is the notion that violations of monetary regulations should give rise to criminal liability totally foreign to American jurisprudence. See 31 U.S.C. §§ 1058, 1059 (providing criminal penalties for violation of provisions regarding reports of currency and foreign transactions).
