57 F. 578 | D. Colo. | 1893
Petitioner is charged with larceny in the dominion of Canada before a commissioner of the circuit court, under the treaty of 1842 with Great Britain,' and title 66 of the Revised Statutes, relating to extradition. The commissioner has continued the hearing for some days with á view to obtain
It was said by counsel for petitioner that there is nothing in the act of 1848 to forbid the allowance of hail pending a hearing. But this is not enough; the authority should he expressed in the act itself. It provides that, if the charge he sustained at the hearing, “it shall he the duty of the said judge or commissioner to issue his warrant for the commitment of the person so charged to the proper gaol, there to remain until such surrender shall he made;” so that, in so far as there is in the act any expression on the subject, bail is denied. It is significant that in the earlier act of 1789, (1 Stat. 91,) relating to the arrest of persons in one federal district who may he charged with crime in another district, there is ample provision for taking hail, and therefore it cannot, be said the subject was overlooked in the act of 1848. In 1882 the act of 1848 was considerably amended in respect to the manner of getting testimony and some other matters, hut the subject of hail was not touched upon, (22 Stat. 215.) This last act further show's the intention of congress to regulate all proceedings in extradition by special act, leaving nothing of substance to he borrowed from the general course of criminal procedure. Inasmuch as there is not in the act of 1848 or in any of the amendatory acts any provision for hail pending a hearing, under those acts the decision of the commissioner seems to have been correct, and the wrrit will he refused.