ORDER GRANTING PLAINTIFF LEAVE TO PROCEED IN FORMA PAUPERIS AND DISMISSING “PETITION FOR RECOVERY OF DAMAGES” FOR FAILURE TO STATE A CLAIM UNDER THE FEDERAL CIVIL RIGHTS ACT
Plaintiff, a state convict confined in the Missouri State Penitentiary, has submitted in this Court his “petition for recovery of damages” in which he invokes federal jurisdiction under Sections 1983 and 1985 of Title 42, United States Code, the Federal Civil Rights Act, and Section 1343 of the same title. Plaintiff states that he is unable to pay the costs of filing his “petition” or to give security therefor in a proper affidavit. Plaintiff will therefore be granted leave to proceed in forma pauperis.
Petitioner states that he was charged with first degree robbery in an indictment returned in Jackson County, Missouri, on January 30, 1968; that thereafter he was arrested in California in July 1968 and while awaiting extradition to Missouri, “the plaintiff and the California officials were notified that all charges against plaintiff had been dismissed and he was released from custody on July 29, 1968, without the State of Missouri making any effort whatsoever to extradite the plaintiff”; that “thereafter the plaintiff was being held by the Kansas State authorities in Topeka, Kansas, and that officers of Kansas City, Jackson County, Missouri, (Detective Rule and Detective Stoekdale), came to the State of Kansas and forcibly removed him from the State of Kansas without proper extradition proceedings, without the consent of the plaintiff and without affording him an opportunity to be heard”; that “because of said action, the plaintiff was denied due process and equal protection of the law as guaranteed to him by the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution”; that “said officers, Detectives Gene Rule and Stoekdale, defendants named herein, were acting under color of state law and in the capacity of detectives of the Kansas City Police Department, of Kansas City, Jackson County, Missouri, at the time this incident accrued” (sic); and that plaintiff “was convicted by a jury of robbery first degree, in the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri, case No. C-37920, under date of September 18, 1969, and was subsequently sentenced to twenty-five years imprisonment therefor.”
Plaintiff, however, cannot properly invoke federal jurisdiction in this case because he does not state the denial of any federally protected right within the meaning of the Federal Civil Rights Act. The federal constitutional provisions for extradition and the federal statutes implementing them are not intended primarily to safeguard the fugitive from justice, but rather to facilitate the discovery and bringing to speedy trial of fugitives from justice by the States. Article 4, § 2, U.S.Const.; Section 3182, Title 18, United States Code;
*1351
Smith v. State of Idaho (C.A.9)
“No persuasive reasons are now presented to justify overruling this line of cases. They rest on the sound basis that due process of law is satisfied when one present in court is convicted of crime after having been fairly apprized of the charges against him and after a fair trial in accordance with constitutional procedural safeguards.” (Emphasis added.)342 U.S. at 522 ,72 S.Ct. at 511-512 ,96 L.Ed. at 545 .
Further, in Johnson v. Matthews,
supra,
For the foregoing reasons, it is
Ordered that plaintiff be, and he is hereby, granted leave to proceed in forma pauperis. It is further
*1353 Ordered and adjudged that this cause be, and it is hereby, dismissed for failure to state a claim under the Federal Civil Rights Act.
Notes
. Further in Picking v. Pa. R. Co. (M.D.Pa.)
In
Picking,
it was also held that a magistrate who refused to give the plaintiffs a hearing upon their request might also be claimed against under the predecessor to the Civil Rights Act. But that precedent is distinguishable from the case at bar in that plaintiff in this case does not state that he had a habeas corpus petition or other request for hearing pending at the time of his alleged abduction from Kansas. Further, the
Picking
case, as it involves a claim against a judicial officer, has been expressly overruled by the Court which decided it and repeatedly questioned and repudiated by subsequent cases for its abrogation of the doctrine of judicial immunity. Tenney v. Brandhove,
