After examining the briefs and the appellate record, this three-judge panel has determined unanimously that oral argument would not be of material assistance in the determination of this appeal. See Fed.R. App.P. 34(a); Tenth Cir.R. 10(e). The cause is therefore ordered submitted without oral argument.
Petitioner, a resident of Kansas, was convicted of burglary in Texas, sentenced, and placed on probation during a visit there in 1981. Upon probation he returned to his home in Kansas. In March 1982, petitioner was arrested and jailed on a burglary charge under Kansas law in Reno County, Kansas. During this confinement, another Kansas criminal charge was filed against him, and Texаs began extradition proceedings against him for a probation violation in connection with his Texas conviction. Petitioner posted bond on all three matters and was released from jail on April 8, 1982. The next day he was rearrested upon execution of a governor’s extradition warrant, and has since been held without bail.
Petitioner brought this habeas corpus proceeding undеr 28 U.S.C. §§ 2254, 2241 (1976), alleging that he is being denied his constitutional rights to bail and to liberty in violation of the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments. The district court,
We join those circuits which have concluded that the Eighth Amendment’s excessive bail provision is integral to our concept оf ordered liberty and therefore binding upon the states under the Fourteenth Amendment.
See, e.g., Hunt v. Roth,
The Eighth Amendment’s prohibition against excessive bail “is the foundation of a bail system which, by сonditioning release on the offer of financial security, seeks to reconcile the defendant’s interest in, and society’s сommitment to, pretrial liberty with the need to assure the defendant’s presence at trial.”
Sistrunk,
Moreover, the right of an accused to freedom pending trial is inherеnt in the concept of a liberty interest protected by the due process clause of the Fourteenth
*792
Amendment.
Atkins
v.
Michigan,
As noted above, Kansas has adopted the Uniform Criminal Extradition Act.
See
Kan.Stаt.Ann. §§ 22-2701 to -2730 (1981). There is no provision in the Uniform Act for bail after a governor’s extradition warrant has been executed, as was done hеre. The majority of courts have decided that, absent such a statutory authorization, a defendant detained by a governor’s warrant has no right to bail.
See, e.g., Deas v. Weinshienk,
“The rationale of these decisions is that because the fugitive is being held for another state he should be readily available to be turned over to those who arrive to return him. A presumption exists that the demanding state will accord the fugitivе all his legal rights, including that of bail.”
Deas,
“When a fugitive is held under executive warrant of extradition, it is entirely appropriate and just that his right to bаil be tested by the laws of the demanding state, where he is charged with crime, and where his guilt or innocence must be judicially determined, аnd not by the laws of the asylum state which holds him solely for the purpose of rendition.”
State v. Second Judicial Dist. Court,
We need not decide whether a state may сonstitutionally deny bail when a detainee is held by the asylum state solely for the purpose of extradition. Here petitioner is not only being held awaiting extradition, but is also being held by Kansas authorities to face the Kansas criminal charges as permitted under the Uniform Act. 1 Indeed, detention pursuant to the Kansas charges appears to take precedence since petitioner alleges that he will not be extradited until the Kansas charges are disposed of, and Kansas does not deny this allegation.
Thesе Kansas crimes are indisputably bailable offenses; petitioner has already been bailed once under Kansas law on these same charges. Denial of bail pending extradition is based on the presumption that the detainee will be promptly extradited and provided his legal right to bail in the demanding state. That rationale is inapplicable to the particular facts of this case and cannot, therefore, logically justify denial of bail to petitioner. The Kansas charges preclude petitiоner’s extradition and his opportunity to apply for bail in Texas; at the same time, the extradition warrant has been construed tо prevent his bail on the Kansas charges. Such a situation is constitutionally impermissible. We conclude that so long as petitioner is being held by Kansas to face Kansas charges, he is entitled to be considered for bail under Kansas law. The order of dismissal is reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings in light of this opinion.
Notes
. The Uniform Act provides:
“Persons under criminal prosecution in this state at time of requisition. If a criminal prosecution has been instituted against such person under the laws of this state and is still pending, the governor, in his discretion, either may surrender him on demand of the executive authority of another state or hold him until he has been tried and discharged or convicted and punished in this state.”
Kan.Stat.Ann. § 22-2719.
