delivered the opinion of the Court.
The petitioner Thomeczek appeals from the trial court’s denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. He asserts that the extradition request fails to establish probable cause and identity and that the trial court erroneously denied his motion to conduct a suppression hearing. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.
The petitioner was arrested in Colorado on March 14, 1978 pursuant to a search of his residence which yielded, among other things, items which were allegedly stolen from Ford County, Kansas. Kansas officials sent a request to the state of Colorado for petitioner’s return to stand trial on charges of theft by deception. The extradition documents forwarded by Kansas included an arrest warrant which contained a finding by a Kansas judge that probable cause existed to believe that the petitioner committed the offenses charged, and an affidavit signed by a Kansas deputy sheriff wherein he identified the goods seized from petitioner’s residence as items stolen from Kansas.
In
Michigan
v.
Doran,
Petitioner’s remaining contentions concern the legal effect and admissibility of the items seized during the search of his residence. Relying on the deputy sheriffs identification of the goods seized at petitioner’s home and on the congruence of petitioner’s name and the name referred to in the extradition documents, the trial court concluded that the extradition documents established petitioner’s identity as the person sought for extradition. Petitioner contends that his mere possession of stolen goods does not give rise to the presumption that he committed the crime charged, because his possession does not satisfy the legal requirement of being recent, unexplained, and exclusive.
See Wells
v.
People,
Petitioner argues alternatively that evidence of the stolen goods should have been suppressed because it was obtained in the course of a search which violated his constitutional rights. The lower court denied petitioner’s motion to suppress and denied his accompanying request to hold a hearing on the motion. The policy underlying extradition proceedings is to enable offenders to be brought to trial as swiftly as possible in the state where the offense was allegedly committed.
See Michigan
v.
Doran, supra.
Since the extradition hearing is not designed to determine the guilt or innocence of the accused and is summary in nature, the accused is not entitled to all of the procedural protections of a criminal trial.
See Eathorne v. Nelson,
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
