Appellee Williams was arrested on September 26, 1979 pursuant to a warrant issued by a United States Magistrate in Boston. The warrant was issued on the basis of a telegraphic communication from the Government of Canada to the Department of State requesting the extradition of Williams to face a charge of conspiracy to import a narcotic. A hearing before a magistrate to determine whether appellee should be extradited has been scheduled for October 31,1979. On October 4, the district court ordered appellee released on bail pending the hearing. On October 5, a judge of this court stayed that order.
In a case involving foreign extradition, bail should not be granted absent “special circumstances.”
Wright v. Henkel,
The district court erred in limiting the “special circumstances” rule to post-hearing bail applications.
Wright v. Henkel
itself was a case of pre-hearing confinement,
Nor do we think that the circumstance that appellee’s brother has been released on bail is sufficiently “special” to permit appellee’s release. Previous cases have limited “special circumstances” to situations where “the justification is pressing as well as plain,”
In re Klein, supra,
or “in the most pressing circumstances, and when the requirements of justice are absolutely peremptory.”
In re Mitchell, supra.
Such circumstances may include a delayed extradition hearing,
see McNamara, supra,
and the need of the defendant to consult with his attorney in a civil action upon which his “whole fortune” depends,
Mitchell, supra.
In contrast, the discomfiture of jail,
Klein, supra,
and even applicant’s arguable acceptability as a tolerable bail risk,
cf. Beaulieu v. Hartigan,
The order of the district court is reversed. 2 Mandate to issue forthwith.
Notes
.
Beaulieu v. Hartigan,
. The district court remains free following remand to expedite the extradition hearing, if feasible.
