MEMORANDUM OPINION
In this international parental kidnapping prosecution, defendant is charged with having retained his daughter in Iran with the intent to obstruct the mother’s lawful custody rights, in violation of the International Parental Kidnapping Crime Act (“IPKCA”), Pub.L. No. 103-173 (1993) (codified at 18 U.S.C. § 1204). Because his acts occurred wholly in Iran, defendant seeks dismissal of the indictment on two constitutional grounds:
(1) that defendant’s prosecution violates the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment; and
(2) that the IPKCA, by criminalizing this extraterritorial conduct, exceeds Congress’ authority under the Commerce Clause.
I.
On February 12, 1985, defendant, formerly an Iranian citizen, became a naturalized citizen of the United States. 1 In 1991, he married Feretesh Raissan, an employee of the World Bank, who is an Iranian citizen and a lawful permanent resident of the United States. Later that year, the couple had a daughter, Ava Shahani, who became an American citizen at birth. In 1995, Raissan separated from defendant on alleged grounds of physical and emotional abuse. Thereafter, in 1995, a Fairfax court granted full legal and physical custody of Ava to Raissan. A final divorce *726 decree was granted by the Fairfax court in 1997, in which Raissan was again awarded full custody of Ava.
In the summer of 1996, Raissan, with the Fairfax court’s permission, traveled to Iran with her daughter to visit her ailing mother and other relatives living in that country. Defendant, it appears, followed Raissan and Ava to Iran, apparently in violation of the Fairfax court’s orders. 2 The government alleges that on September 9, 1996, while in Iran, defendant removed Ava from her mother’s custody and kept her in Iran until September 2008, a period of seven years. 3 Based on this allegation, defendant was indicted under the IPKCA for retaining his American-born child in Iran with intent to obstruct the lawful exercise of parental rights as reflected in the Fairfax court order assigning custody of the daughter to her mother in the United States. Defendant claims that his actions in removing Ava while in Iran were consistent with Iranian law. 4
II.
Defendant first moves to dismiss the indictment on the ground that a prosecution for conduct that occurs entirely in a foreign country violates the Due Process Clause. Defendant argues that the application of United States law in such a situation is fundamentally unfair, especially given that the conduct alleged here was lawful under Iranian law.
Although the precise question presented is undecided in this circuit, the general principles dispositive of this issue are well settled. In general, congressional legislation, including criminal statutes, applies only within the territorial jurisdiction of the United States.
EEOC v. Arabian American Oil Co.,
It appears the Fourth Circuit has yet to address the extent to which the Due Process Clause limits the United States’ assertion of jurisdiction over conduct violative of the IPKCA committed outside our borders. Another well-settled general constitutional principle makes clear that application of United States law in such a situation must be neither arbitrary nor fundamentally unfair. The Supreme Court articulated this general due process principle in a state choice of law context in
Allstate Insurance Company v. Hague,
The general constitutional principle announced in
Hague
also finds expression in the criminal context. The Second and Ninth Circuits have held that to apply a federal criminal statute to a defendant ex-traterritorially without violating due process “ ‘there must be a sufficient nexus between the defendant and the United States, so that such application would not be arbitrary or fundamentally unfair.’ ”
United States v. Yousef,
Thus, this caselaw makes clear that the due process question presented here is whether the application of the IPKCA to defendant’s retention of his daughter in Iran in violation of the mother’s custody rights is arbitrary or fundamentally unfair. It is plainly neither. Here, defendant is an American citizen. He married Raissan in the United States. Their daughter was born in the United States and is an American citizen. When defendant and Raissan separated, a Fairfax court granted full custody of the daughter to her mother. The Fairfax court further ordered that defendant. surrender his passport and provide notice to the court of any intent to relocate permanently. Defendant violated the Fairfax court’s orders by following his wife and daughter to Iran, by physically removing his daughter from her mother’s custody, relocating permanently to Iran without giving any notice to the Fairfax court, and by keeping his daughter in Iran, away from her mother for seven years. Given these facts, the United States manifestly has a clear interest in ensuring that parental rights are respected, especially when the marital domicile of the parents is within the United States. By deterring both the removal of children from the United States to foreign countries and the retention of such children there in order to obstruct parental rights, the IPKCA is directly aimed at furthering this interest. It is thus clear that the United States’ contacts with this defendant and with the subject-matter of this case are of such significance that application of the IPKCA in this context is neither arbitrary nor fundamentally unfair. 8
This result finds firm support in analogous authority from other circuits. In
Davis,
the Ninth Circuit addressed a due process challenge to the extraterritorial application of the Maritime Drug Law Enforcement Act (“MDLEA”). There, the defendant was convicted of possession of, and conspiracy to possess, marijuana on a vessel with intent to distribute. The defendant was not a United States citizen, nor was his vessel a U.S. flag ship; his arrest took place on the high seas.
9
Even so, the Ninth Circuit found that there ex
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isted a sufficient nexus to apply the MDLEA to Davis’ extraterritorial conduct without violating the Due Process Clause because the facts of the case “support the reasonable conclusion that Davis intended to smuggle contraband into United States territory.”
10
Davis,
[t]he nexus requirement serves the same purpose as the “minimum contacts” test in personal jurisdiction. It ensures that a United States court will assert jurisdiction only over a defendant who “should reasonably anticipate being haled into court” in this country.
In this case, defendant had ample reason to anticipate being haled into court in the United States for his conduct in Iran. He and his daughter are both American citizens. He was aware of a Fairfax court order granting full legal and physical custody of his daughter to her mother. Moreover, he knew that he had been ordered to surrender his passport to the Fairfax court and to provide notice to the court of any intent to relocate permanently. By traveling to Iran and retaining his daughter there, he knew he was violating these court orders and had every reason to anticipate being taken to court in the United States upon his return to this country. The conduct that violated the Fairfax court’s orders is the same conduct that provides the basis for defendant’s prosecution under the IPKCA. As a result, there is a sufficient nexus between defendant’s conduct in Iran and the United States 12 such that his prosecution in the United States is neither arbitrary nor fundamentally unfair. 13
*730
Further support for the conclusion that this prosecution is consistent with due process is found in
Blackmer v. United States,
where the Supreme Court sanctioned the “nationality principle,” a principle that finds its origins in international law and permits a state to prosecute offenses committed by its nationals abroad.
See
Finally, defendant’s reliance on
Nielsen v. Oregon,
More importantly, however, there is an important difference between conflicts among states of the Union and conflicts between the United States and a foreign country. The states of our Union are co
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equal sovereigns in a federal system and the Full Faith and Credit Clause of the Constitution “direct[s] that a State, when acting as the forum for litigation having multistate aspects or implications, respect the legitimate interests of other States and avoid infringement upon their sovereignty.”
Allstate Insurance Co. v. Hague,
Can the state of Oregon, by virtue of its concurrent jurisdiction, disregard that authority, practically override the legislation of Washington, and punish a man for doing within the territorial limits of Washington an act which that state had specially authorized him to do? We are of the opinion that it cannot.... [T]he opinion of the legislatures of the two states is different, and the one state cannot enforce its opinion against that of the other.
In sum, due process is not offended by the application of the IPKCA to defendant’s unlawful acts in Iran because the strong connection between defendant, his conduct, and the United States make plain that his prosecution in the United States is neither arbitrary nor fundamentally unfair.
III.
Defendant next argues that the retention portion of the IPKCA may, by its terms, reach defendant’s unlawful conduct in Iran, but that in so doing, the statute’s reach exceeds its constitutional grasp under the Commerce Clause. 18
In
United States v. Lopez,
the Supreme Court identified three categories that Congress may regulate under its commerce power: (1) the channels of interstate commerce; (2) the Instrumentalities of, or persons and things in, interstate commerce; and (3) activities having a substantial relation to interstate commerce,
ie.,
those activities that substantially affect interstate commerce.
The channels of interstate commerce are the routes through which commerce travels and the term refers,
inter alia,
to “navigable rivers, lakes, and canals ...; the interstate railroad track system; the interstate highway system; ... inter
*733
state telephone and telegraph lines; air traffic routes; television and radio broadcast frequencies; and satellite communication frequencies on, over, and through which flow the goods, commodities, and information which constitute commerce between places in different states.”
United States v.
Miles,
Only one court of appeals has addressed the constitutionality of the retention portion of the IPKCA under the Commerce Clause. In
United States v. Cummings,
In reaching the conclusion that the IPK-CA thus regulates the channels of commerce, the Ninth Circuit appears to have assumed that wrongful retention is necessarily preceded by wrongful removal, as was indeed the case in Cummings. In this case, however, the child was not wrongfully removed, but rather was taken voluntarily to Iran by her mother. Therefore, the channels of commerce were not wrongfully used in removing her from the United States as in Cummings.
*734
But that does not end the analysis because the Ninth Circuit had another ground for upholding the retention portion of the IPKCA in
Cummings.
The court also held the IPKCA to be a valid regulation of the channels of commerce because “it removes an impediment to the use of those channels. If a child is wrongfully retained in a foreign country, he or she cannot freely use the channels of commerce to return.”
Defendant argues, however, that the IPKCA targets interference with lawful parental rights, and not the channels of commerce.
22
This argument is unpersuasive. “Congress’s power over the channels Of interstate commerce, unlike its power to regulate activities with a substantial relation to interstate commerce, reaches beyond the regulation of activities that are purely economic in nature. The power to regulate channels of interstate commerce allows Congress to make laws that protect the flow of commerce.”
United States v. Deaton,
Another argument for upholding the IPKCA under the “channels” category becomes clear by imagining the resultant state of affairs had Congress not criminalized retention of a child in a foreign country through the IPKCA. In these circumstances, a non-custodial parent who wishes to kidnap his child need only wait for the custodial parent to travel with the child outside the United States before making his or her move. This would have an obvious effect on the use of the channels
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of commerce by the custodial parent and child. For fear of an overseas kidnapping, the child and his custodial parent would then become virtual prisoners of the United States — unable to step outside the country’s borders for fear of an irredressable interference with their lawful parental rights. By proscribing retention, the IPKCA removes this impediment to international travel and thus appropriately regulates the channels of international commerce.
See Heart of Atlanta Motel, Inc. v. United States,
23
Finally, it is worth noting that a principal basis for the Supreme Court’s recent concern over Congress’ use of its commerce power is strikingly absent from this case. Central to the Supreme Court’s decisions in
United States v. Lopez,
In summary, Congress did not exceed its authority under the Commerce Clause in enacting the retention portion of the IPKCA because it removes an impediment to the use of the channels of international commerce
IY.
Accordingly, defendant’s motion to dismiss the indictment on due process and Commerce Clause grounds must be denied.
An appropriate order has issued.
Notes
. In the course of oral argument, counsel referred to defendant as possessing dual citizenship, American and Iranian. From the perspective of the United States, this claim is untenable. To become a naturalized American citizen, defendant took an oath that is now more than 200 years old in which he swore, inter alia, "to renounce and abjure absolutely and entirely all allegiance and fidelity to any foreign prince, potentate, state, or sovereignty of whom or which [he] was before a subject or citizen.” 8 U.S.C.A § 1448. Thus, insofar as the United States is concerned, defendant was required to renounce his loyalty and fidelity to Iran, to renounce, in other words, his Iranian citizenship. Also, newly-naturalized Americans are typically required to surrender their former passports. Iran, of course, is free to continue to consider defendant an Iranian national, but this does not alter the fact that, as far as the United States is concerned, he has formally and under oath effectively renounced that citizenship to become an American.
. The Fairfax court ordered that defendant surrender his passport to the Fairfax court as well as notify the court of any intent to relocate permanently.
. Ava is now back in the United States in the custody of her mother. It appears that defendant cooperated in ensuring her return to the United States by furnishing a power of attorney necessary to effectuate Ava’s departure from Iran.
. Defendant's claims concerning Iranian law are unsupported by any competent proof or affidavit.
See United States v. Mitchell,
.The statute reads, in relevant part:
Whoever removes a child from the United States, or attempts to do so, or retains a child (who has been in the United States) outside the United States with intent to obstruct the lawful exercise of parental rights shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than 3 years, or both.
18 U.S.C. § 1204(a).
.
See also New England Leather Co. v. Feuer Leather Corp.,
. The defendants in
Yousef
conspired to attack a dozen United States-flag aircraft "in an effort to inflict injury on this country and its people and influence American foreign policy, and their attack on the Philippine Airlines flight was a ‘test-run’ in furtherance of this conspiracy.”
. While there may be situations where the application of the IPKCA might violate due process, defendant's claim is as-applied rather than a facial challenge to the statute.
See United States v. Salerno,
. The ship in
Davis
sailed under a British flag. The British government specifically consented to a U.S. Coast Guard search of the ship, which led to the discovery of the contraband. The British government also waived objection to the enforcement of United States law by the United States. Other circuits have reached a conclusion different from that reached by the Ninth Circuit in
Davis.
While the Ninth Circuit requires the existence of a nexus between the United States and the extraterritorial conduct, the First, Third, and Fifth Circuits have all rejected the nexus requirement, requiring instead only that a defendant’s prosecution be neither arbitrary nor fundamentally unfair.
See United States v. Suerte,
. Similarly, defendant’s actions show that he intended to violate the Fairfax court's custody order through his conduct in Iran.
. Put in terms of the Hague test, the defendant in Davis specifically directed his conduct at the United States and the United States thus had a significant interest in preventing and punishing his smuggling of drugs into the United States.
. Defendant’s citation to
Home Insurance Company v. Dick,
nothing in any way relating to the policy sued on, or to the contracts of reinsurance, was ever done or required to be done in Texas. All acts relating to the making of the policy were done in Mexico. All in relation to the making of the contract of reinsurance were done there or in New York. And, likewise, all things in regard to performance were to be done outside of Texas.
.Although the
Klimavicius-Viloria
court equated the nexus requirement to the "minimum contacts” test for personal jurisdiction articulated in
World-Wide Volkswagen Corp. v. Woodson,
. Defendant also attempts to distinguish
Ski-riotes
by noting that the conduct at issue there occurred on the high seas. Yet, in that case, the Court stated that "the United States is not debarred by any rule of international law from governing the conduct of its own citizens upon the high seas
or even in foreign countries
when the rights of other nations or their nationals are not infringed.”
. At oral argument, defendant’s counsel compared the case at bar to one in which American citizens are prosecuted in the United States for possession and use of marijuana occurring entirely in the Netherlands, where such conduct is legal. The comparison is inapposite. Congress has not clearly expressed an intent for this country's drug possession laws to apply extraterritorially and *731 thus Americans in the Netherlands would have no notice that their conduct could subject them to prosecution in the United States. By contrast, congressional intent here is clear and while defendant may not have been aware of the IPKCA, he was certainly aware that his conduct violated the Fairfax court’s orders, as those orders, in part, were specifically directed at him.
. Defendant contends that the laws of another country — Iran—are implicated in this case; he argues that his conduct was consistent with Iranian law. Similarly, it appears that the
Blackmer
defendant’s conduct in refusing to comply with an American subpoena in France was likewise consistent with French law. This does not lead to the conclusion that the sovereign interests of France were implicated there or that Iran’s are implicated here. Despite a brief and unsupported assertion to the contrary at oral argument, this is not a case where Iranian law conflicts with United States law in the sense that defendant’s compliance with American law required his violation of Iranian law.
See Societe Internationale Pour Participations Industrielles et Commerciales, S.A. v. Rogers,
.
Nielsen
also involved conduct that was not
malum in se,
a fact of which the Court made note. See
. The Commerce Clause gives Congress the power "[t]o regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes.” U.S. Const, art. I, § 8, cl. 3.
.
.
. Citing
Heart of Atlanta Motel, Inc. v. United States,
. To bolster this argument, defendant asserts that the statute could apply to situations where the custodial parent is not in the United States or the child at issue legally resides outside the United States before retention by the non-custodial parent occurs. This hypothetical presents an interesting legal question neither presented, nor relevant to the as applied challenge asserted here. See supra note 8.
.
Heart of Atlanta Motel
was decided long before the Supreme Court delineated the three permissible categories under which Congress may use its commerce power.
See United States v. Lopez,
. Because the retention portion of the IPK-CA is appropriate under Congress’ power to regulate the channels of commerce, it is unnecessary to reach the government's argument that the IPKCA is a valid exercise of Congress’ power to regulate and protect persons or things in commerce. It is worth noting, however, that the government's argument appears to conflate the instrumentalities and the channels of commerce. Essentially, the government contends that, despite her stop in Iran, Ava was still a person in international commerce even after her physical movement by air from the United States to Iran was complete. But the government does not address the fact that when Ava stepped off the plane that brought her to Iran, she was no longer on an instrumentality of commerce.
See United States v. Miles,
.Morrison dealt with regulation of gender-motivated crimes of violence under the civil remedy provision of the Violence Against Women Act ("VAWA”), while Lopez found unconstitutional the Gun-Free School Zones Act, which made it a federal crime to knowingly possess a firearm in a school zone. The Supreme Court analyzed both of these statutes under the third prong of Lopez and found that the regulated activity did not substantially affect commerce.
