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tangent4ronpaul
09-03-2013, 02:07 AM
Russia Issues Travel Warning to Its Citizens About United States and Extradition
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/03/world/europe/russia-issues-travel-warning-about-united-states.html?_r=0

MOSCOW — Countries often issue travel advisories warning citizens of danger abroad: war, for instance, or a terrorist threat or an outbreak of disease. The Russian Foreign Ministry posted advice of a somewhat different nature on Monday, cautioning people wanted by the United States not to visit nations that have an extradition treaty with it.

“Warning for Russian citizens traveling internationally,” the Foreign Ministry bulletin said. “Recently, detentions of Russian citizens in various countries, at the request of American law enforcement, have become more frequent — with the goal of extradition and legal prosecution in the United States.”

Citing examples in Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, Lithuania and Spain, the Foreign Ministry said, “Experience shows that the judicial proceedings against those who were in fact kidnapped and taken to the U.S. are of a biased character, based on shaky evidence, and clearly tilted toward conviction.”

Extradition has frequently been a contentious issue between Russia and the United States, but the disagreements have been particularly sharp in recent months over the case of Edward J. Snowden, the former intelligence contractor who is wanted on criminal espionage charges but has been granted temporary asylum in Russia.

In response to the demands by the Obama administration for Mr. Snowden’s return, Russian officials have said the United States has routinely ignored extradition requests from Russia. Russia has also complained about the arrests of Russian citizens by the United States or by other countries at the Americans’ request.

In late July, a spokeswoman for the Russian Foreign Ministry, Maria Zakharova, criticized the arrest in the Dominican Republic of Aleksandr Panin, a Russian citizen wanted by the United States on charges related to cybercrimes.

Ms. Zakharova said Russia considered such arrests “a vicious trend, absolutely unacceptable and inadmissible.” She said the Russian government demanded that the United States request the arrest of Russian citizens directly from Moscow, under a 1999 treaty on assistance in criminal matters.

There is no formal extradition treaty between Russia and the United States. Russian officials cited the lack of such an agreement as a main reason they could not forcibly return Mr. Snowden from the transit zone of Sheremetyevo Airport in Moscow, where he lived for more than a month until his temporary asylum request was approved.

Russia has often accused the United States of overstepping and potentially violating international law in its treatment of Russian citizens accused of crimes. It bridled over the handling of Viktor Bout, an international arms dealer who was arrested in Thailand in 2008 and was extradited to the United States, convicted in federal court and jailed in a federal prison.

The United States has said that Mr. Bout’s arrest and extradition by the Thai government were legal, and that other cases have also been handled in accordance with international law.

Besides the case of Mr. Panin, the Foreign Ministry’s travel advisory mentioned Maksim Chukharayev, who was arrested in Costa Rica in May in an investigation into a huge money-laundering operation, and Dmitry Ustinov, arrested in April in Lithuania and accused of smuggling American-made night-vision goggles to Russia for resale.

The Foreign Ministry said Russian citizens could not expect to be treated fairly in the American justice system. “Russian embassies and consulates general logically give consular and legal help to Russians in trouble,” the Foreign Ministry said.

“However,” it added, “one should not count on a successful outcome in such cases.”

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: September 2, 2013

An earlier version of this article misstated the nation where Dmitry Ustinov was arrested. It was Lithuania, not Latvia.

-t

Mani
09-03-2013, 02:32 AM
Imagine if another country started sending out warnings of a rogue country that sends drones and drops bombs on wedding parties and on Children.


Think of all the bat shit crazy stuff our administration does in the name of fighting TERROR, which is basically murdering more people and causing much more terror than any other entity in the world.

daviddee
09-03-2013, 07:35 AM
...

HOLLYWOOD
09-03-2013, 08:51 AM
Corrected:

Besides the case of Mr. Panin, the Foreign Ministry’s travel advisory mentioned Maksim Chukharayev, who was arrested in Costa Rica in May because the US Govt despises Bitcoin, Alternative Currencies, and anything that prevents their full monitoring of transactions amongst free people. The only victims of the "crime" were those individuals who were locked out of their funds by the US Government. The US Government is often referred to as "The Great Satan", "The biggest threat to Freedom", and "douche bags" worldwide.

Yep, Washington DC's New World Monopoly... on currency, on government, on control... you name it, 1984 is here and it's the very elected criminals of America, terrorizing the world and people of every country, with their JUST-US lawless system.

OH, WAIT... there's Exception to their OWN Laws/Rules/Terror: http://rt.com/usa/lady-cia-chief-milan-325/


Panama releases ex-CIA station chief in Milan wanted by Italy http://rt.com/files/news/1f/d1/50/00/snimok_ekrana_2013-07-19_v_20.46.51.si.jpg







A high-ranking CIA official that eluded Italian authorities for years despite being found guilty of kidnapping has returned to the United States just one day after being discovered by officials in Panama.


Now the former Central Intelligence Agency officer that’s been ordered to spend nine years in an Italian prison for his role in the 2003 kidnapping of Muslim cleric Hassan Mustafa Osama Nasr may escape court-appointed sentencing. The Washington Post reported early Friday that Robert Seldon Lady, 59, is on his way to the US where he will likely avoid extradition to Italy.


“It’s our understanding that he’s on a plane en route to the United States right now,” a senior official in the Obama administration told the Post on Friday.


An Italian court sentenced Lady earlier this year for his role in a 2003 kidnapping for which he was convicted of in absentia in 2009. A court concluded that Lady assisted in the “extraordinary rendition” of Nasr, an Egyptian man wanted by the US over alleged ties to terrorists, while station chief of the CIA’s Milan outpost.
In the hands of the US, Nasr was reportedly tortured at length. Italy charged 23 Americans, mostly CIA agents, for their involvement in the case, but had been unable to locate Lady until he was detained Thursday in Panama.
Lady “has been arrested in Panama,” that country’s ambassador in Washington told the Post originally, adding, “Procedures for this kind of international detentions are being followed by Panama at this moment.”
Italy’s Gazzetta del Sud reported that Lady had been handed over to Interpol after he was arrested while trying to cross into Costa Rica on Wednesday. Even then, though, Italian solicitor Ferdinando Pomarici told the paper he was “sure” the US would prevent Lady from being extradited.
Amnesty International issued a statement on Friday asking Panama to extradite Lady to Italy, a plea which apparently was too little too late to influence American authorities.
“Amnesty International welcomes the arrest of Robert Seldon Lady and calls on the Panamanian authorities to extradite him to Italy,” the human rights group wrote. “By his own admission, he participated in a kidnapping operation that resulted in a man being tortured. Robert Seldon Lady evaded justice by leaving Italy before his trial - this time he should have to answer the charges against him in Italy in person.”
On his part, Lady has long insisted he’s innocent, claiming his actions came about because CIA superiors ordered him to conduct in such a manner that made him a criminal in Italy.
“When you work in intelligence, you do things in the country in which you work that are not legal,” he told GQ Magazine in an interview while on the run.