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1. Summary of the case-law of the Court of Justice
Extradition requests can be issued for the purposes of conducting
a criminal prosecution or
executing a custodial sentence or a detention order.
In relation to the first category - extradition requests issued for the purpose of conducting a
criminal prosecution, the Court of Justice has developed the so-called
“Petruhhin
doctrine”
13
.
In relation to the second category - extradition requests issued for the purpose of executing a
custodial sentence or detention order, the only case of reference so far has been the
Raugevicius judgment
14
. Currently, another case is pending
before the Court of Justice
concerning an extradition request for the purpose of executing a custodial sentence
15
.
Judgment of the Court of Justice of 6 September 2016, Petruhhin, C-182/15
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The
Petruhhin judgment is the first case where the Court of Justice held that an EU Member
State faced with an extradition request from a third State concerning a national of another EU
Member State is
obliged to initiate a consultation procedure with the Member State of
nationality of the EU citizen, thus giving the latter the opportunity to prosecute its citizen by
means of an EAW.
Facts of the case
The case related to an extradition request issued by the Russian
authorities to Latvia in
relation to an Estonian national, Mr Petruhhin, accused of attempted large-scale, organised
drug-trafficking. The Public Prosecutor’s Office of the Republic of Latvia authorised the
extradition to Russia. However, Mr Petruhhin filed an application against the extradition
decision on
the ground that, under the treaty between the Republic of Estonia, the Republic of
Latvia and the Republic of Lithuania on judicial assistance and judicial relations, he enjoyed
the same rights in Latvia as a Latvian national, including protection from unjustified
extradition.
The referred questions
The Latvian Supreme Court asked the Court of Justice whether, for the purposes of applying
an extradition agreement concluded between a Member State
and a non-Member State
(Latvia and Russia), the nationals of another Member State must benefit, in the light of the
principle of non-discrimination on grounds of nationality under Article 18 TFEU and the
right to free movement and of residence of Union citizens under Article 21(1) TFEU, from
the rule which prohibits the extradition by the requested Member State of its own nationals.
13
Judgment of the Court of Justice of 6 September 2016,
Petruhhin, C-182/15, ECLI:EU:C:2016:630.
14
Judgment of 13 November 2018,
Raugevicius, C-247/17, ECLI:EU:C:2018:898.
15
Case C-237/21,
Generalstaatsanwaltschaft München.
16
Judgment of the Court of Justice of 6 September 2016,
Petruhhin, C-182/15, ECLI:EU:C:2016:630.
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The Latvian Supreme Court also asked whether the requested Member State (namely, the
Member State from which a non-member State requests the extradition of a national of
another Member State, in this case Latvia) must verify (and, if necessary, according to which
criteria) that the extradition will not prejudice the rights protected by the Charter of
Fundamental Rights of the European Union
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(the Charter).
Reasoning and reply of the Court of Justice
Preliminarily, the Court of Justice specified that, although the rules on extradition in principle
fall under the competence of the Member States, where there is no international agreement
between the European Union and the third country concerned, a situation such as that at issue
in the main proceedings, still falls within the scope of application of the Treaties within the
meaning of Article 18 TFEU, since it involves the exercise of the freedom to move and reside
within the territory of the Member States, as conferred by Article 21 TFEU.
A Member State is not required to grant every Union citizen who has moved within its
territory the same protection against extradition as that granted to its own nationals.
In the absence of rules of EU law governing extradition between the Member States and a
third State, it is, however, necessary, in order to combat the risk
of impunity while at the
same time safeguarding EU nationals from measures liable to deprive them of the right to
freedom of movement, to implement all the cooperation and mutual assistance mechanisms
provided for in the criminal field under EU law. Consequently, the exchange of information
with the Member State of which the person concerned is a national must be given priority in
order to afford the authorities of that Member State, in so far as they have jurisdiction
pursuant to their national law to prosecute that person for offences
committed outside their
territory, the opportunity to issue an EAW for the purposes of prosecution. In cooperating
accordingly with the Member State of which the person concerned is a national and giving
priority to that potential EAW over the extradition request, the host Member State acts in a
manner which is less prejudicial to the exercise of freedom of movement while avoiding, as
far as possible, the risk of impunity. The EAW is considered to be equally effective as the
extradition in achieving the objective of preventing the risk of impunity for a person alleged
to have committed a criminal offence.
The Court of Justice also found that where a Member State receives a request from a third
State seeking the extradition of a national
of another Member State, the requested Member
State must verify that the extradition will not prejudice the rights referred to in Article 19 of
the Charter
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. In so far as the competent authority of the requested Member State is in
possession of evidence of a real risk of inhuman or degrading treatment of individuals in the
third State concerned, it is bound to assess the existence of that risk when it decides on the
extradition request. To that end, the competent authority of the requested Member State must
rely on information that is objective, reliable, specific and properly updated. That information
may be obtained from, inter alia, judgments of international courts, such as judgments of the
European Court of Human Rights, judgments of courts of the non-member State concerned,
17
OJ C 202, 7.6.2016, p. 389.
18
Article 19(2) of the Charter provides: ‘
No one may be removed, expelled or extradited to a State where there
is a serious risk that he or she would be subjected to the death penalty, torture or other inhuman or degrading
treatment or punishment.’
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and also decisions, reports and other documents produced by bodies of the Council of Europe
or under the aegis of the United Nations.
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