In Re the Extradition of Mylonas

187 F. Supp. 716, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3383
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Alabama
DecidedSeptember 1, 1960
Docket14334
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 187 F. Supp. 716 (In Re the Extradition of Mylonas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the Extradition of Mylonas, 187 F. Supp. 716, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3383 (N.D. Ala. 1960).

Opinion

GROOMS, District Judge.

On June 3, 1959 the United States Attorney for the Northern District of Alabama, acting in behalf of the Government of Greece, and pursuant to the Treaty of Extradition of May 6, 1931, between the United States and Greece 1 , filed a complaint seeking the extradition of George Basil Mylonas, a former citizen and resident of the Community of Ambelophyton, County of Trifilia, Province of Messinia, Kingdom of Greece, but now a resident of Birmingham, Alabama, and an employee of the La Paree Restaurant.

The alleged crime for which extradition is sought is that of embezzlement. 2

The defendant Mylonas has moved to be discharged on the ground that (1) he is innocent of every charge of embezzlement; (2) that his rights to a prompt and speedy trial have been violated; (3) that by virtue of the lapse of time he is exempt from prosecution or punishment under Article V of the Treaty 3 ; (4) that the proceedings seeking to extradite him are for acts connected with alleged crimes or offenses of a political nature excluded by Article III of the Treaty 4 ; (5) that he *718 has once been placed in jeopardy for the offense upon which his extradition is sought by trial held on October 27, 1955, in the Court of First Instance for Kypar-issia and by judgment of discharge by that court.

The defendant was reared in the Town of Ambelophyton. He entered the Greek Army in July, 1940, and was assigned to the First Artillery Group of the Fifth Division where he fought on the side of the Allies until Greece was occupied by the German and Italian Armies. Thereafter, in the Civil War instigated by the Communists, the defendant and his two brothers volunteered to and did fight the Communists. He was in command of a unit charged with the protection of his Community. His brother Constantine fell at Gargalianous, in September, 1944, and his brother John 5 , at Athens in the same year. His uncle and other members of his family were engaged in this struggle against the Communists, who destroyed the defendant’s home and stole his property and belongings, cremated his aunt in the flames of her own home, and wrought havoc in general, including the destruction of hundreds of people by such devilish devices as throwing them into wells to suffocate. The struggle was long; it was bitter, bloody and brutal. The Community divided into three factions — the Communists, the Anti-Communists, and the neutrals. As history attests, the Anti-Communists prevailed in the battle of arms.

By 1950 the defendant emerged as a popular and heroic figure in his Community. In that year he ran, along with four others, on the Anti-Communist ticket, for City Councilman. The ticket won by a landslide. Under a rotation system whereby each councilman would serve one year as president of the Council, the defendant was selected to serve for 1953. The Council and the populace in general appear to have been so well satisfied with his leadership that, contrary to custom, he was also selected to serve for the year 1954.

By the time of the general election in November, 1954, the political winds had veered to the left. The Communists, profiting from the chaos which they had created, had greatly increased their influence, and set about to accomplish by ballot what they could not accomplish by arms. In the general election, and in the run-off in February, 1955, the defendant’s slate lost, although the defendant won by a large popular vote. Despairing of the hope of ever getting along or doing anything constructive with the Council as then constituted, the defendant decided to accept the invitation of his uncle, William DeMoes, the owner of La Paree Restaurant, to emigrate to Birmingham, Alabama, and to establish a new life for himself.

On June 27, 1955, charges were lodged against the defendant with John Papa-dopoulos, Public Prosecutor of the Kypa-rissia Misdemeanour Court. These charges were preferred by Konstantine Petropoulos, the then President of the Community of Ambelophyton.

Anthony Vayanos, the Investigating Magistrate of the Court of First Instance for Kyparissia, began an investigation of the charges. On various dates prior to October 27, 1955, he examined thirteen witnesses. During this period, Vayanos had the assistance of Constantine Christodoulou, Justice of the Peace of Platamidi, who examined or reexamined eight witnesses.

On October 27, 1955, trial was had in the Court of First Instance for Kyparis-sia, before G. Papageorgandis, Judge of said Court, upon the report of the Investigating Magistrate, Anthony Vaya-nos. The charges were read to the accused, who waived time to present his defense and insisted upon presenting his defense at once. For answer he stated the charges were “entirely untrue and unfounded,” and politically inspired by the new President of the Community; that he did not appropriate to his own use *719 27,098/ 6 drachmas (old issues), but, on the other hand, the Community owed him several thousand drachmas for personal moneys which he had expended on behalf of the Community. He proposed the calling of certain witnesses, five in number, but whether they actually testified is not apparent from the proceedings. 6a

Having decided to emigrate to the United States, the defendant applied to the Prosecuting Attorney of the Magistrate Court for an affidavit that he was not being sought in the district as a Fugitive from Justice or Defaulter. John Papadopoulos, the party with whom the charges had been lodged, and who set the investigation in motion, gave the defendant the requested affidavit on September 28, 1955. Three days previously the defendant had applied to K. Petro-poulos, the President of the Community, for an affidavit of nativity, birth date and residence. This affidavit was made. Both Papadopoulos and Petropoulos had full knowledge at the time they made the the affidavits that applicant was planning on emigrating to the United States.

In November, 1955, the defendant left Greece. On December 1, 1955, the investigation was resumed by George Papa-georgantos, then Examining Magistrate of Kyparissia. On April 12, 1956, the hearing was held by the Court of Mis-demeanours at Kyparissia, composed of three judges, the same John Papada-poulos prosecuting. The trial in absentia was wholly without the knowledge of the defendant. The charges were read, the same K. Petropoulos, the President of the Community, testified. Also testifying were twelve other witnesses. None of the witnesses that defendant proposed to call at the trial on October 27, 1955, was called. The accused was convicted and sentenced to two years in prison, and deprived of his civil rights for five years. The claim for damages presented by Petropoulos as President of the Community, was referred to the Civil Courts.

Not only did the defendant have no knowledge of the charges or prosecution, but he was not represented by counsel and no one appeared for him. He had no witnesses present, nor does the record reveal any cross-examination of the witnesses used against him.

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187 F. Supp. 716, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-extradition-of-mylonas-alnd-1960.