In Re the Requested Extradition of Suarez-Mason

694 F. Supp. 676, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9960
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedApril 27, 1988
DocketCR-87-23-MISC.-DIJ
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 694 F. Supp. 676 (In Re the Requested Extradition of Suarez-Mason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the Requested Extradition of Suarez-Mason, 694 F. Supp. 676, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9960 (N.D. Cal. 1988).

Opinion

ORDER

JENSEN, District Judge.

The Republic of Argentina seeks the extradition of former General Carlos Guillermo Suarez-Mason on the following charges: (1) 43 counts of murder; (2) 24 counts of unlawful deprivation of freedom; and (3) one count of forgery of a public document. This Court’s determination involves two sets of issues: first, whether Argentina has made the necessary showing to warrant extradition; and second, notwithstanding Argentina’s showing, whether Suarez-Mason can establish any affirmative defense or bar created by the Treaty of Extradition (i.e., statute of limitations, political offense, military offense).

The extradition request came on for hearing pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3184 on March 21 and April 6, 1988. Argentina appeared through Assistant United States Attorney Mark N. Zanides. Suarez-Mason appeared through counsel J.T. Prada and James D. Riddet. The Court has reviewed the documents and affidavits submitted by the Republic of Argentina, the affidavits and testimony submitted by Suarez-Mason, the memoranda and oral arguments of counsel, and now Orders as follows:

(A)The requests for extradition on the charges of murder are GRANTED as to the following 39 victims:

(1) Zelmar Miehellini; (2) Hector Jose Gutierrez Ruiz; (3) William Whitelaw; (4) Rosario del Carmen Barredo de Schroeder; (5) Gabriel Eduardo Dunayevich; (6) Federico Martul; (7) Letitia Mabel Akselman; (8) Jacobo Chester; (9) Dardo Cabo; (10) Roberto Rufino Priles; (11) Ana Maria Perdighe; (12) Yictorio Perdighe; (13)-(14) Two unidentified victims killed on Jan. 15, 1977; (15) Claudio Edelmiro Ruival; (16) Mario Lerner; (17) Norberto Gomez; (18) Elena Kalaidjian; (19)-(20) Two unidentified victims killed on March 18, 1977; (21) Carlos Alberto Moreno; (22) Rodolfo Goldin; (23) Daniel Ciufo; (24) Catalina Oviedo de Ciufo; (25) Luis Fabbri; (26) Claudio Gimbini; (27) Elizabeth Isabel Kasserman; (28) Mario Sagroi; (29) Esteban Adrian; (30) Luis Maria Gemetro; (31) Maria Cristina Bernat; (32) Julio Francisco Bernat; (33) Luis DeCristofaro; (34) Jorge Oscar Fernandez; (35) Selma del Carmen Mopardo; (36) Alejandra Beatriz Roca; (37) Daniel Arteaga; (38) Carlos Luis Lahitte; and (39) Laura Estela Carlotto.

The requests are DENIED as to the remaining charges of murder.

(B) The request for extradition on the forgery charge is GRANTED.

(C) The requests for extradition on the unlawful deprivation of freedom charges are BARRED by Article 7(l)(c) of the Treaty of Extradition and the applicable statute of limitations stated in 18 U.S.C. • § 3282. Therefore, the request for extradition on these charges is DENIED.

Accordingly, the Court certifies the ex-traditability of Carlos Guillermo Suarez-Mason to the Secretary of State of the United States on the requested charges of murder and forgery described by this Order. 1

I.

A. Historical Context — “The Dirty War”

The present proceeding arises out of events which occurred in the mid to late 1970s during Argentina’s so-called “dirty war” against suspected subversion. 2 Since 1930 Argentina’s history has been marked by political instability and episodes of mili *680 tary intervention into civilian governance. Beginning in the late 1960’s the nation was confronted by numerous violent terrorist incidents committed for political purposes by groups representing both extremes of the ideological spectrum. Following the death of President Juan Perón in July 1974, this terrorism increased considerably. On November 6, 1974, President Maria Perón, acting pursuant to Article 23 of the Argentine Constitution, declared a “State of Siége.” 3 This action vested the police and national security forces with extensive power to investigate persons suspected of subversion.

By October, 1975, the executive branch of the government concluded that the police and security forces were incapable of combatting the terrorist threat. Therefore, by a series of decrees (L-17, p. 24-28), the government established a defense council and ordered that:

The Armed Forces, under the Command of the President of the Nation, exercised through the Defense Council, will proceed to carry out military and security operations they deem[ ] necessary to annihilate subversive elements throughout the country.

Decree 2772, vol. L-17 (Part One). 4

Pursuant to these decrees, the Defense Council issued several secret written orders to the Armed Forces. The first two, Directives 1/75 and 404/75 (A-l, Docs. A & B), gave the Army authority over all the nation’s police forces. However, with the nation stumbling under an annual inflation rate of over 700%, the political situation became further destabilized and on March 24, 1976, the Armed Forces’ commanders carried out a coup d’etat and ousted the civilian government. The new ruling military junta continued the state of siege and passed legislation providing that civilians accused of subversion would be judged by military law. See Law 21.264, art. 7, in vol L-17 (Part One).

In the course of the next three years, the military (led by the Army) undertook a massive campaign to crush the terrorist threat. In the words of the Army representative on the first junta, the objective of this “dirty war” was to put an end to “subversive thought.” See, e.g., Nunca Mas: The Report of the Argentine National Commission on the Disappeared, volume L-18 (Part Two) at xiii (quoting General Jorge Videla in introduction by Ronald Dworkin). Its method was direct: abduct anyone they suspected of subversion off the street or out of their homes; transport them to secret detention centers; torture them physically, psychologically, and often sexually; and, in vast numbers, kill them. Indeed, the tactics used in the Army’s campaign were so brutal, so inhuman, that were they not so well-documented they would challenge belief.

According to the consistent findings of both the Argentine Courts and other authorities, the Army committed an array of crimes ranging from illegal detention, torture, and rape, to murder. Tens of thousands of people were detained without charges, and by most estimates over 12,000 people were “disappeared,” never to be seen again. See, e.g., Decision of the Federal Criminal and Correctional Court of Appeals of the Republic of Argentina, volume A-2 at 6-11. See also Nunca Mas, supra; Organization of American States, Report on The Situation of Human Rights in Argentina (1980), L-18 (Part One). These tactics were employed against persons said to be subversives, at times on the flimsiest of evidence. See, e.g., United States Department of State, Country Re *681 ports on Human Rights Practices for 1979 (1980), L-l, doc. XX at 230; Nunca Mas, at 32 (case of Mino Retamozo).

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