McKUSICK, Chief Justice.
On appeal from the Superior Court’s denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus, Thomas Allen Olson seeks to prevent his extradition to Pennsylvania, where he stands charged with burglary, theft, and receiving stolen property. We deny the appeal.
Acting upon reasonable information that Olson was a fugitive from justice, police officers in Maine on November 18, 1977, arrested him, without a warrant. Following the procedure set forth in the Uniform Criminal Extradition Act, 15 M.R.S.A. §§ 201-229,
Olson was arraigned three days later in the Maine District Court.
The District Court, however, failed to comply with section 215 of the Act requiring the judge to ascertain whether Olson was the person charged with the Pennsylvania crime. Nor did the court set a specific limit on the period for which Olson could be detained pending the issuance of an interstate rendition warrant by Governor Long-ley of Maine.
Unable to make bail, Olson remained incarcerated until December 21, 1977, when bail was reduced and Olson released.
On December 9, 1977, Governor Shapp of Pennsylvania forwarded a request to Governor Longley, demanding that Olson be extradited from Maine to Pennsylvania. Requisite documentation in support of the demand, however, was not delivered to the Governor of Maine until about a month later. The District Court granted continuances on November 80, 1977, December 14, 1977, December 21, 1977, and January 11, 1978, while awaiting the Governor’s issuance of the rendition warrant. On January 18, 1978, Governor Longley issued a rendition warrant for Olson’s arrest and extradition, which was executed on January 23, 1978. Four days later Olson petitioned
for a writ of habeas corpus in the Superior Court pursuant to 15 M.R.S.A. § 210.
The Superior Court denied his petition, and Olson brought a timely appeal to this court.
Before this court on appeal, as before the Superior Court, Olson asserts three reasons why he believes he should not be extradited to Pennsylvania. First, he contends that the documentation accompanying Pennsylvania’s extradition request failed to satisfy the statutory requirements of 15 M.R.S.A. § 203. Second, he alleges that before he can be extradited on Pennsylvania’s request, Maine courts are constitutionally obligated to make their own independent determination that probable cause exists to believe that Olson has committed a crime, without relying on a probable cause determination made by a Pennsylvania justice. Finally, he argues that the conceded illegality of his earlier detention before the issuance of Governor Longley’s rendition warrant taints the entire extradition procedure, and that consequently his extradition to Pennsylvania would violate the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. The Superior Court correctly rejected each of petitioner’s arguments, and consequently we deny his appeal.
Pennsylvania Documentation Supporting its Demand for Extradition
On August 5, 1977, Detective George Boone of the Lower Merion Police Department personally appeared before Justice Robert P. Johnson of Montgomery County District Court in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and swore to a complaint charging Olson with the offenses of theft, burglary, and receiving stolen property.
Justice Johnson thereupon issued a warrant for Olson’s arrest, certifying that “there is probable cause for the issuance of process,” and that Detective Boone had “personally appeared” before him and that Boone under oath stated “that the facts set forth [in the complaint were] true and correct to the best of [his] knowledge, information and belief.” The executed complaint and the arrest warrant issued by Justice Johnson were attached to Governor Shapp’s extradition request and forwarded to the Governor of Maine. Olson contends that this documentation failed to satisfy the statutory requirements of 15 M.R.S.A. § 203. That section provided in part:
“No demand for the extradition of a person charged with crime in another state shall be recognized by the Governor unless . . . said demand shall be accompanied by a copy of an indictment found, or information, supported by affidavit in the state having jurisdiction of the crime,
or by a copy of an affidavit made before a magistrate in such state, together with a copy of any warrant which was issued thereupon
The indictment, information or affidavit made before the magistrate must substantially charge the person demanded with having committed a crime under the law of that state. The copy of indictment, information, affidavit must be authenticated by the executive authority making the demand.” (Emphasis added)
Olson maintains that the executed complaint is not the equivalent of “an affidavit made before a magistrate” within the meaning of the statute.
This portion of the Maine version of the Uniform Criminal Extradition Act parallels the federal statute
which implements art. IY, § 2, clause 2 of the United States Constitution.
Sawyer v. State,
Me., 382 A.2d 1039, 1041-42 (1978). On a petition for habeas corpus, it is incumbent upon the court to review the warrants of arrest and of requisition to determine whether they comply with the statutes and justify the rendition warrant.
Poulin v. Bonenfant,
Me., 251 A.2d 436, 438 (1969). Though the issue of whether a “complaint” constitutes an “affidavit” under the statute has not previously been addressed by this court, we are particularly alert to the fact that the Maine legislature has mandated that the Uniform Criminal Extradition Act “ ‘shall be so interpreted and construed as to effectuate its general purpose to make uniform the laws of those states which enact it.’ . . . [T]he need for uniformity among the states is particularly acute in this area of the law, involving as it does principles of interstate comity under an umbrella of controlling federal law.”
Sawyer v. State, supra
at 1041.
Bearing in mind, then, the considerable precedential value of decisions from other jurisdictions, we note that courts universally accept a criminal complaint, sworn to before a judge, as an “affidavit made before a magistrate” within the meaning of both the Uniform Criminal Extradition Act and the analogous federal statute, 18 U.S.C. § 3182.
Interestingly enough, Maine was the demanding state in one of the leading cases so holding — decided in Massachusetts, there the asylum state. Maine’s demand for extradition was accompanied by a sworn complaint.
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McKUSICK, Chief Justice.
On appeal from the Superior Court’s denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus, Thomas Allen Olson seeks to prevent his extradition to Pennsylvania, where he stands charged with burglary, theft, and receiving stolen property. We deny the appeal.
Acting upon reasonable information that Olson was a fugitive from justice, police officers in Maine on November 18, 1977, arrested him, without a warrant. Following the procedure set forth in the Uniform Criminal Extradition Act, 15 M.R.S.A. §§ 201-229,
Olson was arraigned three days later in the Maine District Court.
The District Court, however, failed to comply with section 215 of the Act requiring the judge to ascertain whether Olson was the person charged with the Pennsylvania crime. Nor did the court set a specific limit on the period for which Olson could be detained pending the issuance of an interstate rendition warrant by Governor Long-ley of Maine.
Unable to make bail, Olson remained incarcerated until December 21, 1977, when bail was reduced and Olson released.
On December 9, 1977, Governor Shapp of Pennsylvania forwarded a request to Governor Longley, demanding that Olson be extradited from Maine to Pennsylvania. Requisite documentation in support of the demand, however, was not delivered to the Governor of Maine until about a month later. The District Court granted continuances on November 80, 1977, December 14, 1977, December 21, 1977, and January 11, 1978, while awaiting the Governor’s issuance of the rendition warrant. On January 18, 1978, Governor Longley issued a rendition warrant for Olson’s arrest and extradition, which was executed on January 23, 1978. Four days later Olson petitioned
for a writ of habeas corpus in the Superior Court pursuant to 15 M.R.S.A. § 210.
The Superior Court denied his petition, and Olson brought a timely appeal to this court.
Before this court on appeal, as before the Superior Court, Olson asserts three reasons why he believes he should not be extradited to Pennsylvania. First, he contends that the documentation accompanying Pennsylvania’s extradition request failed to satisfy the statutory requirements of 15 M.R.S.A. § 203. Second, he alleges that before he can be extradited on Pennsylvania’s request, Maine courts are constitutionally obligated to make their own independent determination that probable cause exists to believe that Olson has committed a crime, without relying on a probable cause determination made by a Pennsylvania justice. Finally, he argues that the conceded illegality of his earlier detention before the issuance of Governor Longley’s rendition warrant taints the entire extradition procedure, and that consequently his extradition to Pennsylvania would violate the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. The Superior Court correctly rejected each of petitioner’s arguments, and consequently we deny his appeal.
Pennsylvania Documentation Supporting its Demand for Extradition
On August 5, 1977, Detective George Boone of the Lower Merion Police Department personally appeared before Justice Robert P. Johnson of Montgomery County District Court in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and swore to a complaint charging Olson with the offenses of theft, burglary, and receiving stolen property.
Justice Johnson thereupon issued a warrant for Olson’s arrest, certifying that “there is probable cause for the issuance of process,” and that Detective Boone had “personally appeared” before him and that Boone under oath stated “that the facts set forth [in the complaint were] true and correct to the best of [his] knowledge, information and belief.” The executed complaint and the arrest warrant issued by Justice Johnson were attached to Governor Shapp’s extradition request and forwarded to the Governor of Maine. Olson contends that this documentation failed to satisfy the statutory requirements of 15 M.R.S.A. § 203. That section provided in part:
“No demand for the extradition of a person charged with crime in another state shall be recognized by the Governor unless . . . said demand shall be accompanied by a copy of an indictment found, or information, supported by affidavit in the state having jurisdiction of the crime,
or by a copy of an affidavit made before a magistrate in such state, together with a copy of any warrant which was issued thereupon
The indictment, information or affidavit made before the magistrate must substantially charge the person demanded with having committed a crime under the law of that state. The copy of indictment, information, affidavit must be authenticated by the executive authority making the demand.” (Emphasis added)
Olson maintains that the executed complaint is not the equivalent of “an affidavit made before a magistrate” within the meaning of the statute.
This portion of the Maine version of the Uniform Criminal Extradition Act parallels the federal statute
which implements art. IY, § 2, clause 2 of the United States Constitution.
Sawyer v. State,
Me., 382 A.2d 1039, 1041-42 (1978). On a petition for habeas corpus, it is incumbent upon the court to review the warrants of arrest and of requisition to determine whether they comply with the statutes and justify the rendition warrant.
Poulin v. Bonenfant,
Me., 251 A.2d 436, 438 (1969). Though the issue of whether a “complaint” constitutes an “affidavit” under the statute has not previously been addressed by this court, we are particularly alert to the fact that the Maine legislature has mandated that the Uniform Criminal Extradition Act “ ‘shall be so interpreted and construed as to effectuate its general purpose to make uniform the laws of those states which enact it.’ . . . [T]he need for uniformity among the states is particularly acute in this area of the law, involving as it does principles of interstate comity under an umbrella of controlling federal law.”
Sawyer v. State, supra
at 1041.
Bearing in mind, then, the considerable precedential value of decisions from other jurisdictions, we note that courts universally accept a criminal complaint, sworn to before a judge, as an “affidavit made before a magistrate” within the meaning of both the Uniform Criminal Extradition Act and the analogous federal statute, 18 U.S.C. § 3182.
Interestingly enough, Maine was the demanding state in one of the leading cases so holding — decided in Massachusetts, there the asylum state. Maine’s demand for extradition was accompanied by a sworn complaint. Noting that “an affidavit is a statement in writing sworn before an officer authorized to administer an oath,” the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court concluded: “The contention of the petitioners that a complaint cannot be an affidavit is
unsound.”
In re Murphy,
321 Mass. 206, 72 N.E.2d 413, 417-18 (1947). Similarly, the Utah Supreme Court has held that were a complaint “states all of the essential facts constituting the offense, and is sworn to in positive terms,” it “takes the place and answers the purposes of the affidavit referred to in the federal statute and is sufficient both in form and in substance.”
Bell v. Corless,
57 Utah 604, 196 P. 568, 571 (1921).
As the language of the Uniform Act makes clear, “[t]he indictment, information or affidavit made before the magistrate must substantially charge the person demanded with having committed a crime under the law of that State.” As long as the complainant’s statements before the magistrate are given under oath, it is of no relevance that the criminal accusation is described as a “complaint” rather than an “affidavit.” The test remains whether the commission of a crime has been asserted by a person under oath. Detective Boone’s complaint, sworn to before a justice of the Pennsylvania District Court, unambiguously charges Olson with three criminal offenses
and thus satisfied the statutory requirements of 15 M.R.S.A. § 203.
Constitutional Limitations: Probable Cause to Arrest
“The Fourth Amendment requires a timely judicial determination of probable cause as a prerequisite to detention.”
Gerstein v. Pugh,
420 U.S. 103, 126, 95 S.Ct. 854, 869, 43 L.Ed.2d 54 (1975). This principle applies with equal force to the “significant pretrial restraint of liberty” involved in interstate extradition.
Ierardi v. Gunter,
528 F.2d 929, 930 (1st Cir. 1976).
Olson is entitled to a judicial determination of probable cause prior to his extradition. But in issuing the arrest warrant, Pennsylvania District Court Justice Johnson expressly certified his determination of probable cause, and the courts of Maine are precluded from reviewing that judicial determination.
As one federal court has observed: “The question before us is not whether the probable cause defense may be raised to vitiate an arrest, but when [and where] and before which tribunal.”
Garrison v. Smith,
413 F.Supp. 747, 753 (N.D.Miss.1976). Olson argues that this court should follow the rule laid down in
Kirkland v. Preston,
128 U.S.App.D.C. 148, 154, 385 F.2d 670 (1967). The
Kirkland
court differentiated between an extradition demand accompanied by a grand jury indictment and a demand premised on an affidavit and the arrest warrant issued thereon. The court held that in the latter situation “Fourth Amendment considerations require that before a person can be extradited . . . the authorities in the asylum state must be satisfied that the affidavit shows probable cause.”
Id.
128 U.S.App.D.C. at 154, 385 F.2d at 676.
A sounder approach in our view, however, has more recently been taken by the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit. That court, speaking through Judge Campbell, specifically held that the issuance of an arrest warrant by a judge in the demanding state on a finding of probable cause suffices for extradition:
“Respondents seem to assume that if a judicial determination of probable cause must precede extradition, it must be provided by the courts of the asylum state, where the fugitive is held. That is not so. . . . [NJothing in
Gerstein
prevents the demanding state from providing the requisite pre-rendition determination of probable cause. . . . Such a determination is fully consistent with reliance by the asylum state on the regularity of the demanding state’s procedures. If, for example, the papers submitted by Florida were to show that a judicial officer or tribunal there had found probable cause,
Massachusetts would not need to find probable cause anew, nor would it need to review the adequacy of the Florida determination.
Instead, it would be entitled to rely on the official representation of its sister state that the requisite
determination had been made; thus in our view
Massachusetts may credit an arrest warrant shown to have issued upon a finding of probable cause just as it would credit a Florida indictment.” Ierardi v. Gunter, supra
at 930-31 (Emphasis added)
The
Kirkland
court’s assertion that an arrest warrant is an unreliable determination of probable cause seems premised on the unproven assumption that in practice magistrates do not scrutinize warrant requests with an exacting eye,
and that they frequently fall short of the theoretical ideal articulated in
Johnson v. United States,
333 U.S. 10, 14, 68 S.Ct. 367, 369, 92 L.Ed. 436 (1948), of a “neutral and detached magistrate” who, unlike law enforcement officers, is not “engaged in the . . . competitive enterprise of ferreting out crime.”
We see no reason to assume that judicial officers habitually fail to perform their duties in reviewing requests for arrest warrants. On the contrary, the United States Supreme Court noted in
Gerstein v. Pugh, supra,
420 U.S. at 116 n. 18, 95 S.Ct. at 864, that “[a] person arrested under a warrant would have received a prior judicial determination of probable cause.”
There may, of course, be occasions when magistrates fail to perform their constitutionally assigned task of reviewing arrest warrant requests with proper care. Arrest warrants may be issued by some magistrates who simply default and defer to the judgment of police or prosecutors, without making an independent judicial determination of probable cause. Furthermore, other magistrates who do make conscientious efforts to review arrest warrant requests with detached judicial impartiality and zeal may nevertheless, on occasion, make erroneous probable cause determinations. The question becomes not whether such judicial errors should be reviewable, but in what forum may a defendant make an attack on the validity of an arrest warrant. Arguably, if courts of asylum states were permitted to correct mistakes made by judicial officers in demanding states, a valuable safeguard against constitutional error would be provided. But the framers of the Constitution, charged with the task of forging a viable federal system, rejected that contention.
Redress of judicial errors committed in the demanding state must be obtained in the courts of the demanding state. There is but one federal Constitution, and the courts of all fifty states are bound to support and enforce it. Pennsylvania, exactly as much as Maine, must enforce the Fourth Amendment requirement of probable cause for the issuance of an arrest warrant. It is not for the courts of Maine to assume the role of the courts of Pennsylvania. After extradition to Pennsylvania, Olson will have adequate opportunity to challenge the validity of his arrest.
We refuse to sanction the
disruption of our federal system by thrusting the courts of Maine into a matter properly left to the Pennsylvania judiciary.
“The traditional summary nature of extradition and the awareness of our Constitution protects equally citizens throughout the United States has led to the well established rule . . . that it is not for courts in the asylum state to inquire into the constitutionality of a sister state’s criminal justice system. Thus it has been widely held . . . that courts in the asylum state are not to question whether the warrant for a fugitive’s arrest is supported by probable cause.”
Garrison v. Smith, supra
at 753.
At least seven state supreme courts have rejected the
Kirkland
approach in favor of the
Ierardi
rationale.
Judicial appreciation for the interests of comity in transactions between states and of efficiency in bringing to justice criminals who have fled from other jurisdictions would persuade us, if we were free to choose, to prohibit Maine courts from reexamining probable cause determinations made by judicial officers in other states. The Constitution, however, does not allow us the luxury of choice. It
requires
deference to a judicial probable cause determination made by the demanding state. Unlike considerations of comity which govern international extradition proceedings between nations, the United States Constitution mandates that any state honor the extradition demand of a sister state if that demand is supported by documentation showing that the fugitive has been “charged” with a criminal offense in a sister state.
Thus, Justice Catron, in a separate opinion in
Holmes v. Jennison,
14 Pet. (39 U.S.) 540, 597, 10 L.Ed. 579 (1840), wrote:
“The uniform opinion heretofore has been, that the States on the formation of the Constitution, had the power of arrest and surrender in such cases [referring to interstate rendition]; and that so far from taking it away, the Constitution had provided for its exercise, contrary to the will of a state, in case of a refusal; thereby settling, as amongst the states, the contested question, whether on a demand, the obligation to surrender was perfect and imperative, or whether it rested on comity, and was discretionary.”
In reaching our holding that Olson should press his attack upon Justice Johnson’s certificate of probable cause in Pennsylvania
courts, and not here in Maine, we find guidance in Supreme Court decisions on comparable fact situations. In
Sweeney v. Woodall,
344 U.S. 86, 73 S.Ct. 139, 97 L.Ed. 114 (1952), the Court approved of the refusal of state courts in Ohio, the asylum state, to consider the merits of a petitioner’s constitutional claim that Alabama prison conditions constituted cruel and unusual punishment. The petitioner, who had escaped from prison in Alabama, was arrested in Ohio. He sought to block his extradition to Alabama on the grounds that his extradition would result in a continuing violation of the 8th and 14th amendments to the United States Constitution. The Ohio Court of Common Pleas, having jurisdiction over the extradition proceeding, refused to consider petitioner’s claim, and the state appellate courts affirmed that ruling. The petitioner then sought habeas corpus relief in the federal courts and obtained an order from the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, directing the local United States District Court to hold a hearing on the merits of his claim. The United States Supreme Court granted Ohio’s petition for certiorari and reversed, holding that Alabama’s extradition demand must be honored and that petitioner’s constitutional claim was properly raised in Alabama courts alone:
“By a resort to a form of ‘self-help’ respondent has changed his status from that of a prisoner of Alabama to that of a fugitive from Alabama. But this should not affect the authority of the Alabama courts to determine the validity of his imprisonment in Alabama. The scheme of interstate rendition, as set forth in both the Constitution and the statutes which Congress has enacted to implement the Constitution, contemplates the prompt return of a fugitive from justice as soon as the state from which he fled demands him; these provisions do not contemplate an appearance by Alabama in respondent’s asylum to defend against the claimed abuses of its prison system.
Considerations fundamental to our federal system require that the prisoner test the claimed unconstitutionality of his treatment by Alabama in the courts of that State
. . . where all parties may be heard, where all pertinent testimony will be readily available and where suitable relief, if any is necessary, may be fashioned.”
Id.
at 89-90, 73 S.Ct. at 140— 41 (Emphasis added)
Similarly, in
Pierce v. Creecy,
210 U.S. 387, 28 S.Ct. 714, 52 L.Ed. 1113 (1908), the petitioner contested Texas’ attempt to extradite him from Missouri. Texas’ demand for extradition was accompanied by an indictment charging the fugitive with the offense of “false swearing” or perjury. Petitioner argued that the statement of facts contained in the indictment did not describe the commission of a criminal offense. Though the indictment showed that there was probable cause to believe the defendant had committed the acts alleged in the indictment, since these acts allegedly were not criminal in nature, the petitioner’s claim amounted to the contention that there was no probable cause to believe he had committed a crime. But the Supreme Court held that Missouri courts should not address the issue of the sufficiency of the Texas indictment, saying:
“[T]he Constitution does not require, as an indispensable prerequisite to interstate extradition, that there should be a good indictment, or even an indictment of any kind. It requires nothing more than a charge of crime. . . . ”
Id.
at 403, 28 S.Ct. at 719.
“[T]he indictment, in order to constitute a sufficient charge of crime to warrant interstate extradition need show no more than that the accused was substantially charged with crime. ... If more were required it would impose upon courts, in the trial of writs of habeas corpus, the duty of a critical examination of the laws of States with whose jurisprudence and criminal procedure they can have only a general acquaintance. Such a duty would be an intolerable burden, certain to lead to errors in decision, irritable to the just pride of the States and fruitful of miscarriages of justice. The duty ought not to be assumed unless it is
plainly required by the Constitution, and, in our opinion, there is nothing in the letter or spirit of that instrument which requires or permits its performance.”
Id.
at 405, 28 S.Ct. at 720.
To sum up, considerations of comity and efficiency in interstate rendition proceedings alone would make it unwise for courts of asylum states to sit in judgment on the criminal procedures employed and judicial determinations made by tribunals in sister states.
The Fourth Amendment does not require a second, independent probable cause determination by the asylum state, after a judicial officer in another state has already made a finding of probable cause to support an arrest warrant.
In any event, the extradition clause of article IV forbids such a practice and mandates that fugitives be returned to the demanding state, whose courts are equally bound by the United States Constitution to enforce the requirements and limitations of the Fourth Amendment.
Claimed Taint of Whole Extradition Proceedings by Initial Unlawful Detention
At the habeas corpus hearing the State of Maine stipulated that Olson’s initial detention after his arrest without a warrant was unlawful because the Maine District Court judge before whom he was arraigned failed to comply with 15 M.R.S.A. § 215. The District Court never determined whether Olson was the person charged with the alleged crime in another state, nor did it set a time limit on the period of Olson’s incarceration pending the issuance of a rendition warrant by the Governor of Maine. Olson maintains that his incarceration from November 18, 1977 until December 21, 1977 was “an affront to the principles of governmental fair play and fundamental fairness,” which has tainted the entire extradition proceeding and therefore requires that he not be delivered into the custody of Pennsylvania law enforcement officers.
We find petitioner’s argument moot at this stage of the proceedings. Once a valid rendition warrant has been issued and executed, questions relating to the illegality of petitioner’s prior detention are rendered moot.
Lott v. Heyd,
315 F.2d 350 (5th Cir. 1963);
Reese v. Warden & Keeper of County Jail,
Colo., 561 P.2d 339 (1977);
People ex rel. Gummow v. Larson, 35
Ill.2d 280, 220 N.E.2d 165 (1960);
Miller v. Warden, Baltimore City Jail,
14 Md.App. 377, 287 A.2d 57 (1972);
People v. Doran, supra; Lombardo v. Tozer,
264 S.W.2d 376 (Mo.App.1954).
In
People ex rel. Gummow v. Larson, supra,
the Illinois Supreme Court rejected the contention that initial detention which was illegal under the Illinois version of the Uniform Criminal Extradition Act deprived the Illinois governor of any authority to issue a subsequent lawful rendition warrant:
“The purpose of these sections of the extradition law is to prevent unreasonably lengthy periods of confinement of fugitives pending consummation of extradition proceedings by the demanding state. [Citations omitted] There is, however, no indication of any legislative intent to restrict the period within which the Governor . . . may issue his rendition warrant to the period within
which the court which issues the fugitive warrant may commit the accused or require him to give bond.”
Id.,
35 Ill.2d at 282, 220 N.E.2d at 167.
Olson argues that even if we find Governor Longley’s rendition warrant lawful, the illegality of his earlier arrest and detention carries over to the subsequent lawful rendition warrant and taints the entire extradition proceeding. But it is a well-settled rule of criminal procedure that once a defendant is brought within the jurisdiction of a court, previous irregularities in the manner in which he was taken into custody do not render the court’s jurisdiction vulnerable to a due process attack.
Cf. Ker v. Illinois,
119 U.S. 436, 7 S.Ct. 225, 30 L.Ed. 421 (1886);
Frisbie v. Collins,
342 U.S. 519, 72 S.Ct. 509, 96 L.Ed. 541 (1952);
State v. Stone,
Me., 294 A.2d 683 (1972). Since the jurisdiction of Maine to extradite Olson to Pennsylvania now rests on the Governor’s rendition warrant, which was executed on January 23, 1978, previous irregularities in Olson’s detention from November 18, 1977 until December 21, 1977, cannot now be raised as an obstacle to his extradition.
In summary, Olson’s extradition from Maine to Pennsylvania satisfies both federal constitutional standards and the applicable statutory requirements of the Uniform Criminal Extradition Act. The entry must be:
Appeal denied.
Judgment affirmed.
POMEROY and NICHOLS, JJ., did not sit.