William Joseph Quinn v. Glen Robinson, United States Marshal for the Northern District of California
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Opinions
REINHARDT, Circuit Judge:
Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3184 (1982) and the governing treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (“United Kingdom”), Extradition Treaty of June 8, 1972, United States — United Kingdom, 28 U.S.T. 227, T.I.A.S. No. 8468 [hereinafter cited as Treaty ], the United Kingdom seeks the extradition of William Joseph Quinn, a member of the Irish Republican Army (“IRA”), in order to try him for the commission of a murder in 1975 and for conspiring to cause explosions in London in 1974 and 1975. After a United States magistrate found Quinn extraditable, Quinn filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus. The district court determined that Quinn cannot be extradited because a long-standing principle of international law which has been incorporated in the extradition treaty at issue — the political offense exception— bars extradition for the charged offenses. The United States government, on behalf of the United Kingdom, appeals.
This ease requires us to examine the parameters of a foreign sovereign’s right to bring about the extradition of an accused who maintains that the offenses with which he is charged are of a political character. Ultimately we must determine whether the political offense exception is applicable to the type of violent offenses Quinn is alleged to have committed. We undertake this task with the aid of very little helpful precedent. The United States Supreme Court has discussed the political offense exception only once, and then during the nineteenth century. See Ornelas v. Ruiz, 161 U.S. 502, 16 S.Ct. 689, 40 L.Ed. 787 (1896). The only time we considered the subject, see Karadzole v. Artukovic, 247 F.2d 198 (9th Cir.1957), the Supreme Court vacated our opinion, see Karadzole v. Artukovic, 355 U.S. 393, 78 S.Ct. 381, 2 L.Ed.2d 356 (1958) (mem.), an opinion which, in any event, has subsequently been roundly and uniformly criticized, see Eain v. Wilkes, 641 F.2d 504, 522 (7th Cir.), cert. denied, 454 U.S. 894, 102 S.Ct. 390, 70 L.Ed.2d 208 (1981); Garcia-Mora, The Nature of Political Offenses: A Knotty Problem of Extradition Law, 48 Va.L.Rev. 1226, 1246 (1962); Lubet & Czackes, The Role of the American Judiciary in the Extradition of Political Terrorists, 71 J.Crim.L. & Criminology 193, 205 (1980). Only one circuit has previously considered in any detail how or whether the exception applies when the accused person or persons have engaged in conduct involving the use of some of the more violent techniques or tactics that have come to mark the activities of contemporary insurgent or revolutionary movements. Eain v. Wilkes, 641 F.2d 504 (7th Cir.), cert. denied, 454 U.S. 894, 102 S.Ct. 390, 70 L.Ed.2d 208 (1981). The few opinions of other circuits that have considered the exception shed no light on the difficult questions we must resolve here.1 Therefore, we must carefully exam[782]*782ine the historie origins of the political offense exception, analyze the various underpinnings of the doctrine, trace its development in the lower courts and elsewhere, and seek to apply whatever principles emerge to the realities of today’s political struggles.
In the case before us, we find, for reasons we will explain in full, that the charged offenses are not protected by the political offense exception. We vacate the writ of habeas corpus and remand to the district court. We hold that Quinn may be extradited on the murder charge but that the district court must consider Quinn’s remaining defense to the conspiracy charge before extradition is permitted for that offense.
I. BACKGROUND
A. The Extradition Treaty
The right of a foreign sovereign to demand and obtain extradition of an accused criminal is created by treaty. Ramos v. Diaz, 179 F.Supp. 459, 460-61 (S.D. Fla.1959). In the absence of a treaty there is no duty to extradite, see Factor v. Laubenheimer, 290 U.S. 276, 287, 54 S.Ct. 191, 193, 78 L.Ed. 315 (1933); Epps, The Validity of the Political Offender Exception in Extradition Treaties in Anglo-American Jurisprudence, 20 Harv.Int’l L.J. 61, 74 (1979); cf Bassiouni, International Extradition: A Summary of Contemporary American Practice and a Proposed Formula, 15 Wayne L.Rev. 733, 734 (1969) (in Western world, “extradition is a matter of favor or comity rather than a legal duty”), and no branch of the United States government has any authority to surrender an accused to a foreign government except as provided for by statute or treaty. Factor v. Laubenheimer, 290 U.S. 276, 287, 54 S.Ct. 191, 193, 78 L.Ed. 315 (1933); Ramos, 179 F.2d at 460-61.
The extradition treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom provides for the reciprocal extradition of persons found within the territory of one of the nations who have been accused or convicted of certain criminal offenses committed within the jurisdiction of the other nation. Treaty, supra p. 781, at art. I. Murder and conspiracy to cause explosions, the offenses with which Quinn has been charged, are extraditable offenses under the Treaty. Id. art. III(l), (2).
United States citizenship does not bar extradition by the United States. See Charlton v. Kelly, 229 U.S. 447, 467, 33 S.Ct. 945, 952, 57 L.Ed. 1274 (1913); Escobedo v. United States, 623 F.2d 1098,1104-[783]*78307 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 449 U.S. 1036, 101 S.Ct. 612, 66 L.Ed.2d 497 (1980). However, under the doctrine of “dual criminality,” an accused person can be extradited only if the conduct complained of is considered criminal by the jurisprudence or under the laws of both the requesting and requested nations. Factor, 290 U.S. at 293, 54 S.Ct. at 195; Captan v. Voices, 649 F.2d 1336, 1343 (9th Cir.1981); see, e.g., Treaty, supra p. 781, at art. III(l)(a). In addition, there must be evidence that would justify committing the accused for trial under the law of the nation from whom extradition is requested if the offense had been committed within the territory of that nation.' Hooker v. Klein, 573 F.2d 1360, 1367 (9th Cir.), cert. denied, 439 U.S. 932, 99 S.Ct. 323, 58 L.Ed.2d 327 (1978); 18 U.S.C. § 3184 (1982); see, e.g., Treaty, supra p. 781, at art. VII(d). United States courts have interpreted this provision in similar treaties as requiring a showing by the requesting party that there is probable cause to believe that the accused has committed the charged offense. See, e.g., Glucksman v. Henkel, 221 U.S. 508, 512, 31 S.Ct. 704, 705, 55 L.Ed. 830 (1911); United States ex rel. Sakaguchi v. Kaululukui, 520 F.2d 726, 729-31 (9th Cir.1975).
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REINHARDT, Circuit Judge:
Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3184 (1982) and the governing treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (“United Kingdom”), Extradition Treaty of June 8, 1972, United States — United Kingdom, 28 U.S.T. 227, T.I.A.S. No. 8468 [hereinafter cited as Treaty ], the United Kingdom seeks the extradition of William Joseph Quinn, a member of the Irish Republican Army (“IRA”), in order to try him for the commission of a murder in 1975 and for conspiring to cause explosions in London in 1974 and 1975. After a United States magistrate found Quinn extraditable, Quinn filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus. The district court determined that Quinn cannot be extradited because a long-standing principle of international law which has been incorporated in the extradition treaty at issue — the political offense exception— bars extradition for the charged offenses. The United States government, on behalf of the United Kingdom, appeals.
This ease requires us to examine the parameters of a foreign sovereign’s right to bring about the extradition of an accused who maintains that the offenses with which he is charged are of a political character. Ultimately we must determine whether the political offense exception is applicable to the type of violent offenses Quinn is alleged to have committed. We undertake this task with the aid of very little helpful precedent. The United States Supreme Court has discussed the political offense exception only once, and then during the nineteenth century. See Ornelas v. Ruiz, 161 U.S. 502, 16 S.Ct. 689, 40 L.Ed. 787 (1896). The only time we considered the subject, see Karadzole v. Artukovic, 247 F.2d 198 (9th Cir.1957), the Supreme Court vacated our opinion, see Karadzole v. Artukovic, 355 U.S. 393, 78 S.Ct. 381, 2 L.Ed.2d 356 (1958) (mem.), an opinion which, in any event, has subsequently been roundly and uniformly criticized, see Eain v. Wilkes, 641 F.2d 504, 522 (7th Cir.), cert. denied, 454 U.S. 894, 102 S.Ct. 390, 70 L.Ed.2d 208 (1981); Garcia-Mora, The Nature of Political Offenses: A Knotty Problem of Extradition Law, 48 Va.L.Rev. 1226, 1246 (1962); Lubet & Czackes, The Role of the American Judiciary in the Extradition of Political Terrorists, 71 J.Crim.L. & Criminology 193, 205 (1980). Only one circuit has previously considered in any detail how or whether the exception applies when the accused person or persons have engaged in conduct involving the use of some of the more violent techniques or tactics that have come to mark the activities of contemporary insurgent or revolutionary movements. Eain v. Wilkes, 641 F.2d 504 (7th Cir.), cert. denied, 454 U.S. 894, 102 S.Ct. 390, 70 L.Ed.2d 208 (1981). The few opinions of other circuits that have considered the exception shed no light on the difficult questions we must resolve here.1 Therefore, we must carefully exam[782]*782ine the historie origins of the political offense exception, analyze the various underpinnings of the doctrine, trace its development in the lower courts and elsewhere, and seek to apply whatever principles emerge to the realities of today’s political struggles.
In the case before us, we find, for reasons we will explain in full, that the charged offenses are not protected by the political offense exception. We vacate the writ of habeas corpus and remand to the district court. We hold that Quinn may be extradited on the murder charge but that the district court must consider Quinn’s remaining defense to the conspiracy charge before extradition is permitted for that offense.
I. BACKGROUND
A. The Extradition Treaty
The right of a foreign sovereign to demand and obtain extradition of an accused criminal is created by treaty. Ramos v. Diaz, 179 F.Supp. 459, 460-61 (S.D. Fla.1959). In the absence of a treaty there is no duty to extradite, see Factor v. Laubenheimer, 290 U.S. 276, 287, 54 S.Ct. 191, 193, 78 L.Ed. 315 (1933); Epps, The Validity of the Political Offender Exception in Extradition Treaties in Anglo-American Jurisprudence, 20 Harv.Int’l L.J. 61, 74 (1979); cf Bassiouni, International Extradition: A Summary of Contemporary American Practice and a Proposed Formula, 15 Wayne L.Rev. 733, 734 (1969) (in Western world, “extradition is a matter of favor or comity rather than a legal duty”), and no branch of the United States government has any authority to surrender an accused to a foreign government except as provided for by statute or treaty. Factor v. Laubenheimer, 290 U.S. 276, 287, 54 S.Ct. 191, 193, 78 L.Ed. 315 (1933); Ramos, 179 F.2d at 460-61.
The extradition treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom provides for the reciprocal extradition of persons found within the territory of one of the nations who have been accused or convicted of certain criminal offenses committed within the jurisdiction of the other nation. Treaty, supra p. 781, at art. I. Murder and conspiracy to cause explosions, the offenses with which Quinn has been charged, are extraditable offenses under the Treaty. Id. art. III(l), (2).
United States citizenship does not bar extradition by the United States. See Charlton v. Kelly, 229 U.S. 447, 467, 33 S.Ct. 945, 952, 57 L.Ed. 1274 (1913); Escobedo v. United States, 623 F.2d 1098,1104-[783]*78307 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 449 U.S. 1036, 101 S.Ct. 612, 66 L.Ed.2d 497 (1980). However, under the doctrine of “dual criminality,” an accused person can be extradited only if the conduct complained of is considered criminal by the jurisprudence or under the laws of both the requesting and requested nations. Factor, 290 U.S. at 293, 54 S.Ct. at 195; Captan v. Voices, 649 F.2d 1336, 1343 (9th Cir.1981); see, e.g., Treaty, supra p. 781, at art. III(l)(a). In addition, there must be evidence that would justify committing the accused for trial under the law of the nation from whom extradition is requested if the offense had been committed within the territory of that nation.' Hooker v. Klein, 573 F.2d 1360, 1367 (9th Cir.), cert. denied, 439 U.S. 932, 99 S.Ct. 323, 58 L.Ed.2d 327 (1978); 18 U.S.C. § 3184 (1982); see, e.g., Treaty, supra p. 781, at art. VII(d). United States courts have interpreted this provision in similar treaties as requiring a showing by the requesting party that there is probable cause to believe that the accused has committed the charged offense. See, e.g., Glucksman v. Henkel, 221 U.S. 508, 512, 31 S.Ct. 704, 705, 55 L.Ed. 830 (1911); United States ex rel. Sakaguchi v. Kaululukui, 520 F.2d 726, 729-31 (9th Cir.1975). The doctrine of “specialty” prohibits the requesting nation from prosecuting the extradited individual for any offense other than that for which the surrendering state agreed to extradite. United States v. Rauscher, 119 U.S. 407, 420-21, 7 S.Ct. 234, 241, 30 L.Ed. 425 (1886); Caplan v. Vokes, 649 F.2d at 1343; see, e.g., Treaty, supra p. 781, at art. XII.
The treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom provides certain exceptions to extradition, notwithstanding the existence of probable cause to believe that the accused has committed the charged offense. In particular, the treaty specifies that “[ejxtradition shall not be granted if ... the offense for which extradition is requested is regarded by the requested party as one of a political character____” Treaty, supra p. 781, at art. V(l)(c).
B. Factual Background
Quinn, a United States citizen, was arrested on September 30, 1981 in Daly City, California pursuant to a provisional arrest warrant issued by a United States magistrate upon application of the United States acting for and on behalf of the United Kingdom. On November 4, 1981, the United Kingdom formally requested Quinn’s extradition to face charges of the murder of Police Constable Stephen Tibbie and conspiracy to cause explosions of a nature likely to endanger human life.2
The duration of the conspiracy with which Quinn is charged is from January 1, 1974 to April 3, 1975, the day before Quinn was arrested for questioning regarding separate 1974 offenses of kidnapping and assault. Quinn was, in fact, charged, tried, and convicted at that time in Ireland, in a special court utilized for the trial of political cases, of membership in an outlawed organization — the IRA. He was imprisoned in Dublin as a “special category prisoner” — a political prisoner incarcerated in a manner akin to prisoner-of-war status — until January 2, 1976.
The evidence before the United States magistrate regarding the conspiracy centered around six specific bombing incidents:
1. On January 18, 1974, a hollowed-out copy of the Bible containing a bomb was mailed to and received by Bishop Gerard William Tickle in London. At that time, Bishop Tickle was the Roman Catholic Bishop to the British Armed Forces. Quinn’s fingerprints were found on the wrapping paper around the bomb, which was defused without causing any harm.
[784]*7842. On January 30, 1974, a letter bomb was sent to the Surrey, England home of Crown Court Judge John Huxley Buzzard who, at that time, was a senior Treasury Prosecuting Counsel. When Judge Buzzard began to open the package, it partially exploded, lacerating his face, hands, and wrist and causing the loss of the ends of two fingers on his left hand. Quinn’s fin'gerprints were on the wrapping around the bomb.
3. On February 4, 1974, a letter bomb was sent to the offices of Max Aitken, Chairman of the Daily Express newspaper in London. Aitken’s assistant secretary, who partially opened the package, believed it looked suspicious and called a security guard. As the security guard picked up the package, it partially exploded and the officer lost most of the fingers on his left hand. Quinn’s fingerprints were found on the book in which the bomb was concealed.
4. On December 20, 1974, a bomb was found in the foyer adjacent to the loading platform at Aldershot Railway Station in Hampshire County, England. The bomb was defused without causing any harm, and the fingerprints of a number of Quinn’s alleged co-conspirators were found on the wrapping paper and bomb mechanisms.
5. On December 21, 1974, a bomb was discovered in an attache case in the archway entrance to the Kings Arms Public House in Warminster, England. The bomb was defused and the fingerprints of Gilhooley, a fugitive who was not indicted as a co-conspirator, were found on its timing mechanism.
6. On January 27, 1975, a bomb was found in a black bag on the front step of the Charco-Burger Grill on Heath Street in London. The bomb was defused and Quinn’s fingerprints were found on the Irish newspaper that had been used to wrap the bomb.
Searches of two flats in the London area conducted during this time period revealed explosives, detonators, fuses, and diagrams of bomb construction. Fingerprints matching those of Quinn, his alleged co-eonspirators, and Gilhooley were each found on at least one item at each location.
The murder with which Quinn is charged took place on February 26, 1975. On that day, Police Constables Adrian Blackledge and Leslie White were patrolling the West Kensington area of London on foot, looking for burglary suspects. Blackledge saw a man engaged in “suspicious” behavior, such as looking around and changing directions. Blackledge lost sight of the man but later, while White was on a lunch break, saw the suspect reappear from one of a number of houses on Fairholme Road. Blackledge approached the man while he waited at a bus stop, identified himself as a police officer, and asked the man where he had been. The suspect was unable to give Blackledge the address of the house he had emerged from and gave his name as William Rogers. The suspect said he would take Blackledge to the home he had visited, began to walk away, then ran.
A chase ensued, and other plainclothes police officers, including Temporary Detective Constable Derek Hugh Wilson, joined in. Police Constable Stephen Tibbie, who was on a motorcycle dressed in civilian clothes, caught up to the suspect, got off his motorcycle, and assumed a crouched position. The suspect shot Tibbie three times and ran, evading the other officers. Tibbie died that afternoon.
Blackledge described the suspect as 25-30 years old, with straight, short, light brown hair of about collar length, a heavy build, a slightly tanned complexion, and a “mellow” Irish accent. Wilson estimated the suspect’s height at five feet ten inches. He offered a description of the suspect that differed in only two respects from Black-ledge’s. Wilson described the suspect as slimly built, and said he had dark brown hair. Quinn speaks with an American accent but has been reputed to have assumed an Irish accent on occasion. He normally has a pale complexion. He has a slim build and dark brown hair.
On December 12, 1975, British police arrested Quinn’s alleged co-conspirators after [785]*785a six-day siege with hostages in a flat in London. In the flat they discovered, among other things, a revolver. Bullets fired from this revolver revealed rifling characteristics similar to those on the bullets recovered from Tibbie’s body.
Quinn’s alleged co-conspirators became known as the “Balcombe Street Four” during their trial under the British Prevention of Terrorism Act on charges stemming from their activity as members of an Active Service Unit (“ASU”) of the Provisional Irish Republican Army (“PIRA”), a more violent offshoot of the IRA. ASUs are small groups of PIRA members who conducted a series of violent actions in England, including bombings designed to pressure the British government into negotiating independence for Northern Ireland. Quinn’s alleged co-conspirators were tried in a special criminal court in London utilized only for prosecution of “political cases,” and the prosecution at their trial argued that the motive in setting the bombs was purely political.
On May 14, 1975, Constable Blackledge was taken to the Special Criminal Court in Dublin, where Quinn was appearing on the charge of being a member of the IRA. Blackledge pointed Quinn out to Rollo Watts of the Special Branch of New Scotland Yard and identified Quinn as the man who had shot Tibbie. On October 8, 1981, Watts was shown a photograph of Quinn taken in San Francisco on September 30, 1981, at the time of Quinn’s arrest by the FBI. Watts identified Quinn as the man that Blackledge had identified in Ireland six years earlier.
C. Decisions Under Review
After the United Kingdom formally requested Quinn’s extradition, a United States Magistrate conducted preliminary proceedings and a hearing to determine extraditability pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3184 (1982). Quinn contended that the conspiracy charge was time barred, that the evidence was insufficient to establish probable cause to believe he had committed the alleged crimes, and that all the offenses for which the United Kingdom seeks his extradition are “offenses of a political character” upon which extradition cannot be based. At the hearing, Quinn introduced evidence regarding activities of the IRA and the PIRA in Northern Ireland and in England that were designed to cause the overthrow of British rule in Northern Ireland. Quinn did not testify at the hearing or otherwise offer any evidence of his own motivation for his alleged participation in the charged crimes.
On September 29, 1982, the magistrate rejected Quinn’s defenses and issued a Certification of Extraditibility and Order of Committment to the Secretary of State. The magistrate held that in order to qualify for the protection afforded by the political offense exception, Quinn had to show three elements: that there was a violent political uprising, that he was a member of the uprising group, and that the crimes were committed in furtherance of the uprising. The magistrate concluded that there was a violent political uprising in the United Kingdom at the time of the alleged crimes sufficient to bring into play the political offense exception. However, he found that Quinn had not proved the other two elements of a political offense.
According to the magistrate, Quinn’s evidence of his membership in the IRA was of little weight since he had failed to demonstrate that he was a member of the PIRA or of the Active Service Unit that allegedly conducted the bombings. The magistrate also determined that Quinn failed to show that the charged crimes were “in furtherance of” PIRA political goals. According to the magistrate, because the ASUs often acted without guidance from superiors, their targets may have been chosen for personal reasons — such as spite or revenge — rather than out of political motivations. Second, the magistrate determined that the bombings could not be “in furtherance of” the uprising because there was no evidence that any hierarchy within the PIRA had considered their potential effectiveness in promoting the group’s political goals. Third, relying in part on Eain v. [786]*786Wilkes, 641 F.2d 504 (7th Cir.), cert. denied, 454 U.S. 894, 102 S.Ct. 390, 70 L.Ed.2d 208 (1981), the magistrate found that the bombings failed to meet the “direct link” test because they were directed at civilians rather than the government the IRA was attempting to displace and they did not take place in Northern Ireland. Quinn contended that the murder of Officer Tibbie was a political offense because it was motivated by the killer’s fear that, if captured, he would be questioned and forced to reveal information about PIRA activities. The magistrate rejected this argument as well, finding that the murder was motivated by a simple desire to escape capture.
Quinn filed a Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus commanding Glen E. Robinson, the United States Marshal, to release him.3 The district court did not address all of Quinn’s arguments4 because it determined that the offenses for which extradition is being sought are non-extraditable political offenses.5
In granting Quinn’s petition, the district court identified three legal errors in the magistrate’s analysis and found that the magistrate erred in its factual findings regarding Quinn’s membership in the PIRA and the killer’s motive for the Tibbie murder. First, the district court held that the magistrate was wrong in requiring Quinn to show, as a separate element, membership in an uprising group. Second, the district court concluded that the magistrate erred in imposing a requirement that the acts potentially be politically efficacious or directed by a hierarchy within the PIRA in order to meet the requirement of being “incidental to” the uprising. Third, the court disagreed with the magistrate’s application of Eain to this case, noting that the motive of the petitioner in Eain, a member of the Palestinian Liberation Organization (“PLO”), in bombing civilians was to drive them out of Israel. Here, in contrast, the court found that the motive was to influence the British government in its relationship with the PIRA and Northern Ireland and that the potential harm to civilians was merely a consequence of the activities designed to influence the government. As to the Tibbie murder, the district court determined that the magistrate erred in finding no political motive. Although it agreed that the killing was the result of an effort to avoid immediate capture, the court said that it was incidental to the uprising because Quinn was trying to avoid a capture that could lead to the discovery of the bomb factory.
II. JURISDICTION TO CONSIDER THE POLITICAL OFFENSE EXCEPTION
As it has in other recent extradition cases, see, e.g., In re Mackin, 668 F.2d 122 [787]*787(2d Cir.1981); Eain v. Wilkes, 641 F.2d 504 (7th Cir.), cert. denied, 454 U.S. 894, 102 S.Ct. 390, 70 L.Ed.2d 208 (1981), the government contends that both the magistrate and the district court lacked jurisdiction to determine whether the political offense exception bars extradition. According to the government, the language of both the jurisdictional statute and the treaty precludes a judicial determination of whether the exception applies. Moreover, the government contends, such a determination involves political questions that only the executive branch of the government can resolve. Like every court before us that has considered these arguments, see, e.g., Mackin, 668 F.2d at 135-37; Eain, 641 F.2d at 512-18; In re Ezeta, 62 F. 972, 996-97 (N.D.Cal.1894), and like those that have not explicitly considered them but have proceeded to determine whether the exception applies, see, e.g., Ornelas v. Ruiz, 161 U.S. 502, 510-12, 16 S.Ct. 689, 692-93, 40 L.Ed. 787 (1896); In re Doherty, 599 F.Supp. 270 (S.D.N.Y.1984), we believe the government’s contentions to be merit-less.
A. The Language of the Statute and the Treaty
The government contends that the jurisdictional statute, 18 U.S.C. § 3184, fails to authorize the magistrate to determine whether the political offense exception applies and that the treaty explicitly contemplates an executive branch resolution of the question. According to the government, section 3184’s command that the magistrate consider whether “the evidence [is] sufficient to sustain the charge under the provisions of the proper treaty” authorizes the magistrate to determine only whether there is probable cause to believe the accused committed the offense. The government further notes that the treaty calls for the “requested party” to determine if it regards the offense as one of a political character. See Treaty, supra p. 781, at art. V(l)(c)(ii). According to the. government, the term “requested party” refers to the Secretary of State, not the judiciary.
The government’s construction of both the statute and the treaty is in error. The “requested party” language has been used in treaties since at least the turn of the century, see Mackin, 668 F.2d at 132-33 (citing treaties), and has consistently been interpreted to refer to the country, not any particular branch of its government. The language does not undermine the well-established responsibility of the extradition magistrate — and the judiciary on habeas review — to determine whether the charged offense is or is not extraditable. Id.; Captan v. Vokes, 649 F.2d 1336, 1342-44 (9th Cir.1981); Eain, 641 F.2d at 517-18. The determination whether a crime is extraditable “under the provisions of the treaty” includes consideration of whether the crime is nonextraditable because it falls within the political offense exception. See Ezeta, 62 F. at 996-97. We fail to see how the magistrate could determine whether there is probable cause that the defendant committed an extraditable crime without determining whether the charged offense is one for which extradition is prohibited. Nor can we conclude in the absence of explicit language that Congress, in enacting 18 U.S.C. § 3184, intended to restrict the ability of the judiciary to carry out its role in protecting the liberty interests of individuals by requiring us to review extradition orders without considering all aspects of the pertinent question— whether there is probable cause to believe that the accused committed an extraditable offense.
B. The Political Question Doctrine
The government next argues that because three of the factors enumerated in Baker v. Carr, 369 U.S. 186, 217, 82 S.Ct. 691, 710, 7 L.Ed.2d 663 (1962), are present in this case, the judiciary should abstain, under the political question doctrine, from determining whether the political offense exception applies. The government contends that determining whether the exception applies requires a policy determination of a kind clearly inappropriate for the exercise of judicial discretion, that different [788]*788pronouncements from the executive and judiciary on matters necessary to a determination of the applicability of the exception could embarrass the government, and that the issue does not lend itself to resolution through judicially discoverable manageable standards. Other circuit courts have considered and rejected the precise arguments advanced by the government in this case. See Mackin, 668 F.2d at 132-37; Eain, 641 F.2d at 513-18; cf. Tel-Oren v. Libyan Arab Republic, 726 F.2d 774, 796-98 (D.C.Cir.1984) (Edwards, J., concurring) (political question doctrine is a very limited basis for nonjusticiability and does not bar review of a tort claim for damages consequent to terrorist activities), cert. denied, — U.S. -, 105 S.Ct. 1354, 84 L.Ed.2d 377 (1985). But see id. at 826 (Robb, J., concurring) (“[TJhere is simply ‘no justiciable standard to the political offense.’ ”) (quoting Extradition Reform Act of 1981: Hearings on H.R.5227 Before the Subcommittee on Crime of the House Committee on the Judiciary, 97th Cong., 2d Sess. 24-25 (testimony of Roger Olson, Deputy Assistant Attorney General, Criminal Division, U.S. Department of Justice)). Like these courts, we recognize the executive branch’s interest in matters that touch on foreign policy. However, as did Judge Friendly in Mackin, 668 F.2d at 134, we also recognize the individual liberty concerns at stake in cases of this nature and note the Supreme Court’s long accepted conclusion that “extradition without an unbiased hearing before an independent judiciary ... [is] highly dangerous to liberty, and ought never to be allowed in this country.” In re Kaine, 55 U.S. (14 How.) 103, 112, 14 L.Ed. 345 (1852).
In identifying the specific Baker v. Carr factors that it claims are present in this case, the government begins by noting that in order to consider whether the political offense exception applies, a court must determine whether a political uprising was in progress in the foreign land when the offense occurred. See infra p. 797. The government contends that such a factual finding requires a policy determination. We disagree. We need not determine whether the uprising was “justified” or was motivated by political forces of which we approve.6 Rather, we must determine simply whether an uprising was in progress. “The existence of a violent political uprising is an issue of past fact: either there was demonstrable, violent activity tied to political causes or there was not.” Eain, 641 F.2d at 514. Furthermore, like the Seventh Circuit, we believe that even if unique, sensitive information that is available to the State Department bears on this factual issue, there are adequate mechanisms — such as in camera disclosure — for ensuring that the material can be produced for judicial consideration. See id. at 514-15.
The government also contends that the presence of a second factor enumerated in Baker v. Carr counsels judicial abstention. The government argues that a judicial determination that Quinn’s extradition is precluded by the political offense exception would “recognize” political terrorists and would thus constitute a potentially embarrassing pronouncement different than the pronouncements of the executive branch. Like the Seventh Circuit, see Eain, 641 F.2d at 515, we do not believe the executive branch has refused to recognize the existence of terrorists. Rather, in some cases, it may have refused to recognize the legitimacy of these groups. We fail to see why a judicial acknowledgment that terrorist groups exist would constitute a “recognition” of those groups in the sense of legitimizing their actions. Cf. Tel-Oren, 726 F.2d at 822 (Bork, J., concurring) (noting that judicial acknowledgment of effect of PLO on the foreign relations of the United States does not grant the PLO any form of “official recognition” and is similar to the executive branch’s commenting on the sub[789]*789ject of the PLO while continuing to maintain that the group is not deserving of recognition).
Far from embarrassing the executive branch, assigning to the judiciary the responsibility for determining when the exception applies actually affords a degree of protection to the executive branch. As a political branch, the executive could face undue pressure when public and international opposition to the activities of an unpopular group create conflicts with the treaty obligation created by the political offense exception. See Epps, supra p. 4, at 84 (“[T]he requesting state is much more likely to be irate if a court deems the fugitive extraditable but the executive reverses that decision.”); cf. Eain, 641 F.2d at 513 (assignment of this determination to judiciary allows executive branch to avoid risk of political and economic sanctions that could result from discretionary executive refusal to extradite) (quoting Lubet & Czackes, supra p. 3, at 200; citing I.A. Shearer, Extradition in International Law 192 (1971); Note, Bringing the Terrorist to Justice: A Domestic Law Approach, 11 Cornell Int’l L.J. 71, 74 (1978)). By assigning the initial determination of when the exception applies to the impartial judiciary — particularly life-tenured Article III judges — Congress has substantially lessened the risk that majoritarian consensus or favor due or not due to the country seeking extradition will interfere with individual liberty. See C. Van den Wijngaert, The Political Offense Exception to Extradition 100 (1980) (“[Administrative decisions with respect to extradition are much more likely to be influenced by political elements than the decisions of the courts.”). The treaty’s assignment to the judiciary of the task of determining the applicability of the political offense excep-. tion “reflects a congressional judgment that that decision not be made on the basis of what may be the current view of any one political administration.” In re Doherty, 599 F.Supp. 270, 277 n. 6 (S.D.N.Y.1984).7
Nor does the assignment to the judiciary of the initial determination of the applicability of the political offense exception deprive the executive branch of all discretion to determine that a person claiming the protection of that exception should not be extradited. The executive branch has the ultimate authority to decide whether to extradite the accused after a judicial determination that the individual is, in fact, extraditable. Eain, 641 F.2d at 516 (citing In re Ezeta, 62 F. 972 (N.D.Cal.1894)); 18 U.S.C. § 3186 (1982). Although the Secretary of State’s authority to refuse extradition is presumably constrained by our treaty obligations, the contours of executive branch discretion in this area have never been expressly delineated. Bassiouni, supra p. 4, at 756 ([“TJhe statute should probably be interpreted to grant the Secretary only limited discretion to differ from the courts in the matter of treaty interpretation. In fact, the Secretary has always based his refusal to surrender upon a determination that the treaty did not require extradition in that instance____ [T]he Secretary apparently considers his discretion only coextensive with the issues presentable at the extradition proceedings ... [and] has refused surrender infrequently (only twice between 1940 and 1960)____”). Nevertheless, it is clear that the Secretary of State has sole discretion to determine whether a request for extradition should be denied because it is a subterfuge made for the purpose of punishing the accused for a political crime, see In re Lincoln, 228 F. 70 (E.D.N.Y.1915), aff'd, 241 U.S. 651, 36 S.Ct. [790]*790721, 60 L.Ed. 1222 (1916) (per curiam), or to refuse extradition on humanitarian grounds because of the procedures or treatment that await a surrendered fugitive, Arnbjornsdottir-Mendler v. United States, 721 F.2d 679, 683 (9th Cir.1983); Escobedo v. United States, 623 F.2d 1098, 1105 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 449 U.S. 1036, 101 S.Ct. 612, 66 L.Ed.2d 497 (1980); 18 U.S.C. § 3186 (1982).
Finally, the government points out the difficulty of defining which offenses are of a political character. It suggests that this difficulty demonstrates an absence of judicially discoverable manageable standards, another factor that, according to Baker v. Carr, counsels for judicial abstention. As in many areas of the law, and as we discuss further in the remainder of this opinion, there has always been debate about the precise contours of the political offense exception. But the absence of perfect predictive ability in discerning whether a given act falls within the exception is not synonymous with an absence of manageable standards. Rather, as with other complex legal problems, the basic standards that guide us in deciding whether the exception applies are refined on a case-by-case basis as new situations arise. The determination whether there was a violent political disturbance in the requesting country at the time of the alleged acts and whether the acts were incidental to the disturbance, see infra pp. 806-10, are mixed questions of law and fact, see Ornelas v. Ruiz, 161 U.S. 502, 509, 16 S.Ct. 689, 691, 40 L.Ed. 787 (1896), that do not require a political judgment. See Eain, 641 F.2d at 516. We fail to see how the judicial construction of 18 U.S.C. § 3184 and the applicable treaty, and the application of these laws to the facts of a given case, differs from all other judicial decisionmaking.
As the Supreme Court noted in Baker v. Carr, “it is error to suppose that every case or controversy which touches foreign relations lies beyond judicial cognizance.” 369 U.S. at 211, 82 S.Ct. at 706-07.8 The magistrate properly considered the applicability of the political offense exception to the offenses charged against Quinn, and we as well have a responsibility to construe the treaty and to determine whether “it provides the answer.” Id. at 212, 82 S.Ct. at 707.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
A. District Court Review of The Magistrate’s Order
The scope of the district court’s review of a magistrate’s extradition order on a petition for writ of habeas corpus is limited to “whether the magistrate had jurisdiction, whether the offence [sic] charged is within the treaty and, by a somewhat liberal extension, whether there was any evidence warranting the finding that there was reasonable ground to believe the accused guilty.” Fernandez v. Phillips, 268 U.S. 311, 312, 45 S.Ct. 541, 542, 69 L.Ed. 970 (1925); accord Zanazanian v. United States, 729 F.2d 624, 626 (9th Cir.1984). Preliminarily, the magistrate must determine, and the court must review whether the extradition treaty was in effect and applicable to the case and whether the person named in the complaint is the individual before the magistrate. See Ivancevic v. Artukovic, 211 F.2d 565 (9th Cir.), cert. denied, 348 U.S. 818, 75 S.Ct. 28, 99 L.Ed. 645 (1954). As discussed supra Section II., [791]*791the political offense question is reviewable on habeas corpus as part of the question of whether the offense charged is within the treaty. See Eain, 641 F.2d at 513-18.
The question whether the offense comes within the treaty ordinarily involves a determination of whether it is listed as an extraditable crime and whether the conduct is illegal in both countries, Factor v. Laubenheimer, 290 U.S. 276, 54 S.Ct. 191, 78 L.Ed. 315 (1933); see supra p. 782-83; these are purely legal questions that the habeas court may review de novo. Kamrin v. United States, 725 F.2d 1225 (9th Cir.1984); Cucuzzella v. Keliikoa, 638 F.2d 105 (9th Cir.1981). Purely factual questions in extradition cases are reviewed under the clearly erroneous standard. See, e.g., Captan v. Vokes, 649 F.2d 1336, 1342 (9th Cir.1981) (finding that accused was a fugitive reviewed under clearly erroneous standard). The magistrate’s probable cause determination “serve[s] only the narrow function of indicating those items of submitted evidence on which the decision to certify extradition is based.” Caplan v. Vokes, 649 F.2d at 1342 n. 10. Because the magistrate’s probable cause finding is thus not a finding of fact “in the sense that the court has weighed the evidence and resolved disputed factual issues,” id., it must be upheld if there is any competent evidence in the record to support it. See Fernandez, 268 U.S. at 312, 45 S.Ct. at 542; Zanazanian, 729 F.2d at 626; Valencia v. Limbs, 655 F.2d 195, 197 (9th Cir.1981).
The political offense issue, in contrast to the determinations discussed above, is a mixed question of law and fact. See Ornelas v. Ruiz, 161 U.S. at 509, 16 S.Ct. at 691. Accordingly, the district court must review the magistrate’s determination on this issue in the same manner that an appellate court reviews a district court’s findings on mixed fact and law questions. Review of the application of law to fact depends on whether the determination is “essentially factual” — in which case it is reviewed under the clearly erroneous standard, United States v. McConney, 728 F.2d 1195, 1203 (9th Cir.) (en banc), cert. denied, — U.S.-, 105 S.Ct. 101, 83 L.Ed.2d 46 (1984) — or whether it requires the court to consider “legal concepts in the mix of fact and law and to exercise judgment about values that animate legal principles” — in which case the issue is reviewed de novo, id. at 1199-1204. Accordingly, a district court must review the magistrate’s purely factual findings underlying the application of the political offense exception under the clearly erroneous standard, while the mixed determinations at issue — such as the question whether the crime was incidental to a political uprising — must be reviewed de novo
B. Appellate Review of the District Court’s Decision
As discussed supra Section I.B., the district court disagreed with some of the magistrate’s factual findings and legal determinations, as well as its ultimate conclusion on the mixed questions of whether the charged crimes were political offenses. There is no question that we review the [792]*792legal questions and mixed questions de novo. McConney, 728 F.2d at 1199-1204. Quinn contends, however, that we should uphold the district court's factual findings unless they are clearly erroneous, while the government urges us to defer to the factual findings made by the magistrate unless they are clearly erroneous. In support of his argument, Quinn contends that Hooker v. Klein, 573 F.2d 1360 (9th Cir.), cert. denied, 439 U.S. 932, 99 S.Ct. 323, 58 L.Ed.2d 327 (1978), requires us to focus on “the findings of fact and conclusions of law made by the district court in granting or denying habeas relief.” See id. at 1368. In that case, however, the habeas court affirmed the extradition court10 without making specific findings. We focused on the findings of the court that had ordered extradition, which were adopted by the district court that heard the petition for writ of habeas corpus. See also Caplan v. Vokes, 649 F.2d 1336 (9th Cir.1981) (clearly erroneous standard applied to factual findings of district court that had both ordered extradition and denied petition for habeas corpus).
It would make little sense for us to ignore the factual findings of the judicial tribunal that made the initial factual determinations and defer, instead, to the differing factual findings made by a similar tribunal that merely reviewed the record of the earlier proceedings and held no evidentiary hearing of its own. Rather, we must determine whether the habeas court erred, as a matter of law, in overruling the magistrate’s factual findings. Accordingly, we will defer to the extradition tribunal’s factual findings unless we agree with the district court that they are clearly erroneous.
IV. THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE POLITICAL OFFENSE EXCEPTION
A. Origin of the Exception
The first-known extradition treaty was negotiated between an Egyptian Pharaoh and a Hittite King in the Thirteenth Century B.C. See I.A. Shearer, supra p. 22, at 5. However, the concept of political offenses as an exception to extradition is a rather recent development. In the centuries after the first known extradition treaty, and throughout the Middle Ages, extradition treaties were used primarily to return political offenders, rather than the perpetrators of common crimes, to the nations seeking to try them for criminal acts. See I.A. Shearer, supra p. 22, at 166; Recent Decisions, The Political Offense Exception to Extradition: A 19th Century British Standard in 20th Century American Courts, 59 Notre Dame L.Rev. 1005, 1008 (1984) [hereinafter cited as 20th Century American Courts ]. It was not until the early nineteenth century that the political offense exception, now almost universally accepted in extradition law, was incorporated into treaties.
The French and American revolutions had a significant impact on the development of the concept of justified political resistance, see Declaration des droits de l’homme et du Citoyen du 26 aout 1789, art. 2 (Fr.), incorporated as La preamble de la Constitution de 1791 (Fr.), reprinted in Les Constitutions de la France Depuis 1789, at 33, 33 (S. Godechot ed. 1970) (declaring as an inalienable right “la resistance a l’oppression”); La Constitution de 1793, art. 120 (Fr.), reprinted in Les Constitutions de la France Depuis 1789, supra, at 79, 91 (France “donne asile aux etrangers bannis de leur patrie pour la cause de la liberte.”); The Declaration of Independence para. 1 (U.S.1776) (“[Wjhenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it____”), as did the political philosophers of the time, see J. Locke, The Second Treatise of Civil Government ch. XIX (T. Cook ed. 1947); J.S. Mill, On Liberty and Considerations on Representative Government (R. McCallum ed. 1948). In [793]*7931834, France introduced the political offense exception into its treaties, see I.A. Shearer, supra p. 22, at 166-67, and by the 1850’s it had become a general principle of international law incorporated in the extradition treaties of Belgium, England, and the United States as well. See C. Van den Wijngaert, supra p. 22, at 5-14; Epps, supra p. 4, at 62-63.
The political offense exception is premised on a number of justifications. First, its historical development suggests that it is grounded in a belief that individuals have a “right to resort to political activism to foster political change.” Note, American Courts and Modem Terrorism: The Politics of Extradition, 13 N.Y.U.J.Int’l L. & Pol. 617, 622 (1981) [hereinafter cited as Politics of Extradition ]; see also In re Doherty, 599 F.Supp. 270, 275 n. 4 (S.D.N.Y.1984) (“The concept was first enunciated during an era when there was much concern for and sympathy in England for the cause of liberation for subjugated peoples.”) (citation omitted). This justification is consistent with the modern consensus that political crimes have greater legitimacy than common crimes. Politics of Extradition, supra p. 31, at 623. Second, the exception reflects a concern that individuals — particularly unsuccessful rebels— should not be returned to countries where they may be subjected to unfair trials and punishments because of their political opinions. See M. Bassiouni, International Extradition and World Public Order 425 (1974); C. Van den Wijngaert, supra p. 22, at 3; Garcia-Mora, supra p. 3, at 1226, 1238. Third, the exception comports with the notion that governments — and certainly their nonpolitical branches — should not intervene in the internal political struggles of other nations. See C. Van den Wijngaert, supra p. 22, at 3, 158, 204; Politics of Extradition, supra p. 31, at 622.11
B. Comparative Legal Standards
None of the political offense provisions in treaties includes a definition of the word “political.” I.A. Shearer, supra p. 22, at 168. Thus, the term “political offense” has received various interpretations by courts since the mid-nineteenth century. GarciaMora, supra, p. 3 at 1230-31; Wise, Book Review, 30 Am.J.Comp.L. 362, 363 (1982) (reviewing C. Van den Wijngaert, The Political Offense Exception to Extradition (1980)); cf. M. Bassiouni, supra p. 32, at 371-72 (inability to define precisely the term “political offense” promotes a necessary flexibility of the concept). Not every offense that is politically motivated falls within the exception. Instead, courts have devised various tests to identify those offenses that comport with the justifications for the exception and that, accordingly, are not extraditable.
Within the confusion about definitions it is fairly well accepted that there are two distinct categories of political offenses: “pure political offenses” and “relative political offenses.” See Karadzole v. Artukovic, 247 F.2d 198, 203 (9th Cir.1957), vacated, 355 U.S. 393, 78 S.Ct. 381, 2 L.Ed.2d 356 (1958) (mem.); see generally Garcia-Mora, supra p. 3, at 1230; 20th Century American Courts, supra p. 30, at 1009. Pure political offenses are acts aimed directly at the government, see Lubet & Czackes, supra p. 3, at 200, and have none of the elements of ordinary crimes, GarciaMora, supra p. 3, at 1230. These offenses, which include treason, sedition, and espionage, Garcia-Mora, supra p. 3, at 1234; Lubet & Czackes, supra p. 3, at 200, do not violate the private rights of individuals, [794]*794Garcia-Mora, supra p. 3, at 1237. Because they are frequently specifically excluded from the list of extraditable crimes given in a treaty, see 20th Century American Courts, supra p. 30, at 1009, courts seldom deal with whether these offenses are extraditable, see id., and it is generally agreed that they are not, see Lubet & Czackes, supra p. 3, at 200 (citing In re Ezeta, 62 F. 972 (1894)).
The definitional problems focus around the second category of political offenses— the relative political offenses. These include “otherwise common crimes committed in connection with a political act,” Lu-bet & Czackes, supra p. 3, at 200, or “common crimes ... committed for political motives or in a, political context,” 20th Century American Courts, supra p. 30, at 1009. Courts have developed various tests for ascertaining whether “the nexus between the crime and the political act is sufficiently close ... [for the crime to be deemed] not extraditable.” Lubet & Czackes, supra p. 3, at 200. The judicial approaches can be grouped into three distinct categories: (1) the French “objective” test; (2) the Swiss “proportionality” or “predominance” test; and (3) the Anglo-American “incidence” test. See generally Carbonneau, The Political Offense Exception to Extradition and Transnational Terrorists: Old Doctrine Reformulated and New Norms Created, 1 Assoc, of Student Int’l L. Societies Int’l L.J. 1, 11-31 (1977); Garcia-Mora, supra p. 3, at 1239-56; 20th Century American Courts, supra p. 30, at 1009-17. More recent developments allow for further distinctions between the British test and the test employed in the United States. See generally Lubet & Czackes, supra p. 3, at 201-10.
The early French test, most clearly represented in In re Giovanni Gatti, [1947] Ann.Dig. 145 (No. 70) (France, Ct.App. of Grenoble)! considered an offense non-extraditable only if it directly injured the rights of the state. See 20th Century American Courts, supra p. 30, at 1010. Applying this rigid formula, French courts refused to consider the motives of the accused. Garcia-Mora, supra p. 3, at 1249-50. The test primarily protects only pure political offenses, see id. at 1235-36 (discussing cases), and is useless in attempts to define whether an otherwise common crime should not be extraditable because it is connected with a political act, motive, or context. Id. at 1252. Because politically motivated and directed acts may injure private as well as state rights, the objective test fails to satisfy the various purposes of the political offense exception. Politics of Extradition, supra p. 31, at 629-30. Nevertheless, this test has one benefit: because it is so limited, it is not subject to abuse; perpetrators of common crimes will not be protected because of alleged political motivations. Id. at 630; Garcia-Mora, supra p. 3, at 1251.12
In contrast to the traditional French test, Swiss courts apply a test that protects both pure and relative political offenses. The Swiss test examines the political motivation of the offender, see Garcia-Mora, supra p. 3, at 1251, but also requires (a) a consideration of the circumstances surrounding the commission of the crime, see Carbonneau, supra p. 34, at 23-26, and (b) either a proportionality between the means and the political ends, see 20th Century American Courts, supra p. 30, at 1010-11, or a predominance of the political elements over the common crime elements, see Garcia-Mora, supra p. 3, at 1254.
At least one commentator has suggested that the first condition of the Swiss test is a requirement of a direct connection between the crime and the political goal — a condition that essentially requires the pres-' ence of a political movement. See GarciaMora, supra p. 3, at 1253 (citing Swiss cases). Others point out that the early [795]*795Swiss requirement that a crime be incident to a political movement has been explicitly rejected in later cases. See, e.g., Carbonneau, supra p. 34, at 26-28 (citing Swiss cases). More recent Swiss cases concentrate less on the accused’s motive, relying instead almost entirely on an ends-means test under which politically motivated conduct is protected by the exception only if the danger created by the conduct is proportionate to the objectives, i.e., if the means employed are the only means of accomplishing the end and the interests at stake are sufficiently important to justify the danger and harm to others. See Carbonneau, supra p. 34, at 28-29 (citing Swiss cases).
The comprehensiveness and flexibility of the “predominance” or “proportionality” test allows it to be conformed to changing realities of a modern world. See GarciaMora, supra p. 3, at 1255. But because the relative value of the ends and the necessity of using the chosen means must be considered, the criteria applied by Swiss courts incorporate highly subjective and partisan political considerations within the balancing test. See C. Van den Wijngaert, supra p. 22, at 158; Politics of Extradition, supra p. 31, at 631.13 The test explicitly requires an evaluation of the importance of the interests at stake, the desirability of political change, and the acceptability of the means used to achieve the ends. The infusion of ideological factors in the determination which offenses are non-extraditable threatens both the humanitarian objectives underlying the exception and the concern about foreign non-intervention in domestic political struggles. Moreover, it severely undermines the notion that such determinations can be made by an apolitical, unbiased judiciary concerned primarily with individual liberty. See supra pp. 788-89.14
The “incidence” test that is used to define a non-extraditable political offense in the United States and Great Britain was first set forth by the Divisional Court in In re Castioni, [1891] 1 Q.B. 149 (1890). In that case, the Swiss government requested that Great Britain extradite a Swiss citizen who, with a group of other angry citizens, had stormed the palace gates and killed a government official in the process. Id. at 150-51. Castioni did not know the victim or have a personal grudge against him. The habeas court considered:
[W]hether, upon the facts, it is clear that the man was acting as one of a number of persons engaged in' acts of violence of a political character with a political object, and as part of the political movement and [up]rising in which he was taking part.
[796]*796Id. at 159 (per Denman, J.). The court denied extradition, finding that Castioni’s actions were “incidental to and formed a part of political disturbances,” id. at 166 (per Hawkins, J.), and holding that common crimes committed “in the course” and “in the furtherance” of a political disturbance would be treated as political offenses, id. at 156 (per Denman, J.).
Although both the United States and Great Britain rely explicitly on Castioni, each has developed its own version of the incidence test. British courts proceeded first to narrow the exception in 1894. In In re Meunier, [1894] 2 Q.B. 415, the court extradited a French anarchist charged with bombing a cafe and military barracks, id. at 415, concluding that anarchist action is not incident to a two-party struggle for political power, id. at 419 (per Cave, J.). The court held that the political offense exception protects those who seek to substitute one form of government for another, not those whose actions disrupt the social order and whose “efforts are directed primarily against the general body of citizens.” Id.
The rigid “two-party struggle” requirement of the British incidence test has not survived. More recently, British courts have taken other factors into account, noting that political offenses must be considered “according to the circumstances existing at the time.” Regina v. Governor of Brixton Prison (ex parte Kolczynski), [1955] 1 Q.B. 540, 549 (1954) (per Cassels, J.). In Kolczynski, a British court refused to extradite Polish soldiers who were at risk of being punished for treason although the Polish government officially sought their extradition for common crimes. See id. at 543, 545. No political uprising existed at the time the crimes were committed. Id. at 544. Instead of a distinct uprising, the new British incidence test requires some “political opposition ... between fugitive and requesting State,” Schtraks v. Government of Israel, [1964] A.C. 556, 591 (1962) (per Viscount Radcliffe), and incorporates an examination of the motives of the accused and the requesting country in those situations in which the offense is not part of an uprising, see Lubet & Czackes, supra p. 3, at 202-03.15
C. Original Formulation of the United States Incidence Test
The United States, in contrast to Great Britain, has adhered more closely to the Castioni test in determining whether conduct is protected by the political offense exception. The seminal United States case in this area is In re Ezeta, 62 F. 972 (N.D.Cal.1894), in which the Salvadoran government requested the extradition of a number of individuals accused of murder and robbery. The fugitives maintained that the crimes had been committed while they unsuccessfully attempted to thwart a revolution. See id. at 995. Extradition was denied because the acts were “committed during the progress of actual hostilities between contending forces,” id. at 997, and were “closely identified” with the uprising “in an unsuccessful effort to suppress it,” id. at 1002. However, an alleged act that occurred four months prior to the start of armed violence was held not to be protected by the incidence test despite the accused’s contention that El Salvador’s extradition request was politically motivated. Id. at 986.16
[797]*797As we noted at the outset, the Supreme Court has addressed the political offense issue only once. In Ornelas v. Ruiz, 161 U.S. 502, 16 S.Ct. 689, 40 L.Ed. 787 (1896), Mexico sought the extradition of an individual for murder, arson, robbery, and kidnapping committed in a Mexican border town, at or about the time revolutionary activity was in progress. Id. at 510, 16 S.Ct. at 692. The Court allowed extradition on the basis that the habeas court had applied an improper, non-deferential standard of review to the extradition court’s findings. Id. at 511-12,16 S.Ct. at 692-93. It continued by listing four factors pertinent to the political offense inquiry in the case: (1) the character of the foray; (2) the mode of attack; (3) the persons killed or captured; and (4) the kind of property taken or destroyed. Id. at 511, 16 S.Ct. at 692. It found that although the raid (in December 1892) may have been contemporaneous with a revolutionary movement (in 1891), it was not of a political character because it was essentially unrelated to the uprising. The Court noted that the purported political aspects of the crimes were negated “by the fact that immediately after this occurrence, though no superior armed force of the Mexican government was in the vicinity to hinder their advance into the country, the bandits withdrew with their booty across the river into Texas.” Id.
Since Ornelas, lower American courts have continued to apply the incidence test set forth in Castioni and Ezeta with its two-fold requirement: (1) the occurrence of an uprising or other violent political disturbance 17 at the time of the charged offense, see, e.g., Garcia-Guillem v. United States, 450 F.2d 1189, 1192 (5th Cir.1971), cert. denied, 405 U.S. 989, 92 S.Ct. 1251, 13 L.Ed.2d 455 (1972); Ramos v. Diaz, 179 F.Supp. 459, 462 (S.D.Fla.1959),18 and (2) a charged offense that is “incidental to” “in the course of," or “in furtherance of” the uprising, see, e.g., Eain, 641 F.2d at 518; Sindona v. Grant, 619 F.2d 167, 173 (2d Cir.1980); Garcia-Guillem, 450 F.2d at 1192. While the American view that an uprising must exist is more restrictive than the modern British view and while we, unlike the British, remain hesitant to consider the motives of the accused or the requesting state, see Lubet & Czackes, supra p. 3, at 203, 205, American courts have been rather liberal in their construction of the requirement that the act be “incidental to” an uprising, see Garcia-Mora, supra p. 3, at 1244.
The American approach has been criticized as being “both underinclusive and overinclusive,” see Lubet & Czackes, supra p. 3, at 203, and as “yielding] anomalous ... results,” see 20th Century American Courts, supra p. 30, at 1013-14. Although these criticisms have some merit, neither flaw in the American incidence test is serious. Some commentators have suggested that the test is underinclusive because it exempts from judicially guaranteed protection all offenses that are not contemporaneous with an uprising even though the acts [798]*798may represent legitímate political resistance. See, e.g., Lubet & Czackes, supra p. 3, at 203-04. For example, the attempted kidnapping of a Cuban consul, allegedly for the purpose of ransoming the consul for political prisoners held in Cuba, was held by a court not to be a political offense because the act was not “committed in the course of and incidental to a violent political disturbance.” Escobedo v. United States, 623 F.2d 1098, 1104 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 449 U.S. 1036, 101 S.Ct. 612, 66 L.Ed.2d 497 (1980).
There are several responses to the charge of underinclusiveness. First, in their critiques, the commentators fail to give sufficient weight to the existence of a number of ameliorative safeguards. For example, review of certifications of extradition by the Secretary of State, see supra pp. 789-90, serves partially to remedy any underinclusiveness problem. If a court finds the accused extraditable, the Secretary has, at the very least, broad discretion to review the available record and conduct a de novo examination of the issues and, if necessary, to consider matters outside the record in determining whether to extradite. See Lubet & Czackes, supra p. 3, at 199. The potential underinclusiveness dangers of the uprising requirement are also mitigated by the fact that purely political offenses are never extraditable. See id. at 206; supra pp. 793-94. Additionally, because of the rule of dual criminality, see supra pp. 782-83, individuals accused of offenses that constitute protected activity under the First Amendment will not be extradited. See Lubet & Czackes, supra p. 3, at 206. Second, it is questionable whether the incidence test is, in fact, underinclusive. While it does not protect all politically motivated offenses, it protects those acts that are related to a collective attempt to abolish or alter the government — the form of political offense that the exception was initially designed to protect, see supra pp. 792-93. Third, any effort to jprotect all crimes that are in some way politically motivated would either require the abandonment of the objective test for determining which offenses fall within the exception— in our view a most undesirable result — or would result in the protection of innumerable crimes that fall far outside the original purposes underlying the exception.
A number of commentators suggest, on the other hand, that the American test is overbroad because it makes non-extraditable some offenses that are not of a political character merely because the crimes took place contemporaneously with an uprising. See Garcia-Mora, supra p. 3, at 1246; Lu-bet & Czackes, supra p. 3, at 205; Politics of Extradition, supra p. 31, at 628. We think these commentators misunderstand the test. They all cite Karadzole v. Artukovic, 2A1 F.2d 198 (9th Cir.1957) — “one of the most roundly criticized cases in the history of American extradition jurisprudence,” Eain v. Wilkes, 641 F.2d 504, 522 (7th Cir.), cert. denied, 454 U.S. 894, 102 S.Ct. 390, 70 L.Ed.2d 208 (1981) — to support their argument.19 In Artukovic, the [799]*799Yugoslavian government sought the extradition of a former Minister of the Interior of the puppet Croatian government which took over a portion of Yugoslavia following the German invasion in April 1941. Artukovie was charged with directing the murder of hundreds of thousands of civilians in concentration camps between April 1941 and October 1942. Prior to a hearing by an extradition magistrate, the district court granted habeas relief, concluding that the charged offenses were non-extraditable political offenses. Artukovic v. Boyle, 140 F.Supp. 245, 246 (S.D.Cal.1956). We affirmed, applying the Castioni language and noting that the offenses occurred during the German invasion of Yugoslavia and subsequent establishment of Croatia. Karadzole v. Artukovic, 247 F.2d 198, 202-04 (9th Cir.1957). We considered but were unpersuaded by the argument that because war crimes are so barbaric and atrocious they cannot be considered political crimes, see id. at 204, and that United Nations resolutions called for the extradition of war criminals, see id. at 205.
The Supreme Court vacated our opinion in a one paragraph per curiam opinion and remanded for an extradition hearing pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3184. See 355 U.S. 393 (1958). The Court did not comment on the substantive issues and may well have based its order solely on the fact that the habeas court considered the legal questions involved in Artukovic’s extradition before an extradition court had an opportunity to make the preliminary findings mandated by section 3184. See United States v. Artukovic, 170 F.Supp. 383, 393 (S.D.Cal.1959). In his subsequent decision the magistrate denied extradition on the ground that there was insufficient evidence to establish probable cause of Artukovic’s guilt, see id. at 392, but in dicta he adopted our vacated political offense analysis, see id. at 393.20
We do not believe that Artukovic adequately supports the commentators’ suggestion that the incidence test is overinclusive. We think it more likely that the problem lies not in the test itself but in the fact that we erred by applying it in that case.
The offenses with which Artukovic was charged fall within that very limited category of acts which have been labeled “crimes against humanity.” In Artukovic we erroneously assumed that “crimes against humanity” was synonymous with “war crimes,” and then concluded in a somewhat irrelevant fashion that not all war crimes automatically fall outside the ambit of the political offense exception. See 247 F.2d at 204. Our analysis was less than persuasive. We did not need then, and do not need now, to reach a conclusion about whether all war crimes fall outside the bounds of the exception. Cf. C. Van den Wijngaert, supra p. 22, at 143 (suggesting that, under international law, states remain free to consider war crimes as political offenses). The offenses with which Artukovic was charged were crimes against humanity; it matters not whether or not they were also war crimes; either way, crimes of that magnitude are not protected by the exception.
Crimes against humanity, such as genocide, violate international law21 and consti[800]*800tute an “abuse of sovereignty” because, by definition, they are carried out by or with the toleration of authorities of a state.22 While some of the same offenses that violate the laws and customs of war23 are also crimes against humanity, crimes of the latter sort most notably include “murder, extermination, enslavement, ... or persecutions on political, racial or religious grounds ...” of entire racial, ethnic, national or religious groups. The Numberg (Nuremberg) Trial, 6 F.R.D. 69, 130 (Int’l Military Tribunal 1946). Various “inhumane acts ... committed after the beginning of [World War II] did not constitute war crimes, [but] ... constituted crimes against humanity.” Id. at 131.
Wholly aside from the Artukovic court’s confusion of “war crimes” and “crimes against humanity,” we do not believe that the political offense exception, even if meant to protect the acts of representatives of a former government,24 should have been extended to protect those [801]*801carrying out a governmental policy calling for acts of destruction whose “nature and scope ... exceeded human imagination,” Excerpts from Speech by German President, N.Y. Times, May 9, 1985, at 10, col. 1, 3 (excerpts from Speech to Parliament on May 8, 1985 by President Richard von Weizsacker, as translated by the West German Foreign Ministry) (noting that the Nazi genocide is “unparalled in history”). These crimes are simply treated differently and are generally excluded from the protection of many normally applicable rules. See, e.g., The Numberg (Nuremberg) Trial, 6 F.R.D. at 107-11 (individuals accused of these offenses can be tried before international tribunal because offenses violate international law). They are certainly in our view to be excluded from coverage under the political offense exception.
Accordingly, we do not consider the “underinclusiveness” and “overinclusiveness” problems of the incidence test to have been as severe as has been suggested by some of the commentators. Rather, we believe that the incidence test, when properly applied, has served the purposes and objectives of the political offense exception well. More recently, a number of courts have begun to question whether, in light of changing political practices and realities, we should continue to use the traditional American version of that test. They have suggested that basic modifications may be required and, specifically, that certain types of conduct engaged in by some contemporary insurgent groups, conduct that we in our society find unacceptable, should be excluded from coverage. For the reasons we explain below, we believe that the American test in its present form remains not only workable but desirable; that the most significant problems that concern those advocating changes in the test can be dealt with without making the changes they propose; and that efforts to modify the test along the lines suggested would plunge our judiciary into a political morass and require the type of subjective judgments we have so wisely avoided until now.
D. The Recent Political Offense Cases
Recently, the American judiciary has split almost evenly over whether the traditional American incidence test should be applied to new methods of political violence in two categories — domestic revolutionary violence and international terrorism — or whether fundamental new restrictions should be imposed on the use of the political offense exception.
In both In re McMullen, No. 3-78-1099 MG (N.D.Cal. May 11, 1979), and In re Mackin, No. 80 Cr. Mise. 1 (S.D.N.Y. Aug. 13, 1981), appeal dismissed, 668 F.2d 122 (2d Cir.1981), extradition magistrates applied the traditional United States incidence test despite expressing serious concern over the nature of the charged offenses. In McMullen, the United Kingdom sought the extradition of a former PIRA member accused of murder in connection with the bombing of a military barracks in England. Finding that McMullen’s acts took place during a state of uprising throughout the United Kingdom and were incidental to the political disturbance, the magistrate denied extradition noting that “[e]ven though the offense be deplorable and heinous, the criminal actor will be excluded from deportation if the crime is committed under these pre-requisites.” Slip op. at 3.25 The magistrate’s formulation of the test for the political offense exception in Mackin was similar.26 In that case, the United Kingdom’s request for the extradition of an IRA mem-
A [802]*802ber accused of murdering a British soldier in Northern Ireland was denied.27
In contrast, although asserting that the existing incidence test “is sufficiently flexible to avoid [the] abuses [noted by commentators],” 641 F.2d at 519, and while ostensibly applying the traditional test, see id. at 515-16, 518, the Seventh Circuit in Eain v. Wilkes, 641 F.2d 504 (7th Cir.), cert. denied, 454 U.S. 894, 102 S.Ct. 390, 70 L.Ed.2d 208 (1981), superimposed a number of limitations on the exception that had not previously been a part of United States law. Abu Eain, a resident of the occupied West Bank and a member of the PLO, was accused by the State of Israel of setting a bomb that exploded in the Israeli city of Tiberias in 1979, killing two boys and injuring more than thirty other people. A magistrate granted Israel’s extradition request, the district court denied habeas corpus relief, and the Seventh Circuit affirmed.
First, the Eain court distinguished between conflicts that involved “on-going, organized battles between contending armies,” 641 F.2d at 519, and conflicts that involved groups with “the dispersed nature of the PLO,” id., noting that in the former case, unlike the latter, a clear distinction can be drawn between the activities of the military forces and individual acts of violence. Second, although acknowledging that motivation is not determinative of the political character of an act, see id. at 520 (citing Lubet & Czackes, supra p. 3, at 203 n. 102), and characterizing its next requirement as that of a “direct link” between the offense and the conflict, id. at 521, the court examined the motivation for and political legitimacy of the act. The court appears to have concluded that, according to the evidence presented, the PLO’s objectives were not politically legitimate: the PLO sought changes in “the Israeli political structure as an incident of the expulsion of a certain population from the country,” id. at 520, and its activities were therefore more properly characterized as aimed at Israel’s “social structure” rather than its “political structure,” id. Third, the court held simply that regardless what the political objective is, “the indiscriminate bombing of a civilian population is not recognized as a protected political act.” Id. at 521.
Thus, the Seventh Circuit in Eain redefined an “uprising” as a struggle between organized, non-dispersed military forces; made a policy determination regarding the legitimacy of given political objectives;28 and excluded violent acts against innocent civilians29 from the protection afforded by the exception. Cf. Note, Terrorist Extradition and the Political Offense Exception: An Administrative Solution, 21 Va. J.Int’l L. 163, 177-78 (1980) (criticizing Eain magistrate’s test because it invites ideological and foreign policy determinations by extradition courts). As part of its justification for the new limitations it imposed on the applicability of the exception, the Eain court expressed concern that, in the absence of these restrictions,
nothing would prevent an influx of terrorists seeking a safe haven in America____ Terrorists who have committed [803]*803barbarous acts elsewhere would be able to flee to the United States and live in our neighborhoods and walk our streets forever free from any accountability for their acts. We do not need them in our society____ [T]he political offense exception ... should be applied with great care lest our country, become a social jungle—
Id. at 520.
The District Court for the Southern District of New York has recently rejected portions of the Eain analysis but accepted some of the new restrictions propounded by the Seventh Circuit. In In re Doherty, 599 F.Supp. 270 (S.D.N.Y.1984), the court denied the United Kingdom’s request that a PIRA member accused of attacking a convoy of British soldiers in Northern Ireland be extradited. The extradition court rejected the notion that the exception protects only “actual armed insurrections or more traditional and overt military hostilities.” Id. at 275. Noting that “political struggles have been ... effectively carried out by armed guerillas,” id., the court concluded that a dissident group’s likelihood of success and its ability to effect changes by other than violent means were not determinative factors. Id. Nevertheless, the court agreed with the Seventh Circuit's tacit conclusion that the traditional incidence test is “hardly consistent with ... the realities of the modern world,” id. at 274.
The Doherty court continued by approving of the Eain court’s willingness to balance policy considerations so that the exception “does not afford a haven for persons who commit the most heinous atrocities for political ends.” Id. at 275 n. 4. Although such issues were not raised in Doherty, the court stated explicitly that the exception would not protect bombings in public places, id. at 275; acts that “transcend the limits of international law,” id.; acts “inconsistent with international standards of civilized conduct,” id. at 274; harm to hostages, id. at 276; violations of the Geneva convention, id.; or the acts of “amorphous” or “fanatic” groups without structure, organization, or clearly defined political objectives, id. Thus, the Doherty court, like the Eain court, concluded that the traditional incidence test is insufficient to determine which offenses are protected by the exception. Both courts felt it necessary and appropriate to judge the political legitimacy of various ends and means and to exclude “illegitimate” acts from protection even if the incidence test were met. While not identifying their new limitations as such, both incorporated significant aspects of the Swiss ends-means or proportionality test into Anglo-American jurisprudence.
V. THE POLITICAL OFFENSE EXCEPTION AND THE REALITIES OF CONTEMPORARY POLITICAL STRUGGLES
A. The Political Reality: The Contours of Contemporary Revolutionary Activity
The recent lack of consensus among United States courts confronted with requests for the extradition of those accused of violent political acts committed outside the context of an organized military conflict reflects some confusion about the purposes underlying the political offense exception. See supra pp. 792-93. The premise of the analyses performed by modern courts favoring the adoption of new restrictions on the use of the exception is either that the objectives of revolutionary violence undertaken by dispersed forces and directed at civilians are by definition, not political, see, e.g., Eain, 641 F.2d at 519 (“Terrorist activity seeks to promote social chaos.”), or that, regardless of the actors’ objectives, the conduct is not politically legitimate because it “is inconsistent with international standards of civilized conduct,” Doherty, 599 F.Supp. at 274. Both assumptions are subject to debate.
A number of courts appear tacitly to accept a suggestion by some commentators that begins with the observation that the political offense exception can be traced to the rise of democratic governments. See I.A. Shearer, supra p. 22, at 166; C. Van den Wijngaert, supra p. 22, at 100; Car[804]*804bonneau, supra p. 34, at 5. Because of this origin, these commentators argue, the exception was only designed to protect the right to rebel against tyrannical governments, see e.g., Epps, supra p. 4, at 65, and should not be applied in an ideologically neutral fashion, see, e.g., Carbonneau, supra p. 34, at 44; see also In re Gonzales, 217 F.Supp. 717, 721 n. 9 (S.D.N.Y.1963) (evaluating whether acts in question “were blows struck in the cause of freedom against a repressive totalitarian regime”). But see C. Van den Wijngaert, supra p. 22, at 102 (noting that democratic states may also suppress political conduct in the guise of criminality).
These courts then proceed to apply the exception in a non-neutral fashion but, in doing so, focus on and explicitly reject only the tactics, rather than the true object of their concern, the political objectives. See C. Van den Wijngaert, supra p. 22, at 102. The courts that are narrowing the applicability of the exception in this manner appear to be moving beyond the role of an impartial judiciary by determining tacitly that particular political objectives are not “legitimate.”
We strongly believe that courts should not undertake such a task. The political offense test traditionally articulated by American courts, as well as the text of the treaty provisions, see, e.g., Treaty, supra p. 781, at art. V(l)(c), is ideologically neutral. We do not believe it appropriate to make qualitative judgments regarding a foreign government or a struggle designed to alter that government. Accord In re Doherty, 599 F.Supp. 270, 277 (S.D.N.Y.1984); see generally supra note 6. Such judgments themselves cannot be other than political and, as such, involve determinations of the sort that are not within the judicial role. See supra Section II.B.
A second premise may underlie the analyses of courts that appear to favor narrowing the exception, namely, that modern revolutionary tactics which include violence directed at civilians are not politically “legitimate.” This assumption, which may well constitute an understandable response to the recent rise of international terrorism, skews any political offense analysis because of an inherent conceptual shortcoming. In deciding what tactics are acceptable, we seek to impose on other nations and cultures our own traditional notions of how internal political struggles should be conducted.
The structure of societies and governments, the relationships between nations and their citizens, and the modes of altering political structures have changed dramatically since our courts first adopted the Castioni test. Neither wars nor revolutions are conducted in as clear-cut or mannerly a fashion as they once were. Both the nature of the acts committed in struggles for self-determination, see M. Bassiouni, International Extradition: United States Law & Practice, ch. VIII, at §§ 2-71 to 2-72, and the geographic location of those struggles have changed considerably since the time of the French and American revolutions. Now challenges by insurgent movements to the existing order take place most frequently in Third World countries rather than in Europe or North America. In contrast to the organized, clearly identifiable, armed forces of past revolutions, today’s struggles are often carried out by networks of individuals joined only by a common interest in opposing those in power.
It is understandable that Americans are offended by the tactics used by many of those seeking to change their governments. Often these tactics are employed by persons who do not share our cultural and social values or mores. Sometimes they are employed by those whose views of the nature, importance, or relevance of individual human life differ radically from ours. Nevertheless, it is not our place to impose our notions of civilized strife on people who are seeking to overthrow the regimes in control of their countries in contexts and circumstances that we have not experienced, and with which we can identify only with the greatest difficulty. It is the fact that the insurgents are seeking to change their governments that [805]*805makes the political offense exception applicable, not their reasons for wishing to do so or the nature of the acts by which they hope to accomplish that goal.
Politically motivated violence, carried out by dispersed forces and directed at private sector institutions, structures, or civilians, is often undertaken — like the more organized, better disciplined violence of preceeding revolutions — as part of an effort to gain the right to self-government. See Politics of Extradition, supra p. 31, at 632-33. We believe the tactics that are used in such internal political struggles are simply irrelevant to the question whether the political offense exception is applicable.
B. Relationship Between the Justifications for the Exception, the Incidence Test, and Contemporary Political Realities
One of the principal reasons our courts have had difficulty with the concept of affording certain contemporary revolutionary tactics the protection of the political offense exception is our fear and loathing of international terrorism. See, e.g., Eain, 641 F.2d at 520. The desire to exclude international terrorists from the the coverage of the political offense exception is a legitimate one; the United States unequivocally condemns all international terrorism.30 However, the restrictions that some courts have adopted in order to remove terrorist activities from coverage under the political offense exception are overbroad. As we have noted, not all politically-motivated violence undertaken by dispersed forces and directed at civilians is international terrorism and not all such activity should be exempted from the protection afforded by the exception.
Although it was not accepted as international law, the position of the United States, not only on international terrorism but also on the extradition of international terrorists, was made clear in 1972 when it introduced its Draft Convention on Terrorism in the United Nations. See U.N. Draft Convention for the Prevention and Punishment of Certain Acts of International Terrorism: United States Working Paper, U.N. Doc. A/C.6/L.850 (September 25, 1972), reprinted in 1 R. Friedlander, Terrorism: Documents of International and Local Control 487 (1979). The Draft Convention calls either for trial of international terrorists in the State where found or for their extradition. See id. at art. 3; see also 1984 Act to Combat International Terrorism § 201, Pub.L. 98-533, 96 Stat. 2706, 2709 (to be codified at 18 U.S.C. § 3077) (reaffirming United States’ position on the extradition of international terrorists).
The policy and legal considerations that underlie our responses to acts of international terrorism differ dramatically from those that form the basis for our attitudes toward violent acts committed as a part of other nations’ internal political struggles. The application of the political offense exception to acts of domestic political violence comports in every respect with both the original justifications for the exception and the traditional requirements of the incidence test.31 The application of that exception to acts of international terrorism would comport with neither. First, we doubt whether the designers of the exception contemplated that it would protect acts [806]*806of international violence, regardless of the ultimate objective of the actors. Second, in eases of international terrorism, we are being asked to return the accused to the government in the country where the acts were committed: frequently that is not a government the accused has sought to change. In such cases there is less risk that the accused will be subjected to an unfair trial or punishment because of his political opinion.32 Third, the exception was designed, in part, to protect against foreign intervention in internal struggles for political self-determination. When we extradite an individual accused of international terrorism, we are not interfering with any internal struggle; rather, it is the international terrorist who has interfered with the rights of others to exist peacefully under their chosen form of government.
There is no need to create a new mechanism for defining “political offenses” in order to ensure that the two important objectives we have been considering are met: (a) that international terrorists will be subject to extradition, and (b) that the exception will continue to cover the type of domestic revolutionary conduct that inspired its creation in the first place. While the precedent that guides us is limited, the applicable principles of law are clear. The incidence test has served us well and requires no significant modification. The growing problem of international terrorism, serious as it is, does not compel us to reconsider or redefine that test. The test we have used since the 1800’s simply does not cover acts of international terrorism.
1. The “Incidence” Test
As all of the various tests for determining whether an offense is extraditable make clear, not every offense of a political character is non-extraditable. In the United States, an offense must meet the incidence test which is intended, like the tests designed by other nations, to comport with the justifications for the exception. We now explain the reasons for our conclusion that the traditional United States incidence test by its terms (a) protects acts of domestic violence in connection with a struggle for political self-determination, but (b) was not intended to and does not protect acts of international terrorism.
2. The “Uprising” Component
The incidence test has two components— the “uprising” requirement and the “incidental to” requirement. The first component, the requirement that there be an “uprising,” “rebellion,” or “revolution,” has not been the subject of much discussion in the literature, although it is firmly established in the case law, see supra note 1. Most analyses of whether the exception applies have focused on whether the act in question was in furtherance of or incidental to a given uprising. Nevertheless, it is the “uprising” component that plays the key role in ensuring that the incidence test protects only those activities that the political offense doctrine was designed to protect.
As we have noted, the political offense doctrine developed out of a concern for the welfare of those engaged in a particular form of political activity — an effort to alter or abolish the government that controls their lives — and not out of a desire to protect all politically motivated violence. See In re Ezeta, 62 F. 972, 998 (N.D.Cal.1894) (“ ‘Any offense committed in the course of or furthering of civil war, insurrection, or political commotion.’ ”) (quoting John Stuart Mill); In re Castioni, [1891] 1 Q.B. 149, 156 (1890) (“a sort of overt act in the course of acting in a political matter, a political rising, or a dispute between two parties in the State as to which is to have the government in its hands”) (per Den-man, J.).
The uprising component serves to limit the exception to its historic purposes. [807]*807It makes the exception applicable only when a certain level of violence exists and when those engaged in that violence are seeking to accomplish a particular objective. The exception does not apply to political acts that involve less fundamental efforts to accomplish change or that do not attract sufficient adherents to create the requisite amount of turmoil. See Escobedo v.. United States, 623 F.2d 1098 (5th Cir.), cert. denied, 449 U.S. 1036, 101 S.Ct. 612, 66 L.Ed.2d 497 (1980). Thus, acts such as skyjacking (an act that has never been used by revolutionaries to bring about a change in the composition or structure of the government in their own country) fall outside the scope of the exception.
Equally important, the uprising component serves to exclude from coverage under the exception criminal conduct that occurs outside the country or territory in which the uprising is taking place. The term “uprising” refers to a revolt by indigenous people against their own government or an occupying power. That revolt can occur only within the country or territory in which those rising up reside. By definition acts occurring in other lands are not part of the uprising. The political offense exception was designed to protect those engaged in internal or domestic struggles over the form or composition of their own government, including, of course, struggles to displace an occupying power. It was not designed to protect international political coercion or blackmail, or the exportation of violence and strife to other locations — even to the homeland of an oppressor nation. Thus, an uprising is not only limited temporally, it is limited spatially. See 20th Century American Courts, supra p. 30, at 1021 n. 115.
In his concurring opinion, Judge Duniway points out that the limitation to acts occurring within the territory in which there is an uprising means that persons committing acts of piracy, terrorism, or other crimes on the high seas will be unable to invoke the protection of the political offense exception. His observation is correct. Just as skyjackers and other international terrorists are not protected under the exception, neither are persons who commit or threaten to commit violent crimes on the high seas. The political offense exception was never intended to reach such conduct.
While determining the proper geographic boundaries of an “uprising” involves a legal issue that ordinarily will be fairly simple to resolve, there may be some circumstances under which it will be more difficult to do so. We need not formulate a general rule that will be applicable to all situations. It is sufficient in this case to state that for purposes of the political offense exception an “uprising” cannot extend beyond the borders of the country or territory in which a group of citizens or residents is seeking to change their particular government or governmental structure.
It follows from what we have said that an “uprising” can exist only when the turmoil that warrants that characterization is created by nationals of the land in which the disturbances are occurring. Viewed in that light, it becomes clear that had the traditional incidence test been applied in Eain, discussed supra pp. 801-02, the result would have been identical to that reached by the Seventh Circuit. When PLO members enter Israel and commit unlawful acts, there is simply no uprising for the acts to be incidental to. The plain fact is that the Israelis are not engaged in revolutionary activity directed against their own government. They are not seeking to change its form, structure, or composition through violent means. That the PLO members who commit crimes are seeking to destroy Israel as a state does not help bring them within the political offense exception. In the absence of an uprising, the violence engaged in by PLO members in Israel and elsewhere does not meet the incidence test and is not covered by the political offense exception. To the contrary, the PLO’s worldwide campaign of violence, including the crimes its members commit in the state of Israel, clearly constitutes “international terrorism.”
Moreover, Eain’s conduct may have fallen outside the political offense exception [808]*808for an additional, though related, reason. Not only was there no uprising in Israel, but Eain himself was not a national of that country. It is not clear whether, even when the violence is primarily conducted by nationals and thus an uprising may properly be found to exist, a foreign citizen who voluntarily joins the fray is protected by the exception. The exception was designed to protect those seeking to change their own government or to oust an occupying power that is asserting sovereignty over them. We question whether it should apply when the accused is not a citizen of the country or territory in which the uprising is occurring. In the absence of a tangible demonstration that he or she has more than a transitory connection with that land, the acts of a foreign national may simply not qualify for protection.
Although we find substantial merit to the argument that foreign nationals should be excluded from coverage under the political offense exception, the incidence test has never previously been analyzed in a manner that considers the question in any detail. Because of the conclusion we reach with respect to other issues in the case before us, there is no need for us to answer the question here. Accordingly, we leave its resolution to a subsequent time. It is enough for our purposes merely to note that the fact that Eain was not an Israeli might well have constituted another basis for holding that his conduct was not protected under the incidence test.
In short, the Eain and Doherty courts’ objective that this country not become a haven for international terrorists can readily be met through a proper application of the incidence test. It is met by interpreting the political offense exception in light of its historic origins and goals. Such a construction excludes acts of international terrorism. There is no reason, therefore, to construe the incidence test in a subjective and judgmental manner that excludes all violent political conduct of which we disapprove. Moreover, any such construction would necessarily exclude some forms of internal revolutionary conduct and thus run contrary to the exception’s fundamental purpose.33 For that reason, we reject the Eain test and especially the concept that courts may determine whether particular forms of conduct constitute acceptable means or methods of engaging in an uprising.
[809]*8093. The “Incidental to” Component
When describing the second requirement of the incidence test, the “incidental to” component, American courts have used the phrases “in the course of,” “connected to,” and “in furtherance of” interchangeably. We have applied a rather liberal standard when determining whether this part of the test has been met and have been willing to examine all of the circumstances surrounding the commission of the crime. Garcia-Guillem v. United States, 450 F.2d 1189, 1192 (5th Cir.1971), cert. denied, 405 U.S. 989, 92 S.Ct. 1251, 31 L.Ed.2d 455 (1972); Ramos v. Diaz, 179 F.Supp. 459, 463 (S.D.Fla.1959).
Commentators have criticized United States courts for applying the “incidental to” component too loosely or flexibly. See supra p. 797. We disagree with this criticism. To put the matter in its proper context, it is necessary to bear in mind that the offense must occur in the context of an “uprising.” Acts “incidental to” an uprising are, as we have noted, limited by the geographic confines of the uprising. In addition, the act must be contemporaneous with the uprising. Moreover, the “incidental to” component is not satisfied by “any connection, however feeble, between a common crime and a political disturbance,” Garcia-Mora, supra p. 3, at 1244. The act must be causally or ideologically related to the uprising. See, e.g., Ornelas v. Ruiz, 161 U.S. 502, 511, 16 S.Ct. 689, 692, 40 L.Ed. 787 (1896) (concluding that rapid withdrawal of bandits after foray, in absence of threatening armed forces, suggested that acts were not incidental to uprising).
We believe the traditional liberal construction of the requirement that there be a nexus between the act and the uprising, see supra p. 797, is appropriate. There are various types of acts that, when committed in the course of an uprising, are likely to have been politically motivated. There is little reason, under such circumstances, to impose a strict nexus standard. Moreover, the application of a strict test would in some instances jeopardize the rights of the accused.
Under the liberal nexus standard, neither proof of the potential or actual effectiveness of the actions in achieving the group’s political ends, In re Castioni, [1891] 1 Q.B. 149, 158-59 (1890) (refusing to consider whether the act was a wise mode of promoting the cause) (per Den-man, J.), nor proof of the motive of the accused, Eain, 641 F.2d at 519, or the requesting nation, Garcia-Guillem, 450 F.2d at 1192; Ramos v. Diaz, 179 F.Supp. at 463, is required. Nor is the organization or hierachy of the uprising group or the accused’s membership in any such group determinative. See Eain, 641 F.2d at 519.
When extradition is sought, the “offender” at this stage in the proceedings has ordinarily only been accused, not convicted, of the offense. It would be inconsistent with the rights of the accused to require proof of membership in an uprising group. For example, the accused might be able to show that the acts were incidental to the uprising but might be unable to prove membership because he or she did not commit the offense or was not a member of the group. Furthermore, requiring proof of membership might violate the accused’s Fifth Amendment rights both because it might force him to supply circumstantial evidence of guilt of the charged offense and because membership in the group itself might be illegal. Also, we question how one proves membership in an uprising group. Uprising groups often do not have formal organizational structures or document membership. In addition, it is entirely possible to sympathize with, aid, assist, or support a group, help further its objectives and its activities, participate in its projects, or carry on parallel activities of one’s own, without becoming a member of the organization. Still, one may be acting in furtherance of an uprising.
On the other hand, a number of factors, though not necessary to the nexus determination, may play a part in evaluating the circumstances surrounding the commission of the offense. For example, proof of [810]*810membership in an uprising group may-make it more likely that the act was incidental to the uprising. See, e.g., Ramos v. Diaz, 179 F.Supp. at 463; Castioni, 1 Q.B. at 157-59 (per Denman, J.). The similarity of the charged offense to other acts committed by the uprising group, and the degree of control over the accused’s acts by some hierarchy within the group, may give further credence to the claim that the act was incidental to the uprising. And while evidence of the accused’s political motivation is not required and is usually unavailable, evidence that an act was “committed for purely personal reasons such as vengeance or vindictiveness,” In re Doherty, 599 F.Supp. 270, 277 n. 7 (S.D.N.Y.1984), may serve to rebut any presumption that a nexus exists. The exception is not designed to protect mercenaries or others acting for nonpolitical motives.
Under the liberal nexus test we have traditionally applied, or even under a strict nexus standard, there is no justification for distinguishing, as Doherty suggests, between attacks on military and civilian targets. The “incidental to” component, like the incidence test as a whole, must be applied in an objective, non-judgmental manner. It is for the revolutionaries, not the courts, to determine what tactics may help further their chances of bringing down or changing the government. All that the courts should do is determine whether the conduct is related to or connected with the insurgent activity. It is clear that various “non-military” offenses, including acts as disparate as stealing food to sustain the combatants, killing to avoid disclosure of strategies, or killing simply to avoid capture, may be incidental to or in furtherance of an uprising. To conclude that attacks on the military are protected by the exception, but that attacks on private sector institutions and civilians are not, ignores the nature and purpose of the test we apply, as well as the realities of contemporary domestic revolutionary struggles. See supra pp. 804-05.
We should add that the spatial limitations imposed under the “uprising” component may not be circumvented by reliance on the “incidental to” component. As we said earlier, for the political offense exception to be applicable at all, the crime must have occurred in the country or territory in which the uprising was taking place, not in a different geographic location. See supra pp. 806-07.
VI. THE INCIDENCE TEST APPLIED TO THE CHARGED OFFENSES
A: The Magistrate’s Factual Findings and Legal Conclusions
In disposing of this case, the extradition magistrate first made a legal determination that the incidence test has three prongs, the latter two of which are “flip sides of the same question”: (a) the existence of an uprising; (b) that the charged offense be in furtherance of that uprising; (c) and that the accused be a member of the uprising group. In evaluating the applicability of the first prong to the instant case, the magistrate made a number of factual findings, a legal determination, and a conclusion based on the mixed fact and law determinations. First, the magistrate found that there was a violent political uprising in Northern Ireland at the time of the commission of the crimes with which Quinn is charged. He also noted that, were his inquiry limited to conditions in London, he would “find that the severity of the political disturbance [in London] was insufficiently grave to bring into play the political offense exception.” The magistrate then made a legal determination that because Northern Ireland and London are both constitutionally a part of the United Kingdom, and because offenses committed in both geographic areas are directed against the same sovereign, he must consider the United Kingdom as a whole. Accordingly, he determined that a political uprising existed throughout the United Kingdom.
In applying the second and third prongs of his test the magistrate made the factual finding that Quinn was a member of a conspiracy involving the Balcombe Street Four, who were convicted on nineteen counts of bombing and shooting attacks, [811]*811and that the case against the four was based on the theory that they were members of an Active Service Unit. The magistrate concluded, however, that this was an insufficient basis for considering the offenses to be “in furtherance of” the uprising. First, the magistrate held that membership in the uprising group is a necessary component of the incidence test, and that Quinn’s IRA membership and involvement in an ASU conspiracy were insufficient to establish that he was a member of the PIRA, the group that the magistrate labeled the uprising group in this case. Next, the magistrate held that Quinn had failed to establish that the bombings were in furtherance of the PIRA’s political goals (a) because he failed to show that they were ordered by the command within the PIRA hierarchy, (b) because he failed to show that the PIRA considered their efficacy in advancing its objectives, and (c) because he failed to introduce any evidence of his own political motivations. Third, the magistrate adopted the holding of the Seventh Circuit in Eain v. Wilkes, and concluded that “[b]y definition, there can be no direct link between [these bombings directed against innocent civilians] and the political goal of the IRA to force British withdrawal from Northern Ireland, as these actions neither took place in Northern Ireland nor were they directed against the government the IRA was attempting to displace.”
B. Our Areas of Agreement With the District Court: The “Incidental To” Prong
Like the district court, we believe the magistrate reached a number of erroneous legal conclusions. The incidence test has never required that an accused prove his political motivations directly, or establish that the acts were ordered by the leadership of the uprising group or were effective in obtaining the group’s objectives. Nor need an accused prove membership in the uprising group; the magistrate’s hairsplitting distinction between Quinn’s proven IRA membership and his involvement in a conspiracy with ASU members on the one hand,, and his failure to prove conclusively PIRA membership on the other makes apparent the logical absurdity of requiring proof of membership in a specific group.
Quinn is accused of having been a member of a conspiracy involving the Balcombe Street Four and he does not challenge the probable cause finding on this charge; his fingerprints were found on the bombs and within the flats where bombs were constructed. Quinn has already been convicted of and has served a prison sentence for his membership in the IRA. There is no evidence that he was involved in the conspiracy for other than political reasons, and his alleged co-conspirators, the Balcombe Street Four, were convicted of politically motivated bombings. Moreover, the PIRA’s use of bombing campaigns as a political tactic is well-documented. Accepting the magistrate’s factual findings, which are not clearly erroneous, and applying th legal standards we have explained above, we think it quite clear that if an uprising, as that term is defined for purposes of the political offense exception, existed at the time the offenses were committed, the bombings were incidental to that uprising.
Furthermore, because various disparate acts may be incidental to an uprising, we agree with the district court’s conclusion that the Tibbie murder would be incidental to the uprising, although we believe the analysis performed by both the magistrate and the district court is in error with respect to this incident. It does not matter if the killer’s motivation in killing Officer Tibbie was to conceal a bomb factory or to avoid capture. A murder of a police officer is related to an uprising whether the reason for the act is to avoid discovery of munitions or to avoid reduction of “forces” by capture. Regardless which of these goals motivated the killer, if an uprising existed at the time, this offense as well was incidental to it.
C. Our Area of Disagreement With the District Court: The “Uprising” Prong
With regard to the uprising prong of the incidence test, we must again review the [812]*812magistrate’s factual findings under the clearly erroneous standard and his legal conclusions de novo. The district court failed to do this, construing the magistrate’s conclusion that there was an uprising throughout the United Kingdom solely as a finding of fact. The district court summarized the magistrate’s factual findings as to the levels of violence that existed in Northern Ireland and elsewhere in the United Kingdom at the time Quinn allegedly committed the charged offenses, and properly adopted them. However, the district court failed to analyze the magistrate’s legal conclusion that because the requisite level of violence existed in Northern Ireland and because Northern Ireland is “in a constitutional sense” a part of the United Kingdom, an uprising existed in the United Kingdom as a whole.
The magistrate traced the history of the constitutional relationship between Ireland and England, the Irish nationalist movement in opposition to British rule in Northern Ireland, and the history of violent political disturbances concomitant with the struggle to liberate Northern Ireland from British rule. During the 1700’s, economic and political differences between the Catholics in the south of the one, unified, colonized country of Ireland and the Protestants in the north grew, and in 1800 Ireland’s parliament was dissolved and the country became a part of the United Kingdom. Many Catholics continued to demand liberty through the period in the late 1800’s when “home rule” — under which Ireland would have remained a part of the United Kingdom but with local control of domestic affairs — was contemplated. In 1914 the British Parliament passed a bill instituting home rule but it was not implemented because of the outbreak of World War I.
After increased violence between Irish rebels — including the IRA — and British forces broke out in 1919, the British Parliament passed the Government of Ireland Act in 1920. That Act divided Ireland into two partially self-governing countries. Most of Ireland’s political leaders initially rejected the proposed division, demanding complete independence for all of Ireland. Eventually partition was accepted and in 1921 southern leaders and Great Britain signed a treaty creating the Irish Free State in the south (which became the independent Republic of Ireland in 1949) and Northern Ireland in the north. Under the treaty, Northern Ireland separated from Great Britain. Although it remained a part of the United Kingdom with representation in the British Parliament, it had its own governor, parliament, prime minister, and cabinet and controlled most domestic matters independently. Certain powers, such as levying income taxes and maintaining a militia, were reserved for the British Parliament. The Ulster Unionist Party, the Protestant party, retained control of the parliament in Northern Ireland and Catholics were excluded from political power and subjected to civil discrimination.
IRA-organized violence, with the objective of separating Northern Ireland from the United Kingdom and reuniting the northern and southern parts of Ireland, continued in Northern Ireland. In 1969, the PIRA split off from the IRA, which adopted the view that violence was not the best means to achieve its goals at that time. The PIRA advocated armed insurrection and after one campaign of violence in 1969, British troops were sent into Northern Ireland. PIRA bombing campaigns continued between 1970 and 1972. In 1971, the British passed the Special Powers Act, which provided for internment without trial. In 1972, the British dissolved the Parliament of Northern Ireland and once again established direct rule. PIRA bombings continued through 1973, when the Special Powers Act was replaced by the Emergency Provisions Act. The Emergency Provisions Act abolished jury trials for certain offenses, relaxed standards of admissibility for confessions, and provided special tribunals for the trials of those accused of political crimes.
The PIRA was responsible for a number of bombing campaigns again in 1974 and 1975. These campaigns were designed to “bomb the British government to the bargaining table” and to force the withdrawal [813]*813of British troops from Northern Ireland. The PIRA took responsibility for the bombings of both military and civilian targets in both Northern Ireland and England. In 1974 the Prevention of Terrorism (Temporary Provisions) Act, which applies to the entire United Kingdom, was passed. The Act extended the length of time police could detain those suspected of political violence; made it illegal to refuse to give to the authorities information about those suspected of committing acts of political violence; suspended habeas corpus rights for detainees; and proscribed the IRA and the Irish National Liberation Army and formal support for them.
The magistrate correctly concluded that there was an uprising in Northern Ireland at the time of the offenses with which Quinn is charged. PIRA members, although a minority faction, sought to change the structure of the government in that country, the country in which they lived. Criminal activity in Northern Ireland connected with this uprising would clearly fall within the political offense exception.
We cannot conclude, however, that the uprising extended to England. We do not question the fact that throughout the time of the alleged conspiracy, some politically motivated violence was taking place in England as well as in Northern Ireland. See, e.g., J. Bell, The Secret Army: The IRA 1916-1979, at 403-24 (1980). However, as the magistrate noted, in general the violent attacks and the responses to them were far less pronounced outside of Northern Ireland. It is clear from the record that the magistrate correctly concluded that the level of violence outside Northern Ireland was insufficient in itself to constitute an “uprising.”34 There is a second and even more significant reason why the “uprising” prong is not met in this case. As the magistrate found, what violence there was was not being generated by citizens or residents of England. In fact, the magistrate determined that a large percentage of the bombing incidents in England were attributable to the Balcombe Street Four. The critical factor is that nationals of Northern Ireland, seeking to alter the government in that territorial entity, exported their struggle for political change across the seas to a separate geographical entity — and conducted that struggle in a country in which the nationals and residents were not attempting to alter their own political structure.
We do not ignore the constitutional, legal, and military relationship between England and Northern Ireland. The ties are so well established, see generally 1 Europa Year Book 1984, at 991-96; 14 World Book Encyclopedia 403-06b (1985 ed.), that had evidence of the relationship not been presented to the magistrate, judicial notice would have been appropriate. It is beyond dispute that during the time of the conspiracy with which Quinn is charged, Northern Ireland was, in essence under British rule: the British government had dissolved the Northern Ireland Parliament, declared a state of emergency, and made the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland directly answerable for the government of Northern Ireland to the United Kingdom Parliament at Westminster.35
We do not question whether the PIRA sought to coerce the appropriate sovereign. Nor do we pass judgment on the use of violence as a form of political coercion or the efficacy of the violent attacks in England. But, as we have already said, see supra pp. 806-08, the word “uprising” means exactly that: it refers to a people rising up, in their own land, against the government of that land. It does not cover terrorism or other criminal conduct export[814]*814ed to other locations. Nor can the existence of an uprising be based on violence committed by persons who do not reside in the country or territory in which the violence occurs.
In light of the justifications for the political offense exception, the formulation of the incidence test as it has traditionally been articulated, and the cases in which the exception has historically been applied, we do not believe it would be proper to stretch the term “uprising” to include acts that took place in England as a part of a struggle by nationals of Northern Ireland to change the form of government in their own land.36 Accordingly, we need not decide whether had an uprising occurred, the protection afforded by the exception would have been extended to one who, like Quinn, is a citizen of a different and uninvolved nation. See supra pp. 807-08. Because the incidence test is not met, neither the bombing conspiracy nor the murder of Police Constable Tibbie is a non-extraditable offense under the political offense exception to the extradition treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom.
VII. ISSUES NOT ADDRESSED BY THE DISTRICT COURT
In addition to contending that all the crimes with which he is charged are protected by the political offense exception, Quinn argued to the district court that the magistrate erred in concluding (1) that the conspiracy charge was not time barred and (2) that there was sufficient competent legal evidence to establish probable cause to believe that he murdered Police Constable Tibbie. Because it held that the political offense exception barred extradition, the district court did not reach either of these issues.
A. Appellate Discretion to Resolve These Issues
As a general rule, “a federal appellate court does not consider an issue not passed upon below.” Singleton v. Wulff, 428 U.S. 106, 120, 96 S.Ct. 2868, 2877, 49 L.Ed.2d 826 (1976). But this rule is not inflexible. Youakim v. Miller, 425 U.S. 231, 234, 96 S.Ct. 1399, 1401, 47 L.Ed.2d 701 (1976). We have discretion to decide whether to address an issue that the district court did not reach if the question is a purely legal one and the record has been fully developed prior to appeal; in deciding whether to exercise this discretion we should consider whether the resolution of the issue is clear and whether injustice might otherwise result. See Lien Ho Hsing Steel Enterprise Co. v. Weihtag, 738 F.2d 1455, 1461 (9th Cir.1984); In re Howell, 731 F.2d 624, 627 (9th Cir.1984).
The government suggests in a footnote in its appellate brief that we should exercise our “pendent” jurisdiction and resolve the issues not addressed by the district court, yet it failed to brief those issues on appeal. Quinn argues on appeal that the two remaining issues are not properly before us; he also did not brief either of these issues on appeal. We do have before us the parties’ memoranda to the district court and the full factual record developed before the magistrate and, at this point, the questions appear to be purely legal. Accordingly, we evaluate the remaining factors to determine whether to reach these issues.
Clearly, in considering the risk that injustice might result, we must be more concerned about the possible unjust deprivation of Quinn’s liberty than about any other source of injustice. The delay that could result from a remand on these issues affects both parties; we cannot see any other manner in which a remand might cause injustice to the government. However, because Quinn has asked us not to reach these issues, the fact that a remand might prolong his pretrial detention is insuffi[815]*815cient, in itself, to convince us that we should resolve issues that have not been addressed on appeal.
The crucial factor, then, appears to be whether the resolution of either of these issues is clear. We believe that the probable cause issue is clear and we thus resolve it. The statute-of-limitations issue, in contrast, is quite complex and involves a discovery request as well. Accordingly, we do not reach that issue at this time.
B. Probable Cause: The Tibbie Murder
Although he accepts the magistrate’s conclusion that there is probable cause to believe that Police Constable Tibbie was murdered, Quinn contends that the magistrate erred in concluding that there was any competent evidence to support the belief that he was the murderer. Quinn points to alleged procedural irregularities in the circumstances surrounding Constable Blackledge’s identification, the “double hearsay” method of presenting this evidence through Inspector Watts, see supra pp. 784-85, the six year delay between Blackledge’s identification in Ireland and Watts’ photo identification after Quinn’s arrest in San Francisco, and some contradictions between the description of the assailant Blackledge originally gave the police and Quinn’s actual physical characteristics, see supra p. 784. Quinn contends that because of these irregularities the evidence is unreliable and cannot be considered “competent,” see supra pp. 790-91, and that it thus cannot support the probable cause finding. We disagree.
Clearly the evidence introduced before the magistrate for the purpose of linking Quinn with the Tibbie murder is not overwhelming. If that were all the evidence introduced at a murder trial, Quinn could not be convicted. But the country seeking extradition is not required to produce all its evidence at an extradition hearing and it is not our role to determine whether there is sufficient evidence to convict the accused. The magistrate does not weigh conflicting evidence and make factual determinations but, rather, determines only whether there is competent evidence to support the belief that the accused has committed the charged offense. See supra p. 791. And on review we can determine only whether, because of an absence of competent evidence, the magistrate’s determination is wrong as a matter of law. Cf. Ker v. California, 374 U.S. 23, 33-34, 83 S.Ct. 1623, 1629-30, 10 L.Ed.2d 726 (1963) (reasonableness of search and seizure is mixed question of law and fact which is reviewed de novo); United States v. McConney, 728 F.2d 1195, 1203 (9th Cir.) (en banc) (probable cause determination is mixed question of law and fact which is reviewed de novo), cert. denied, — U.S. -, 105 S.Ct. 101, 83 L.Ed.2d 46 (1984).
The credibility of witnesses and the weight to be accorded their testimony is solely within the province of the extradition magistrate. See Garcia-Guillem v. United States, 450 F.2d 1189, 1192 (5th Cir.1971). The magistrate was free to determine the weight to be accorded to the various descriptions of the killer. In addition, although the magistrate may take the circumstances of an identification into account in assessing its reliability, there is no per se rule that specifies which identification procedures are “competent” for probable cause purposes. An identification does not fail to constitute competent evidence merely because the required United States procedures for admissibility of the identification at trial were not followed. See Zanazanian v. United States, 729 F.2d 624, 627 (9th Cir.1984) (multiple hearsay method of presenting evidence may decrease reliability of evidence but evidence may nevertheless be sufficiently reliable to be “competent”); Escobedo v. United States, 623 F.2d 1098, 1102 & n. 10 (5th Cir.) (single photograph identified by witness sufficient to support probable cause finding), cert. denied, 449 U.S. 1036, 101 S.Ct. 612, 66 L.Ed.2d 497 (1980). Barring hearsay from extradition proceedings would thwart one of the objectives of bilateral extradition treaties by requiring the requesting nation to send its citizens to the extraditing coun[816]*816try to confront the accused. Zanazanian, 729 F.2d at 626-27.
Because the magistrate properly determined that there is competent legal evidence to support the belief that Quinn murdered Officer Tibbie, the habeas petition cannot be granted for lack of probable cause. See Fernandez v. Phillips, 268 U.S. 311, 312, 45 S.Ct. 541, 542, 69 L.Ed. 970 (1925); Valencia v. Limbs, 655 F.2d 195, 197 (9th Cir.1981).
C. The Statute of Limitations on the Conspiracy Charge
In addition to the political offense exception, the extradition treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom provides that “[ejxtradition shall not be granted if ... the prosecution for the offense for which extradition is requested has become barred by lapse of time according to the law of the requesting or requested Party ____” Treaty, supra p. 781, at art. V(l)(b). Neither the United States nor the United Kingdom imposes a statute of limitations on murder charges. Since the United Kingdom has no relevant limitations period, the applicable statute of limitations on the conspiracy charge is that which is set forth in 18 U.S.C. § 3282 (1982).
Under section 3282, prosecution on a conspiracy charge is barred “unless the indictment is found or the information is instituted within five years next after such offense shall have been committed.” The United Kingdom does not follow the same criminal procedures as the United States; no indictment is issued for a conspiracy charge, and the extradition magistrate determined that the United Kingdom’s “laying of an information” is not analogous to the United States procedures mandated by section 3282.
Quinn contends that the conspiracy charge is time-barred because the conspiracy terminated on April 3, 1975, and the United Kingdom’s extradition request was not filed until November 1981, well over five years later. However, the magistrate concluded that the statute of limitations was tolled when Quinn became a fugitive from justice after the murder of Officer Tibbie,37 and that the tolling continued through the time of Quinn’s Daly City arrest, notwithstanding the British government’s fairly consistent knowledge of his whereabouts from the time that Blackledge identified him in 1975 through the time he was incarcerated in Ireland and the years that he subsequently lived openly and notoriously in San Francisco.38 The government, which originally specified that it would not contend that Quinn was a fugitive at any time and which addressed the issue only after the magistrate sua sponte ordered the parties to do so, asks that the magistrate’s findings on the fugitive issue be affirmed. In the alternative, it contends that the habeas court should affirm the magistrate’s conclusion that the extradition request is timely by concluding that the United Kingdom’s “laying of an information” satisfies the United States’ statute of limitations.39
Each of these questions is complex. Complicating them further, Quinn [817]*817contends that the magistrate erred as a matter of law in refusing his request for discovery on the fugitive issue. He seeks documents that would demonstrate that the United Kingdom knew his whereabouts and was dilatory in initiating proceedings. He also contends that, because the standard of proof for the fugitive issue is a preponderance standard,40 he is entitled to discovery in order to test the credibility of the Black-ledge identification that serves as the premise for the theory that his absence from the United Kingdom was due to a desire to avoid arrest or prosecution.41
The multiple legal questions involved in the statute of limitations issue are complicated; their resolution is not clear and could even lead to the introduction of additional facts. Accordingly, it would not be proper for us at this time to decide this issue which the district court did not reach and the parties have not briefed on appeal. Nor would it be appropriate to indicate any view as to its ultimate outcome. Should the United Kingdom continue to be interested in pursuing Quinn’s extradition on the conspiracy charge so that he may be tried for that offense, it will have to await the district court’s determination whether the charge is time-barred, and possibly our subsequent review.42
VIII. CONCLUSION
For extradition to be denied for an otherwise extraditable crime on the basis that it falls within the protective ambit of the political offense exception, the incidence test must ordinarily be met. (We reserve the question whether offenses committed by government officials or in connection with wars between nations are covered by the exception and, if so, whether a different test would be appropriate.) The incidence test has two components, designed so that the exception comports with its original justifications and protects acts of the kind that inspired its inclusion in extradition treaties. First, there must be an uprising — a political disturbance related to the struggle of individuals to alter or abolish the existing government in their country. An uprising is both temporally and spatially limited. Second, the charged offense must have been committed in furtherance of the uprising; it must be related to the political struggle or be consequent to the uprising activity. Neither the objectives of the uprising nor the means employed to achieve those objectives are subject to judicial scrutiny. And while the nature of the uprising group and any evidence of the accused’s motivations may be relevant, proof on these elements is not required or necessarily determinative. Acts of international terrorism do not meet the incidence test and are thus not covered by the political offense exception. Crimes against humanity also are beyond the scope of the exception.
The conspiracy to cause explosions and the murder with which Quinn is charged do [818]*818not fall within the political offense exception. Although an uprising existed in Northern Ireland at the time the charged offenses were committed, there was no uprising in England. The crimes did not take place within a territorial entity in which a group of nationals were seeking to change the form of the government under which they live; rather the offenses took place in a different geographical location. We do not decide whether Quinn’s status as a citizen of an uninvolved nation would also preclude him from receiving the protection of the exception.
We conclude that the magistrate did not err in finding probable cause in connection with the charge that Quinn murdered Officer Tibbie. However, we cannot properly determine at this point whether the conspiracy charge is time-barred. That matter must first be considered by the district court.
We vacate the writ of habeas corpus and remand to the district court. We hold that Quinn may be extradited on the murder charge but that the district court must consider whether the conspiracy charge is time-barred before extradition is permitted for that offense.
VACATED AND REMANDED.
I have been authorized to include this footnote on behalf of the full panel.
We are unanimous in our decision that the writ of habeas corpus issued by the district court must be vacated. We reach this difficult decision by somewhat different routes.
Judge Duniway concurs in the result but not for the reasons that are set forth in this opinion. His reasons appear in his separate concurring opinion.
Judge Fletcher concurs in the reasoning set forth in this opinion with the exception of the part that treats England and Northern Ireland as separate entities for purposes of applying the "uprising" component of the political offense doctrine. Her disagreement on that point causes her to dissent from the holding that Quinn may be extradited on the murder charge. As her concurring and dissenting opinion states, she would remand in order to permit the district court to determine the extent of Quinn’s ties to Northern Ireland. I do not find it necessary to reach that issue, see page 808 infra, but believe that Judge Fletcher's argument regarding the necessity for such ties has considerable 'merit.
We are unanimous in our holding that a remand to the district court is required with respect to the conspiracy charge. We also are unanimous that extradition on that count would not be proper in the absence of an appropriate resolution of the statute of limitations issue, a decision that must be made initially by the district court.
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