Presidential Decree No 1069
Presidential Decree No 1069
Presidential Decree No 1069
WHEREAS, under the Constitution the Philippines adopts the generally accepted
principles of international law as part of the law of the land, and adheres to the
policy of peace, equality, justice, freedom, cooperation and amity with all nations;
WHEREAS, the suppression of crime is the concern not only of the estate where it
is committed but also of any other state to which the criminal may have escaped,
because it saps the foundation of social life and is an outrage upon humanity at
large, and it is in the interest of civilized communities that crimes should not go
unpunished;
WHEREAS, there is need for rules to guide the executive department and the
courts in the proper implementation of the extradition treaties to which the
Philippines is a signatory.
(1) Any foreign state or government with which the Republic of the
Philippines has entered into extradition treaty or convention, only
when the relevant treaty or convention, remains in force, may request
for the extradition of any accused who is or suspected of being in the
territorial jurisdiction of the Philippines.
(1) the decision or sentence imposed upon the accused by the court
of the requesting state or government; or
(2) the criminal charge and the warrant of arrest issued by the
authority of the requesting state or government having jurisdiction of
the matter or some other instruments having the equivalent legal
force.
(b) A recital of the acts for which extradition is requested, with the
fullest particulars as to the name and identity of the accused, his
whereabouts in the Philippines, if known, the acts or omissions
complained of, and the time and place of the commission of these
acts;
(1) Unless it appears to the Secretary of Foreign Affairs that the request fails to
meet the requirements of this law and the relevant treaty or convention, he shall
forward the request together with the related documents to the Secretary of Justice,
who shall immediately designate and authorize an attorney in his office to take
charge of these case.
(2) The attorney so designated shall file a written petition with the proper Court of
First Instance of the province or city having jurisdiction of the place, with a prayer
that the court take the request under consideration and shall attach to the petition
all related documents. The filing of the petition and the service of the summons to
the accused shall be free from the payment of docket and sheriff's fees.
(3) The Court of First Instance with which the petition shall have been filed shall
have and continue to have the exclusive power to hear and decide the case,
regardless of the subsequent whereabouts of the accused, or the change or changes
of his place of residence.
(1) Immediately upon receipt of the petition, the presiding judge of the court shall,
as soon as practicable, summon the accused to appear and to answer the petition on
the day and hour fixed in the order. We may issue a warrant for the immediate
arrest of the accused which may be served any where within the Philippines if it
appears to the presiding judge that the immediate arrest and temporary detention of
the accused will best serve the ends of justice. Upon receipt of the answer, or
should the accused after having received the summons fail to answer within the
time fixed, the presiding judge shall hear the ace or set another date for the hearing
thereof.
(2) The order and notice as well as a copy of the warrant of arrest, if issued, shall
be promptly served each upon the accused and the attorney having charge of the
case.
Section 7. Appointment of Counsel de Oficio. If on the date set for the hearing the
accused does not have a legal counsel, the presiding judge shall appoint any law
practitioner residing within his territorial jurisdiction as counsel de oficio for the
accused to assist him in the hearing.
(2) The attorney having charge of the case may upon request represent the
requesting state or government throughout the proceeding. The requesting state or
government may, however, retain private counsel to represent it for particular
extradition case.
(3) Should the accused fail to appear on the date set for hearing, or if he is not
under detention, the court shall forthwith issue a warrant for this arrest which may
be served upon the accused anywhere in the Philippines.
(2) Sworn statements offered in evidence at the hearing of any extradition case
shall be received and admitted as evidence if properly and legally authenticated by
the principal diplomatic or consular officer of the Republic of the Philippines
residing in the requesting state.
Section 10. Decision. Upon conclusion of the hearing, the court shall render a
decision granting the extradition, and giving his reasons therefor upon showing of
the existence of a prima facie case. Otherwise, it shall dismiss the petition.
Section 11. Service of Decision. The decision of the court shall be promptly served
on the accused if he was not present at the reading thereof, and the clerk of the
court shall immediately forward two copies thereof to the Secretary of Foreign
Affairs through the Department of Justice.
(1) The accused may, within 10 days from receipt of the decision of
the Court of First Instance granting extradition cases shall be final
and immediately executory.
(2) The appeal shall stay the execution of the decision of the Court of
First Instance.
(b) A request for provisional arrest shall be sent to the Director of the National
Bureau of Investigation, Manila, either through the diplomatic channels or direct
by post or telegraph.
(c) The Director of the National Bureau of Investigation or any official acting on
his behalf shall upon receipt of the request immediately secure a warrant for the
provisional arrest of the accused from the presiding judge of the Court of First
Instance of the province or city having jurisdiction of the place, who shall issue the
warrant for the provisional arrest of the accused. The Director of the National
Bureau of Investigation through the Secretary of Foreign Affairs shall inform the
requesting of the result of its request.
(d) If within a period of 20 days after the provisional arrest the Secretary of
Foreign Affairs has not received the request for extradition and the documents
mentioned in Section 4 of this Decree, the accused shall be released from custody.
(e) Release from provisional arrest shall not prejudice re-arrest and extradition of
the accused if a request for extradition is received subsequently in accordance with
the relevant treaty of convention.
Section 21. Effectivity. this Decree shall take effect immediately and its provisions
shall be in force during the existence of any extradition treaty or convention with,
and only in respect of, any foreign state or government.
Mr. Helms, from the Committee on Foreign Relations, submitted the following
REPORT
Modern extradition treaties (1) identify the offenses for which extradition will be
granted, (2) establish procedures to be followed in presenting extradition requests,
(3) enumerate exceptions to the duty to extradite, (4) specify the evidence required
to support a finding of a duty to extradite, and (5) set forth administrative
provisions for bearing costs and legal representation.
II. Background
On November 13, 1994, the President signed an extradition treaty with the
Philippines. The Treaty was transmitted to the Senate for its advice and consent to
ratification on September 5, 1995. In recent years the Departments of State and
Justice have led an effort to modernize U.S. bilateral extradition treaties to better
combat international criminal activity, such as drug trafficking, terrorism and
money laundering. The United States is a party to approximately 100 bilateral
extradition treaties. According to the Justice Department, during 1995 131
individuals were extradited to the United States and 79 individuals were extradited
from the United States.
The increase in international crime also has prompted the U.S. government to
become a party to several multilateral international conventions which, although
not themselves extradition treaties, deal with international law enforcement and
provide that the offenses which they cover shall be extraditable offenses in any
extradition treaty between the parties. These include: the Convention for the
Suppression of Unlawful Seizure of Aircraft (Hague), art. 8; the Convention to
Discourage Acts of Violence Against Civil Aviation (Montreal), art 8; the Protocol
Amending the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs of 1961, art. 14 amending art.
36(2)(b)(I) of the Single Convention; the Convention to Prevent and Punish Acts
of Terrorism Taking the Form of Crimes Against Persons and Related Extortion
that are of International Significance (Organization of American States), art. 3; the
Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Crimes against Internationally
Protected Persons, including Diplomatic Agents, art. 8; the International
Convention against the Taking of Hostages, art. 10; the Convention on the Physical
Protection of Nuclear Materials, art. 11; and the United Nations Convention
against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (Vienna).
These multilateral international agreements are incorporated by reference in the
Untied States' bilateral extradition treaties.
III. Summary
A. GENERAL
The contents of recent treaties follow a standard format. Article 1 sets forth the
obligation of contracting states to extradite to each other persons charged by the
authorities of the Requesting State with, or convicted of, an extraditable offense.
Article 2, sometimes referred to as a dual criminality clause, defines extraditable
offenses as offenses punishable in both contracting states by prison terms of more
than one year. Attempts or conspiracies to commit an extraditable offense are
themselves extraditable. Several of the treaties provide that neither party shall be
required to extradite its own nationals. The treaties carve out an exception to
extraditable crimes for political offenses. The trend in modern extradition treaties
is to narrow the political offense exceptions.
The treaties include a clause allowing the Requested State to refuse extradition in
cases where the offense is punishable by death in the Requesting State, unless the
Requesting State provides assurances satisfactory to the Requested State that the
individual sought will not be executed.
In addition to these substantive provisions, the treaties also contain standard
procedural provisions. These specify the kinds of information that must be
submitted with an extradition request, the language in which documents are to be
submitted, the procedures under which documents submitted are to be received and
admitted into evidence in the Requested State, the procedures under which
individuals shall be surrendered and returned to the Requesting State, and other
related matters.
B. MAJOR PROVISIONS
The dual criminality clause means, for example, that an offense is not extraditable
if in the United States it constitutes a crime punishable by imprisonment of more
than one year, but is not a crime in the treaty partner or is a crime punishable by a
prison term of less than one year. In earlier extradition treaties the definition of
extraditable offenses consisted of a list of specific categories of crimes. This
categorizing of crimes has resulted in problems when a specific crime, for example
drug dealing, is not on the list, and is therefore not extraditable. The result has been
that as additional offenses become punishable under the laws of both treaty
partners the extradition treaties between them need to be renegotiated or
supplemented. A dual criminality clause obviates the need to renegotiate or
supplement a treaty when it becomes necessary to broaden the definition of
extraditable offenses.
2. Extraterritorial offenses
During the negotiations, the United States delegation received assurances from the
Philippine delegation that major United States offenses such as operating a
continuing criminal enterprise 4 are extraditable under the Treaty, and that offenses
under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (``RICO'') statutes 5 are
extraditable if the predicate offense is an extraditable offense. The Philippine
delegation also stated that the extradition is possible for offenses such as drug
trafficking, terrorism, money laundering, tax fraud or tax evasion, crimes against
environmental law and antitrust violations punishable by both Contracting Parties.
Paragraph 3 reflects the intention of the Contracting Parties to have the principles
of this article interpreted broadly. Judges in foreign countries often are confused by
the fact that many United States federal statutes require proof of certain elements
(such as use of the mails or interstate transportation) solely to establish jurisdiction
in United States federal courts. Because these judges know of no similar
requirements in their own criminal law, they occasionally have denied the
extradition of fugitives sought by the United States on federal charges on this
basis. This paragraph requires that such elements be disregarded in applying the
dual criminality principle. For example, it will ensure that Philippine authorities
treat United States mail fraud charges 6 in the same manner as fraud charges under
state laws, and view the federal crime of interstate transportation of stolen
property 7 in the same manner as unlawful possession of stolen property. This
paragraph also requires the Requested State to disregard differences in the
categorization of the offense in determining whether dual criminality exists, and to
overlook mere differences in the terminology used to define the offense under the
laws of the Contracting Parties. A similar provision is contained in all recent
United States extradition treaties.
Paragraph 4 deals with the fact that federal crimes may involve acts committed
wholly outside United States territory. Our jurisprudence recognizes the
jurisdiction of our courts to hear criminal cases involving offenses committed
outside the United States if the crime was intended to, or did, have effects in this
country, or if the legislative history of the statute shows clear Congressional intent
to assert such jurisdiction.8 In the Philippines, however, the government's ability to
prosecute extraterritorial offenses is much more limited. 9 Paragraph 4 reflects the
Philippine government's agreement to recognize United States jurisdiction to
prosecute offenses committed outside the United States if Philippine law would
permit the Philippines to prosecute similar offenses committed abroad in
corresponding circumstances. If the Requested State's law does not provide for
such punishment, paragraph 4(b) permits the executive authority of the Requested
State to decide, in its discretion, to submit the case to its courts for the purpose of
extradition. For the United States, this decision is made by the Secretary of State,
and for the Philippines, by the Minister of Justice. A similar provision appears in
several recent United States extradition treaties. 10 Paragraph 4(b) is worded in
terms of the executive authority's decision to submit the case to the courts for
approval because Philippine authorities need the approval of Philippine courts to
extradite.
Paragraph 5 states that when extradition has been granted for an extraditable
offense, it shall also be granted for any other offense for which all of the
requirements for extradition are met, except for the requirement that the offense be
punishable by more than one year of imprisonment. For example, if the Philippines
agrees to extradite to the United States a fugitive wanted for prosecution on a
felony charge, the United States may also obtain extradition for any misdemeanor
offenses that have been charged, as long as those misdemeanors are also
recognized as criminal offenses in the Philippines. Thus, the Treaty incorporates
recent United States extradition practice by permitting extradition for
misdemeanors committed by a fugitive when the fugitive's extradition is granted
for a more serious extraditable offense. This practice is generally desirable from
the standpoint of both the fugitive and the Requesting State in that it permits all
charges to be disposed of more quickly, thereby facilitating trials while evidence is
fresh and permitting the possibility of concurrent sentences. Similar provisions are
found in recent United States extradition treaties with Australia, Ireland, Italy and
Costa Rica.
Some recent treaties provide that persons who have been convicted of an
extraditable offense and sentenced to imprisonment may be extradited only if at
least a certain specified portion of the sentence (often six months) remains to be
served. The Treaty contains no such requirement. Provisions of this kind are an
attempt to limit extradition to serious cases because of the significant costs
associated with the process. However, the negotiators of the Treaty felt that the
particular sentence imposed or outstanding is not necessarily an adequate measure
of the seriousness of the crime.11 The Contracting Parties concluded that the
Treaty's goals can be better served by the exercise of discretion and good judgment
in the administration of the Treaty without arbitrary limits imposed in its terms.
This approach has been taken in some of our extradition treaties with other
countries, including Australia, Canada, Jamaica, New Zealand and the United
Kingdom.
Paragraph 2(c) states that the political offense exception does not apply to
conspiring or attempting to commit, or aiding or abetting the commission or
attempted commission of, any of the foregoing offenses.
Paragraph 3 provides that extradition shall not be granted if the executive authority
of the Requested State determines that the request is politically motivated. 20 United
States law and practice have been that the Secretary of State has the sole discretion
to determine whether an extradition request is based on improper political
motivation.21 Paragraph 3 also permits denial of extradition if the executive
authority determines that the request relates to a military offense that is not
punishable under non-military penal legislation.
Paragraph 2 outlines the information that must accompany every request for
extradition under the Treaty. Paragraph 3 describes the additional information
needed when the person is sought for trial in the Requesting State. Paragraph 4
describes the information needed, in addition to the requirements of paragraph 2,
when the person sought has already been tried and found guilty in the Requesting
State.
Most of the items listed in paragraph 2 enable the Requested State to determine
quickly whether extradition is appropriate under the Treaty. For example,
paragraph 2(c) calls for ``a statement of the provisions of law describing the
essential elements of the offense for which extradition is requested,'' which enables
the Requested State to determine easily whether a lack of dual criminality is an
appropriate basis for denying extradition. Some of the items listed in paragraph 2,
however, are required strictly for information purposes. Thus, paragraph 2(e) calls
for ``a statement of the provisions of the law describing any time limit on
prosecution or the execution of the punishment for the offense,'' even though the
Treaty does not permit denial of extradition based on a lapse of time. The United
States and Philippine delegations agreed that paragraph 2(e) should require this
information so that the Requested State is fully informed about the charges brought
in the Requesting State.
Paragraph 3 requires that if the fugitive has not yet been convicted of the crime for
which extradition is requested, the Requesting State must provide such evidence as
would provide probable cause for the arrest and committal for trial of the person if
the offense had been committed in the Requested State. This is consistent with
extradition law in the United States and the Philippines, and is similar to language
in other United States extradition treaties.
During the negotiations, the United States delegation told the Philippine delegation
its concern about the fact that serious criminal charges may be filed in the
Philippines by a complainant without the permission or support of a prosecutor.
United States military personnel have reported that in the past, criminal charges or
the threat of criminal charges seem to have been used against United States
servicemen stationed in the Philippines for improper purposes such as extortion,
harassment, or to gain improper advantage in civil litigation for debt collection.
The United States delegation noted that United States courts generally do not
attempt to evaluate the credibility of affiants in extradition proceedings, but that
the Department of Justice does carefully consider and weigh credibility in
assessing extradition requests, while the Department of State takes credibility into
account in deciding whether to issue the surrender warrant necessary to effect an
extradition. If it appears that complainants or key witnesses involved in a
Philippine extradition request brought the charges solely for improper motives,
their tainted credibility could vitiate probable cause, thereby compelling the United
States to deny extradition under paragraph 3. The Philippine delegation
acknowledged this possibility.
Paragraph 4 lists the information needed to extradite a person who has been
convicted of an offense in the Requesting State. This paragraph makes it clear that
once a conviction has been obtained, no showing of probable cause is required. In
essence, the fact of conviction speaks for itself, a position taken in recent United
States court decisions even absent a specific treaty provision. 28 Subsection (d)
states that if the person sought was found guilty in absentia, the documentation
required for extradition includes both proof of conviction and the same
documentation required in cases in which no conviction has been obtained. This is
consistent with the longstanding United States policy of requiring such
documentation in the extradition of persons convicted in absentia.
Paragraph 5 governs the authentication procedures for documents intended for use
in extradition proceedings. Paragraph 5(a) deals with evidence intended for use in
extradition proceedings in United States and Philippine courts; current United
States and Philippine authentication requirements are virtually
29
identical. Paragraph 5(b) provides a second method for authenticating evidence in
an extradition proceeding by permitting such evidence to be admitted if it is
authenticated in any manner accepted by the laws of the Requested State. This
paragraph should ensure that relevant evidence that usually satisfies the evidentiary
rules of the Requested State is not excluded at the extradition hearing because of
an inadvertent error or omission in the authentication process.
Article 8--Language
The Philippines has two official languages, English and Pilipino (which is based on
Tagalog). Several other languages such as Cebuano, Bicol, Ilocano and Pampango
are widely used. This article requires that all extradition documents be translated
into English.
Paragraph 2 sets forth the information that the Requesting State must provide in
support of such a request. Paragraph 3 states that the Requesting State must be
advised without delay of the outcome of the request and the reasons for its denial,
if any. Paragraph 4 provides that a person who has been provisionally arrested may
be released from detention if the Requesting State does not submit a fully
documented request for extradition to the executive authority of the Requested
State within 60 days of the provisional arrest.31 When the United States is the
Requested State, the executive authority includes the Secretary of State and the
United States Embassy in Manila.
Paragraph 4 establishes that the person provisionally arrested may be released from
custody if the formal extradition request, including supporting documentation, is
not received within the 60-day period. However, the proceedings against the
person need not be dismissed; paragraph 5 makes it clear that the person may be
taken into custody and the extradition proceedings may be commenced again if the
formal request is presented at a later date.
Paragraph 2 provides that the executive authority of the Requested State may
postpone the extradition proceedings against a person who is serving a sentence in
the Requested State until the full execution of any punishment that has been
imposed. The provision allows the Requested State to postpone the surrender of a
person facing prosecution or serving a sentence, as well as the initiation of
extradition proceedings.
Exceptions to the rule have developed over the years. This article codifies the
current formulation of the rule by providing that a person extradited under the
Treaty may only be detained, tried, or punished in the Requesting State for: (1) the
offense for which extradition was granted or a differently denominated offense
based on the same facts, provided the offense is extraditable or is a lesser included
offense; (2) an offense committed after the extradition; or (3) an offense for which
the executive authority of the Requested State consents. Paragraph 1(c)(ii) permits
the Contracting Party that is seeking consent to pursue new charges to detain the
person extradited for 90 days or for such longer period as the Requested State may
authorize while the Requested State makes it determination on the application.
Paragraph 2 prohibits the Requesting State from surrendering the person to a third
state without the consent of the Requested State.
If the United States is the Requested State and the person sought elects to return
voluntarily to the Philippines before the United States Secretary of State signs a
surrender warrant, the process is not deemed an ``extradition.'' Longstanding
United States policy has been that the rule of specialty as described in article 13
does not apply to such cases.
Article 16--Transit
Paragraph 1 gives each Contracting Party the power to authorize transit through its
territory of persons being surrendered to the other Contracting Party by a third
state. A person in transit may be detained in custody during the transit period.
Requests for transit are to contain a description of the person whose transit is
proposed and a brief statement of the facts of the case with respect to which transit
is sought. The transit request may be submitted through diplomatic channels or
directly between the United States and Philippine Departments of Justice. The
negotiators agreed that diplomatic channels will be employed as frequently as
possible for requests of this nature.
Paragraph 2 describes the procedure each Contracting Party should follow when
seeking to transport a person in custody through the territory of the other. Under
this provision, no advance authorization is needed if the person in custody is in
transit to one of the Contracting Parties and is travelling by aircraft and no landing
is scheduled in the territory of the other. Should an unscheduled landing occur, a
request for transit may be required at that time, and the Requested State may grant
the request if, in its discretion, it is deemed appropriate to do so. The Treaty
ensures that the person will be kept in custody for up to 96 hours until a request for
transit is received and thereafter until it is executed.
Paragraph 3 provides that neither Contracting Party shall make a pecuniary claim
against the other in connection with extradition proceedings, including arrest,
detention, examination and surrender of the person sought. This includes any claim
by the person sought for damages or reimbursement of legal fees or other expenses
occasioned by the execution of the extradition request.
Article 18--Consultation
This article provides that the United States and Philippine Departments of Justice
may consult with each other with regard to an individual extradition case or
extradition procedures in general. A similar provision is found in other recent
United States extradition treaties.
Article 19--Application
This Treaty, like most United States extradition treaties negotiated in the past two
decades, is expressly made retroactive and covers offenses that occurred before as
well as after the Treaty enters into force.
Article 21--Termination
This article contains standard treaty language describing the procedure for
termination of the Treaty by either Contracting Party. Termination shall become
effective six months after notice of termination is received.
Resolved (two-thirds of the Senators present concurring therein), That the Senate
advise and consent to the ratification of the Extradition Treaty Between the
Government of the United States of America and the Government of the Republic
of the Philippines, signed at Manila on November 13, 1994. The Senate's advice
and consent is subject to the following proviso, which shall not be included in the
instrument of ratification to be signed by the President:
Nothing in the Treaty requires or authorizes legislation or other action by the
United States of America that is prohibited by the Constitution of the United States
as interpreted by the United States.