PART I: EXTRADITION
1: Introduction and Overview
2: Liability to Extradition; Extradition Offences
3: Categorization of Territories; Territorial Scope of the
Extradition Act 2003
4: Initial Stages of the Extradition Process
5: The Extradition Hearing in Category 1 Cases
6: The Extradition Hearing in Category 2 Cases
7: Extradition and Human Rights
8: The Role of the Secretary of State; Deferral of Extradition
9: Appeals
10: Time for Extradition
11: Consent to Extradition; Withdrawals of Claims for
Extradition
12: Return to the United Kingdom
13: Police Powers in Extradition Cases
14: Post-surrender Matters
15: The European Arrest Warrant
16: Extradition to International Criminal Tribunals
PART II: MUTUAL ASSISTANCE
17: Introduction to International Cooperation in Criminal
Matters
18: UK Requests to Foreign States for Assistance
19: Requests by Foreign States to the UK for Assistance in
Providing Evidence
20: Cross-border Surveillance
21: International Information Systems and Mutual Legal Assistance
Institutions
22: Mutual Assistance in the Service of Process
23: Mutual Recognition of Driving Disqualifications within the
European Union
24: Transfer of Prisoners to and from the UK for the Purpose of
Giving Evidence and Assisting Investigations
25: Mutual Legal Assistance in Relation to Confiscation and
Forfeiture
Extradition Appendices
Appendix E1: The Extradition Act 1870
Appendix E2: Extradition Act 1989
Appendix E3: Extradition Act 2003
Appendix E4: European Arrest Warrant (EAW) Framework Decision
Appendix E5: Category 1 &2 territories; Territories designated
for the purposes of the EA 2003
Appendix E6: European Convention
Mutual Assistance Appendices
Appendix M1: Crime (International Co-operation) Act 2003
Appendix M2: Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 (External Requests and
Orders) Order 2005
Appendix M3: Mutual Legal Assistance Guidelines for the United
Kingdom (4th edn, Home Office, November 2006)
Clive Nicholls QC is Head of Chambers at 3 Raymond Buildings and
specializes in extradition, human rights, mutual assistance, money
laundering, and confiscation of assets cases. He has appeared in
many of the leading extradition cases in England, including over 15
in the Supreme Court and Privy Council. Clare Montgomery QC is a
barrister at Matrix Chambers and a Deputy High Court Judge. She is
the co-editor (with Professor David Ormerod and Tony Shaw QC)
of
Montgomery and Ormerod on Fraud: Criminal Law and Procedure
published by OUP. She has been involved in many of the leading
criminal fraud prosecutions: Guinness, Brent Walker, Maxwell and
Wickes. She has also
been involved in transnational crime cases in the Supreme
Court.
Julian B. Knowles QC is a barrister at Matrix Chambers, where he
specializes in crime, extradition, public law, and human rights. He
is the author of the Blackstone's Guide to the Extradition Act
2003, and co-author of the Blackstone's Guide to the Coroners and
Justice Act 2009.
The book covers the full spectrum of issues pertaining first in
Part I to extradition and in Part II, mutual legal assistance ...
Now in its third edition, this book on the often controversial,
complex, and ever-changing area of extradition is indeed a boon to
practitioners.
*Phillip Taylor MBE, and Elizabeth Taylor, The Report*
Like its predecessors, this edition is thourough in its treatment,
comprehensive in its coverage, and authoritative in its exposition
of the law. The writing team now consists of five specialists, all
of them well known in the field of extradition practice. This book
is going from strength to strength.
*Commonwealth Lawyer*
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