Evaluating the Potential for Success of Extradition Requests Made Pursuant to the UN Convention Sample Clauses

Evaluating the Potential for Success of Extradition Requests Made Pursuant to the UN Convention. Against Transnational Organized Crime Ratified by El Salvador and the United States in 2004 and 2005, respectively, the Organized Crime Convention sets out “to promote cooperation to prevent and combat transnational organized crime more effectively.”202 In particular, the Convention applies to “the prevention, investigation, and prosecution” of serious offenses “where the offence is transnational in nature and involves an organized criminal group.”203 Given the examples described in this Note, and assuming the United States is only pursuing extradition in cases where the charged offense is particularly serious—“punishable by at least four years” in prison204—the Supreme Court of Justice should find MS-13 members ideal candidates for extradition under the Organized Crime Convention. The language in Article 3(2)(c) of the Organized Crime Convention provides a means for state-party205 prosecutors to attack MS-13 and similar organizations, based solely on their status as transnational organizations. For instance, Article 3(2)(c) defines a transnational offense as one that “is committed in one State but involves an organized criminal group that engages in criminal activities in more than one State.”206 Recall the discussion from Part II regarding MS-13 leaders jailed in El Salvador directing criminal 200. El Salvador Country Profile, U.S. AGENCY FOR INT’L DEV. 1 (July 2010) xxxx://xxx.xxxxx.xxx/locations/latin_america_caribbean/country/el_salvador/El_Salvad or_country_profile.pdf.
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