Deccan Chronicle

Mumbai attack convict Headley not to be extradited

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Washington, June 27: Mumbai terrorist attack convict David Headley cannot be extradited to India, but Pakistani-origin Canadian businessma­n coconspira­tor Tahawwur Rana faces extraditio­n, a US attorney has told a federal court while opposing his bail plea.

Rana, 59, a childhood friend of David Coleman Headley, was recently rearrested on June 10 in Los Angeles on an extraditio­n request by India for his involvemen­t in the 2008 Mumbai terror attack in which 166 people, including six Americans, were killed. He is a declared fugitive in India.

According to the federal prosecutor­s, between 2006 and November 2008, Rana conspired with Headley, also known as Daood Gilani, and others in Pakistan to assist Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and Harakat ul-Jihad-e-Islami, both US-designated terrorist organisati­ons, to plan and carry out the Mumbai terrorist attacks.

Pakistani-American LeT terrorist Headley was involved in plotting the

2008 Mumbai terror attack. He was made an approver in the case, and is currently serving a 35year prison term in the US for his role in the attack.

The US is yet to file India’s request for Rana's extraditio­n, but is expected to do it soon. It is evident that the offences for which Rana was tried in the Illinois court will differ from the Indian offences mentioned in the complaint. Rana in his defence has argued that US’ decision not to extradite his co-conspirato­r, Headley, to India is inconsiste­nt and bars his extraditio­n. However, Assistant US Attorney John J. Lulejian told a federal court in Los Angeles that unlike Rana, Headley immediatel­y accepted responsibi­lity for his conduct and pleaded guilty to all of the charges in the Supersedin­g Indictment.

Because Headley fulfilled the required terms, the plea agreement establishe­d that Headley would not be extradited to India. Rana’s situation is different because he neither pleaded guilty nor cooperated with the United States. As a result, he is unable to avail himself of the benefits afforded to Headley through his negotiated plea. Thus, he cannot complain that he faces extraditio­n, while his codefendan­t does not, the US attorney said.

Rana’s bail applicatio­n is due for hearing next week.

Early this week, his attorney told the court that the 26/11 convict is not a flight risk and has proposed a USD 1.5 million bond for his release. “Rana should be released on a robust bond: secured by approximat­ely USD 1.5 million in property pledged by family and friends and under the supervisio­n of his daughter, Lemaan Rana, a matriculat­ing medical student and Ph.D. candidate,” Amy Karlin, the Interim Federal Public Defender, said in the court submission on behalf of Rana.

India seeks his arrest on a number of offences, including the conspiracy to commit murder, conspiracy to commit forgery for the purpose of cheating, and murder under relevant sections of the

Indian Penal Code (IPC). He is sought for his role in 2008 terrorist attacks in Mumbai. The US attorney urged the court to continue his detention pending the extraditio­n proceeding­s to India. Describing Rana as a flight risk, the attorney said that no matter what bond package he offers, Rana poses an unacceptab­le flight risk.

If the US extradites Rana to India and he is convicted of the charges, he may be eligible for the death penalty. Given what is at stake, Rana has an extreme incentive to flee and avoid facing these extraditio­n proceeding­s,.

He could accomplish this by going into hiding within the US, but he has a particular incentive to go to another country that may not extradite him without assurances from India that it will not seek, impose or carry out the death penalty, the attorney argued.

If Rana were to flee to Canada, his extraditio­n from Canada to the US would take years and would require substantia­l resources by the government­s of both Canada and the United States, and there is no guarantee that Canada would ultimately grant that extraditio­n request, he said.

However, even if Canada granted the request from the US, the terms of the US-Canada extraditio­n treaty would prohibit the US from extraditin­g Rana to a third country, such as India, unless Canada granted its consent to do so, Lulejian said. - PTI

Pakistani-American LeT terrorist Headley was involved in plotting the

2008 Mumbai terror attack. He was made an approver in the case, and is currently serving a 35year prison term in the US for his role in the attack.

Because Headley fulfilled the required terms, the plea agreement establishe­d that Headley would not be extradited to India.

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