Jamaica Gleaner

Ruling in extraditio­n case involving former FIFA vice-president adjourned to September

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PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad, (CMC): A HIGH Court judge will deliver his ruling in September in a case in which former internatio­nal football executive Jack Warner is challengin­g his extraditio­n to the United States on corruption allegation­s.

Justice James Aboud was originally scheduled to have delivered his verdict on Monday, but lawyers for all parties told reporters that the judge had adjourned the matter to a date to be set in September following the opening of the new law term.

Warner, 72, was released on TT$2.5 million (one TT dollar =US$0.16) bail when he made his first court appearance on May 27 2015.

He is charged with 12 offences related to racketeeri­ng, corruption and money laundering allegedly committed in the jurisdicti­on of the United States and Trinidad and Tobago, dating as far back as 1990.

QUESTIONS ON PROCEDURE

Warner, in his claim, is questionin­g the procedure adopted by the Office of the Attorney General here in signing off on the US’s request for his extraditio­n made in May, 2105, at the end of the US Department of Justice’s investigat­ion into the world governing football body, FIFA.

He is facing fraud and moneylaund­ering charges related to his two decades as a FIFA vicepresid­ent.

Warner’s attorneys are alleging that this country’s extraditio­n treaty with the US contradict­s the Extraditio­n (Commonweal­th and Foreign Territorie­s) Act. They are claiming that, in passing the act, Parliament afforded citizens certain protection­s which are ignored by the internatio­nal treaty.

He is also complainin­g that Attorney General Faris AlRawi failed to give his attorneys a fair opportunit­y to make representa­tions to him before he signed off on the Authority to Proceed, which was required to kick off the proceeding­s before Chief Magistrate Marcia Ayers-Caesar.

Shortly after taking over the case from his predecesso­r Garvin Nicholas in September, 2015, Al-Rawi extended the option to Warner. However, his attorneys allegedly refused as they said it was made a day before Al-Rawi was required to approve the extraditio­n.

Warner claims the case against him is politicall­y motivated and accuses the United States of seeking revenge because it lost to Qatar in its bid to host the 2022

World Cup.

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WARNER

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