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  1. #1
    FarangRed
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    Surge in Britons exported for trial

    The number of people in Britain seized under the controversial "no-evidence-needed" European Arrest Warrant rose by more than 50 per cent last year, figures obtained by The Sunday Telegraph show.


    Under the European Arrest Warrant, people can be held and extradited over a charge that is not even a crime in this country Photo: ALAMY




    In total 1,032 people – almost three a day – were detained and extradited by British police on the orders of European prosecutors in the 12 months to April, up from 683 in 2008-09. The Home Office expects a further 70 per cent rise, to 1,700 cases, next year.



    The increase will fuel growing political concern about the "unfair" and "disproportionate" nature of the warrants, which British courts have little power to challenge.



    It comes as the case of Christopher Tappin, a suburban golf club captain accused of arms smuggling, sparked separate controversy about "unbalanced" extradition arrangements with the US.



    David Blunkett, the former home secretary who introduced the European warrants, admitted he had been "insufficiently sensitive" about how they could be "overused". David Davis, his former Tory shadow, last night called for a "review and reform" of the extradition system.



    The number of European Arrest Warrant detentions in Britain has risen 43-fold since 2004, when there were only 24 across the year. Many of those detained are accused of relatively minor crimes such as possessing cannabis or leaving petrol stations without paying.


    They can spend long periods in jail – here and abroad – for crimes which might not even have been prosecuted in Britain. They can also be seized for offences which are not crimes in Britain.
    Foreign prosecutors do not have to present evidence to the British courts, just demand the person be "surrendered".


    It can be revealed that a middle-aged motorist from Kent spent weeks in a British prison after Polish prosecutors sought his extradition on charges of possessing a forged car insurance certificate.



    Patrick Reece-Edwards, 49, was stopped at a Polish border crossing. After questioning, he was allowed to drive off, but months later was seized at his home in Dartford under a European Arrest Warrant.


    "He was kept in custody in Britain for weeks,” said his solicitor, Stephen Fidler. “After he was extradited to Poland, matters were resolved by payment of an administrative penalty with no criminal record.”



    Another of Mr Fidler’s clients is fighting extradition to Romania after being convicted there of possessing a small quantity of cannabis.


    He is in his third month in a British prison and is likely to be there at least a further two months before his appeal against the European Arrest Warrant is heard. “Aside from the disproportionality of these cases, the costs to the British authorities are huge,” said Mr Fidler. “Those resources should go towards tackling serious crime in the UK, not minor crime abroad.”



    Britain has the same rights to request no-evidence extraditions from other EU countries, but uses the power sparingly.


    The latest figures show that 98 people were brought to the UK on European Arrest Warrants in 12 months, a fall of 6 per cent on the year before.


    Supporters of the warrants say that in an increasingly borderless Europe their role has become vital, but human rights campaigners say that the warrants place British citizens at the mercy of some European legal systems whose standards and safeguards are lower.


    Catherine Heard, the policy officer at Fair Trials International, said: “The over-rigid nature of the system and the absence of basic, EU-wide defence rights have seen people being extradited to serve sentences after grossly unfair trials, or spending months in pretrial detention waiting to prove their innocence.”



    Mr Blunkett said: “I was right, as Home Secretary in the post-9/11 era, to agree to the European Arrest Warrant, but I was insufficiently sensitive to how it might be used.”


    A Home Office spokesman said: “The Government is committed to reviewing the UK’s extradition arrangements.”
    Additional reporting: David Barrett

  2. #2

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    dirtydog's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by FarangRed
    The increase will fuel growing political concern about the "unfair" and "disproportionate" nature of the warrants,
    Quote Originally Posted by FarangRed
    Many of those detained are accused of relatively minor crimes such as possessing cannabis or leaving petrol stations without paying.
    If I owned a petrol station and the bastards robbed me I wouldn't mind them spending a year or 2 in prison, fuk erm. As for the drugs, let them come to Thailand or Malaysia or Singapore and enjoy the prisons there.

  3. #3
    Molecular Mixup
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    look at that guy in the photo -wearing his shoes in bed !,what an animal,if he ever gets a Thai wife hes in for a thick ear

    Perhaps its about time we started exporting criminals ,rather than being the dustbin for the worlds scum

  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by blue View Post
    look at that guy in the photo -wearing his shoes in bed !,what an animal,if he ever gets a Thai wife hes in for a thick ear

    Perhaps its about time we started exporting criminals ,rather than being the dustbin for the worlds scum
    Are you telling me before you discovered your new life in Thailand, you didnt wear shoes inside the house, stand on chairs with your shoes on or lie down on brand new beds in the shops with shoes still on?

  5. #5
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    but they can't send murders and rapists back to Somali and Pakistan because they might get persecuted.

    Cheers

  6. #6
    Thailand Expat
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    Quote Originally Posted by blue View Post
    look at that guy in the photo -wearing his shoes in bed !,what an animal,if he ever gets a Thai wife hes in for a thick ear

    Perhaps its about time we started exporting criminals ,rather than being the dustbin for the worlds scum

    Sort of interesting that in a PC world, the fellow has a swarthy complexion. Is there a subliminal message in there somewhere?

  7. #7
    FarangRed
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    He's a bit over dressed for being in a cell dont ya think

  8. #8
    euston has flown

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    Does seem very broken. Perhaps the UK should specify that the offence needs to have a prison sentence associated with the crime and demand that the requesting government pays for the prison costs etc + a very large admin fee, and demonstrate that they have some enthusiasm to get the bugger back

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by blue View Post
    look at that guy in the photo -wearing his shoes in bed !,what an animal,if he ever gets a Thai wife hes in for a thick ear

    Perhaps its about time we started exporting criminals ,rather than being the dustbin for the worlds scum

    Not very likely a blackie would get a Thai wife, unless she was desperate, or he was very rich

  10. #10
    Thailand Expat
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    Quote Originally Posted by crazy dog View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by blue View Post
    look at that guy in the photo -wearing his shoes in bed !,what an animal,if he ever gets a Thai wife hes in for a thick ear

    Perhaps its about time we started exporting criminals ,rather than being the dustbin for the worlds scum

    Not very likely a blackie would get a Thai wife, unless she was desperate, or he was very rich
    You make it sound like it is incredibly difficult to find a thai wife and only handsome and successful young men, such as yourself no doubt, ever attain this lofty dream.....

  11. #11
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Britain has the same rights to request no-evidence extraditions from other EU countries, but uses the power sparingly.
    Thank fuck for that. They'd probably only want to come back and stay anyway.

  12. #12
    FarangRed
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    ^^ then they get a degree in sociology something like that

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