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Fan loses extradition court fight Fan loses extradition court fight
(21 minutes later)
An England fan has lost his latest fight to avoid being extradited to Portugal to serve a jail term for his involvement in a riot during Euro 2004.An England fan has lost his latest fight to avoid being extradited to Portugal to serve a jail term for his involvement in a riot during Euro 2004.
Appeal Court judge Lord Justice Moses said the High Court had no jurisdiction to intervene in the extradition of Garry Mann, from Faversham, Kent. Appeal Court judge Lord Justice Moses said the High Court had no jurisdiction to intervene in the extradition of Garry Mann, 51, of Faversham, Kent.
But he granted his lawyers a stay of 14 days pending a further judicial review.But he granted his lawyers a stay of 14 days pending a further judicial review.
He received a two-year sentence for his role in football-related violence in Albufeira in the Algarve. Mann was given a two-year sentence for his role in football-related violence in Albufeira in the Algarve.
He was deported after the case but not made to serve the sentence in the UK.He was deported after the case but not made to serve the sentence in the UK.
'Deprived of justice'
His lawyers claimed he underwent a fast-track procedure which produced an unfair trial.
Lord Justice Moses, sitting with Mr Justice Hickinbottom, said the apparent injustice did not stem from what Mann believed was an unfair and unlawful hearing.
He said he had been deprived of proper legal assistance "by two sets of lawyers in two separate jurisdictions on two distinct occasions".
Lord Justice Moses said he hoped the European Court of Human Rights would intervene or diplomatic authorities in the UK or Portugal could "strive to achieve some measure of justice for Mr Mann, a justice of which he has been so signally deprived by those on whom he had previously relied".
Mann's lawyers now have 14 days to appeal to the European Court or take the matter further in the English courts.