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US rules for Noriega extradition | US rules for Noriega extradition |
(10 minutes later) | |
The US Supreme Court has refused to hear an appeal from Panama's ex-leader Manuel Noriega against his extradition to France on money laundering charges. | The US Supreme Court has refused to hear an appeal from Panama's ex-leader Manuel Noriega against his extradition to France on money laundering charges. |
Noriega wanted to be sent back to his country after completing a drug sentence at a jail in Florida. | Noriega wanted to be sent back to his country after completing a drug sentence at a jail in Florida. |
In April, a US court ruled the former dictator could be extradited to France. | |
The US convicted Noriega of laundering illicit drugs money in 1990 and he was sentenced to 30 years, later reduced to 17 years for good behaviour. | The US convicted Noriega of laundering illicit drugs money in 1990 and he was sentenced to 30 years, later reduced to 17 years for good behaviour. |
France convicted him in his absence in 1999 for laundering money through French banks, though it says he will be granted a new trial. | |
His lawyers had argued international law required he be returned to Panama. | |
As a former prisoner of war following the US invasion of Panama in 1989, they said, the Geneva Conventions precluded his extradition to a third country. | |
He also faces a 20-year sentence at home imposed by a Panamanian court in his absence for ordering the murder in 1985 of Hugo Spadafora, a prominent opponent. | |
Noriega, who is in his 70s, led Panama in the mid- to late 1980s and was a key American ally in the region before being captured by invading US forces. | |
He has remained in US custody ever since the completion of his 17-year US prison term, pending his appeal against extradition. |
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