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23 Tul. J. Int'l & Comp. L. 573 (2014-2015)
Trabelsi v. Belgium: Extradition of Terrorist Suspects and Aversion to Whole-Life Prison Sentences

handle is hein.journals/tulicl23 and id is 597 raw text is: 





Trabelsi v Belgium: Extradition of Terrorist Suspects and
Aversion to Whole-Life Prison Sentences

I.   OVERVIEW                     ............................................. 573
II.  BACKGROUND                      ......................................... 574
     A. Irreducible Life Sentences...    ...........................574
     B.   Heightened Scrutiny of Sentence Review....        ......577
III. THE COURT'S DECISION        ................................ 579
IV. ANALYSIS            .................................... 583
V.   CONCLUSION                     ........................................... 587

I.   OVERVIEW
     Three days after terrorists attacked New York City's World Trade
Center in 2001, the Brussels Court of Assizes issued a search warrant for
the home of suspected terrorist Nizar Trabelsi leading to the discovery of
automatic weapons, ammunition, chemical formula, and false passports
in addition to a detailed plan of the U.S. embassy in Paris.' Belgian
authorities arrested Trabelsi and charged him with criminal conspiracy,
forgery, and illegal possession of combat weapons.2 Trabelsi pled guilty
as charged and was sentenced to ten years imprisonment by the Brussels
Court of Assizes on September 30, 2003.' After serving five years of his
sentence, the United States Department of Justice requested Trabelsi's
extradition to the United States to face criminal prosecution on charges
of conspiracy to kill U.S. nationals in targeted facilities, conspiracy to use
weapons of mass destruction, and providing material support to al-Qaeda
associates.' The Department of Justice informed Belgian authorities that
two of these statutory offenses could result in life imprisonment under
the United States Criminal Code.' U.S. authorities stipulated that whole-
life sentences were discretionary because a district court judge could
issue reduced sentences based on mitigating circumstances or a suspect's
willingness to aid law enforcement in their investigation of terrorist
organizations.' The United States guaranteed that Trabelsi would not be

    1.  Trabelsi v. Belgium, App. No. 140/10 Eur. Ct. H.R. para. 6, HUDOC (Sept. 4, 2014),
http://hudoc.echr.coe.int/sites/eng/pages/search.aspx?i=00 1-146372.
    2. Id. para. 7.
    3. Id. para. 8.
    4.   Id.para. 13.
    5.  Id para. 15.
    6.  Id paras. 22, 27.
                                 573

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