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Monday, 11 March 2013

Basic law of extradition of accused to foreign country


Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Mobility rights — Extradition 
— Minister ordering surrender of Canadian citizens to U.S. authorities to be tried 
there on terrorism charges — Whether extradition violates right to remain in Canada 
even when foreign state’s claim of jurisdiction is weak or when prosecution in 
Canada is feasible — Whether surrender decisions unreasonable on the evidence —
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, s. 6(1); Extradition Act, S.C. 1999, c. 18.
Administrative law — Natural justice — Procedural fairness — Minister 
providing all materials considered in making decisions to surrender, except legal 
advice — Whether procedural fairness required minister to obtain and disclose 
Canadian prosecutorial authority’s assessment of whether to prosecute in Canada.

SUPREME COURT OF CANADA
CITATION: Sriskandarajah v. United States of America, 
2012 SCC 70
DATE: 20121214




.After the Ontario Superior Court of Justice found that there was sufficient 
evidence to commit S and N, who are Canadian citizens, for extradition to the United 
States to be tried there on charges related to their alleged support of a terrorist 
organization, the Minister of Justice ordered their surrender. Those decisions were 
subsequently upheld on appeal.
Held: The appeals should be dismissed.
Extradition does not violate the right of citizens to remain in Canada 
under s. 6(1) of the Charter, even when the foreign state’s claim of jurisdiction is 
weak or when prosecution in Canada is feasible. To hold otherwise would amount to 
overruling United States of America v. Cotroni, [1989] 1 S.C.R. 1469, United States 
of America v. Kwok, 2001 SCC 18, [2001] 1 S.C.R. 532, and Lake v. Canada 
(Minister of Justice), 2008 SCC 23, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 761. No compelling reasons 
have been shown to depart from the principles set out in those cases. Extradition does 
not violate the core values of s. 6(1). Rather, it fulfills the needs of an effective
criminal justice system. The decision to extradite is a complex matter, involving 
numerous factual, geopolitical, diplomatic and financial considerations. The Minister 
of Justice has superior expertise in this regard, and his discretion is not conclusively 
bound by any of the Cotroni factors. The ability of Canada to prosecute the offences 
remains but one factor in the inquiry; nor is the strength of the foreign jurisdiction’s 
claim to prosecute always determinative. Here, the record shows that the Minister properly considered and weighed 
the factors relevant to the situations of S and N. The Minister did not ascribe 
determinative weight to the fact that charges were not laid against them in Canada, 
and he conducted an independent Cotroni assessment. His conclusion that there were 
sufficient links to the U.S. to justify extradition flowed from this independent 
assessment and has not been shown to be unreasonable on the evidence.
The claim of procedural unfairness has not been established. S and N’s 
request for disclosure of the assessment of the Public Prosecution Service of Canada 
on whether to prosecute them in Canada is a thinly disguised attempt to impugn the 
state’s legitimate exercise of prosecutorial authority. Procedural fairness does not 
require the Minister to obtain and disclose every document that may be indirectly 
connected to the process that ultimately led him to decide to extradite. 
S and N’s challenge to the constitutionality of the Canadian terrorism 
provisions corresponding to the alleged conduct for which they are sought in the U.S. 
is considered (and dismissed) in the companion case, R. v. Khawaja, 2012 SCC 69.


THE CHIEF JUSTICE —[1] The Minister of Justice has ordered the surrender of the appellants, who 
are Canadian citizens, to the United States to be tried there on terrorism charges, 
related to their alleged support of the Liberation Tigers of the Tamil Eelam (“Tamil 
Tigers or LTTE”), a terrorist organization involved in insurgency in Sri Lanka. 
1. Overview
[2] Suresh Sriskandarajah is alleged to have assisted the Tamil Tigers in 
researching and acquiring submarine and warship design software, communications 
equipment and other technology. He is said to have helped smuggle items into 
territory controlled by the Tamil Tigers. He is also alleged to have laundered money 
for the Tamil Tigers and to have counselled individuals on how to smuggle goods to 
them in Sri Lanka.
[3] Piratheepan Nadarajah is alleged to have been part of a group of four 
individuals who attempted to purchase on behalf of the Tamil Tigers both surface to 
air missiles and AK-47s from an undercover police officer posing as a black market 
arms dealer in Long Island, New York. The undercover officer had arranged the 
meeting with one Mr. Sarachandran, who had allegedly named Nadarajah as his 
armaments expert in telephone conversations.
[4] In 2006, the United States of America requested the Canadian Minister of 
Justice for the extradition of both appellants to stand trial in the U.S., on various 
terrorism-related charges. Pattillo J. of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice found that there was sufficient evidence to commit the appellants for extradition on 
terrorism charges ((2009), 95 O.R. (3d) 514). In decisions dated November 17, 2009, 
the Minister of Justice ordered the surrender of the appellants to the United States. 
These decisions were subsequently upheld by the Court of Appeal 
2. Issues
[5] The appellants oppose their extradition on four grounds: (1) that the 
conduct alleged against them apart from association with the LTTE is not criminal 
conduct because the Canadian terrorism provisions corresponding to the alleged 
conduct for which the appellants are sought in the United States are unconstitutional; 
(2) that extradition violates s. 6(1) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, 
which guarantees the right of citizens to remain in Canada, when the foreign state’s 
claim of jurisdiction is weak or when prosecution in Canada is feasible; (3) that the 
Minister’s review of the extradition order did not comply with the requirements of 
procedural fairness; and (4) that the surrender decisions were unreasonable in all the 
circumstances.
3. Are the Canadian Terrorism Offences Unconstitutional? 
[6] The Extradition Act, S.C. 1999, c. 18, requires that the conduct for which 
extradition is sought be an offence in Canada: s. 3. The appellants challenge the 
constitutionality of the Canadian terrorism offences relied on in the Authority to 
Proceed. Pattillo J. and the Court of Appeal rejected these arguments. [7] I consider the constitutionality of the impugned Canadian terrorism 
provisions in the companion case, R. v. Khawaja, 2012 SCC 69, concluding that they 
do not infringe the rights protected under ss. 2 and 7 of the Charter. For the reasons 
there stated, this ground of appeal is dismissed. 
4. What Is the Scope of the Right to Remain in Canada Under Section 6(1) of the 
Charter? 
[8] Section 6(1) of the Charter provides that “[e]very citizen of Canada has 
the right to enter, remain in and leave Canada”. This Court first analyzed the rapport 
between extradition and the right to remain in Canada in United States of America v. 
Cotroni, [1989] 1 S.C.R. 1469. The scheme proposed in Cotroni was subsequently 
confirmed and refined in United States of America v. Kwok, 2001 SCC 18, [2001] 1 
S.C.R. 532, and in Lake v. Canada (Minister of Justice), 2008 SCC 23, [2008] 1 
S.C.R. 761. From this jurisprudence, six principles provide guidance to respond to 
the interpretation of s. 6(1) proposed by the appellants.
a) The Jurisprudence
[9] First, Cotroni, Kwok and Lake hold that extradition constitutes a marginal 
limitation of the s. 6(1) right to remain in Canada. Although the surrender of a 
Canadian citizen to a foreign country impairs the individual’s right to remain on 
Canadian soil, s. 6(1) is primarily aimed against exile and banishment, i.e. exclusion 
from membership in the national community. As a consequence, this limitation “lies 
at the outer edges of the core values” of s. 6(1): Cotroni, at p. 1481.[10] Second, and flowing from the previous point, extradition will be 
generally warranted under s. 1 of the Charter as a reasonable limitation of the right to 
remain in Canada: Cotroni, at p. 1483; Lake, at para. 37. This is supported by the 
pressing and substantial objectives of extradition: (1) protecting the public against 
crime through its investigation; (2) bringing fugitives to justice for the proper 
determination of their criminal liability; (3) ensuring, through international 
cooperation, that national boundaries do not serve as a means of escape from the rule 
of law.
[11] Third, the Minister’s discretion to extradite or to prosecute in Canada is a 
necessary condition for the effective enforcement of the criminal law, and it attracts a 
high degree of deference: Cotroni, at p. 1497; Kwok, at paras. 93-96; Lake, at para. 
34. The Minister’s assessment of whether the infringement of a fugitive’s s. 6(1) right 
is justified under s. 1 involves a determination of whether, based on his superior 
expertise of Canada’s international obligations and interests, Canada should defer to 
the interests of the requesting state. This is mostly a political decision. Courts should 
interfere with the Minister’s discretion only in the “clearest of cases” (Lake, at para. 
30).
[12] Fourth, ministerial discretion to extradite is not unfettered. Public 
authorities must give due regard and weight to the citizen’s Charter right to remain in 
Canada in considering whether to prosecute domestically or order surrender. The 
Minister must order surrender only if satisfied that extradition is more appropriate than domestic prosecution, having balanced all factors which he finds relevant under 
the circumstances, such as:
 Where was the impact of the offence felt or likely to have been felt?
 Which jurisdiction has the greater interest in prosecuting the offence?
 Which police force played the major role in the development of the case?
 Which jurisdiction has laid charges?
 Which jurisdiction has the most comprehensive case?
 Which jurisdiction is ready to proceed to trial?
 Where is the evidence located?
 Is the evidence mobile?
 How many accused are involved and can they be gathered together in one 
place for trial?
 In what jurisdiction were most of the acts in furtherance of the crime 
committed?
 What is the nationality and residence of the accused?
 What is the severity of the sentence that the accused is likely to receive in 
each jurisdiction?
[13] Fifth, no single factor is dispositive. Nor need all relevant factors be 
given equal weight. The Minister may decide to grant an extradition request because 
of one factor which he finds determinative in a given case. The pertinence and 
significance of the “Cotroni factors” vary from case to case: Lake, at para. 30. Nothing precludes the Minister from paying more heed to one factor than another in a 
given case. The inquiry is essentially a fact-based, balancing assessment within the 
expertise of the Minister.
[14] Sixth, the question of whether a Canadian prosecution is a realistic option 
is simply one factor that must be considered. It is not the determinative factor in the 
Minister’s assessment: Cotroni, at p. 1494; Kwok, at para. 92; Lake, at para. 37. In 
Kwok, Arbour J. noted that “[t]he efficacy of a prosecution goes beyond simply 
determining whether it has any chance of resulting in a conviction. It requires an 
assessment, in the public interest, of all the costs and risks involved, including delay, 
inconvenience to witnesses and applicable rules” (para. 90). In addition, the interest 
of the foreign nation in prosecuting the fugitive on its territory must not be neglected. 
Indeed, it would not be wrong for a Minister, after having pondered all the relevant 
factors, to “yield to the superior interest of the Requesting State, even in a case where 
some form of prosecution Canada [was] not materially impossible or totally unlikely 
to succeed” (Kwok, at para. 91).
b) Should the Jurisprudence be Reconsidered?
[15] The appellants ask the Court to reconsider Cotroni. First, they submit 
that extradition should no longer automatically be seen as a marginal limitation of the 
right to remain in Canada, “l[ying] at the outer edges of the core values” protected by 
s. 6(1) of the Charter (Sriskandarajah factum, at para. 47). They submit that where a 
citizen is sought by a foreign country which has a weak claim of jurisdiction “by Canadian lights”, extradition should be seen as a more serious infringement of s. 6(1) 
than contemplated in Cotroni (at para. 52). They say this evolution is needed because 
of recent trends in extradition and criminal justice, in particular the emergence of 
sweeping claims of jurisdiction by foreign states over the conduct of Canadian 
citizens within Canadian territory. 
[16] On the basis of this revised interpretation of s. 6(1), the appellants argue 
that two factors should have near-dispositive weight in the s. 1 analysis: (1) a weak 
claim of jurisdiction by the foreign state; and (2) a realistic possibility of prosecuting 
in Canada. They argue that if the requesting state’s claim of jurisdiction is weak or 
there is a realistic possibility of prosecuting a citizen in Canada for the crimes, the 
Minister will not be justified in ordering the surrender of the citizen in question. 
[17] To accept the appellant’s propositions would amount to overruling 
Cotroni, Kwok and Lake. The appellants’ interpretation of s. 6(1) of the Charter 
departs from the Cotroni jurisprudence in two important ways. First, it rejects the 
proposition that extradition is a marginal limitation of the right to remain in Canada. 
Second, it abandons the view that ministerial discretion is not conclusively bound by 
any of the Cotroni factors.
[18] The Court does not lightly depart from the law set out in the precedents. 
Adherence to precedent has long animated the common law: “[I]t is an established 
rule to abide by former precedents, where the same points come again in litigation” 
(W. Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (4th ed. 1770), Book I, at p. 69). The rule of precedent, or stare decisis, promotes predictability, reduces 
arbitrariness, and enhances fairness, by treating like cases alike.
[19] Exceptionally, this Court has recognized that it may depart from its prior 
decisions if there are compelling reasons to do so: R. v. Henry, 2005 SCC 76, [2005] 
3 S.C.R. 609, at para. 44. The benefits must outweigh the costs. For instance, 
compelling reasons will be found when a precedent has become unworkable, when its 
validity has been undermined by subsequent jurisprudence or when it has been 
decided on the basis of considerations that are no longer relevant.
[20] No compelling reasons have been shown to depart from the principles set 
out in Cotroni, Kwok and Lake. These principles have been consistently and 
repeatedly upheld by this Court. The common theme is that extradition, unlike exile 
and banishment, does not lie at the core of the right to remain in Canada under s. 6(1) 
of the Charter. A Canadian citizen who is extradited to stand trial in a foreign state 
does not necessarily become persona non grata: the accused may return to Canada if 
he is acquitted or, if he is convicted, at the end of his sentence or even to serve his 
sentence in accordance with the International Transfer of Offenders Act, S.C. 2004, 
c. 21. Extradition does not violate the core values of s. 6(1), but rather, it fulfills the 
needs of an effective criminal justice system. 
[21] The appellants have not shown that the considerations on which Cotroni 
(1989), Kwok (2001) and Lake (2008) were based are no longer valid. If anything, the march of globalization calls for increased international cooperation in law 
enforcement.
[22] The decision to extradite is a complex matter, involving numerous 
factual, geopolitical, diplomatic and financial considerations. A strong factor in one 
case may be a weak factor in another. This supports maintaining a non-formalistic test 
that grants flexibility to the Minister’s decision when faced with a foreign state’s 
request. The Minister of Justice has superior expertise in this regard, and his 
discretion is necessary for the proper enforcement of the criminal law.
[23] More particularly, the case for elevating either of the factors on which the 
appellants rely to near-dispositive factors has not been made. It is for the Minister to 
decide whether granting the foreign state’s request of extradition is appropriate in the 
circumstances. The ability of Canada to prosecute the offences remains but one 
factor in this inquiry, and may be offset by other factors, such as where the 
prosecution may most efficaciously be carried out. Extradition is not to be avoided at 
all costs. In an age when crimes span borders, states should not be reduced to 
piecemeal prosecutions of one perpetrator in one jurisdiction and another in another 
jurisdiction. Nor is the strength of the foreign jurisdiction’s claim to prosecute 
always determinative. It is one factor among others. A highly tenuous claim of 
jurisdiction might be a reason to refuse extradition, to be sure. However, a weak 
claim does not conclusively entail an unjustified breach of s. 6(1). . Rather, the weakness of a claim of jurisdiction informs the reasonableness of the Minister’s 
decision, which I discuss later. 
5. The Argument on Procedural Fairness
[24] The appellants argue that the Minister’s duty of procedural fairness goes 
beyond providing reasons to explain which Cotroni factors prompted his decision. 
Procedural fairness, they say, also requires the Minister of Justice to obtain and 
disclose the assessment of the Public Prosecution Service of Canada (“PPSC”) on 
whether to prosecute them in Canada. The appellants argue that they should be given 
time to respond to the prosecution assessment by the PPSC, following which the 
Minister should address their concerns in his final decision to extradite. They submit 
that disclosure is important because the decision not to lay charges in Canada was a 
key factor in the final decision to extradite. They add that this would ensure that the 
prosecutorial authorities’ assessment was not based on erroneous or out-dated 
information.
[25] The Minister refused the appellants’ requests for this information, stating 
that he had provided the appellants with all of the materials which he had considered 
in making the decisions on surrender, with the exception of legal advice, and that he 
had not been provided with a copy of any PPSC assessment. With respect to the 
PPSC’s assessment of prosecution in Canada, the Minister took the position that the 
decision whether to prosecute in Canada was only one of many relevant factors, and 
pointed out that the appellant’s right of appeal was from the decision to extradite, not the decision whether to prosecute, which involves prosecutorial discretion. (See 
Minister’s Reasons on Surrender re Sriskandarajah, A.R., vol. I, at pp. 50-51; see also 
Minister’s reasons on Surrender re Nadarajah, at pp. 58-59.)
[26] The appellants’ submission that they are entitled to see the PPSC’s 
prosecution assessment cannot be sustained.
[27] First and foremost, prosecutorial authorities are not bound to provide 
reasons for their decisions, absent evidence of bad faith or improper motives: Kwok, 
at paras. 104-108. Not only does prosecutorial discretion accord with the principles 
of fundamental justice — it constitutes an indispensable device for the effective 
enforcement of the criminal law: Cotroni, at pp. 1497-98. The appellants do not 
allege bad faith. Their request to see the prosecution assessment is a thinly disguised 
attempt to impugn the state’s legitimate exercise of prosecutorial authority.
[28] Second, as the Minister pointed out, the ability to prosecute in Canada is 
but one of many factors to be considered in deciding whether to extradite a person for 
prosecution in another country. Procedural fairness does not require the Minister to 
obtain and disclose every document that may be indirectly connected to the process 
that ultimately led him to decide to extradite.
[29] Finally, concerns that the decision may have been based on out-dated 
information are met by the appellants’ ability to bring full and correct information to the attention of the Minister. In turn, the Minister must, in good faith, transfer to the 
prosecution authorities the information he finds relevant.
[30] As a matter of procedural fairness, full Stinchcombe-type disclosure is not 
required at the surrender stage (R. v. Stinchcombe, [1991] 3 S.C.R. 326). The 
Minister must present the fugitive with adequate disclosure of the case against him or 
her, and with a reasonable opportunity to state his or her case against surrender 
(Kwok, at paras. 99 and 104), and he must provide sufficient reasons for his decision 
to surrender (Lake, at para. 46; Kwok, at para. 83). In this case, the Minister complied 
with these requirements.
[31] I conclude that the claim of procedural unfairness has not been 
established. 
6. Were the Minister’s Decisions Unreasonable?
[32] The appellants argue that the Minister’s decisions to order their surrender 
to the United States was unreasonable because he failed to consider all relevant 
factors bearing on the Cotroni assessment. In particular, they submit, the Minister 
failed to address (1) the weak American claim of jurisdiction over the appellants’ 
alleged conduct, and (2) the ability to prosecute in Canada. Accordingly, extradition 
was an unjustifiable limitation on the appellants’ s. 6(1) rights.[33] As explained above, the Minister’s order of surrender is a political 
decision that attracts a high degree of judicial deference. The Extradition Act confers 
broad discretion on the Minister’s decision to extradite: s. 7.
[34] In these cases, the record shows that the Minister properly considered and 
weighed the factors relevant to the situation of the appellants. With respect to the 
appellants’ first concern, the Minister found that the “negative impact of [their] 
actions, when considered in concert with the alleged actions of [their] many coconspirators, would have been felt in jurisdictions outside of Canada”, implicitly 
including the United States (A.R., vol. I, at pp. 54 and 60). Additionally, it seems 
clear on the facts alleged here that the conduct described is connected in one way or 
another with the use of e-mail accounts, companies and bank accounts based within 
the United States. With respect to the appellants’ second concern, the Minister 
considered whether prosecution should proceed in Canada and concluded that this 
factor did not negate extradition. 
[35] In concluding that extradition was a justifiable limitation of the 
appellants’ s. 6(1) right, the Minister provided five reasons which were relevant: the 
investigation was initiated and developed by American authorities; charges have been 
laid in the U.S.; the U.S. is ready to proceed to trial; all of the co-accuseds have been 
charged in the U.S.; and most of the witnesses are located in the U.S. Contrary to the 
suggestion of the appellants (Sriskandarajah factum, at paras. 78-82), the Minister did 
not ascribe determinative weight to the fact that the PPSC decided not to lay charges in Canada against them. The Minister conducted an independent Cotroni assessment 
and concluded that the surrender of the appellants would not unjustifiably violate 
their s. 6(1) rights, principally on the basis of the fact that the U.S. had taken the lead 
in investigating and prosecuting the actions of the appellants. The Minister’s 
conclusion that there were sufficient links to the U.S. to justify extradition flowed 
from this independent assessment and has not been shown to be unreasonable on the 
evidence.
[36] The claim that the Minister’s decision was unreasonable must be rejected. 
7. Conclusion
[37] The appeals are dismissed and the orders of surrender confirmed. 
Appeals dismissed.


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