Collapse to view only § 4104. Transfer of offenders on probation
- § 4100. Scope and limitation of chapter
- § 4101. Definitions
- § 4102. Authority of the Attorney General
- § 4103. Applicability of United States laws
- § 4104. Transfer of offenders on probation
- § 4105. Transfer of offenders serving sentence of imprisonment
- § 4106. Transfer of offenders on parole; parole of offenders transferred
- § 4106A. Transfer of offenders on parole; parole of offenders transferred
- § 4107. Verification of consent of offender to transfer from the United States
- § 4108. Verification of consent of offender to transfer to the United States
- § 4109. Right to counsel, appointment of counsel
- § 4110. Transfer of juveniles
- § 4111. Prosecution barred by foreign conviction
- § 4112. Loss of rights, disqualification
- § 4113. Status of alien offender transferred to a foreign country
- § 4114. Return of transferred offenders
- § 4115. Execution of sentences imposing an obligation to make restitution or reparations
All laws of the United States, as appropriate, pertaining to prisoners, probationers, parolees, and juvenile offenders shall be applicable to offenders transferred to the United States, unless a treaty or this chapter provides otherwise.
An offender transferred to the United States because of an act which would have been an act of juvenile delinquency had it been committed in the United States or any State thereof shall be subject to the provisions of chapter 403 of this title except as otherwise provided in the relevant treaty or in an agreement pursuant to such treaty between the Attorney General and the authority of the foreign country.
An offender transferred to the United States shall not be detained, prosecuted, tried, or sentenced by the United States, or any State thereof for any offense the prosecution of which would have been barred if the sentence upon which the transfer was based had been by a court of the jurisdiction seeking to prosecute the transferred offender, or if prosecution would have been barred by the laws of the jurisdiction seeking to prosecute the transferred offender if the sentence on which the transfer was based had been issued by a court of the United States or by a court of another State.
An offender transferred to the United States to serve a sentence imposed by a foreign court shall not incur any loss of civil, political, or civic rights nor incur any disqualification other than those which under the laws of the United States or of the State in which the issue arises would result from the fact of the conviction in the foreign country.
A summons or a warrant shall be issued by the justice, judge or magistrate judge ordering the offender to appear or to be brought before the issuing authority. If the justice, judge, or magistrate judge finds that the person before him is the offender described in the complaint and that the facts alleged in the complaint are true, he shall issue a warrant for commitment of the offender to the custody of the Attorney General until surrender shall be made. The findings and a copy of all the testimony taken before him and of all documents introduced before him shall be transmitted to the Secretary of State, that a Return Warrant may issue upon the requisition of the proper authorities of the sentencing country, for the surrender of offender.
If in a sentence issued in a penal proceeding of a transferring country an offender transferred to the United States has been ordered to pay a sum of money to the victim of the offense for damage caused by the offense, that penalty or award of damages may be enforced as though it were a civil judgment rendered by a United States district court. Proceedings to collect the moneys ordered to be paid may be instituted by the Attorney General in any United States district court. Moneys recovered pursuant to such proceedings shall be transmitted through diplomatic channels to the treaty authority of the transferring country for distribution to the victim.