Thailand Judicial Court clears obstacles for extradition of Viktor Bout >>
FROM A
DIFFERENT POINT OF VIEW by Monte Friesner
5 October 2010
WANTED SA has just been informed that Viktor Bout the alleged Russian arms smuggler dubbed "The Merchant of Death" was led off by masked commandos after a Thailand Judicial Court late today Tuesday October 05, 2010 removed a key legal obstacle to his U.S. extradition, which has landed Thailand in the midst of a diplomatic tussle between Washington and Moscow.
Viktor Bout, who allegedly supplied weapons that fueled wars in South America, the Middle East & Africa, has been fighting extradition since his March 2008 arrest in Bangkok as part of a U.S.-led sting operation with private intelligence from various countries including Panama.
The Bangkok Criminal Court on Tuesday dismissed a new trial against Bout, which had threatened to stall the extradition further. It was the latest phase — and a potential turning point — in a long-running legal battle. Both Washington and Moscow have been demanding Bout's hand-over.
The announcement of the ruling stunned the normally stoic Bout, who was standing to hear the verdict but then sat and hugged his wife, who was seated beside him and began to weep. He then waded through the courtroom to his defense lawyer and with a look of concern said:
"(Do) something now. The appeal! We need to appeal!"
Court officials told reporters that the defense was not allowed to appeal. Only prosecutors who filed the charges of money laundering and wire fraud on behalf of the U.S. have the right to appeal within 72 hours, after which time Bout could be extradited. Prosecutors were not expected to appeal.
One possible twist: Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva has said once the court process is finished he will have the final say in Bout's extradition.
Asked by reporters how he felt, Bout replied:
"I don't know. I don't know what to say."
Shackled at the ankles, Bout was escorted in and out of the courtroom by masked commandos. He wore a bulletproof vest for his journey to and from prison. The vest was removed inside the courtroom.
A Thai Appeals Court gave its approval Aug. 20 for Bout's extradition to the U.S. to face trial on four terrorism-related charges that could land him in prison for life. That ruling reversed a lower court's decision.
But the process was stalled because, after the lower court rejected the request, Washington had filed a second set of charges to ensure Bout wasn't set free. Working with Thai prosecutors, the U.S. then tried to drop those charges after the Appeal Court's ruling, but the Bangkok Criminal Court said Monday the legal proceedings had already started and must be allowed to continue.
But in another twist in the case, the Criminal Court on Tuesday ruled to dismiss the second set of charges, saying there was no further legal reason to keep Bout from being extradited.
The apparent reversal from Monday to Tuesday appeared to be the court's way of saying it would not be pressured into prematurely dropping the second case before its first hearing.
It ruled that there was "a lack of evidence and witnesses" to prove the charges of money laundering and wire fraud, and would so dismiss the case unless the prosecution appealed.
When the Appeals Court cleared the way for Bout's extradition in August, it said the extradition must take place within 90 days, or roughly by Nov. 20.
A U.S. Embassy spokeswoman in Bangkok could not immediately be reached for comment.
Russia says Bout is an innocent businessman and has demanded his return. Experts say Bout, a former Soviet air force officer, has knowledge of Russia's military and intelligence operations and that Moscow does not want him going on trial in the United States.
Bout's high-profile arrest at a Bangkok luxury hotel in March 2008 was part of an elaborate sting in which U.S. agents posed as arms buyers for the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, which Washington classifies as a terrorist organization.
The head of a lucrative air transport empire, Bout long evaded U.N. and U.S. sanctions aimed at blocking his financial activities and restricting his travel. He has denied any involvement in illicit activities and said he ran a legitimate business.
In 2000, a high-ranking minister at Britain's Foreign office called Bout, who flouted U.N. arms embargoes on the warring parties in Angola and Sierra Leone, "a Merchant of Death."
Bout also reportedly supplied arms to warring parties in Afghanistan before the 2001 fall of the Taliban's Islamic regime with a mystical individual who was dubbed “The Dragon” who cannot be identified and is suspected of working for the CIA.
The facts and opinions stated in this article are those of the author and not those of WANTED SA. WANTED SA does not warrant the accuracy of any facts and opinions stated in this article; does not endorse them, and accepts no responsibility for them.