home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- THE WEEK, Page 30NATIONLong Arm of the Law
-
-
- A decision to uphold an international kidnapping alarms Latin
- America
-
-
- The U.S. high court reached across American borders last week
- and tweaked a neighbor's nose. In a 6-to-3 opinion, Chief
- Justice William Rehnquist wrote that a "forcible abduction" from
- a foreign country -- in this case, Mexico -- does not prohibit
- a defendant's trial in the U.S. "for violation of this country's
- criminal laws."
-
- The case involved Dr. Humberto Alvarez-Machain, a
- gynecologist who two years ago was dragged from his Guadalajara
- office by Mexican bounty hunters, flown to El Paso and handed
- over to agents of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.
- Alvarez-Machain still awaits trial in Los Angeles on federal
- charges of conspiring to torture and kill dea agent Enrique
- Camarena, kidnapped and murdered in Guadalajara in 1985. The
- doctor allegedly injected Camarena with lidocaine, which kept
- his heart going to prolong his torture and interrogation by
- Mexican officials and drug kingpins.
-
- Attorney General William Barr called the landmark decision
- "an important victory . . . against terrorists and
- narcotraffickers." But Justice John Paul Stevens, who was joined
- in his dissent by Harry Blackmun and Sandra Day O'Connor, warned
- that "most courts throughout the civilized world will be deeply
- disturbed by the `monstrous' decision the court announces
- today."
-
- Certainly the Mexicans -- and many other Latin Americans
- -- were upset. Calling the ruling "invalid and unacceptable,"
- Mexico threatened to suspend antidrug cooperation with the U.S.
- -- a threat rescinded after Washington offered assurances that
- its sovereignty would be respected in the future. But the
- diplomatic dust had hardly settled when Mexican officials
- charged that on June 13 agents from the U.S. crossed the border,
- seized Teodulo Romo Lopez and returned him to Tucson to face
- bail-jumping and cocaine-trafficking charges. The Salinas
- government quickly protested.
-
-
-
-
-
-