Title 18Crimes and Criminal ProcedureRelease 119-73

§3188 Time of commitment pending extradition

Title 18 › Part PART II— - CRIMINAL PROCEDURE › Chapter CHAPTER 209— - EXTRADITION › § 3188

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

A federal or state judge may release someone held to be handed over to another country if they are not sent abroad within two calendar months after being committed, excluding the time needed to move them from the jail. They or a representative must apply and prove they gave reasonable notice to the Secretary of State, and the judge can refuse release for good cause.

Full Legal Text

Title 18, §3188

Crimes and Criminal Procedure — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

Whenever any person who is committed for rendition to a foreign government to remain until delivered up in pursuance of a requisition, is not so delivered up and conveyed out of the United States within two calendar months after such commitment, over and above the time actually required to convey the prisoner from the jail to which he was committed, by the readiest way, out of the United States, any judge of the United States, or of any State, upon application made to him by or on behalf of the person so committed, and upon proof made to him that reasonable notice of the intention to make such application has been given to the Secretary of State, may order the person so committed to be discharged out of custody, unless sufficient cause is shown to such judge why such discharge ought not to be ordered.

Legislative History

Notes & Related Subsidiaries

Historical and Revision Notes

Based on title 18, U.S.C., 1940 ed., § 654 (R.S. § 5273). Changes in phraseology only were made.

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

18 U.S.C. § 3188

Title 18Crimes and Criminal Procedure

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73