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Rana, 59, a childhood friend of Headley, is facing extradition request by India for his involvement in the 2008 Mumbai terror attack in which 166 people, including six Americans, were killed. Rana, who has been declared a fugitive by India, is opposing his extradition.
In a submission early this week before the US District Court Judge in Los Angeles Jacqueline Chelonian, opposing his extradition the attorney of Rana claimed that as of now there is no indication in the record that India has agreed to forgo Headley’s extradition to India.
“India presumably could have agreed to forgo Headley”s extradition in return for his assistance to the United States, but there is no indication in the record that it did so,” the court submission told the court.
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Rana’s attorneys said that the Court should not lightly assume (as the government appears to suggest) that the government circumvented its treaty obligation to India through “a sham interpretation” of Article 6 of the India-US Extradition Treaty as part of its deal with Headley.
The government”s conclusion in Headley”s plea agreement that Article 6 defines offenses in terms of conduct rather than elements and thus bars Headley”s extradition must be taken as its good-faith interpretation of the Treaty”s terms, it said.
Rana, in the court filing, describe his childhood friend Headley as a liar.
Headley lied to federal agents, judges, and presumably prosecutors in relation to these cases. After his first heroin sentence (reduced because of his cooperation), he went back to dealing heroin despite promising that he would not.
“He disregarded the agents” instructions regarding his dealings with targets and travelled to Pakistan without permission. After his second heroin conviction, he used his status as a DEA cooperator to deflect government scrutiny of his activities with Lashkar and his statements supporting jihad,” his lawyers alleged.