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Relevance: GS-II (International Treaties, Bilateral Relations, Foreign Policy) Source: Legal & Diplomatic Reviews, July 2026

1 · What exactly happened?

The US Department of Justice (DoJ) recently indicted jailed gangster Lawrence Bishnoi and 36 others in a sweeping global investigation called ‘Operation Hardball’. The charges involve murder, extortion, and the June 2023 killing of Khalistan separatist Hardeep Singh Nijjar in Canada.
Washington has confirmed it will officially ask India to extradite (hand over) Bishnoi. But since he is currently locked up in a high-security prison in Gujarat facing dozens of Indian court cases, how does the extradition process actually work, and can India say no?

2 · Understanding the Legal Rules

Extradition between India and America is governed by our 1997 Bilateral Treaty and India’s domestic law, the Extradition Act, 1962. Handing over a fugitive isn’t automatic; it must pass several strict legal hurdles:

The Golden Rule
Dual Criminality
The crime must be illegal and punishable by over 1 year in both countries. While India doesn’t have an exact match for America’s RICO (anti-gang) law, basic crimes like murder and extortion qualify easily.
Strict Bounds
Rule of Specialty
Once an accused person is handed over, the receiving country can only try them for the exact specific crimes for which the extradition was officially approved, not for any other past offenses.
India’s Power to Delay
Section 31 of the Act
Since Bishnoi is already facing domestic trials in India, Section 31 gives New Delhi the legal right to postpone his handover until his Indian trials and jail sentences are fully completed.
No Citizen Shield
No Automatic Immunity
Under the Indo-US treaty, India cannot refuse to hand someone over simply because they are an Indian citizen. Furthermore, severe crimes like murder cannot be excused as “political offenses.”

  • How the request moves: The US DoJ sends the request via the US State Department directly to India’s Ministry of External Affairs (MEA).
  • The Double Check: An Indian court first examines the foreign evidence to see if it justifies a trial. If the court agrees, the final decision to extradite rests with the Union Government.
  • Section 34A Option: If India decides not to surrender a fugitive to a foreign state, our domestic laws empower the Central Government to try and punish them right here in India for the crimes they committed abroad.

UPSC Prelims Quick Facts
Section 31 (Extradition Act, 1962) Legally permits India to postpone the surrender of a fugitive if they are currently facing criminal trials or serving a jail sentence in India.
Dual Criminality A core international treaty principle: extradition can only happen if the act is considered a serious crime in both the requesting and requested nations.
David Headley Precedent The US refused India’s request to extradite 26/11 terrorist David Headley because he had signed a special plea bargain agreement with US authorities.
Tahawwur Rana Precedent US courts cleared his extradition to India after overlapping 26/11 terror offenses successfully satisfied the “dual criminality” test.
RICO Act Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act. A powerful US law specifically designed to prosecute organized crime syndicates and gangs.

MCQ Practice Question
Q. With reference to the extradition laws and treaties governing India, consider the following statements:

  1. Under the India-US Extradition Treaty, an individual cannot be extradited if they are an Indian citizen.
  2. The principle of ‘Dual Criminality’ mandates that the underlying conduct must be an offense punishable in both countries.
  3. Section 31 of India’s Extradition Act, 1962 allows the government to postpone the surrender of an accused if domestic criminal proceedings are pending against them.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
(a) 1 and 2 only    (b) 2 and 3 only    (c) 1 and 3 only    (d) 1, 2 and 3

Answer: (b) 2 and 3 only

  • Statement 1 — Incorrect (the trap): The 1997 India-US Extradition Treaty explicitly states that extradition cannot be refused merely on the ground that the person sought is a citizen of the requested country.
  • Statement 2 — Correct: Dual criminality is the bedrock of extradition law; both nations must recognize the conduct as a punishable crime.
  • Statement 3 — Correct: Section 31 of the 1962 Act gives India the legal discretion to keep an accused person in the country until their pending domestic trials or jail sentences are completed.

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