Foreign Nationals

Consular Rights, Foreign Nationals and the Death Penalty

Under Article 36 of the 1963 Vienna Convention on Consular Relations (VCCR), local author­i­ties must inform all detained for­eign­ers with­out delay” of their right to have their con­sulate noti­fied of their deten­tion and to com­mu­ni­cate with their con­sular rep­re­sen­ta­tives. At the request of the nation­al, the author­i­ties must then noti­fy the con­sulate of the deten­tion with­out delay; they must also facil­i­tate con­sular com­mu­ni­ca­tion and grant con­sular access to the detainee. Consuls are empow­ered to arrange for their nation­als’ legal rep­re­sen­ta­tion and to pro­vide a wide range of human­i­tar­i­an and oth­er assis­tance, with the con­sent of the detainee. Local laws and reg­u­la­tions must give full effect” to the rights enshrined in Article 36. The USA rat­i­fied the VCCR with­out reser­va­tions in 1969; so fun­da­men­tal is the right to con­sular noti­fi­ca­tion and access that the U.S. Department of State con­sid­ers it to be required under cus­tom­ary inter­na­tion­al law in all cas­es, even if the detainee’s home coun­try has not signed the VCCR. As of February 9, 2009, 172 coun­tries were par­ties to the VCCR

In March of 2004, the International Court of Justice deter­mined in the Avena case (Mexico v. USA) that advise­ment of con­sular rights with­out delay” means a duty upon the arrest­ing author­i­ties to give that infor­ma­tion to an arrest­ed per­son as soon as it is real­ized that the per­son is a for­eign nation­al, or once there are grounds to think that the per­son is prob­a­bly a for­eign nation­al.” In most cas­es, police in the United States would become aware of a sus­pec­t’s prob­a­ble nation­al­i­ty through rou­tine iden­ti­ty con­fir­ma­tion and back­ground checks, done either dur­ing the ini­tial inves­ti­ga­tion, upon arrest, or very short­ly there­after. The State Department has inter­pret­ed the term with­out delay” to mean as soon as prac­ti­ca­ble (i.e., with­out undue delay) and nor­mal­ly by the time the detainee is booked for deten­tion. While not all of the report­ed for­eign nation­als cur­rent­ly on death row were deprived of their con­sular rights by arrest­ing author­i­ties, there is over­whelm­ing evi­dence that prompt noti­fi­ca­tion of these rights remains high­ly spo­radic across the United States. No com­par­a­tive study has yet been done, but the avail­able data indi­cates that time­ly con­sular assis­tance sig­nif­i­cant­ly reduces the like­li­hood that death sen­tences will be sought or imposed on for­eign nation­als fac­ing capital charges.

Even apply­ing the less strin­gent def­i­n­i­tion of prompt noti­fi­ca­tion used by the State Department, only 7 cas­es of com­plete com­pli­ance with Article 36 require­ments have been iden­ti­fied so far, out of more than 160 total report­ed death sen­tences (includ­ing those exe­cut­ed, reversed on appeal or exon­er­at­ed and released). In most of the remain­ing cas­es, detained nation­als learned of their con­sular rights weeks, months or even years after their arrest, typ­i­cal­ly from attor­neys or oth­er pris­on­ers and not from the local author­i­ties. As a con­se­quence, con­sular offi­cials were often unable to pro­vide cru­cial assis­tance to their nation­als when it would be most ben­e­fi­cial: at the arrest and pre-tri­al stage of cap­i­tal cas­es. For exam­ple, Arizona author­i­ties did not for­mal­ly inform German nation­als Karl and Walter LaGrand of their Article 36 rights until 17 years after their arrest– and just weeks before their execution.

Although not a cap­i­tal case, evi­dence from a law­suit indi­cates the extent to which police depart­ments in the USA may have breached their con­sular noti­fi­ca­tion oblig­a­tions. In Sorensen v. City of New York , a Danish nation­al sought puni­tive and com­pen­sato­ry dam­ages for the fail­ure of the NYPD to inform her upon arrest in 1997 of her right to con­sular noti­fi­ca­tion. Official records pro­duced by the plain­tiff revealed that over 53,000 for­eign nation­als were arrest­ed in New York City dur­ing 1997, but that the NYPD Alien Notification Log reg­is­tered only 4 cas­es in which con­sulates were noti­fied of those arrests – a fail­ure rate well in excess of 99 per cent (even pre­sum­ing that a major­i­ty of the detainees might have declined con­sular noti­fi­ca­tion). Another exam­ple is the recent find­ing by the International Court of Justice in Avena and Other Mexican Nationals that the United States had vio­lat­ed its Article 36 oblig­a­tions in 51 of 52 reviewed cas­es of Mexican nation­als result­ing in death sen­tences (a 98% fail­ure rate, in the most seri­ous of all possible circumstances).

Research to date indi­cates that a large major­i­ty of death-sen­tenced for­eign nation­als were law­ful­ly present in the United States and were thus not ille­gal aliens.” For exam­ple, of the 54 Mexican nation­als whose cas­es were ini­tial­ly brought before the International Court of Justice in Avena, only 5 were alleged by the United States to have entered the coun­try ille­gal­ly at any time pri­or to their arrest on the charges result­ing in their death sentences.