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Can the US Extradite a Startup Founder Over Contract Dispute?

Hello everyone. I co-founded a technology startup that entered into a cross-border licensing arrangement several years ago. The partnership eventually collapsed after projected revenues failed to materialize, and the foreign counterparty has now characterized the situation as intentional misrepresentation rather than a failed commercial agreement. I currently reside in the United States and have not been charged domestically. My concern is whether a contractual breakdown can realistically be reframed as criminal fraud for purposes of seeking extradition. How do American courts approach cases where business negotiations are later presented as deliberate deception?

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hurikan
hurikan
Feb 18

Good afternoon. In extradition proceedings, a U.S. court does not re-litigate the business dispute itself. Instead, the judge examines whether the requesting country’s description of events, if accepted as true, would satisfy the elements of a criminal offense under American law and whether the governing treaty applies. The distinction between breach of contract and fraud often turns on how intent is articulated in the supporting materials. For a structured explanation of how federal courts analyze commercial allegations presented in criminal form, you may review https://extraditionlawyers.ae/ The material outlines how documentary framing influences certification decisions.

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