INTERPOL Diffusion Defense
International persecution without a Red Notice.
By Dr. Julius Hagen, Attorney at Law
Defence against INTERPOL Diffusions
An INTERPOL Diffusion is sent through INTERPOL channels by a National Central Bureau or an authorized international entity to selected countries or recipients. It may also be recorded in an INTERPOL police database. The person concerned often notices the problem only during a border check, a visa process or an arrest abroad.
Selectively circulated, harder to detect, operationally relevant
A Diffusion differs from a Red Notice mainly in the way it is circulated. It may be sent to one country, several countries or specific recipients. The requesting state can deliberately restrict circulation. This can create an international alert risk that is difficult to identify from the outside.
The purpose of the Diffusion matters. Some Diffusions concern location or identification. Others seek arrest, detention or movement restrictions with a view to extradition. That distinction affects the immediate risk and the legal response before INTERPOL or national authorities.
Checklist
- Do not make statements to border officials, police or foreign authorities before the legal position is assessed.
- Keep travel documents, border records, boarding documents and official correspondence.
- Document previous arrests, refused entry, visa issues or unusual border checks.
- Do not contact authorities of the requesting country informally.
- Prepare a structured record of criminal proceedings, civil disputes, business conflicts or political background involving the requesting state.
- Keep arrest warrants, judgments, summonses and translations, even if incomplete or outdated.
- Before travelling, assess whether destination or transit countries may react to a Diffusion with arrest or refusal of entry.
The practical risk
Many clients do not learn about a Diffusion from INTERPOL directly. The first sign may be an unusually long airport check, a refused visa, a bank inquiry or an arrest in a third country. At that point, it may still be unclear whether the response was triggered by a Diffusion, a Red Notice, a bilateral alert or a domestic database entry.
The consequences may arise before any formal extradition decision is made. A Diffusion can affect travel, border crossings and communications between foreign authorities and the requesting state. For businesspeople and politically exposed individuals, the record may also omit the commercial or political background of the allegation.
Domestic basis and personal attribution
A Diffusion aimed at arrest or extradition requires a valid basis in the requesting state. The existence of a warrant or court order is not always enough. The international record must identify the alleged conduct and explain why the person concerned is individually linked to it.
In business crime cases, personal attribution is often decisive. A corporate title, a former management role or proximity to a business group does not by itself establish criminal responsibility. The defense therefore has to examine whether the Diffusion describes concrete conduct or relies mainly on status, association or corporate position.
Purpose limitation and limits of INTERPOL use
Diffusions may only be used for international police cooperation. The formal charge is not the only relevant factor. The background of the case may matter where criminal allegations are used to advance private claims, political pressure or a business dispute.
This assessment is separate from the national criminal case. INTERPOL does not decide guilt or innocence. The CCF may, however, review whether the data processing complies with INTERPOL rules. Relevant issues include data quality, purpose, proportionality, human rights concerns and the prohibition on INTERPOL involvement in matters of a predominantly political, military, religious or racial character.
Data quality as a defence point
Diffusions often contain compressed summaries. International police cooperation cannot rest on every allegation made by a requesting state. The data must be sufficiently precise, up to date and lawful for the stated purpose. Where arrest is sought, the record should show a factual link between the person and the alleged offense.
In practice, the weaknesses are often narrow but important. The relevant period may be unclear. The person’s role may be described only by title. Exculpatory developments may be missing. A commercial dispute may be presented as fraud or breach of trust. These points can support a request for correction, restriction of processing or deletion.
CCF requests in Diffusion cases
A request to the Commission for the Control of INTERPOL’s Files may seek access, disclosure, restriction of processing or deletion. In Diffusion cases, the difficulty is that the person concerned may have only indirect signs of the record. The request should therefore explain why those signs indicate INTERPOL data processing.
The application should address more than the underlying accusation. It should explain why the Diffusion, in its concrete use, is non-compliant or disproportionate. Relevant issues include the recipient states, the stated purpose, the domestic legal basis, possible political or private conflict background and missing exculpatory information.
Distinction from Red Notice defence
A Diffusion is not simply a less serious Red Notice. A Red Notice is a formalised INTERPOL alert with a broader international wanted-persons function. A Diffusion may be circulated more selectively, but it can still trigger serious action in the receiving country.
The distinction affects the legal response. In Red Notice cases, the focus is often correction, deletion or provisional restriction of the formalised alert. In Diffusion cases, it is also necessary to identify where the alert was sent, whether access restrictions apply and whether specific countries may rely on the record for their own measures.

Dr. Julius Hagen
Julius represents clients in criminal matters, white-collar investigations, extradition proceedings, INTERPOL matters and commercial disputes. He consults in English and German.
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