Red Notice Removal

When a Red Notice affects travel, banking or liberty.

By Dr. Julius Hagen, Attorney at Law

Defence against INTERPOL Red Notices

A Red Notice is an alert within INTERPOL’s system. A member country uses it to locate a wanted person and to initiate measures for extradition, surrender or a comparable lawful process. For the person concerned, this may create a cross-border enforcement situation, even though any concrete measure depends on the domestic law of the state involved.

Entrepreneurs, investors, high-net-worth individuals and people with international business ties often do not learn about a Red Notice through formal service. The information may come from a border control, foreign counsel, a bank, a visa decision or a business partner. The first step is to clarify what data actually exist and whether the matter involves a public Red Notice, a non-public Red Notice, a Diffusion or national alert data.

First orientation if a Red Notice may exist

  • Keep border records, detention documents, visa communications and bank inquiries.
  • Before travelling, assess destination countries, transit states, nationality and residence status together.
  • Do not provide informal explanations to foreign authorities, embassies, banks or business partners.
  • Do not delete emails, chats, travel records, payment records or corporate documents.
  • Assess whether the first step should be access to INTERPOL data or an immediate request for deletion, correction or restriction of processing.

Not every foreign warrant is enough

INTERPOL rules set independent requirements for Red Notices. Foreign criminal proceedings or a national warrant will not always suffice. Requirements include a sufficiently serious ordinary-law offence, reliable identity data, judicial information, a clear summary of facts and a valid judicial basis.

This matters in business crime cases. A requesting country may describe the case as fraud, corruption, tax evasion or money laundering. For INTERPOL, the label is not the point. The Red Notice must identify conduct attributable to the person concerned and show that the judicial basis supports international circulation. If that link is missing, the issue is not limited to the foreign criminal case. It also concerns the quality of the INTERPOL data.

Where Red Notices become vulnerable

One ground of challenge is the factual basis. A Red Notice must contain more than a general allegation. It must identify the person’s alleged role. In financial and corporate disputes, this distinction can be central: involvement in a company, proximity to decision-makers or a family connection does not itself establish personal criminal responsibility.

A second ground concerns the nature of the case. INTERPOL is not a tool for enforcing private disputes, shareholder conflicts or administrative claims. If a commercial conflict is later framed as a criminal case, the data must show why the matter qualifies as a serious ordinary-law offence. Criminal terminology alone does not carry a Red Notice.

A third ground concerns whether the data still serve their proper purpose. Continued processing may become problematic when the factual or procedural context has changed. This includes situations where:

  • the underlying warrant has been lifted or materially changed;
  • the requesting country takes no meaningful extradition steps after the person has been located;
  • exculpatory court decisions or protection decisions are missing from the INTERPOL file;
  • the Red Notice is effectively used as leverage in a foreign dispute.

If you are affected by a Red Notice or suspect that one exists, the review should begin with the INTERPOL data itself. A confidential assessment can clarify whether deletion, correction or restriction of processing may be available.

The CCF reviews data processing, not guilt or innocence

Requests for access, correction or deletion of INTERPOL data are usually brought before the Commission for the Control of INTERPOL’s Files. The CCF is not the criminal court of the requesting country. Its review focuses on whether the processing of data complies with the INTERPOL Constitution and the Rules on the Processing of Data.

A deletion request must therefore be structured differently from a defence submission in the foreign criminal case. Relevant factors include the foreign judicial basis, the summary of facts, the procedural status, the quality of the data and possible breaches of INTERPOL rules. Foreign warrants, indictments, court decisions, corporate records, payment evidence, protection decisions, detention reports and official correspondence may all be relevant. The decisive issue is what information INTERPOL may rely on and what conclusions the file does not support.

If documents from the foreign proceedings are already available, they can be assessed for their relevance to a CCF request. A structured overview of the alert, the procedural status and current risks is often sufficient for an initial review.

Political and human rights objections

The INTERPOL Constitution sets clear limits. Article 3 prohibits activities of a political, military, religious or racial character. Article 2 links international police cooperation to human rights and the spirit of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. These principles may make a Red Notice vulnerable where a formally criminal allegation is shaped by political interests, repression or serious procedural defects.

General criticism of the requesting country’s justice system is usually not enough before the CCF. The objection must be connected to the individual case: for example, lack of access to defence rights, a politically charged procedural context, signs of arbitrariness, a risk of human-rights-violating detention conditions or prosecution that goes beyond the alleged ordinary-law offence. These circumstances must be documented in a way that calls the lawfulness of INTERPOL data processing into question.

Deletion, correction or restriction of the data

Red Notice Removal may involve several procedural aims. Depending on the case, it may be appropriate to seek access to the data, correction of inaccurate information, addition of exculpatory material, restriction of processing or deletion. The right step depends on the alert, the procedural status and the current risk position.

Deletion from INTERPOL’s system does not automatically end the foreign criminal case. National warrants, extradition requests or domestic alerts may remain in place. It may, however, prevent INTERPOL channels from continuing to circulate the request internationally. For the person concerned, this may be significant in border controls, visa procedures, banking checks or international business relationships.

RATH HAGEN represents clients in international criminal and crisis matters involving INTERPOL, Red Notices, Diffusions and extradition risk. In Red Notice matters, the first task is usually to reconstruct the data position. This includes the requesting country, the alleged conduct, the judicial basis, the public or non-public circulation and identifiable follow-on risks.

The procedural route follows from that assessment. In some cases, an access request is the first step. In others, an immediate request for deletion, correction or restriction may be appropriate. Where travel or arrest risks are acute, coordination with foreign defence counsel, extradition lawyers or immigration counsel may be required.

Dr. Julius Hagen

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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