Travel under INTERPOL Risk

Risk assessment before entry, transit and possible extradition

By Dr. Julius Hagen, Attorney at Law

Border and travel risk after a Red Notice or Diffusion

A person who fears a Red Notice, Diffusion or foreign arrest warrant usually needs a concrete assessment of the next journey, not an abstract explanation of INTERPOL. Public INTERPOL information is only part of that assessment. Relevant data may also appear through Diffusions, national alerts or border-control systems.

The risk materialises in the country that acts on the information. A short transit may be enough if the transit state holds the person and contacts the requesting country. A visa or residence status does not prevent a security check. Before travel, the requesting state, the planned route and the likely consequences of a border hit must be assessed together.

Checklist

  • Do not give informal explanations to border officers, police or consular staff without prior legal coordination.
  • Assess the route, transit countries and stopovers before travel.
  • Avoid spontaneous travel while a Red Notice, Diffusion or foreign arrest warrant remains unclear.
  • Secure available documents, including arrest warrants, court orders, visa records, border notes and official correspondence.
  • If someone is stopped, record the place, time, authority, travel documents and stated reason.
  • Before urgent travel, clarify whether local counsel, CCF steps or extradition advice should be prepared in parallel.

From database hit to provisional arrest

Travel risk often arises before a formal extradition request is filed. The critical moment may occur when a border authority, police body or immigration officer receives a database hit and must quickly decide whether the person may continue travelling, should be questioned or should be held provisionally.

The threshold depends on the state concerned. Some states may allow provisional arrest on the basis of an INTERPOL reference. Others require a foreign arrest warrant, a domestic order or review by judicial authorities. For risk assessment, it matters whether the state is only verifying identity and the hit or already treating the matter as the beginning of an extradition case.

The relevant alert may not be visible to the person concerned. A Diffusion may circulate directly between authorities. A national alert may remain active independently of an INTERPOL procedure. A public search alone therefore gives an incomplete picture.

What authorities may infer from limited alert documents

International alerts often rely on compressed information. A short arrest warrant, a brief description of the allegation, passport data, travel records, visa files, company registers or information from other authorities may be enough for a person to be treated as wanted during a check. The person concerned often does not know which document triggered the hit.

The documents may claim more than the underlying file can support. A warrant may describe personal involvement only in broad terms. A corporate role may be read as criminal responsibility although the file mainly concerns corporate, commercial or administrative matters. Translations, dates and previous stays abroad may acquire a weight in alert documents that does not follow from the original case file.

Legal assessment should therefore separate documented facts from official inferences. The fact that a state is seeking a person does not establish that the allegations are individualised, non-political or human-rights compliant. That assessment may matter for travel decisions, CCF proceedings and any later extradition defence.

Route, transit states and international hubs

Internationally mobile clients often focus on the final destination. The more sensitive jurisdiction may be a transit state. Major airports, states closely cooperating with the requesting country and jurisdictions with active extradition practice require particular attention. Businesspeople, politically exposed persons and individuals facing foreign criminal proceedings should have each stopover assessed separately.

A common scenario is travel through an international hub without any intention to enter the requesting country. A database hit appears during transit. The result may be police questioning, retention of travel documents or provisional arrest. In other cases, a non-public Diffusion causes the border authority to hold the person pending clarification from the requesting state.

Detention, refusal of entry and provisional arrest

After an airport stop or border detention, the first issue is procedural classification. Questioning, refusal of entry, retention of a passport and provisional arrest are legally different situations. A first control may develop quickly into an extradition matter if the requesting state provides documents or announces a formal request.

At this stage, the local authority will usually not review the full legality of the foreign criminal case. It reacts to a hit and may secure the person for further decisions. For defence purposes, precise information about place, time, authority, stated data source and the next procedural step is often more useful than a broad account of the political or commercial background.

Documents for travel-risk assessment

A travel-risk assessment starts with documents rather than general country assumptions. Relevant materials include the foreign arrest warrant, earlier court decisions, official letters, visa or border notes and records of prior controls. Citizenship, residence status and habitual place of residence may also affect the risk.

A single factor rarely decides the assessment. An old warrant may still be processed. A pending request before the Commission for the Control of INTERPOL’s Files may help, but it does not necessarily prevent national reactions. For the travel decision, the immediate issue remains how transit and destination countries are likely to respond to available data.

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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Travel with a Red Notice, Diffusion or Foreign Alert - Rath Hagen Rechtsanwälte – Global Challenges. German Precision.