HR-9202-119
Referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.
Sponsored by Christopher Smith (R-NJ)
What it does
This bill would require the President to submit an annual public report to Congress on fugitives abroad whose extradition the United States is seeking. The report would cover the number of outstanding cases, diplomatic efforts undertaken, average case duration, resolution rates, barriers to extradition, and data on foreign countries seeking extradition of U.S. citizens. The bill also expresses the sense of Congress that U.S. ambassadors and senior officials should prioritize extradition advocacy in meetings with foreign governments, citing the specific case of George Wright, convicted of a 1962 murder in New Jersey and living in Portugal since escaping prison in 1970.
Who benefits
Victims and families of crimes committed by fugitives living abroad, who would gain greater government accountability and public visibility into extradition efforts. Congress, which would receive structured, recurring data to conduct oversight of executive branch diplomacy. Journalists, researchers, and advocacy groups who would gain access to previously scattered or unavailable information. The Patterson family specifically is named in the bill. Countries that extradite to the U.S. may benefit from reciprocal diplomatic pressure on their own outstanding requests.
Who is hurt
The executive branch would face new mandatory reporting obligations that could constrain diplomatic flexibility or reveal sensitive negotiating positions, even with a classified annex option. Foreign governments — particularly Portugal — may view the bill's specific naming of a fugitive and characterization of their policy as "deplorable" as diplomatically counterproductive, potentially straining bilateral relations. Fugitives named in or identified through the report could face increased diplomatic pressure. U.S. citizens abroad whose extradition is sought by foreign governments would be subject to increased scrutiny and reporting.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the United States currently lacks a comprehensive, public accounting of how many fugitives are living abroad beyond U.S. reach, making it impossible for Congress or the public to evaluate whether diplomatic resources are being used effectively. They contend that transparency and congressional oversight are essential tools for pressuring both the executive branch and foreign governments to prioritize extradition — pointing to the George Wright case, where a convicted murderer has lived freely in Portugal for over 50 years despite a bilateral extradition treaty. Advocates argue that victims' families deserve accountability and that sunlight on stalled cases is a proven lever for diplomatic action.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that mandating a public report on specific extradition cases could undermine sensitive diplomatic negotiations by signaling U.S. priorities and leverage to foreign governments before talks conclude. They contend that singling out Portugal — a NATO ally — by name and characterizing its legal decisions as "deplorable" in statutory findings is counterproductive to the very extradition goals the bill seeks to advance, potentially hardening foreign governments' positions. Critics may also argue that the bill's "sense of Congress" language directing ambassadors to prioritize specific cases encroaches on the President's exclusive authority to conduct foreign policy and manage diplomatic personnel under Article II.