PUERTO RICO v. BRANSTAD 483 U.S. 219 (1987). CASE BRIEF

PUERTO RICO V. BRANSTAD
483 U.S. 219 (1987).
NATURE OF THE CASE: This was an appeal from a denial of extradition.
FACTS: Calder was a federal employee working in Puerto Rico (P). He was involved in an automobile accident and charged with vehicular homicide. P sent an extradition petition to Branstad (D), the governor of Iowa, where Calder fled. D refused to grant the petition because the charges were too severe. P filed a complaint asking a district court to compel the extradition. The court dismissed the complaint under Kentucky v. Dennison 24 How 66 (1861) which held that federal courts had no power to order a governor to fulfill a state's obligation under the Extradition Clause. P appealed.

ISSUE:


RULE OF LAW:


HOLDING AND DECISION:


LEGAL ANALYSIS:





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