
Universal Criminal Jurisdiction
By Douglass Cassel
Editor's Note: Portions of this article are adapted from a report
on universal criminal jurisdiction cosponsored by the American Bar Association's
(ABA) Section of Individual Rights and Responsibilities and coauthored
by this writer. The views expressed in this article, however, are solely
those of the author.
Universal criminal jurisdiction is an important tool in the worldwide
struggle to end impunity for serious international crimes. Together
with other ABA entities, the Section on Individual Rights and Responsibilities
is sponsoring a Recommendation on universal criminal jurisdiction for
consideration at the February 2004 ABA Midyear Meeting of the House
of Delegates. The Recommendation recognizes universal criminal jurisdiction
as essential and suggests safeguards against its potential abuse.
Universal Jurisdiction in International and American Law
Universal criminal jurisdiction is the principle of international law
that permits any nation to prosecute certain serious international crimes,
regardless of where they are committed, by whom or against whom, or
any other unique tie to the prosecuting nation. The Recommendation applies
whether or not an accused is in custody and does not address the separate
topics of universal jurisdiction in civil cases or the immunities of
senior government officials before foreign national courts.
Universal criminal jurisdiction has long been recognized by customary
international law over piracy, slavery, slave trading, and, more recently,
genocide. In the last half-century, an expanding series of treaties
has recognized universal jurisdiction over such serious international
crimes as "grave breaches" of the 1949 Geneva Conventions
and the 1977 Geneva Protocol I and over certain acts of international
terrorism such as hijacking aircraft and torture. The most recent treaties,
ratified by the United States in 2002, authorize universal jurisdiction
over terrorist bombings and financing of terrorism. International Convention
for the Suppression of Terrorist Bombings, 37 I.L.M. 249, art. 6.4 (1998);
International Convention for the Suppression of Financing of Terrorism,
39 I.L.M. 270, art. 7.4 (2000).
Current federal law confers universal jurisdiction on federal civilian
courts over at least the following crimes: piracy; torture; air hijacking,
destruction of aircraft, and violence at international airports; violence
against foreign officials, official guests, and internationally protected
persons; hostage taking; violence against ships or fixed maritime platforms;
financing of terrorism; and terrorist bombings. In addition, general
courts-martial have universal jurisdiction over war crimes to the extent
permitted by the law of war, which includes grave breaches of the Geneva
Conventions and Protocol.
Need for Universal Criminal Jurisdiction
Universal criminal jurisdiction developed over time as a response to
international recognition of serious crimes whose perpetrators were
otherwise likely to escape prosecution. The first such crime was piracy,
which all nations were authorized to prosecute because of the nature
of the crimes and the ease with which pirates might evade jurisdiction.
Much the same dual rationale-heinous crimes otherwise left in impunity-has
fueled the modern extension of universal jurisdiction over war crimes,
genocide, torture, and acts of international terrorism.
Other bases of jurisdiction frequently are inadequate to ensure that
persons who perpetrate grave international crimes are brought to justice.
The two main alternatives to universal jurisdiction are prosecutions
of criminals by their national courts and prosecutions before international
criminal courts. Neither to date has proved sufficient to bring the
world's worst criminals to justice.
National courts are often incapable of prosecuting international crimes
committed by their own citizens, although an increasing number of courts
are recognizing their responsibility to do so under international law.
Genocide and acts of state-sponsored terrorism, by nature, are committed
by order of or with the tolerance of high-ranking military or civilian
leaders, who then shield themselves and subordinates from prosecution
by national courts. Friends in high places often shield war criminals
and torturers as well. No Iraqi court, for example, could or did prosecute
Saddam Hussein or the security officers who carried out his orders,
at least while he remained in power. Similarly, certain governments
often shelter international terrorists by refusing to prosecute them
or extradite them to the countries whose peoples they victimized. The
Taliban regime in Afghanistan, for example, sheltered Osama bin Laden
despite his indictment in the United States.
International criminal courts have made valuable contributions to the
rule of law within the last few decades. But they do not yet have universal
jurisdiction or sufficient resources. Ad hoc tribunals such as Nuremberg
and Tokyo and those recently established for Yugoslavia, Rwanda, Sierra
Leone, and East Timor are limited to prosecuting only certain crimes
committed in particular hostilities or countries.
In theory, the solution could be the permanent International Criminal
Court (ICC) with global jurisdiction over the most serious international
crimes, a concept previously endorsed by the ABA. But the ICC as currently
configured lacks universal jurisdiction. For example, it has no jurisdiction
over crimes committed before July 2002 and may prosecute crimes occurring
after that date only with the consent of the country where the crime
was committed or whose citizen is the suspect. To date, only about half
the world's nations (the United States not among them) have consented
to ICC jurisdiction by joining its statute. Although the ICC can also
act in situations referred by the UN Security Council, referrals may
be vetoed by any of the five permanent powers.
The ICC currently has jurisdiction over only three crimes: genocide,
war crimes, and crimes against humanity. It cannot prosecute other international
crimes such as terrorism and torture, except insofar as they amount
to one of the crimes over which it does have jurisdiction. Additionally,
even where the ICC has jurisdiction, its resources are limited, and
it can prosecute only a small fraction of the world's serious international
crimes.
Neither the national courts of the perpetrators nor international courts,
then, are as yet up to the job of curbing impunity for the world's worst
crimes. Hence the need for an additional prosecutorial option: universal
criminal jurisdiction exercised by courts of nations not directly involved
in the crimes.
Limitations to Prevent Abuse
While universal criminal jurisdiction is needed to serve justice, safeguards
must be designed so that it is not abused by prosecutions that are frivolous
or politically motivated or that violate basic due process protections.
The proposed Recommendation adopts three safeguards against such abuses:
the principles of legality, necessity, and due process of law. Only
if all three are satisfied should universal jurisdiction be exercised.
Similar safeguards have been proposed by three respected judges of the
International Court of Justice (IJC). Democratic Republic of Congo
v. Belgium, ICJ Gen. List No. 121, Judgment of Feb. 2002, Separate
Opinion of Judges Rosalyn Higgins, Pieter Kooijmans, & Thomas Buergenthal.
The full court did not reach the issue of universal jurisdiction. Issues
of the proper reach of universal jurisdiction are now pending before
the ICJ in the case of Democratic Republic of Congo v. France,
ICJ, Gen. List No. 129, Order of July 11, 2003.
The principle of legality: Universal criminal jurisdiction should
be exercised only over serious international crimes clearly recognized
by treaty or customary international law authorizing such jurisdiction.
Many crimes already meet this test; however, not all international crimes
are recognized as subject to universal criminal jurisdiction. Crimes
in violation of customary international law were prosecuted by the United
States at Nuremberg and, at the urging of the United States, by the
International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia. Additional
crimes may be added in the future by new treaties or by the evolution
of customary international law based on the general practice of states.
The principle of legality also means that no person can be prosecuted
under universal criminal jurisdiction for acts not clearly recognized
by treaty or customary international law as crimes at the time they
were committed. E.g., International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights, art. 15. Crimes subject to universal jurisdiction also must
be defined with sufficient clarity to provide fair notice to all concerned-a
general principle of international law.
The principle of necessity: Universal jurisdiction should not
be exercised by another nation where the nation whose citizen or lawful
permanent resident is a suspect conducts a genuine investigation and,
if warranted, prosecution, provided its procedures meet international
human rights norms for fair criminal trials. National courts exercising
universal jurisdiction, therefore, have only secondary jurisdiction.
In this they are constrained in a manner similar to the ICC, which likewise
may exercise jurisdiction only over matters not properly investigated
or prosecuted by national courts. In the ICC context, this principle
is called "complementarity"; the language of the proposed
ABA Recommendation largely parallels the complementarity provision of
article 17 of the ICC statute.
The principle of due process of law: A nation should not exercise
universal criminal jurisdiction if its courts fail to comply with international
norms on the protection of human rights in criminal proceedings, such
as judicial independence and impartiality and the right to an adequate
defense. E.g., International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights,
art. 14. This will limit significantly the number of nations that may
exercise universal criminal jurisdiction because many do not in fact
comply with these norms.
Nations also should not exercise universal jurisdiction in the absence
of facts supporting a reasonable belief that a crime subject to universal
jurisdiction may have been committed.
U.S. Military Personnel
The proposed Recommendation in effect would allow nations whose criminal
justice systems meet international norms, including the United States,
to preempt another nation from prosecuting their military personnel.
It specifically recognizes that the United States has adequate procedures
to investigate and prosecute its soldiers. If the Recommendation were
followed by governments, then as long as the United States used those
procedures in future cases to investigate reasonable allegations and,
where warranted by the evidence, to prosecute them, the United States
could in effect preempt other nations from prosecuting its soldiers
under universal jurisdiction. Although European nations decline to extradite
suspects without assurances that they will not face the death penalty,
for example, Soering v. United Kingdom, 161 Eur. Ct. H.R. (Series
A) (1989), this is not a requirement of international law.
An issue could arise if the United States failed to investigate or,
where warranted, to prosecute. The United States has an independent
interest in avoiding such lapses. During the Vietnam War, for example,
the United States successfully prosecuted more than twenty cases involving
war crimes, including the My Lai massacre in 1968, for which Lieutenant
William Calley, the officer in charge of the patrol that actually participated
in the killing of as many as 500 Vietnamese civilians, was found guilty
of murder.
The U.S. record has been far from perfect, however. For example, although
a final judgment in the case should await further developments, The
Blade of Toledo, Ohio, recently conducted an extensive investigation
of alleged killings of unarmed civilians by the U.S. "Tiger Force"
platoon during the Vietnam War. This case also had been extensively,
albeit belatedly, investigated by the U.S. military; although military
investigators reportedly substantiated war crimes and recommended prosecutions,
commanding officers had declined to authorize prosecutions. Following
The Blade's revelations, the military recently reopened the case-more
than three decades after U.S. military personnel first reported the
allegations to their superiors. See Michael D. Sallah & Mitch Weiss,
"Buried Secrets, Brutal Truths," The Blade, Oct. 2003, available
at http://www.toledoblade. com/apps/pbcs.dll/section?Category=SRTIGERFORCE.
The potential exercise of universal jurisdiction by another nation
would provide an additional incentive to ensure that such cases are
not overlooked or ignored. At the same time, the proposed Recommendation
would protect American soldiers against frivolous or politically motivated
universal jurisdiction prosecutions abroad.
Conclusion
The proposed ABA Recommendation embraces a balanced approach. It recognizes
universal criminal jurisdiction as an important tool in the global effort
to establish the rule of law, and also adopts principled limitations
by which nations may preempt foreign trials of their own citizens and
lawful permanent residents, including their military personnel, by investigating
reasonable allegations and, where warranted, prosecuting in accordance
with international human rights norms.
Douglass Cassel is a professor of law at Northwestern University
School of Law in Chicago, Illinois. He is the director of the Center
for International Human Rights.