Yes, U does hold an extradition treaty with Brazil. The treaty was signed on January 13, 1961 and June 18,1962 at Rio de Janeiro although the treaty came into force on Dec 17,1964. The ratification was advised by the US Senate on May 16,1961 and Oct 22,1963. It was ratified by the President of the United States of America May 29, 1961, and October 29, 1963, respectively; Later it was ratified by Brazil August 25, 1964 and the ratifications exchanged at Washington November 17, 1964;
For the complete treaty, please refer the link in sources. Hope this helps.
Short answer, yes
Yes. See; http://avalon.law.yale.edu/19th_century/brazil04.asp
if you have serious charges against you, they could very well could extradite you so you can face them and be tried.
yes under the provisions of the Hague Treaty.
Yes.
It's really easy, United States, Canada, Mexico, and Brazil.
TV Shack was a website that listed links to TV-shows. This was obviously a violation of the law, and led to an attempted extradite.
yes
Canada, China, Nepal, India, North Korea, etc.
In área ... YES Canada is 4. and Brasil is 5 position.
In accordance with the US Constitution, any State will extradite anyone to any other State at that State's request.
No. The Canadian government will not extradite someone if they are facing execution. The United States must ensure that the criminal will not be executed in order to extradite them. there have, however, been times where this was worked around. For example, the US could get the offender extradited on other charges, then charge them with the executable offense once they were in custody.