Leland,
Are you saying that Interpol didn't have this ability prior to the 
silent signing of this Executive Order?

-----
::moii
-----

Leland F. Jackson, CPA wrote:
> The way Interpol operates internationally, through the 
> countries that elect to join it as members in good standing, 
> is not unlike the way the Federal Government relates to the 
> individual states.
> 
> I'll give you a clue.  The USA Constitution, (eg Federal 
> Law), is the highest law of the land, and any federal, state 
> or local law that violate the American Constitution is null 
> and void.  Each state also has its own constitution and 
> local governments within the states have their city counsel, 
> local laws, sheriff department and police department, etc, 
> which is fine, as long as state and local laws do not 
> violate the American Constitution
> 
> If a law is violated, it usually falls under the 
> jurisdiction of the local government in which the crime 
> occurred, but what happens when a crime is committed that 
> crosses state lines.  Because it doesn't make sense to have 
> separate states pursuing a single crime across states lines, 
> such crimes come under the jurisdiction of the Feds, who 
> will be in charge of pursuing the criminals with cooperation 
> of all the local an state law enforcement involved, and 
> coordinating all activities between the various 
> jurisdictions.  The Feds may elect to prosecute the 
> criminals as well within the federal court system and 
> punishment would then be under the federal penal system.
> 
> Interpol also needs a way to peruse crimes/criminals across 
> national lines, that provides cooperation with the countries 
> involved, and a way to coordinate effort under a single 
> umbrella.
> 
> Regards,
> 
> LelandJ
> 
> 
> On 12/30/2009 02:33 PM, Publius Maximus wrote:
>>>>> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interpol
>>>> So, brainiac, what does such a supposedly "small" organization need
>>>> that kind of diplomatic and police power for?
>>> Perhaps a better answer to your question is Interpol
>>> operates autonomously, under its own constitution.
>> That settles it. I am going to create a new constitution that
>> basically lets me and whoever joins me roam the globe, and gives us
>> the power to arrest individuals from any country and extradite them to
>> some place outside their borders for trial.
>>
>> All I need are some "willing fools" in the existing countries to grant
>> me full diplomatic and police immunity to operate in their borders,
>> without their right to request information about how I'm doing what
>> I'm doing for what purpose, i.e., to prove it's for the noble purposes
>> I advertise.
>>
>> Now, where might I find such fools?
>>
>> Oh. Nevermind. :)
>>
>> - Publius
>>
>>> To have
>>> an international organization, like Interpol, subject to the
>>> jurisdictional and constitutional restrains of each of its
>>> member countries would cripple Interpol to a point where it
>>> became dysfunctional.
>>>
>>> Regards,
>>>
>>> LelandJ
>>>
>>
>>
> 
> 
[excessive quoting removed by server]

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