Cases
Our cases page should show the kind of matters we handle, the legal patterns we see, and how we approach cross-border defence. It is not a claim sheet. It is a trust page.
What kinds of matters we handle
We work on extradition, INTERPOL, Red Notice removal, sanctions exposure, and related travel-risk issues. Many files involve more than one of those topics at once, which is why the case strategy has to be built in layers.
Typical case patterns
- Red Notice disputes tied to political or commercial conflict
- extradition requests based on weak or overbroad charges
- cross-border financial crime or sanctions cases
- travel disruption caused by police or border alerts
- cases where deportation risk is higher than extradition risk
What a strong result usually requires
Most strong results come from the same basics: the right evidence, the right legal ground, and the right timing. If the request is defective or the notice is abusive, the earlier we intervene, the better the chance of a clean outcome.
That is why our approach is always practical. We do not just describe the law. We use the law to reduce the actual risk.
How we document a matter
We first map the issue, then collect the documents that matter, then decide whether to attack the notice, the request, or both. If necessary, we coordinate local counsel and prepare a parallel defence track.
Related pages
For the core defence tracks, read Interpol CCF Lawyer, Interpol Red Notice Removal Lawyers, and International Extradition Attorney.
Need us to review a live matter? Send the facts and we will map the legal path.
What the record should show
A strong cases page should make it clear that the firm handles real cross-border risk, not just theory. That is why we describe the categories of matters, the legal patterns, and the types of pressure clients face. We do not publish confidential details, but we do explain the kind of work involved.
If you are comparing firms, this page helps you see whether the practice is truly focused on the issues that matter in extradition and INTERPOL work.
What clients usually need in a case review
Clients usually need three things: a quick explanation of the risk, a clear view of the legal route, and a realistic estimate of what can happen next. Our cases page should reflect that reality, not only the headline result.
We use the page to show that the work is specific, international, and driven by evidence.


