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Overview

  • The article examines how Supreme Court precedents—particularly *In re Neagle* and decisions on foreign‑head‑of‑state immunity—inform the legal debate over President Trump’s authority to order an extraterritorial military raid to arrest former Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and the likely defenses Maduro may raise in U.S. courts.
  • **Presidential extraterritorial power**: The 1989 DOJ OLC memos rely on *In re Neagle* to argue that the President possesses inherent authority to protect federal officials and conduct arrests abroad, even when such actions conflict with international law.
  • **Limits of Supreme Court guidance**: While *In re Neagle* addresses federal officer immunity, it does not expressly define the scope of military force or the interplay with international law, leaving a gap in precedent for overseas raids.
  • **Foreign‑head‑of‑state immunity**: Prior Supreme Court cases (e.g., *U.S. v. Alvarez‑Macha*, *Republic of Austria v. Altmann*) distinguish between personal criminal liability and official acts, suggesting Maduro may invoke head‑of‑state immunity but that such claims are evaluated case‑by‑case.
  • **Impact on jurisdiction**: Even if the arrest is deemed a violation of international law, existing Supreme Court rulings indicate that U.S. courts could still assert jurisdiction over the substantive drug‑trafficking and narco‑terrorism charges.
  • **Strategic considerations for defense**: Maduro’s legal team is likely to challenge the legality of the raid under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act and argue procedural violations, but must also confront the strong precedent that the President’s duty to protect federal functions can supersede foreign‑policy objections.
Via SCOTUSblog