Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein recently traveled to
Dubai, United Arab Emirates, to deliver the keynote address at the 87th
INTERPOL General Assembly.
The Deputy Attorney General’s remarks focused on the
opportunities and challenges faced by law enforcement in the cyber age, and
emphasized the need for member nations to uphold and advance the rule of law.
Although the Internet “holds immeasurable promise as a repository of ideas, and
as a forum for speech and commerce,” he stated, it also can be “exploited by
wrongdoers” “to damage information systems, steal data, commit fraud, violate
privacy, attack critical infrastructure, and sexually exploit children. They
also launch misleading schemes to influence people’s opinions, seeking to
foment division and disrupt democratic processes.” In light of the risks posed
by “malicious actors [who] use the Internet for evil ends,” the Deputy Attorney
General called out those nations—like Russia—that have refused to extradite
cybercriminals and instead have recruited them to carry on their crimes safe
from international criminal process.
Before an audience of more than 1,000 delegates from over
150 nations, Deputy Attorney General Rosenstein promised that the United States
would continue to “expose schemes to manipulate the extradition process” and
“identify nations that routinely block the fair administration of justice and
fail to act in good faith.” By doing so, he stated, nations around the world
can ensure that “cyber criminals . . . find no safe haven, either on the dark
web or within national borders.”
The Deputy Attorney General also highlighted “several
prominent challenges to the rule of law” within INTERPOL and its member
nations, including “the lawless attacks on Sergei and Yulia Skripal and Jamal
Khashoggi” and “the disappearance of [former INTERPOL] President Meng Hongwei.”
Such events, he said, “give rise to questions about whether our member
countries abide by shared principles.” The Deputy Attorney General reminded
INTERPOL member nations of their obligation to “support leaders and policies
that promote international police coordination and preserve the rule of law—in
practice, and not just in theory.”
Three days later, INTERPOL member nations answered the call
when the General Assembly voted to elect Kim Jong Yang of South Korea as
INTERPOL’s next president. The United States had strongly endorsed Mr. Kim in
light of his commitment to upholding policies that advance international police
coordination and preserve the rule of law.
In addition to delivering the keynote address, Deputy
Attorney General Rosenstein met with senior officials from INTERPOL and several
member nations in attendance at the General Assembly to discuss opportunities
for promoting cooperation between law enforcement partners and the pursuit of
justice across international borders.
Prior to the Deputy Attorney General’s trip, teams from the
United States and the UAE had completed the latest round of negotiations on a
mutual legal assistance treaty between the two countries. Mutual legal
assistance treaties allow generally for the United States and its treaty
partner to quickly obtain evidence needed for important investigations and
trials in both countries. If approved by both countries, this would be the
first such treaty between the United States and a Gulf region nation. Deputy
Attorney General Rosenstein met with His Excellency Abdul Rahman Al-Baloushi,
Director of International Cooperation, UAE Ministry of Justice, to discuss the
next steps and other ongoing activities to maintain the robust and positive law
enforcement relationship between the two countries.
While in the United Arab Emirates, the Deputy Attorney
General met with United States Embassy staff, led by Charge d'Affaires Steve
Bondy.
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