Former US Marine pilot Daniel Duggan can be extradited from Australia to face US charges of training Chinese military pilots to land on aircraft carriers, a Sydney magistrate ruled on Friday.
Duggan, 55, a naturalised Australian citizen, is facing US charges including money laundering and breaking arms control law by training Chinese military pilots to land on aircraft carriers. He denies the allegations.
He has 15 days to seek a review of the magistrate's ruling. The decision to extradite will ultimately be made by Australia's attorney-general.
Outside court his wife Saffrine said the family would appeal to attorney-general Mark Dreyfus to refuse the extradition.
One of seven co-conspirators in a US indictment is convicted Chinese hacker Su Bin, although Duggan's lawyers argue the hacking case is unrelated.
Duggan was arrested by Australian federal police in a rural town in New South Wales state in October 2022, shortly after returning from China, where he had lived since 2014.
In the same week, Britain issued a warning to its former defence staff not to train Chinese People's Liberation Army pilots at a South African flying academy where Duggan had also worked.
Duggan, whose wife and six children are also Australian, has been held in a maximum-security prison since his arrest. Saffrine placed her hand against the glass window to the dock where Duggan sat in court on Friday.
Former US Marine pilot can be extradited, Australian magistrate rules
Image: 123RF/Lukas Gojda/ File photo
Former US Marine pilot Daniel Duggan can be extradited from Australia to face US charges of training Chinese military pilots to land on aircraft carriers, a Sydney magistrate ruled on Friday.
Duggan, 55, a naturalised Australian citizen, is facing US charges including money laundering and breaking arms control law by training Chinese military pilots to land on aircraft carriers. He denies the allegations.
He has 15 days to seek a review of the magistrate's ruling. The decision to extradite will ultimately be made by Australia's attorney-general.
Outside court his wife Saffrine said the family would appeal to attorney-general Mark Dreyfus to refuse the extradition.
One of seven co-conspirators in a US indictment is convicted Chinese hacker Su Bin, although Duggan's lawyers argue the hacking case is unrelated.
Duggan was arrested by Australian federal police in a rural town in New South Wales state in October 2022, shortly after returning from China, where he had lived since 2014.
In the same week, Britain issued a warning to its former defence staff not to train Chinese People's Liberation Army pilots at a South African flying academy where Duggan had also worked.
Duggan, whose wife and six children are also Australian, has been held in a maximum-security prison since his arrest. Saffrine placed her hand against the glass window to the dock where Duggan sat in court on Friday.
Ex-marine facing extradition in Australia says he wasn't US citizen at time of offence
Australia toughens ban on training 'certain foreign militaries' after pilot case
Magistrate Daniel Reiss said the criteria for extradition had been met. “Mr Duggan is eligible for surrender,” he said.
Duggan's lawyers had previously argued there is no evidence the Chinese pilots he trained were military, and that he became an Australian citizen in January 2012, before the alleged offences.
The US government has argued Duggan did not lose his US citizenship until 2016, when he signed a document renouncing it in the US embassy in Beijing.
Duggan was barred from leaving China in 2014, his lawyer wrote in a filing to the attorney-general, and knew Su Bin as an employment broker for Chinese aviation company AVIC.
Su Bin pleaded guilty in 2016 to theft of US military aircraft designs by hacking major US defence contractors.
Reuters
Would you like to comment on this article?
Sign up (it's quick and free) or sign in now.
Please read our Comment Policy before commenting.
News and promos in your inbox
subscribeMost read
Latest Videos