Extradition of Tahawwur Rana: A key milestone in the 26/11 Mumbai terror case
New Delhi. After years of diplomatic and legal wrangling, Tahawwur Rana, the key plotter of the 2008 Mumbai terror attack, was extradited from the US to India in April 2025. Rana, a Pakistani-born Canadian national and former Chicago-based businessman, is alleged to have played a key role in facilitating the deadly assault that left 166 people dead and hundreds injured.
The 2008 Mumbai attacks, also referred to as 26/11 attacks, were a series of coordinated Islamist terrorist attacks that took place in November 2008, when 10 members of Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), a Pakistan-based terrorist organisation, carried out 12 shooting and bombing attacks lasting four days across Mumbai. The attacksbegan on November 26, and lasted until November 29, 2008.
Soon after he landed in New Delhi on April 10, Rana was taken into custody by the National Investigation Agency (NIA). He faces charges under various Indian laws, including the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, for his alleged involvement in the 26/11 attacks.
Rana, 64, is charged in India with numerous offenses, including conspiracy, murder, commission of a terrorist act, and forgery, related to his alleged involvement in the 26/11 attacks committed by LeT, a designated foreign terrorist organization. Between November 26 and 29, 2008, 10 LeT terrorists carried out a series of 12 coordinated shooting and bombing attacks in Mumbai.
They infiltrated the city by sea and then broke into teams, dispersing to multiple locations. Attackers at a train station fired guns and threw grenades into crowds. Attackers at two restaurants shot indiscriminately at patrons. Attackers at the Taj Mahal Palace Hotel gunned people down and detonated explosives. Attackers also shot and killed people at a Jewish community centre. When the terror finally subsided, 166 victims, including six Americans, were dead, along with all but one of the LeT terrorists. Hundreds more were injured, and Mumbai sustained more than $1.5 billion in property damage. The attacks were among the most horrific and catastrophic in India’s history.
India alleges that Rana facilitated a fraudulent cover so that his childhood friend David Coleman Headley, a US citizen born Daood Gilani, could freely travel to Mumbai for the purpose of conducting surveillance of potential attack sites for LeT.
Headley had received training from LeT members in Pakistan and was in direct communication with LeT about plans to attack Mumbai. Among other things, Rana allegedly agreed to open a Mumbai branch of his immigration business and appoint Headley as the manager of the office, despite Headley’s having no immigration experience.
On two separate occasions, Rana allegedly helped Headley prepare and submit visa applications to Indian authorities that contained information Rana knew to be false. Rana also allegedly supplied, through his unsuspecting business partner, documentation in support of Headley’s attempt to secure formal approval from Indian authorities to open a branch office of Rana’s business. Over the course of more than two years, Headley allegedly repeatedly met with Rana in Chicago and described his surveillance activities on behalf of LeT, LeT’s responses to Headley’s activities, and LeT’s potential plans for attacking Mumbai.
According to a statement issued by the US Department of Justice, in June 2020, the United States acted on a request for Rana’s extradition submitted by the India, which Rana contested for almost five years. On May 16, 2023, a US magistrate judge in the Central District of California certified Rana’s extradition to India. Rana then filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, which the US District Court in the Central District of California denied on August 10, 2023. On August 15, 2024, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit affirmed that decision. The Supreme Court likewise denied Rana’s petition for certiorari on January 21, 2025. The Secretary of State issued a warrant ordering Rana’s surrender to Indian authorities. Both the district court and the Ninth Circuit denied Rana’s application for a stay of extradition, and on April 7, the US Supreme Court denied Rana’s application for a stay of extradition.
“On April 9, the US Marshals Service executed the Secretary’s surrender warrant by surrendering Rana to Indian authorities for transportation to India,” the Department of Justice stated in a press release. “Rana’s extradition is now complete.The extradition litigation was handled by Assistant US attorneys John J Lulejian and David R Friedman and former Assistant US Attorney Bram M Alden of the Central District of California and Deputy Director Christopher J Smith, Associate Director Kerry A Monaco, and former Associate Director Rebecca A Haciski of the Criminal Division’s Office of International Affairs. The US Marshals Service and attorneys and international affairs specialists in the Justice Department’s Office of International Affairs provided support to this extradition. The FBI’s Legal Attaché Office in New Delhi also provided assistance.”