Interpol "Blue" notice
Amicus International Consulting
Partner at Amicus International Consulting
Should I be Concerned About a Blue Notice?
The answer is, yes.
Anytime INTERPOL is interested in you, there is sufficient cause for concern. Note that I say concern, not panic. The subject of a Blue Notice may or may not be a suspect in a crime. A Blue Notice is issued when INTERPOL grants a member country’s request for assistance with the following:
- seeking the location of someone connected with a criminal investigation
- identifying someone connected with a criminal investigation
- finding witnesses to a criminal act, and
- locating friends, relatives, or associates of offenders or suspected offenders
The difference between a Red Notice, our usual topic, and a Blue Notice, is that a Blue Notice can be issued prior to criminal charges being filed. Red notices are concerned with persons who have been charged with or convicted of crimes. If a person of interest has a known identity, INTERPOL can issue the Blue Notice in the person’s name, just as it did in the case of Frenchman Xavier Dupont de Ligonnes, who is being sought in connection with the investigation of his family’s death in April of this year.
On the other hand, there are times when an offender is wanted, but his identity is unknown. One such instance was in 2007, when INTERPOL launched an effort termed, Operation Vico, where it circulated a photograph of a man who was wanted for the sexual abuse of children based on widely circulated images on the internet. Although the man’s identity was unknown, his face was known, and INTERPOL’s efforts led to his arrest 11 days later. He was later sentenced to 19 years in Federal prison after entering a guilty plea.
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