Oscar-winning director Roman Polanski attended a closed door hearing today in a Polish court set to rule on his extradition to the United States where he faces sentencing for the 1977 rape of a 13-year-old girl.
The United States filed an extradition request for the 81-year-old fugitive in January and Polanski has said he doubts it will be honoured.
The dual French-Polish citizen, dressed in a suit and tie, appeared calm and made no comment as he arrived in court alongside his lawyer.
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Mazur said that Polanski's lawyers had petitioned the court to consider evidence from a 2009 case in Switzerland that saw him released after nine months under house arrest following a similar US extradition demand.
A court spokesperson said Polanski and state prosecutors were expected to make presentations.
Polish prosecutors argue there are legal grounds for the extradition to go ahead, despite a statute of limitations under Polish law on child sex crimes.
If the Krakow court clears the extradition, Poland's justice ministry will still have to take the final decision.
The latest extradition bid comes months after the United States tried to have Polanski arrested for sex offences when he travelled to Warsaw for the opening of a Jewish museum in October.
Polanski, who became a French citizen in 1976 after moving to France from Poland, said he would begin shooting a new film in Warsaw in July.
The movie will be about France's Dreyfus Affair, the case of an army captain wrongly convicted in 1894 of espionage and treason. His ordeal has become a symbol of injustice and anti-Semitism.
The director of "The Pianist", "Chinatown" and "Rosemary's Baby" was accused of raping Samantha Geimer, who was then 13, after a photo shoot in Los Angeles in 1977 when he was 43.
He pleaded guilty to unlawful sex with a minor, or statutory rape, avoiding a trial, but then fled the country fearing a hefty sentence.
US officials have regularly pressed for his extradition, but to no avail.
Polanski's lawyers had requested a new hearing to try to close the case on procedural grounds, but a Los Angeles judge refused the move last year.