London court clears way to extradite US mother accused of killing 2 of
her children in Colorado
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[January 25, 2025]
By BRIAN MELLEY
LONDON (AP) — A London judge on Friday rejected a U.S. mother's
challenge to her extradition to face murder charges in Colorado in the
deaths of two of her young children.
The ruling by Judge John Zani at Westminster Magistrates’ Court clears
the way for the British government to order Kimberlee Singler’s return
to America. It was not clear when that would happen.
Singler, 36, is accused of two counts of first-degree murder in the
December 2023 shooting and stabbings of her 9-year-old daughter and
7-year-old son, and one count of attempted murder in the slashing of her
11-year-old daughter with a knife in Colorado Springs. She also faces
three counts of child abuse and one count of assault.
Singler’s attorney had argued that sending her back to the U.S. would
violate European human rights law, in part, because she faces a sentence
of life in prison without parole if convicted in Colorado of
first-degree murder.
Such a sentence would be inhumane because it offers no prospect for
release even if she is rehabilitated, attorney Edward Fitzgerald said.
Fitzgerald said that despite an option for a Colorado governor to
commute her sentence at some point, it would be “political suicide” to
do so.
Experts for the defense had originally said that a life sentence had
never been commuted in Colorado. But prosecutors later found that Gov.
John Hickenlooper in 2018 commuted life sentences of five men convicted
of murder.
The defense countered that three of those sentences were not life
without parole and two were for men who committed their crime between
the ages of 18 and 21, which is sometimes considered a mitigating factor
at sentencing because of the offender's relative youth.
“This defendant, Kimberlee Singler, has no real prospect of release no
matter what progress she makes” behind bars, Fitzgerald said.
Prosecutor Joel Smith said the judge only had to consider if there is a
mechanism that could allow Singler to be freed someday — not the
likelihood of it happening.
“Prospect of release — that is not your concern,” Smith told the judge
at a hearing in December.
Zani said in his ruling that he felt there was an option in Colorado to
release an inmate serving a life sentence.
“I am satisfied that the defendant has failed to vault the hurdle
necessary in order to succeed in the challenges raised," the judge said.
Fitzgerald said he planned to appeal to the High Court.
The Colorado Springs Police Department said it had no estimate for when
Singler could be sent back to the United States.
“CSPD is aware of the ongoing extradition process regarding Kimberlee
Singler, as well as the legal rights still afforded her in the UK. Our
investigative efforts into the ongoing case are continuing, and we will
continue to work diligently toward its conclusion," police spokesperson
Ira Cronin said in a statement.
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The outside of Westminster Magistrates Court is shown in London,
Oct. 21, 2021. (AP Photo/Alberto Pezzali)
The Dec. 18, 2023 killings took place in an apartment where Singler
had been staying with her mother during a custody battle with her
ex-husband, who had recently been awarded more parenting time. Her
mother was away at the time.
Two days before the crimes, Singler had been due to hand over the
children to her husband for the holidays but had refused to let his
sister pick them up. The husband’s lawyer got a court order on Dec.
18 for her to exchange the children two days later.
Singler has denied that she harmed her children, Fitzgerald said.
She told police that her ex-husband had either carried out the
killings or hired a hitman.
She told police her ex-husband “had previously dreamt about killing
his family, that the children’s father was always trying to ‘frame
her’ and ‘get her arrested’ and to have the kids taken away from
her,” Zani said in his ruling.
Police said her husband had a solid alibi, backed up by GPS records
that showed he had been driving a truck at the time of the killings
about 80 miles (130 kilometers) away.
Singler told police that an intruder had entered the apartment that
morning through a patio door she forgot to lock and attacked her and
and she lost consciousness. Police said they found no footprints in
the snow leading to the patio.
Singler described being too weak to get help and said she couldn't
find her phone.
She said, however, that when she did have enough strength, she found
her youngest children dead and gave her surviving daughter water
throughout the day.
Late that night, she said she heard her phone ringtone playing
Christmas music and called police for help when she located it.
Singler had superficial knife wounds and was initially treated as a
victim.
But that changed after her surviving daughter, who initially told
police a similar intruder story, said her mother tried to kill her.
After her daughter changed her story, police sought to arrest
Singler on Dec. 26 but she had fled. She was found four days later
in London’s posh Chelsea neighborhood and arrested.
The girl, who has not been named, told police that her mother gave
the children milk with a powdery substance to drink and told them to
close their eyes as she guided them into a bedroom, prosecutors
said.
Singler cut her neck and, as the girl begged her to stop, she
slashed her again. The girl said her mother had a gun.
“The defendant told her that God was telling her to do it, and that
the children’s father would take them away,” Smith said at a
previous hearing.
Police found Aden Wentz, 7, and Elianna “Ellie” Wentz, 9, dead when
they entered the Colorado Springs apartment early the morning of
Dec. 19. They had been shot and stabbed.
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