In a case that’s left both sides of the Atlantic in shock, Kimberlee Singler, a Colorado mother, is locked in a fierce legal battle in the United Kingdom, fighting extradition to the United States. British authorities arrested Singler, 36, at the end of December in London, just days after the bodies of her two children, ages 7 and 9, were discovered in her Colorado Springs home. The grim details presented in court on Wednesday tell a story almost too horrific to believe.
According to the allegations laid out at Westminster Magistrates Court, Singler allegedly sedated her children with sleeping pills, told them to close their eyes, and then proceeded to kill them in cold blood—shooting and stabbing them in what prosecutors describe as an unimaginable act of violence. A third child, 11, who survived the attack, initially told authorities a man had broken into their home and committed the crime. Later, however, the child revealed to a foster carer that it was Singler, their own mother, who had carried out the horrific attack. In a chilling statement made in court, it was said that Singler claimed she had been commanded by God to commit these acts.
US mother accused of killing her children attends UK extradition hearing: Kimberlee Singler denies responsibility for the deaths of her son and daughter – and an attack on a third child. https://t.co/1X5dl95EwE https://t.co/IjvbOKTGS7 pic.twitter.com/w2i9fW6DPu
— Manlio Vaiana (@Manlio97493652) September 4, 2024
The charges against Singler are severe. They include two counts of first-degree murder for the deaths of her two younger children and the attempted murder of her eldest, who survived despite serious injuries. In a scene more gruesome than any nightmare, the authorities discovered the bodies of the two children lying side by side in bed. Spent cartridges and a bloodied knife were found nearby, alongside a gun marked with bloody fingerprints. Two empty bottles of sleeping pills were recovered from the kitchen trash, adding a sinister layer to the already grim scenario.
But the legal drama doesn’t end with the horror of the crime itself. Singler’s defense team is vigorously fighting against her extradition to the U.S., arguing that a life sentence without the possibility of parole—almost a certainty if she were convicted in America—would violate her human rights under European law. Specifically, they cite Article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights, which prohibits inhumane or degrading treatment. Her lawyer, Edward Fitzgerald KC, who has previously represented high-profile clients like Julian Assange, contends that shipping Singler back to the U.S. without any consideration for mitigating circumstances would be tantamount to endorsing a cruel and disproportionate punishment.
On the other side, representing the U.S. government, Joel Smith KC made a compelling case for her extradition. He argued that the severity of the crimes and the fact that the U.S. legal system allows for executive clemency—such as a governor commuting a life sentence—should nullify concerns about human rights violations. “In America, if there’s a route for clemency through the executive, that should suffice,” Smith argued, underscoring the point that even a life sentence in the U.S. does not entirely preclude the possibility of eventual release.
Extradition hearing is underway in the UK for Kimberlee Singler, a Colorado mom charged with the tragic deaths of her two young children. Justice must be served. #TrueCrime #Extradition
Read more: https://t.co/Mw97o8i5FV #ColoradoTweetsFreeWith #BHiveNectar
— Colorado Bee (@therapidblog) September 4, 2024
Adding another layer to the narrative is the bitter custody battle between Singler and her children’s father. Court documents suggest that Singler had been ordered to hand over custody of the children but refused to comply. Just a day after that order was issued, police found the two children dead in her home, a haunting end to an already contentious family dispute.
Fitzgerald pushed back hard against the extradition, highlighting the stark differences between American and European approaches to justice. “In the UK, we don’t just lock people away and throw away the key,” he argued. “You have to consider who the person is, what led them to commit such acts. This is a woman who, by all accounts, was a devoted mother until this tragic moment. Are we really prepared to send her off to face a life sentence without any hope of parole, without understanding what drove her to this?”
The defense lawyer painted a picture of a woman who snapped under the weight of her circumstances, not a cold-blooded killer deserving of America’s harshest penalties. He called into question the morality of a system that would automatically condemn her to die behind bars, without any consideration for her mental state or personal history. “It’s foreign to us,” he said, “to impose such a final and unforgiving sentence based solely on the crime category.”
BREAKING: Police say 35-year-old Kimberlee Singler is wanted in connection to the deaths of her 9-year-old daughter and 7-year-old son.
Police say they found the two children dead inside a Colorado Springs condo last Tuesday.@KOAA pic.twitter.com/x6tlphySjU
— Maggie Bryan KOAA (@MaggieB_TV) December 29, 2023
As the three-day hearing continues, the court must grapple with these contrasting legal philosophies and the complex human elements involved. Should Singler be sent back to face American justice, or should she be tried in the UK, where her defense argues she would receive a fairer trial?
Major Points
- Kimberlee Singler, a mother from Colorado, is fighting extradition from the UK to the US after allegedly murdering two of her children and attempting to kill a third.
- She is accused of drugging the children before fatally shooting and stabbing two of them, claiming she acted on divine orders.
- Singler’s legal team argues that extraditing her would violate European human rights laws due to the possibility of a life sentence without parole in the US.
- The US government counters that the potential for executive clemency in America negates these human rights concerns.
- The case hinges on the legal and ethical considerations of extradition, balancing justice for the victims against European human rights standards.
Lap Fu Ip – Reprinted with permission of Whatfinger News