Pubdate: Thu, 04 May 2000 Source: Inquirer (PA) Copyright: 2000 Philadelphia Newspapers Inc. Contact: 400 N. Broad Street, Philadelphia, PA 19101 Website: http://www.phillynews.com/inq/ Forum: http://interactive.phillynews.com/talk-show/ Author: Joseph A. Slobodzian COLOMBIAN WILL NOT BE EXTRADITED Prosecutors could not prove that the man, who is living in Bucks County, knew he was dealing with drug traffickers. A federal judge yesterday refused to return a Colombian lawyer to his homeland to face drug-related charges, saying prosecutors lacked proof the lawyer knew he was dealing with narcotics traffickers when he used a Colombian businessman to help transfer money to his mother in Bucks County. "If we're going to do a certificate of extraditability for him, then we might as well do one for the mother," U.S. Magistrate Judge Charles B. Smith told federal prosecutors. "It was her money that was being used." Smith's ruling was a setback for federal prosecutors and drug-enforcement authorities, who had publicized the arrest of Victor Manuel Tafur-Dominguez as the first Colombian to face extradition from the United States under a 1979 treaty between the two countries. Prosecutors had argued that it was important for the United States to reciprocate because Colombia has regularly sent its citizens to this country to face U.S. drug charges. Tafur-Dominguez's father, Donald Tafur, was a Colombian legislator and antidrug campaigner who helped to write the extradition treaty between Colombia and the United States. He was slain in 1992, reputedly by assassins hired by drug traffickers. Tafur-Dominguez, 36, left the federal courthouse in Center City free to return to the New Hope-area home of his mother and stepfather, Solita and Chase Rosade, where he has been recovering from injuries suffered in a plane crash last year while studying for a master's degree in environmental law. "I just want to get this all cleared up," Tafur-Dominguez said after the hearing, surrounded by supporters from law school. Tafur-Dominguez's freedom could be tenuous. Although Smith's ruling cannot be appealed, Assistant U.S. Attorneys Thomas J. Eicher and Virgil B. Walker said extradition petitions could be renewed repeatedly based on new evidence. Eicher said it was likely that a new petition would be filed. "I think that's a decision that the Colombia authorities have to make," he said. Tafur-Dominguez's U.S. lawyer, Joseph A. Tate, said he was also concerned that U.S. immigration officials would try to arrest Tafur-Dominguez and deport him. Smith told Tate that he might have to move quickly to obtain a court order blocking such a move. Tafur-Dominguez was arrested March 4 on a September 1999 warrant involving a Colombian investigation into the seizure of about seven tons of cocaine. Tafur-Dominguez was implicated, Colombian authorities alleged, because checks totalling $350,000 that he wrote and signed over to a Colombian businessman were then used to pay for shipping containers that concealed the cocaine. Tafur-Dominguez said he knew nothing about the cocaine shipment and was simply trying to convert the money - a widow's pension voted to his mother in 1998 by the Colombian Congress - from pesos to dollars to forward to Bucks County. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea