Pubdate: Wed, 06 Sep 2006 Source: Windsor Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2006 The Windsor Star Contact: http://www.canada.com/windsor/windsorstar/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/501 Author: Trevor Wilhelm, Windsor Star DRUG DEALER FIGHTS EXTRADITION Trafficker Sentenced To Three Years In Canada, Could Get Another 10 In U.S. A Windsor lawyer hopes to change how Canada extradites criminals by taking the case of his client -- a convicted cocaine trafficker facing similar charges in the U.S. -- to the Supreme Court of Canada. Talib Steven Lake's lawyer, Frank Miller, said that if his application is successful, it could make provincial Court of Appeal decisions on the issue more uniform and force the minister of justice to better justify reasons for extraditing someone. "It will change the way the minister makes decisions in extraditions," said Miller. "He'll have to be more careful. It could mean the minister has to do more to justify surrendering Canadian citizens. It's also a really important case because it raises the issue of how appeal courts assess a decision of the minister to send someone to a foreign country." Last week, the Ontario Court of Appeal denied Lake's application to overturn an extradition order to the United States, where he would face court proceedings for the same drug deal he already served time for in Canada. Miller said he will now apply to take the case to the Supreme Court of Canada. A decision, made by a three-judge panel, likely won't come until after Christmas. The United States requested Lake's extradition after he had served three years in Canada and was out on bail. A Superior Court judge signed the extradition order in 2004. Lake appealed, claiming that it violates his charter right to remain in Canada, the minister of justice failed to give adequate reasons for the extradition decision and the U.S. minimum 10-year sentence is unjust and oppressive. Miller added Tuesday that the standards for addressing appeals vary from province to province and the Supreme Court has never clarified the situation. Ministry of Justice spokesman Christian Girouard said he couldn't comment because the case is still before the courts. Lake was arrested in Windsor in late 1997 as part of a large OPP sting when he tried to sell thousands of dollars worth of crack cocaine to an undercover cop. He pleaded guilty in 1998 to three charges of trafficking crack cocaine to the undercover officer, two counts of possessing proceeds of crime and one of conspiracy to traffic. Lake, who spent a year in jail before confessing, was sentenced to another three years in penitentiary. After he got out, American authorities started the extradition process to try him there, because the cocaine exchange between Lake and the officer occurred in Detroit. In the U.S., he would face a possible 10-year minimum sentence. "This guy will get sentenced over there for trafficking consecutive to what he got here," said Miller. "It's a tough situation." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek