Pubdate: Sun, 11 Feb 2007 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 Times Colonist Contact: http://www.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Author: Sandra McCulloch, Times Colonist COUPLE IN QUAGMIRE FIGHT EXTRADITION They Claim They're Being Framed, But A Legal Glitch Might Be What Saves Them An American couple arrested in Zeballos in January 2006 on warrants from their home county in Colorado are immersed in a legal quagmire as they fight extradition charges and pursue refugee status in Canada. They spent seven months in jail on immigration holds but they're out now, and for that at least, 36-year-old Lori Romero and Michael Welch, 33, are thankful. That freedom came at a price -- the cost of the both of them being fitted with electronic ankle monitors was $16,000. They borrowed the money from family in the U.S. The Fort Collins prosecutor declined last week to comment on the case other than to say through an assistant that the extradition process will go ahead. The warrants stem from a November 2004 standoff in Fort Collins, Colo., that ended when Michael Welch's father was shot by a sheriff's deputy. Welch and Romero are wanted for first-degree assault of a peace officer, and menacing. The state says Welch is wanted on weapons offences and cultivation of marijuana, but Welch and Romero say those charges were thrown out in U.S. federal court. The dispute over these charges is what led to the standoff. They maintain the U.S. police are framing them and they can't get a fair trial in Colorado. They have applied for refugee status in Canada. Vancouver lawyer Shepherd Moss is representing the couple on both the extradition and the refugee-claim processes. Canada doesn't usually accept people as refugees who've committed or are even just accused of committing serious crimes in other countries, said Moss. "It's a very low standard of proof," he said in a telephone interview. Stockwell Day, the minister of public security, has deemed the couple unworthy of refugee status because of the warrants from the U.S., said Moss. The Immigration and Refugee Board is considering Day's opinion as it ponders the couple's refugee application. Usually, extradition applications trump refugee claims, but not in this case. "If you're being extradited for crimes which, had they been committed in Canada, would give you at least a 10-year jail sentence, that automatically suspends your refugee case," said Moss. "But in this case, the Department of Justice has equated their charges in the States with crimes that have a seven-year sentence in Canada, so their refugee claims are continuing." Canada's view of the seriousness of the crime is in contrast to that of the Colorado authorities, who estimate the assault charge carries a jail sentences of 10 to 32 years. As the wheels of justice creak slowly forward, Welch and Romero live in a Port Coquitlam basement suite, their home since leaving jail on Sept. 26, and try to get by on welfare. They're not allowed to work in the home-remodelling business they had in the U.S. because they don't have the necessary paperwork. They don't want to go back to the U.S. and face the charges, saying the police fabricated evidence against them. "We went through all of that back home before we came here," said Romero. "My husband won his federal court case [but] we saw multiple cops take the stand and lie." The couple was arrested in Zeballos after their van went into a ditch, a Mountie ran their licence plates and saw the warrant. Their 16-year-old son Anthony flew up at Christmas to join them in Canada, and now his application for refugee status is attached to theirs. "We have to feed the three of us on $150 a month," Romero said. "We always want to go back home. We love Colorado, not to say Canada is bad. "I love it here too, but our family is back home. My daughter's pregnant and she's going to be having a baby in three months and I can't be there for that." She said they didn't know they were supposed to have applied for refugee status upon arrival in Canada. "We thought we could go to a lawyer and have him file the paperwork." Their next court date is March 5 in B.C. Supreme Court in Vancouver. "We don't know where it will go from there. Either the judge will throw it out or he'll set a hearing date," said Romero. "Even though we're starving, we're still together. We always look at the positive side of things. We've been through so much, it's going to be a long haul and we know that, but we still have faith that justice will prevail." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek