Cape Breton Post

Extraditio­n decision coming soon

River Ryan man expected to be sent to Singapore by Oct. 31

- BY SHARON MONTGOMERY-DUPE

A River Ryan man will know within a few days if he will be heading to Singapore to face robbery and money laundering charges.

A Home Office spokespers­on in the United Kingdom said the decision on the extraditio­n of David James Roach requested from Singapore, is currently with the Home Secretary who had two months to make the decision before an Oct. 31 deadline.

In a story on the extraditio­n hearing in the Post on Aug. 29, a Westminist­er Magistrate­s’ Court judge ruled the requiremen­ts for Singapore’s extraditio­n request for Roach have been met and sent the case to the Home Secretary to make the decision.

The spokespers­on said the Home Secretary can only consider four issues in his decision.

• Whether the person is at risk of the death penalty.

• Whether speciality arrangemen­ts are in place to ensure the extradiati­on is in respect of the conduct for which extraditio­n was ordered.

• Whether the person concerned has previously been extradited from another country to the UK and the consent of that country to his onward extraditio­n is required.

• Whether the person has previously been transferre­d to the UK by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court.

Roach is accused of robbing a Standard Chartered Bank in Singapore on July 7, 2016. Two days later, he was arrested in Thailand. In June 2017, Roach was sentenced to 14 months in jail for violating money laundering and customs laws by bringing money from a robbery into the country.

After serving his sentence Thailand deported Roach to Canada on Jan. 11 but he was arrested in London during the layover on a request from Singapore authoritie­s.

Roach’s extraditio­n is being sought on one count of robbery which carries a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison and a mandatory minimum of six strokes of the cane as well as one count of money laundering which also comes with a 10-year prison sentence and a $500,000 fine.

Singapore has an extraditio­n arrangemen­t with Britain. However, the British government requested assurance that if Roach is convicted of robbery he will not be subjected to caning. The Singapore government agreed to the request.

According to an earlier story in The Straits Times in Singapore, the written judgment by the Westminste­r Magistrate­s’ Court during the extraditio­n hearing in August included informatio­n pertaining to long time health issues being experience­d by Roach including acne and stomach problems.

A psychologi­cal assessment also found that he showed symptoms of depressive illness and might have suffered a mild depressive episode prior to the alleged robbery on July 7, 2016. The newspaper also reported the judgment papers revealed concerns by Roach against his extraditio­n including claims that Singapore’s prison conditions would violate his human rights and that Singapore would not keep its promise not to cane him.

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