Calgary Herald

Alberta judge commits accused in Thailand murder for extraditio­n

- JONNY WAKEFIELD

A former Canadian soldier accused of murdering a B.C. gangster in Southeast Asia is one step closer to extraditio­n after a ruling from an Alberta judge.

Matthew Dupre was committed for extraditio­n Friday after Court of King 's Bench Justice Denise Kiss found the Canadian government had successful­ly made the case to surrender him to Thailand for trial in the death of Jimi Singh Sandhu.

Sandhu, a member of the United Nations gang, was gunned down on the island of Phuket on Feb. 4, 2022, in what Thai authoritie­s allege was a drug-related hit by Dupre and another Canadian man.

Dupre's lawyers argued against extraditio­n on the grounds he could be sentenced to death if convicted. But Kiss said judges in extraditio­n hearings cannot concern themselves with the issue of potential punishment, saying extraditio­n committal hearings are a “modest screening device.”

“I note that if he is convicted, the only sentence is death by lethal injection,” Kiss said. “This is simply not a factor I'm permitted to consider at this stage of the extraditio­n proceeding­s.”

Dupre was a member of the Canadian Armed Forces and served in Afghanista­n before joining a private security firm deployed in highrisk areas including Iraq. He was arrested at his home in Sylvan Lake on Feb. 20 and remains in custody.

Sandhu was deported to India in 2016 for “serious criminalit­y” and, according to Thai police, had amassed large sums of money and illegal drugs at the Phuket villa where he was gunned down.

Thai authoritie­s believe Dupre and another man, Gene Karl Lahrkamp, travelled to Thailand to kill Sandhu. They claim to have evidence linking the two to the shooting, including immigratio­n records, testimony from the clerk of their hotel, car rental records, and CCTV footage around the time of the shooting.

As part of the extraditio­n proceeding­s, a Thai police official submitted a sworn statement claiming to have matched a tattoo on Dupre's right arm to surveillan­ce footage and witness testimony.

James Lockyer, Dupre's lawyer, urged Kiss not to commit his client for extraditio­n because she had not seen the CCTV footage allegedly obtained by Thai police.

But Kiss said extraditio­n judges are only permitted to conduct a “limited weighing ” of the evidence against the accused. She said her role is to establish whether there is a case against Dupre, and whether on a balance of probabilit­ies he is the person sought for extraditio­n.

Dupre's fate now lies with federal Justice Minister David Lametti, who makes the ultimate decision whether to surrender Canadian citizens to other countries.

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