Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Family wants Walker extradited from U.S. to Canada

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Aug, 2022 01:39 PM
  • Family wants Walker extradited from U.S. to Canada

Relatives of a Saskatchewan woman being held in custody in the United States say they want her extradited quickly to deal with her charges in Canada.

Dawn Walker, 48, is facing two charges in Oregon related to identity fraud along with two charges in Saskatoon of child abduction and public mischief.

She was arrested Friday when she and her seven-year-old son were found in Oregon City, Ore., after a two-week search.

Police allege Walker was involved in a custody dispute with the boy's father and faked her death and that of her son before illegally entering the U.S.

Marie-Anne Day Walker-Pelletier, a former chief of Okanese First Nation who is Walker's aunt, said a letter-writing campaign is underway to get federal officials to bring her home.

"I'm hoping that with every effort … through the attorney generals, both in Saskatchewan and the federal government, they can work together to have her extradited quicker than sitting in a U.S. jail," Day Walker-Pelletier said Tuesday in Regina.

She also called for an Indigenous treaty to be invoked, since Walker and her son are members of Okanese First Nation.

"We have the Jay Treaty that reflects First Nation values and traditions, and hopefully the U.S. will consider that as part of her extradition," Day Walker-Pelletier said.

The treaty, signed in 1794 between Great Britain and the United States, says Indigenous people in what is now Canada may travel freely across the international boundary. In order to qualify for these privileges, the treaty says eligible persons must provide evidence of their Indigenous background at the port of entry.

The United States Attorney’s Office in Oregon alleges Walker stole the identity of a colleague and that colleague's child to illegally cross the border in what they describe as an elaborate scheme. She is being held as a flight risk.

Saskatoon police saidthey are working with prosecutors and justice officials on extradition, but had no update on Wednesday.

The U.S. Department of Justice saidon its website that if an extradition is approved by a judge, it can take months or years to return a person back to their home country.

The federal and Saskatchewan attorneys general did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Kathy Walker spoke at a rally in front of the Saskatchewan legislature on Tuesday asking the public not to vilify her sister.

"She's a wonderful, caring, brilliant, beautiful person. And I don't want that to be lost in this coverage, or in the story that's being told about her," she said.

"She did everything she could to protect her son, because that's the type of person she is."

In a statement provided by Saskatchewan lawyer Eleanor Stonechild, Walker said she left Saskatoon to protect her child.

"I was left with no choice. No one heard me. I loved my son … very much," the statement said. "He is my only child, and I would do absolutely anything for him."

MORE National ARTICLES

Wildfires threaten western province

Wildfires threaten western province
Lytton was razed in a similar fire last year and many residents evacuated in 2021, still have yet to return home. The Manitoba Wildfire Service says heat and hot weather have caused 45 blazes in the province with the largest being east of Mathias Colomb Cree Nation.

Wildfires threaten western province

Random COVID-19 testing resumes at 4 airports

Random COVID-19 testing resumes at 4 airports
Deputy chief public health officer Dr. Howard Njoo has previously said random mandatory testing is an important part of Canada's strategy to detect new variants coming in to the country. Travellers who are not fully vaccinated must test on both the first and eighth days of their mandatory 14-day quarantine, unless exempt.

Random COVID-19 testing resumes at 4 airports

Vancouver Police investigation leads to charges in last week's Yaletown homicide, deemed a random stabbing

Vancouver Police investigation leads to charges in last week's Yaletown homicide, deemed a random stabbing
The VPD have released a photo of Justin Mohrmann, in the hopes that someone who saw him before the stabbing will come forward with more information. Police say Mohrmann was stabbed while walking near Smithe and Homer streets the morning of July 11.

Vancouver Police investigation leads to charges in last week's Yaletown homicide, deemed a random stabbing

3 young offenders enter guilty pleas in relation to a stabbing that occurred outside a party in Burnaby last October

3 young offenders enter guilty pleas in relation to a stabbing that occurred outside a party in Burnaby last October
In early July, two of the three youth suspects received sentencing which included charges for aggravated assault and assault with a weapon. The third offender has entered a guilty plea but is awaiting sentencing.  

3 young offenders enter guilty pleas in relation to a stabbing that occurred outside a party in Burnaby last October

Police seek public’s help to identify deceased woman

Police seek public’s help to identify deceased woman
Since that time, the Richmond RCMP General Investigation Section (GIS) and the BC Coroners Service have been working to identify the woman without success.  Today a composite sketch of the woman has been released in hopes someone will recognize her.

Police seek public’s help to identify deceased woman

Ottawa to provide $870M for B.C. flood recovery

Ottawa to provide $870M for B.C. flood recovery
British Columbia has asked for about $5 billion to help rebuild after the disaster through the program, and provincial Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth said accessing the money can take time, so the advanced payment is important.

Ottawa to provide $870M for B.C. flood recovery