Canadian man linked to more than 100 deaths in Britain will not be extradited, families demand inquiry. world News

A Canadian man accused of supplying deadly substances linked to the deaths of more than 100 people in Britain will not be extradited to face prosecution in Britain.Kenneth Law, 60, is currently facing criminal proceedings in Canada and is expected to appear in court in Ontario on Friday. He is accused of inciting suicide after allegedly delivering packages containing deadly substances to customers in dozens of countries.The National Crime Agency linked Law’s alleged operation to 112 deaths in the UK after finding 286 people had received packages from websites selling substances linked to assisted suicide, Sky News reports.Investigators found that 330 products were sent to the UK. Law is accused of sending approximately 1,200 packages to customers in 40 countries.The NCA and the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) informed the families this week that they will not seek Law’s extradition after the Canadian proceedings conclude.In a letter sent to the families of those killed, the agencies said they agreed that the full scale of the alleged crime should be punished through the same legal process as in Canada. “After careful assessment, we agreed that Mr. Law should be sentenced for the full extent of his crime under the same sentencing process in Canada,” the letter said.Officials acknowledged that some families had expected a separate prosecution in England and Wales, but said the decision was taken after detailed consideration of all available options.The move prompted renewed calls for a public inquiry from relatives of those who died.Adele Zeynep Walton, whose sister Amy Walton died aged 21 in Southampton in 2022, said the family were still waiting for answers about how the substance was able to reach vulnerable people in Britain.“Foreign sentencing hearings cannot answer this. Only a statutory public inquiry can answer this,” he said, as quoted by Sky News.The law has also been investigated by authorities in the United States, Italy, Australia and New Zealand as law enforcement agencies investigate the international reach of the alleged scheme.

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