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'God made me do it': American mother accused of killing two of her children fights extradition

A Americanwho is accused of killing her two children Children In Colorado claimed last December, God made her do it.
Kimberlee Singler, who is fighting extradition to the US in a London court, has denied attacking her children. Prosecutor Joel Smith revealed that Singler told her surviving 11-year-old daughter that God had instructed her to commit the crime.
The girl begged for her life, but Singler stabbed her again despite her pleas for mercy.
Singler is fighting extradition to the United States. Her defense attorney, Edward Fitzgerald, argues that she should not be extradited because a conviction for premeditated murder in Colorado would result in a life sentence without parole, which violates European human rights law. Fitzgerald also expressed concerns that the 11-year-old's statement to police may have been coerced.
The hearing, which focused primarily on the legal issues surrounding extradition, revealed more details of the case. At the time of the murders, Singler was involved in a custody battle with her ex-husband, Kevin Wentz, and had failed to surrender the children to him as the court ordered. The two youngest children, Aden Wentz, 7, and Elianna “Ellie” Wentz, 9, were found dead in their apartment, shot and stabbed to death.
Initially, Singler claimed a “dark figure” had entered her home and attacked the children, but her surviving daughter later told a caregiver that Singler was responsible and asked her to lie to police. The girl said Singler gave the children milk with a powdered medicine and told them God had told her to do it or their father would take them away. DNA tests of the weapons revealed a mixture of blood that matched that of the children and their mother. An empty bottle of sleeping pills was also discovered in the house.
The hearing was adjourned until December 2 to give attorneys the opportunity to confirm a news report about former Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper's commutation of sentences for premeditated murder and to present further arguments.