Severance plans to fight extradition to Virginia

This handout image provided by the Alexandria, Va. Circuit Court shows a Polaroid photo of Charles Severance, 53, taken in 2000 as part of a custody dispute in Alexandria Circuit Court. Severance is being held in West Virginia on a weapons charge, and Alexandria investigators want to interview Severance about three unsolved slayings in the city over the past 10 years. (AP Photo/Alexandria, Va. Circuit Court)
This handout image provided by the Alexandria, Va. Circuit Court shows a Polaroid evidence photos taken in a 2000 custody dispute in Alexandria Circuit Court, in which Charles Severance, 53, lost custody and visitation rights to his infant son. The judge ordered a mental-health evaluation for Severance to regain custody, but he refused. Severance is now a suspect in three unsolved slayings of Alexandria residents going back the last 10 years, according to prosecutor Scott Smith in Ohio County, W.Va., where Severance is currently being held. (AP Photo/Alexandria, Va. Circuit Court)
This handout image provided by the Alexandria, Va. Circuit Court shows a Polaroid photo of a rifle, laid on a pillow, and was taken in 2000 as part of a custody dispute in Alexandria Circuit Court involving longtime city resident Charles Severance. The mother of Severance's child sought a protective order after saying she found the weapon laid out meticulously when she returned to the home they shared. Severance is now a suspect in three unsolved slayings of Alexandria residents going back the last 10 years, according to prosecutor Scott Smith in Ohio County, W.Va., where Severance is currently being held.. (AP Photo/Alexandria, Va. Circuit Court)
This booking photo released with the West Virginia Regional Jail & Correctional Facility Authority shows Charles Severance. A Virginia man is being held without bond in West Virginia after a prosecutor said he's a suspect in three unsolved slayings in the city of Alexandria over the past decade. Charles Severance is charged in Loudoun County, Va., on an unrelated gun charge. Police arrested him last week in Wheeling, W.Va. (AP Photo/West Virginia Regional Jail & Correctional Facility Authority)
(1/4)

WASHINGTON – Prosecutors say a man wanted for questioning in connection to three unsolved murders in Alexandria knew police wanted to speak with him when he left for West Virginia and that he is a flight risk.

Charles Severance, 53, will likely fight his extradition from West Virginia to Loudoun County, where he is wanted for a weapon violation. He was in court in Wheeling Monday.

The court is now waiting for a formal request from Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe for Severance’s extradition.

During the 10-minute hearing, Severance’s public defender Shayne Welling told the Ohio County Court he needs to know more about the weapons charge out of Loudoun County, which form the basis for the extradition.

“The only information I have is he’s wanted on a felon in possession that I have really not seen much in the way of information on that. So whether or not it’s an extraditable offense is something we traditionally explore,” Welling said.

Judge James Mazzone denied bail after prosecutors detailed Severance’s actions before he left for Wheeling, where he was arrested Thursday based on a tip from investigators in Virginia.

Prosecutor Scott Smith said after learning Alexandria police were investigating Severance for three unsolved homicides in Alexandria, Severance unsuccessfully sought asylum at the Russian Embassy in D.C. He then left for West Virginia.

Smith also said two guns belonging to Severance remain unaccounted for.

Handcuffed and wearing a tan jacket over his orange jumpsuit, Severance smiled a few times during the hearing but never spoke.

A bond hearing is set for Wednesday. And another extradition hearing is scheduled for March 31.

By fighting extradition, Severance could delay the process up to 60 days as the states have to exchange information and decide how to proceed.

Alexandria police insist that Severance is not a a person of interest nor a suspect in the killings of RuthAnne Lodato, Ron Kirby and Nancy Dunning.

Related Stories:

WTOP’s Megan Cloherty to this report. Follow @WTOP on Twitter and on WTOP Facebook page.

Federal News Network Logo
Log in to your WTOP account for notifications and alerts customized for you.

Sign up