The local hitmen involved in the killing were arrested, tried and convicted, the result of an aggressive investigation by Inspector Swaran Singh. Attempts were made to
extradite Malkiat Kaur Sidhu and Surjit Singh Badesha from
Canada to India to stand trial, but the process was stalled owing to British Columbian court proceedings and Canadian extradition laws. When pressed for information at the time, the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police,
Canadian Foreign Affairs and the
Department of Justice stated that the file remained active and extradition was still being considered. Sukhwinder was accused of rape in August 2004 and incarcerated in the Ludhiana Central Jail for four years, until he was acquitted. The woman who made the false accusation was found to have connections to Jassi Sidhu's family. Harbinder Sewak, the publisher of the
South Asian Post newspaper in Vancouver, BC, intervened on behalf of Sukhwinder, hiring a legal team for him. The newspaper was recognised for its crusading journalism through a
Jack Webster Award for Best Community Reporting in 2008 for this action. After his acquittal, Sukhwinder was elected panch of Kaunke Khosa. The rape charge, and additional charges of drug smuggling, against Sukhwinder were later recommended for cancellation by Justice Mehtab Singh Gill. However, he faces additional drug charges and has spend 3 years in jail before securing bail. Darshan Singh Sidhu, one of the men who was earlier convicted of Jassi's murder but later acquitted in India after an appeal, was given permanent residency in Canada in 2008, having lied about his criminal status on his immigration application. He was later declared inadmissible in Canada after his criminal past was revealed.
Extradition of Badesha and Sidhu On May 9, 2014, following court proceedings in the
Supreme Court of British Columbia, Justice Gregory Finch ordered Surjit Badesha and Malkit Sidhu to be turned over to Indian police to face trial. This motion effectively ended the debate regarding their extradition, which had been stalled by the pair arguing that enough evidence was not present to extradite. Finch justified his decision by showing evidence that India had presented against Badesha, including 266 telephone calls between Badesha and the four men convicted of killing Jassi. Justice Finch also reminded those present at the trial that "it is the Canadian court's role to determine whether a jury
could convict based on the evidence, not whether they
should convict." On 24 January 2019, they were both extradited and arrived in Delhi, India to face the charges. As of June 2025, the trial of Badesha and Sidhu is ongoing, with both defendants free on
bail granted during the
COVID-19 pandemic. ==Coverage==