Rather than using Premiere for transferring ("capturing") the DV footage from the camera, instead look to use a dedicated DV transfer tool, such as the freeware WinDV. While Premiere is an excellent editing program, it's bloated and can cause issues trying to get the video off the tape and onto the computer (i.e., dropped frames).
After you use WinDV to transfer the video to the computer, THEN look to load the DV AVI into Premiere, and edit from there.
I would not use Cyberlink software for anything in 2010. Even their DVD player software is rather inferior to something like VLC, WinDVD or even what now comes with Windows Vista or Windows 7 for playing DVDs.
I'm assuming you're on Windows, be it XP, Vista or 7.
Also look at some of our capturing articles:
http://www.digitalFAQ.com/guides/vid...rd-capture.htm
Specifically, the DV and dropped frames / audio sync guides.