Close X
Saturday, October 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

Accused 'Lone Wolf' Attackers Unlikely To Face Terror Charges In Canada: Experts

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Feb, 2017 12:31 PM
    So-called "lone wolf" attackers are unlikely to face terror charges under Canadian law, a legal expert said Tuesday as authorities continued to investigate a deadly mass shooting at a Quebec City mosque that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau called a terrorist attack.
     
    Politicians were quick to denounce Sunday's shooting, which killed six Muslim worshippers and injured 19 others, as a terrorist act. But while the label sends a political message, experts said that doesn't always carry over into courtroom. 
     
    Prosecutors have not laid terror-related charges against the accused in the case, Alexandre Bissonnette, who is charged with murder and attempted murder. None of the allegations against him has been proven in court.
     
    Police have not ruled out further charges but have also given no possible motive for the attack.
     
    In order to be deemed terrorism under Canadian law, an attack must be politically, religiously or ideologically motivated and designed to intimidate the public or compel a person or government to act, and it must also have caused serious harm, said experts, who were not speaking specifically about the mosque attack.
     
    The law is written in such a way that a person acting entirely alone is unlikely to face terror charges "unless they were giving money to or leaving to participate in a terrorist group," said Kent Roach, a law professor at the University of Toronto.
     
    "A truly lone wolf attack cannot result in most terrorism offences, which require participation or support of a group or commission of an offence for a group," Roach said in an email.
     
    Even if a person consulted materials from a terror group, that would not justify a terror charge, he said. "Inspiration alone is not enough — you would need some form of active participation or direct instruction or incitement to commit a terrorist act," he said.
     
    Proving the ideological aspect is often the biggest barrier, said Wesley Wark, a national security expert at the University of Ottawa.
     
    "It's often to meet that threshold that, in an investigation, there might be some delay between the initial laying of charges and the ultimate shape of the charges as they explore, as best they can, the motivation of the attack," he said.
     
    In many cases there is a "powerful political dimension" behind the decision to lay terror charges, though the evidence determines how prosecutors ultimately proceed, Wark said. 
     
     
    "That background calculation would be to send a message to Muslims in Canada that they are not being treated any differently when they become victims of terrorism themselves — in other words, terrorism offences are not just offences conducted by Muslim jihadists but they can be offences conducted against Muslims themselves," he said.
     
    Faisal Bhabha, an associate professor at York University's Osgoode Hall Law School who is also involved in anti-discrimination initiatives, said it's impossible to ignore the political and social context in which these decisions are made.
     
    Men of colour and Muslim men in particular are more likely to face terror charges than white male mass shooters like convicted cop killer Justin Bourque, he said.
     
    Should prosecutors decide to lay terror charges against Bissonnette, it would carry symbolic weight but have little other impact on his fate if convicted, said Roach. First-degree murder already carries a life sentence with no chance of parole for 25 years — the harshest possible sentence.
     
    "Yes, a terrorism charge would send a political message, one that terrorism comes in all forms, but it would likely not add anything tangible in terms of sentence and would complicate the prosecution process," he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Trump Has Conversation With Trudeau, Discuss The Economy And Exports

    Trump Has Conversation With Trudeau, Discuss The Economy And Exports
    The Prime Minister's Office says the two men spoke by phone Saturday, but it was not immediately clear how long the conversation lasted.

    Trump Has Conversation With Trudeau, Discuss The Economy And Exports

    Free Snowmobiling In Northern New England, Canada This Month

    EAGLE LAKE, Maine — Maine is using a pair of weekends in January to open up snowmobiling opportunities with its neighbours, including New Brunswick.

    Free Snowmobiling In Northern New England, Canada This Month

    'Sisters Of The North' Join Massive Women's March On Washington

    'Sisters Of The North' Join Massive Women's March On Washington
    Many simply yelled "thank you Canada" as they spotted the women, and at least one shouted "take us with you!"

    'Sisters Of The North' Join Massive Women's March On Washington

    Burnaby Man in Alleged Sexual Assault of Bus Operator Remanded in Custody

    Burnaby Man in Alleged Sexual Assault of Bus Operator Remanded in Custody
    A 40 year old Burnaby man has been remanded in custody following his arrest for allegedly sexually assaulting a Coast Mountain Bus Company (CMBC) operator in a moving bus.

    Burnaby Man in Alleged Sexual Assault of Bus Operator Remanded in Custody

    Huge Fire On Mitchell Island In Richmond

    Huge Fire On Mitchell Island In Richmond
    Police and fire crews are on the scene, but it is unclear what caused the fire and what exactly is burning.

    Huge Fire On Mitchell Island In Richmond

    77 Students Ill, With Symptoms Of Vomiting, Abdominal Pain At Toronto College

    77 Students Ill, With Symptoms Of Vomiting, Abdominal Pain At Toronto College
    At least 77 students at Humber College were affected, most of whom live at a residence at the institution's North Campus, said spokesman Andrew Leopold.

    77 Students Ill, With Symptoms Of Vomiting, Abdominal Pain At Toronto College