Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Alek Minassian Admits To Planning, Carrying Out Toronto Van Attack

The Canadian Press, 05 Mar, 2020 08:06 PM
  • Alek Minassian Admits To Planning, Carrying Out Toronto Van Attack

TORONTO - A man who killed 10 people when he drove a van into crowds of pedestrians on a busy Toronto sidewalk in 2018 has admitted to planning and carrying out the attack, court heard Thursday.

 

Alek Minassian faces 10 counts of first-degree murder and 16 counts of attempted murder in connection with the attack on April 23, 2018. His trial is scheduled to begin in front of a judge, without a jury, in April.

 

Crown attorney John Rinaldi read out an agreed statement of facts between the prosecution and defence.

 

"While driving the van in the said area, (Minassian) drove his van into, or otherwise struck, at least 26 people, 10 of those people were killed and 16 injured to various degrees," Rinaldi said.

 

The 27-year-old is in court for a pre-trial motion hearing where his lawyer, Boris Bytensky, is fighting over the admissibility of a statement Minassian gave to a booking officer shortly after his arrest.

 

As part of a standard set of questions, the booking officer asked Minassian if he had any illnesses.

 

"Yes. I am a murdering piece of shit," Minassian said.

 

The defence concedes Minassian made that statement, but argues Minassian's charter rights — the right to remain silent — were violated.

 

Several victims and families of those who died in the attack were in the courtroom. Some wiped tears away and others stared Minassian when the video showed him making that statement to police.

 

Minassian later told police in a lengthy interview after the attack that he carried it out in retribution for years of sexual rejection and ridicule by women. He told a detective that he was part of the so-called "incel movement," which is a fringe internet subculture that attracts males who are involuntarily celibate.

 

Minassian told Det. Rob Thomas that he saw himself on the bottom rung of society as an incel, and wanted to be part of an "uprising" in an effort to change his societal status.

 

"This is the day of retribution," Minassian told Thomas.

 

He also told the detective he had "accomplished" his mission.

 

Minassian conceded that interview in court on Thursday, which will now form part of the agreed facts in the case.

 

The judge has said the case will turn on Minassian's state of mind at the time of the attack, not whether he did it.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Crosswinds Hold Up Chartered Flight Taking Canadians From Wuhan

Crosswinds Hold Up Chartered Flight Taking Canadians From Wuhan
More than 200 Canadians due to be evacuated from the Chinese city of Wuhan should continue making their way to the airport if they are already on their way, even though their flight out of the centre of the new coronavirus outbreak

Crosswinds Hold Up Chartered Flight Taking Canadians From Wuhan

251 Canadians On-Board Cruise Ship Quarantined After Coronavirus Outbreak

251 Canadians On-Board Cruise Ship Quarantined After Coronavirus Outbreak
A cruise ship carrying 251 Canadians has been quarantined off the coast of Japan following a confirmed outbreak of the new coronavirus.    

251 Canadians On-Board Cruise Ship Quarantined After Coronavirus Outbreak

Talks With Wet'suwet'en Over Pipeline 'Not Successful,' Province Says

Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs proposed seven days of discussions to de-escalate the dispute over the construction of the Coastal GasLink pipeline through the First Nation's traditional territory near Houston.

Talks With Wet'suwet'en Over Pipeline 'Not Successful,' Province Says

Husband Of Iran Plane Crash Victim Seeks Answers, Justice From Investigation

OTTAWA - The husband of one of the victims who died when a Ukrainian jetliner was shot down by the Iranian military last month wants the people he says are responsible for his wife's death to be charged and tried at the International Criminal Court.

Husband Of Iran Plane Crash Victim Seeks Answers, Justice From Investigation

Opponents To Ramp Up Protests Against Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion In B.C.

VANCOUVER - Opponents of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion say they will do whatever it takes to stop the project after suffering a devastating legal blow at the Federal Court of Appeal.

Opponents To Ramp Up Protests Against Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion In B.C.

No End In Sight For B.C. Forestry Strike As Mediators Withdraw Services

No End In Sight For B.C. Forestry Strike As Mediators Withdraw Services
VANCOUVER - Efforts to end a bitter, seven-month strike by forestry workers on Vancouver Island hit another impasse as two mediators have pulled out.    

No End In Sight For B.C. Forestry Strike As Mediators Withdraw Services