Close X
Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

Few Would Escape Death Or Injury If Bombs Went Off At B.C. Legislature: Court

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 May, 2015 07:27 PM
  • Few Would Escape Death Or Injury If Bombs Went Off At B.C. Legislature: Court
VANCOUVER — Everyone celebrating Canada Day on the B.C. legislature's front lawn in 2013 could have died or been injured if three shrapnel-packed pressure-cooker bombs had detonated, a B.C. Supreme Court jury heard on the final day of the Crown's submissions.
 
An RCMP explosives expert who built the fake explosives for accused terrorists John Nuttall and Amanda Korody painted a grim picture of what could have happened had they been real.
 
"Blast pressure is what we would consider the most dangerous in close proximity to an explosion because it can move through you and simply turn your organs into mush," Const. Peter Cucheran told jurors on Tuesday.
 
The pressure waves emanating from the explosion would have been enough to cause death or serious injury within 30 metres, he said.
 
The jury has already heard the couple hid what they thought were homemade pressure-cooker bombs, containing C4 plastic explosives, in flower planters at the legislature but didn't know they were working with undercover police.
 
Cucheran said fragments or shrapnel that spread from a detonation site can be equally as deadly at further distances.
 
"Pieces of the pressure cooker ... are likely going to be flat or mangled pieces of metal, which are going to catch wind and therefore slow down," he said. "Whereas a nail, for instance, is going to travel likely further."
 
The furthest edge of the front lawn of the legislature is about 150 metres from the alleged detonation sites, the Crown has told the court.
 
Cucheran said the minimum safe distance from the most powerful of the three bombs allegedly hidden by the couple was 250 metres.
 
Footage played in court earlier Tuesday showed Mounties detonating the same model of homemade pressure-cooker explosive that Nuttall and Korody are accused of using for their alleged plot.
 
Cucheran narrated the scene to the jury as a pressure cooker packed with nails, metal washers and more than two kilograms of C4 obliterated a surrounding ring of plywood boards.
 
The detonation took place inside a sand-filled compound lined with two tiers of concrete blocks, located at a police explosives range in the Vancouver area.
 
Cucheran said he couldn't recall whether he saw any shrapnel embedded in the sheets of plywood in the aftermath of the staged explosion.
 
"Everything that I saw (had) holes through it," he said.
 
All that was left in the compound, which was caked with dirt following the blast, was a smoking crater and wood debris, the video showed.
 
Jurors watched a second video of a pressure cooker filled with gunpowder exploding. Court previously heard Nuttall tell an undercover officer that he would use gunpowder to build a bomb if he failed to acquire C4.
 
The blast from the second explosive did not appear as powerful as the C4 bomb and failed to even topple the surrounding plywood boards.
 
After the Crown closed its case, the jury was asked not to return to court on Wednesday.

MORE National ARTICLES

Teen Actress Abigail Bergman And Friend Found In Toronto On Saturday: Police

Teen Actress Abigail Bergman And Friend Found In Toronto On Saturday: Police
Fourteen-year-old Abigail Bergman — who acts on the Family Channel's "Next Step" series — and her friend Polinah Ouskova, 15, were reported missing by their families after they didn't return to their Oakville, Ont., homes on Monday night.

Teen Actress Abigail Bergman And Friend Found In Toronto On Saturday: Police

Alberta's Housing Sector Is Hurting, But It's No 1980s Flashback: Feds

Alberta's Housing Sector Is Hurting, But It's No 1980s Flashback: Feds
OTTAWA — The oil slump is sure to bruise Alberta's housing market, but don't expect real estate in the province to absorb another 1980s-style drubbing, says an internal federal government analysis.

Alberta's Housing Sector Is Hurting, But It's No 1980s Flashback: Feds

Billion-Dollar LNG Deal Pitched To B.C. First Nation For Project Support

Billion-Dollar LNG Deal Pitched To B.C. First Nation For Project Support
PRINCE RUPERT, B.C. — A $1.15-billion benefits' package is being offered to a First Nation on British Columbia's northwest coast in a bid to win support for a proposed liquefied-natural-gas terminal and pipeline.

Billion-Dollar LNG Deal Pitched To B.C. First Nation For Project Support

Alaska Delegation To Visit Mount Polley Disaster Site, Meet Company, First Nations

Alaska Delegation To Visit Mount Polley Disaster Site, Meet Company, First Nations
VICTORIA — Alaska's lieutenant-governor will make an extraordinary visit to the British Columbia mine at the centre of an environmental disaster in an effort to ensure his state won't be damaged by a similar catastrophe.

Alaska Delegation To Visit Mount Polley Disaster Site, Meet Company, First Nations

Alberta Premier Says Voters Have Choice Between Two Parties In Election Race

Alberta Premier Says Voters Have Choice Between Two Parties In Election Race
Despite a number of polls showing a surging NDP and a tight race between the PCs and the Wildrose Party Prentice sees things differently.

Alberta Premier Says Voters Have Choice Between Two Parties In Election Race

Harper Makes Surprise Visit To Iraq, Meeting Officials, Tour Close To Front

Harper Makes Surprise Visit To Iraq, Meeting Officials, Tour Close To Front
ERBIL, Iraq — Stephen Harper got to see the no man's land of northern Iraq on Saturday as questions emerged about whether Canadian special forces soldiers have curtailed trips to the frontline in the aftermath of a friendly fire death almost two months ago.

Harper Makes Surprise Visit To Iraq, Meeting Officials, Tour Close To Front