Close X
Saturday, January 11, 2025
ADVT 
National

Lawyer Says CSIS Documents May Point To Entrapment In Case Of Alleged Terrorists

The Canadian Press, 23 Jun, 2015 10:17 AM
  • Lawyer Says CSIS Documents May Point To Entrapment In Case Of Alleged Terrorists
VANCOUVER — Canada's spy agency should hand over information that could shed light on whether a British Columbia man found guilty of terrorism was the victim of police manipulation, a court has heard.
 
Lawyer Marilyn Sandford said she wants the B.C. Supreme Court to order disclosure of all correspondence between the Canadian Security Intelligence Service and the Mounties related to the investigation of her client John Nuttall and his wife Amanda Korody.
 
Nuttall and Korody were found guilty three weeks ago of planning to set off pressure-cooker bombs on the grounds of the B.C. legislature in 2013.
 
Their lawyers are scheduled to begin arguments next week that the couple was entrapped and that police manipulated them into carrying out their Canada Day bomb plot.
 
Sandford told the court on Tuesday that it appeared that CSIS had information on Nuttall and Korody's case beyond what the RCMP has so far released.
 
She pointed to the possible involvement of another individual in the case who may have acted as a source for a CSIS investigation, which Sandford argued would be "of extreme relevance to the issue of entrapment."
 
"We require disclosure concerning (the individual) in order to investigate his potential role, if he was a human source, as an agent provocateur who encouraged Mr. Nuttall to commit violent acts," Sandford told the court.
 
She referenced wire intercepts disclosed in the earlier trial, which, she said, strongly indicate "that that's what he was doing in the name of Islamic jihadist extremism."
 
The court heard that documents disclosed by the Mounties consist of little more than a single line from CSIS advising police that Nuttall may be a national security threat.
 
"We have the RCMP saying, 'there's nothing here,'" said Sandford. "Well, there seems to be a lot more here than what meets the eye."
 
Crown lawyer Peter Eccles opposed the application, insisting that CSIS has no obligation to share information with anyone and that any information would be irrelevant to the defence's case.
 
The RCMP can ask for information and the spy agency is fully entitled to tell the Mounties "to pound sand," Eccles told the court.
 
He also pointed out that the question of entrapment relates to the conduct of the RCMP and not CSIS.
 
"They had no idea about the CSIS information," said Eccles. "So how can the presence or absence of CSIS material have an impact on the RCMP's (conduct)?"
 
He accused the defence of embarking on a fishing expedition, calling its "broad, sweeping request" for information from CSIS as "a pure shot in the dark."
 
Besides its correspondence with the RCMP, defence is asking for disclosure from the Canadian Security Intelligence Service for all surveillance information related to Nuttall and Korody collected between Jan. 1, 2011 and July 1, 2013, when the pair was arrested.
 
A trial, set to begin next week, will examine if Nuttall and Korody were entrapped by police into attempting their bomb plot.

MORE National ARTICLES

Jaela Bernstien, CBC Montreal Reporter Confronts Hecklers Weeks After Similar Incident In Toronto

Jaela Bernstien, CBC Montreal Reporter Confronts Hecklers Weeks After Similar Incident In Toronto
A Montreal journalist confronted men who hurled sexually explicit remarks at her while she was conducting a video interview

Jaela Bernstien, CBC Montreal Reporter Confronts Hecklers Weeks After Similar Incident In Toronto

Calgary Man, 52, Facing Sex Charges Involving Young Canadians Performance Group

Calgary Man, 52, Facing Sex Charges Involving Young Canadians Performance Group
Philip Heerema, 52, faces 13 charges that include child pornography, sexual assault, luring a child via a computer and inciting sexual contact with a youth.

Calgary Man, 52, Facing Sex Charges Involving Young Canadians Performance Group

Four Canadians To Receive $100,000 To Drop Out Of School, Pursue Their Dreams

Four Canadians To Receive $100,000 To Drop Out Of School, Pursue Their Dreams
Four Canadian youth will be putting their formal education on hold and accepting hefty cheques to help kick-start their budding technology-oriented business ventures.

Four Canadians To Receive $100,000 To Drop Out Of School, Pursue Their Dreams

Pakistani Man Jahanzeb Malik Accused Of Plotting Toronto Terror Attacks Ordered Out From Canada

Pakistani Man Jahanzeb Malik Accused Of Plotting Toronto Terror Attacks Ordered Out From Canada
TORONTO — A Pakistani man accused of plotting bomb attacks on the U.S. consulate and other buildings in Toronto was ordered out of Canada on Friday following a process his lawyer denounced as a farce.

Pakistani Man Jahanzeb Malik Accused Of Plotting Toronto Terror Attacks Ordered Out From Canada

RCMP Arrest Winnipeg Man On Suspicion Of Possible Terrorist Plans

RCMP Arrest Winnipeg Man On Suspicion Of Possible Terrorist Plans
Aaron Daniel Driver, 23, was arrested after a raid Thursday in a suburban home. He appeared briefly in court Friday, where police filed an application for a peace bond that could impose limits on Driver's activities.

RCMP Arrest Winnipeg Man On Suspicion Of Possible Terrorist Plans

Justin Trudeau Promises Plan For Cities, Joe Oliver Asks How It Will Be Funded

EDMONTON — Justin Trudeau promised Canada's big city mayors a new deal Friday, but Finance Minister Joe Oliver urged them to push the federal Liberal leader on how he plans to pay for it.

Justin Trudeau Promises Plan For Cities, Joe Oliver Asks How It Will Be Funded