Close X
Saturday, September 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Next Chapter In Case Of B.C. Couple Found Guilty Of Terror Holds New Challenges

The Canadian Press, 03 Jun, 2015 01:01 PM
    VANCOVUER, B.C. — A legal expert says a couple found guilty of terrorism in a foiled attempt to bomb the British Columbia legislature face an uphill battle to prove they were entrapped by police.
     
    Simon Fraser University criminology professor David MacAlister says John Nuttall and Amanda Korody will have to convince a judge they wouldn't have carried out their bomb plot without police involvement.
     
    Jurors found them each guilty of conspiring to commit murder as well as possessing and planting an explosive substance on behalf of a terrorist organization.
     
    But a judge has yet to enter the convictions, saying she will still rule on whether police enticed the couple to break the law by entrapping them.
     
    Defence lawyers say their clients were manipulated by undercover officers and they plan on calling senior RCMP officials to testify when arguments begin in July.
     
    Court has heard that Nuttall and Korody were poor drug addicts with radical Islamic views when police launched an undercover sting that led to their arrests.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Bureaucrats To Use Honour System When It Comes To Archiving Instant Messages

    Bureaucrats To Use Honour System When It Comes To Archiving Instant Messages
    OTTAWA — While controversy swirls around Hillary Clinton for deleting tens of thousands of emails in a personal account she used while serving as U.S. secretary of state, the Canadian government has based its own approach to officials' private text messages on the honour system.

    Bureaucrats To Use Honour System When It Comes To Archiving Instant Messages

    Mackay To Review The Case Of Convicted Quebec Judge Asking For New Trial

    MONTREAL — Federal Justice Minister Peter MacKay says he'll carefully examine a request to review the case of the only Canadian judge ever convicted of first-degree murder.

    Mackay To Review The Case Of Convicted Quebec Judge Asking For New Trial

    U.S. Border Patrol Agent Fatally Shoots Man Near Town On U.S.-Canada Border

    U.S. Border Patrol Agent Fatally Shoots Man Near Town On U.S.-Canada Border
    SUMAS, Wash. — A U.S. Border Patrol agent fatally shot a man Tuesday afternoon near Sumas, Washington, near the border with British Columbia.

    U.S. Border Patrol Agent Fatally Shoots Man Near Town On U.S.-Canada Border

    New Rules For Tailings Ponds Based On Findings From Mount Polley Collapse

    New Rules For Tailings Ponds Based On Findings From Mount Polley Collapse
    VANCOUVER — The disastrous collapse of the Mount Polley mine tailings pond in B.C.'s Interior last year has spurred new provincial environmental requirements for similar operations.

    New Rules For Tailings Ponds Based On Findings From Mount Polley Collapse

    Judge Dismisses Challenge To Christian Law School After B.C. Reverses Approval

    Judge Dismisses Challenge To Christian Law School After B.C. Reverses Approval
    VANCOUVER — A B.C. Supreme Court judge has dismissed legal action over the plan for a controversial law school at a Christian university, saying the man's challenge is "moot."

    Judge Dismisses Challenge To Christian Law School After B.C. Reverses Approval

    Ontario Minimum Wage Rises To $11.25 starting Oct. 1

    Ontario Minimum Wage Rises To $11.25  starting Oct. 1
    TORONTO — Ontario's minimum wage will rise to $11.25 an hour starting Oct. 1, making it the second-highest rate in the country after the Northwest Territories.

    Ontario Minimum Wage Rises To $11.25 starting Oct. 1