Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Police Should Have Said Halifax Man In Chemicals Case Couldn't Make Bomb: Lawyer

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 May, 2015 12:37 PM
    HALIFAX — Police should have informed the public they knew a stockpile of chemicals that led to evacuations in two cities lacked key bomb ingredients, says a defence lawyer representing the man who was arrested in the high-profile case.
     
    Mike Taylor was referring Thursday to one of several court exhibits released in the case of 42-year-old Christopher Phillips, who has been charged with uttering threats and possessing a weapon — the hazardous chemical osmium tetroxide. 
     
    Phillips and Taylor briefly appeared in Nova Scotia Supreme Court to confirm a judge-only trial is set for June 1.
     
    An exhibit released to The Canadian Press contains an analysis by forensics expert Melanie Brochu, who wrote that chemicals police found in Phillips' cottage in Grand Desert, N.S., didn't include the ingredients needed for homemade explosives.
     
    "Although some chemicals could be used as reagents to make explosives, I did not see all the requisite precursors typically required to actually make homemade explosives," Brochu wrote in a report entry dated Jan. 22 — the day after Phillips' arrest.
     
    "Advised the incident commander that the labeled chemical products personally observed via live video stream did not corroborate the suspect was making homemade explosives."
     
    The rural community around the cottage was evacuated, as were neighbourhoods in Halifax and the hotel where Phillips was taken into custody in Ottawa.
     
    Chief Supt. Roland Wells said at a news conference on Jan. 23 that the chemicals in Grand Desert were stacked from floor to ceiling and many were unstable and there was "an extreme fire risk" due to the volatility of the chemicals.
     
    The RCMP said in an emailed comment Thursday that Wells didn't know about Brochu's analysis at the time of his news conference, and "the processing of the scene by RCMP and Halifax Fire was not complete until two days later."
     
    "Comments made with respect to the volatility of the chemicals were indicative of the storage state of the chemicals. They were not referencing what could be made by combining them," said the email.
     
    Taylor says the lack of ingredients for bombs should have been conveyed to help reduce public anxieties.
     
    "I absolutely think they should have let the public know that there wasn't that risk," he said.
     
    "It created a lot of unnecessary anxiety. It created a picture of Mr. Phillips and the whole situation that was not accurate."
     
    Phillips has since testified that he owned the chemicals to extract heavy metals and was running a chemical business.
     
    The exhibits also contain an email Phillips wrote to a friend in the United States about how he would like to send him a container of highly toxic osmium tetroxide as "the ultimate Christmas present."
     
    The email says the container would include instructions that it is "to be used only in the event of forceful entry by the police."
     
    The instructions suggest poking a hole in the vial with a stick and throwing "entire box at any police officer that has decided to take up residence on your property."
     
    In the next paragraph, Phillips says he realizes his email could be stored and adds, "and I do ... stress that the box will not be designed to actually be used as a weapon."
     
    Taylor said outside court the email is the key element in the Crown's case, and he will argue strongly it doesn't amount to a criminal offence.
     
    "There are a couple of comments in this email that I can point to that suggest this isn't even close to an actual threat being made by Mr. Phillips," he said.
     
    However, the Crown has argued there are reasonable grounds to continue the case against the former U.S. citizen, who has been in a provincial jail since his arrest.
     
    Phillips was denied bail in a hearing on March 17 due to a lack of suitable guarantor and he remains in jail in Yarmouth, N.S.
     
    Defence lawyers routinely ask for publication bans on bail hearings, which judges must grant upon their request.
     
    But in Phillips' case, Taylor told the judge he did not want such a ban on the exhibits - including the email, and the memo written by Brochu.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    There Is An Atmosphere Of Trust In India, Modi Tells Indo-Canadians At Ricoh Coliseum, Toronto

    There Is An Atmosphere Of Trust In India, Modi Tells Indo-Canadians At Ricoh Coliseum, Toronto
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi in the last leg of 3-nation tour, addressed the Indian Diaspora in Toronto's Ricoh Coliseum on Wednesday, and said “There is one solution to all the problems and that is development".

    There Is An Atmosphere Of Trust In India, Modi Tells Indo-Canadians At Ricoh Coliseum, Toronto

    Second Man Arrested In Stabbing Death Of Homeless Man In Surrey

    Second Man Arrested In Stabbing Death Of Homeless Man In Surrey
    SURREY, B.C. — A manslaughter charge has been laid against a second man following the 2014 stabbing death in Surrey, B.C., of a retired, widowed mill worker who was homeless.

    Second Man Arrested In Stabbing Death Of Homeless Man In Surrey

    Another Drive-By Shooting In Surrey As Police Warn Of Turf War

    Another Drive-By Shooting In Surrey As Police Warn Of Turf War
    Police are investigating another shooting in Surrey, B.C., a day after investigators revealed that gang rivalry is involved in a number of similar incidents. Surrey RCMP received several calls at about 1 a.m. Wednesday from witnesses who heard gunshots.

    Another Drive-By Shooting In Surrey As Police Warn Of Turf War

    Modi's Canadian Visit Kicks Off With Deal To Buy Tonnes Of Saskatchewan Uranium

    Modi's Canadian Visit Kicks Off With Deal To Buy Tonnes Of Saskatchewan Uranium
    OTTAWA — Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi began the first full day of his visit to Canada by signing a deal to buy more than 3,000 tonnes of Saskatchewan uranium over the next five years to fuel his country's power reactors.

    Modi's Canadian Visit Kicks Off With Deal To Buy Tonnes Of Saskatchewan Uranium

    India's Parrot Lady To Fly Back Home From Canada

    India's Parrot Lady To Fly Back Home From Canada
    India's Parrot Lady' is to return home, after Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper on Wednesday handed over to Prime Minister Narendra Modi the 800-year-old Indian sandstone sculpture of a woman holding a parrot.

    India's Parrot Lady To Fly Back Home From Canada

    Canada's Indian Community To Give Rock Star Welcome To Modi

    Canada's Indian Community To Give Rock Star Welcome To Modi
    Modi was welcomed by Canadian Multiculturalism Minister Jason Kenney and Indian High Commissioner Vishnu Prakash and a large number of Indo-Canadian leaders on his arrival at Ottawa airport from Germany.

    Canada's Indian Community To Give Rock Star Welcome To Modi