Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Police Team Worried About Raising Suspicions Of Terror Suspect's Wife Amanda Korody: Officer

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Jan, 2016 12:03 PM
    VANCOUVER — The commander of an undercover police sting says his team was wary about a terrorism suspect's common-law partner becoming suspicious of a covert operation focusing on her husband.
     
    RCMP Sgt. Bill Kalkat has told B.C. Supreme Court that the wives of police targets are often more "switched on" and suspicious of newcomers than the targets themselves.
     
    Lawyers for John Nuttall and his common-law wife Amanda Korody are arguing that police manipulated the pair into planting what they believed were bombs on the grounds of the B.C. legislature on Canada Day 2013.
     
    A jury found Nuttall and Korody guilty of terrorism last June, but a judge has yet to rule on whether they were entrapped by police.
     
    Kalkat says an operation to determine the pair's intent to commit a terrorist act differed from a traditional undercover investigation because officers gave the couple multiple chances to back out without repercussions.
     
    But Korody's lawyer Mark Jette has said that the two accused expressed fears they were expendable and would be "deleted" if they didn't carry out the terrorist plan.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Justin Trudeau Faces Fiery Foreign Policy Debut As Paris Attacks Focus G20 On Security

    Justin Trudeau Faces Fiery Foreign Policy Debut As Paris Attacks Focus G20 On Security
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's unexpected baptism of fire in international statesmanship began Saturday when he arrived at the G20 summit in Turkey, less than a day after the deadly Paris attacks.

    Justin Trudeau Faces Fiery Foreign Policy Debut As Paris Attacks Focus G20 On Security

    Feds, Junior League, Tribes Fight Sex Traffickers In SD: 'Catching Awful Lot Of Them'

    Feds, Junior League, Tribes Fight Sex Traffickers In SD: 'Catching Awful Lot Of Them'
    It was an anonymous two-story house with an outdoor side staircase, nothing that looked ominous to Kevin Koliner when he passed by going to and from work

    Feds, Junior League, Tribes Fight Sex Traffickers In SD: 'Catching Awful Lot Of Them'

    The New Brunswick Government Has Formed A Committee To Handle Incoming Refugees

    The New Brunswick government has formed a committee aimed at facilitating a smooth transition of the Syrian refugees to the province.

    The New Brunswick Government Has Formed A Committee To Handle Incoming Refugees

    Government Says Assisted-Death Panel Won't Give Advice For Legislation

    Government Says Assisted-Death Panel Won't Give Advice For Legislation
    A federal panel created in the wake of the Supreme Court ruling on assisted death will no longer be asked to make recommendations to the government and will now simply report on its consultations on the issue.

    Government Says Assisted-Death Panel Won't Give Advice For Legislation

    Speed A Factor In Crash That Killed 68-Year-Old Man On Oak Street: Vancouver Police

    Speed A Factor In Crash That Killed 68-Year-Old Man On Oak Street: Vancouver Police
    Vancouver police say speed is likely a factor in a crash that killed one man and sent another to hospital on Saturday.

    Speed A Factor In Crash That Killed 68-Year-Old Man On Oak Street: Vancouver Police

    Suspicious Package Prompts Evacuation Of Airport In Northern Alberta

    Suspicious Package Prompts Evacuation Of Airport In Northern Alberta
    The airport in Fort McMurray, Alta., has resumed normal operations after being evacuated Friday night because of a suspicious package.

    Suspicious Package Prompts Evacuation Of Airport In Northern Alberta