Close X
Wednesday, December 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Sting On Couple Guilty Of Terror Charges Not Meant To Seem Illegal: Officer

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Jan, 2016 11:22 AM
    VANCOUVER — An undercover terrorism sting involved thousands of dollars changing hands and officers claiming access to guns and explosives, but the lead officer insisted repeatedly in court on Wednesday that the operation was in no way meant to appear criminal.
     
    RCMP Sgt. Bill Kalkat told B.C. Supreme Court that officers never explicitly told John Nuttall he was consorting with a jihadist terrorism group or any other criminal organization.
     
    Nuttall and his wife Amanda Korody were found guilty last June of plotting to blow up the B.C. legislature on Canada Day 2013. No conviction will be entered until a judge decides if police entrapped the pair.
     
    "Mr. Nuttall and Ms. Korody were free to come to whatever inference or decision they wanted. We didn't persuade them or dissuade them one way or another," Kalkat told the court.
     
    "Nuttall might infer that it's a criminal organization. I don't know what he's thinking."
     
    Nuttal and Korody's lawyers are arguing police manipulated the pair into carrying out the terrorist act.
     
    Early in the undercover operation, Nuttall was paid $200 to take an unmarked package to a transit-station locker in downtown Vancouver.
     
    He was later directed to transport another parcel, this time taking a circuitous transit route and leaving the package in the trunk of an unlocked rental car.
     
    "Would any of that behaviour be consistent with the notion that the package is legitimate and legal?" Korody's lawyer Mark Jette asked.
     
    Kalkat admitted it's possible to interpret the operation as illegitimate but emphasized that Nuttall was always informed the contents of the packages were legal.
     
    Another scenario involved officers engaging Nuttall in a "loyalty talk" before showing him $20,000 in cash being exchanged between undercover officers and talk of a commission.
     
     
     
    "I'm going to suggest to you that you designed it that way because you wanted Nuttall to believe that (the primary undercover officer) was engaged in nefarious, probably illegal activities," said Jette.
     
    "No, not that he's engaged in nefarious activities, but that he does have contacts and that he's engaged in business and that he has a source of income," Kalkat replied.
     
    Kalkat explained that Nuttall could have interpreted the exchange as hawala, an informal system of transferring large sums of money for a commission, which the officer said was common practice in India and the Middle East.
     
    "Really?" Jette asked. "Do you have any information that would lead you to believe that Mr. Nuttall was aware of underground Indian banking systems?"
     
    "It's possible," Kalkat replied. "Mr. Nuttall has extensive, in my opinion, knowledge of some of the Middle Eastern practices."
     
    "You really thought that Nuttall would put all those pieces together?" Jette said. "John Nuttall? Really?"
     
    "Yes, I did." said Kalkat.
     
    Earlier in the day, Kalkat said he "absolutely" urged his officers to consider the fact that Nuttall appeared developmentally delayed, telling the court that police scenarios were designed to take Nuttall's mental capacity into account.
     
     
     
    Kalkat also said he was aware as early as March that the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, Canada's spy agency, had been conducting its own surveillance of Nuttall.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Justin Trudeau Says Vow To Balance Budget In Four Years Is 'very' Cast In Stone

    Justin Trudeau Says Vow To Balance Budget In Four Years Is 'very' Cast In Stone
    OTTAWA — Even as the economic hurdles pile up, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau insists his pledge to balance the federal books in four years is "very" cast in stone.

    Justin Trudeau Says Vow To Balance Budget In Four Years Is 'very' Cast In Stone

    Canadian Dollar Plunges Below 72 Cents US On Commodity Prices, Fed Hike

    Canadian Dollar Plunges Below 72 Cents US On Commodity Prices, Fed Hike
    Shortly after noon Thursday, the Canadian dollar was trading at 71.53 cents US, down 1.01 U.S. cents from Wednesday's close.

    Canadian Dollar Plunges Below 72 Cents US On Commodity Prices, Fed Hike

    Justin Trudeau Says New Star Wars Movie Will Make Viewers 'Very, Very Happy'

    Justin Trudeau Says New Star Wars Movie Will Make Viewers 'Very, Very Happy'
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is a self-confessed Star Wars geek and says fans are going to be very happy about the latest incarnation of the saga, which he saw Tuesday evening.

    Justin Trudeau Says New Star Wars Movie Will Make Viewers 'Very, Very Happy'

    Baby Boom Makes Eighth Killer Whale In Endangered Population Off B.C. Coast

    VANCOUVER — The endangered killer whale off British Columbia's coast is experiencing a baby boom.

    Baby Boom Makes Eighth Killer Whale In Endangered Population Off B.C. Coast

    Ontario's Dipika Damerla Delays Ban On Electronic Cigarettes And Vaping Planned For Jan. 1, 2016

    Ontario's Dipika Damerla Delays Ban On Electronic Cigarettes And Vaping Planned For Jan. 1, 2016
    The ban on e-cigarettes in public spaces and workplaces was supposed to go into effect Jan. 1, but Associate Health Minister Dipika Damerla says it will be delayed until later in the year.

    Ontario's Dipika Damerla Delays Ban On Electronic Cigarettes And Vaping Planned For Jan. 1, 2016

    Return To East Coast From Oilpatch A Struggle For Some, Fresh Start For Others

    TRURO, N.S. — As the days go by with no phone calls offering work in the Alberta oilpatch, Jared Park worries about how he'll pay for his son's leukemia medicine.

    Return To East Coast From Oilpatch A Struggle For Some, Fresh Start For Others