Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

Top Cop In B.C. Terror Case Concerned About Having Experienced Officers: Court

The Canadian Press, 19 Jan, 2016 11:23 AM
    VANCOUVER — The head of an RCMP team tasked with investigating a possible terror suspect has told a B.C. Supreme Court trial that he had concerns about entrapment and abuse of process near the start of a police sting.
     
    Emails read in court show Sgt. Bill Kalkat asked undercover officers how they planned to avoid potential legal issues months before John Nuttall and Amanda Korody were arrested for plotting to blow up the B.C. legislature in 2013.
     
    Nuttall and Korody were found guilty of terrorism charges last June, but the convictions have not been entered while defence lawyers argue that police entrapped their clients in a sting.
     
    Crown lawyer Peter Eccles asked Kalkat when he began thinking about entrapment and abuse of process as possible issues.
     
    "Late February, early March (of 2013)," Kalkat replied, adding that such issues are always a concern for investigators when a crime has not yet been committed.
     
    The senior officer also told court that he faced some challenges with the undercover team investigating Nuttall and trying to determine whether he posed a threat to public safety.
     
    An experienced officer was important for the case, Kalkat testified, adding he asked that someone who'd worked on similar national security investigations be assigned.
     
    "There's a whole bunch of little fine details that come along in the national security world that just are not pressing in your typical homicide technique undercover operation."
     
    The undercover officer also needed to be familiar with the Muslim faith, which Nuttall had converted to, and have some knowledge of Islamic extremism.
     
    "If you can't talk the talk and walk the walk, it's going to be very difficult to ingratiate yourself with that target and move forward," Kalkat said.
     
    But one of the officers on the case had less experience than what Kalkat had requested, creating challenges for the senior cop.
     
    Investigators on national security cases don't have a lot of examples to follow, unlike homicide or drug investigations that undercover officers usually work on, Kalkat said.
     
    "That's one of the difficulties you experienced with the undercover shop, that they were bringing pages out of the wrong playbook?" Eccles asked.
     
    "That was one of the challenges I faced," Kalkat replied.
     
    Emails read in court suggested he asked for more details about the undercover team's long-term plans.
     
    "You can't just go scenario to scenario. There has to be some sort of game plan. And I wasn't seeing that with the undercover unit," Kalkat said.
     
    Court heard that at one point, a difference in opinion over how the case should proceed put the investigation on hold.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Firefighting Funds Depleted: Record Number Of Wildfires In National Parks

    Firefighting Funds Depleted: Record Number Of Wildfires In National Parks
    Wildfires scorched a record amount of Canada's national parks last year — the latest in a number of long, hot summers that have almost entirely depleted Parks Canada's firefighting reserve.

    Firefighting Funds Depleted: Record Number Of Wildfires In National Parks

    Premier Kathleen Wynne Says Ontario Is Preparing Protocols For Physician-Assisted Death

    Premier Kathleen Wynne Says Ontario Is Preparing Protocols For Physician-Assisted Death
    The top court is holding an oral hearing today on the Trudeau government's request for a six-month extension to deal with the issue.

    Premier Kathleen Wynne Says Ontario Is Preparing Protocols For Physician-Assisted Death

    Somali-Canadian Woman Fights Revocation Of Security Clearance That Cost Her Airline Job

    Somali-Canadian Woman Fights Revocation Of Security Clearance That Cost Her Airline Job
    Ayaan Farah, 31, says Ottawa unfairly revoked her Transportation Security Clearance a year ago, leading to her firing from her full-time job of eight years.

    Somali-Canadian Woman Fights Revocation Of Security Clearance That Cost Her Airline Job

    Justin Trudeau Makes The Tabloids For His Family Vacation On Small Caribbean Island

    Justin  Trudeau Makes The Tabloids For His Family Vacation On Small Caribbean Island
    The visit to Nevis, a small island that is part of the twin-island Federation of St. Kitts and Nevis, was billed as a private family vacation, but it has become fodder for celebrity gossip website TMZ.

    Justin Trudeau Makes The Tabloids For His Family Vacation On Small Caribbean Island

    Government Pleads For More Time To Craft Assisted-Death Law

    Government Pleads For More Time To Craft Assisted-Death Law
    Robert Frater, counsel for the attorney general, said the federal government needs a six-month extended window to provide a comprehensive response to the judgment.

    Government Pleads For More Time To Craft Assisted-Death Law

    Vancouver Anti-Fur Protester Complains To Watchdog Over Police Warning Letter

    Vancouver Anti-Fur Protester Complains To Watchdog Over Police Warning Letter
    An anti-fur activist has complained to British Columbia's police watchdog claiming Vancouver Police violated his rights by indefinitely banning him from visiting, or even walking past, a store where he regularly protests.

    Vancouver Anti-Fur Protester Complains To Watchdog Over Police Warning Letter