Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Undercover Cops Provided Money For Accused B.C. Duo Damaged By Addiction: Lawyer

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 May, 2015 12:36 PM
    VANCOUVER — A defence lawyer has begun closing arguments in the case of two alleged B.C. terrorists accused of scheming to blow up the provincial legislature on Canada Day in 2013.
     
    John Nuttall and Amanda Korody were charged with planning to plant homemade pressure-cooker bombs in Victoria after being caught in an elaborate RCMP sting.
     
    Marilyn Sandford has suggested to a B.C. Supreme Court jury that Nuttall and his wife were damaged by addiction and enmeshed in poverty.
     
    She says undercover officers posing as terrorist liaisons provided meaning to their lives while offering friendship and money.
     
    Sandford says reassurances from undercover officers that the pair could walk away at any time were at odds with their repeated insistence that Nuttall come up with a feasible terrorist plot.
     
    Nuttall and Korody have each pleaded not guilty to four terrorism-related charges.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Retired B.C. Teacher Accused In Child Porn Trial: I'm Not A Pervert

    Retired B.C. Teacher Accused In Child Porn Trial: I'm Not A Pervert
    Court has heard the 66-year-old’s downstairs neighbour uncovered binders of CDs containing child pornography in his ceiling while performing minor renovations in 2012.

    Retired B.C. Teacher Accused In Child Porn Trial: I'm Not A Pervert

    B.C. Judge Tells Jury To Drop One Of Four Terror Charges Against Couple

    Justice Catherine Bruce told jurors that due to legal reasons they will not be required to make a decision on count three of the indictment — knowingly facilitating a terrorist activity.

    B.C. Judge Tells Jury To Drop One Of Four Terror Charges Against Couple

    New Windsor-Detroit Bridge Named After Hockey Legend Gordie Howe

    WINDSOR, Ont. — A new bridge between Windsor, Ont., and Detroit will be named after hockey legend Gordie Howe. Howe, who is now 87, was born in Floral, Sask., and came to be known as "Mr. Hockey."

    New Windsor-Detroit Bridge Named After Hockey Legend Gordie Howe

    Youth Representative Criticizes B.C. Government For Aboriginal Teen's Death

    Youth Representative Criticizes B.C. Government For Aboriginal Teen's Death
    An indifferent care system and persistent inaction by front-line workers led to the death of an aboriginal teenage girl in Vancouver, British Columbia's representative for children and youth has determined.

    Youth Representative Criticizes B.C. Government For Aboriginal Teen's Death

    Supreme Court Says It Won't Hear Appeal In Deadly B.C. Ferry Sinking

    Supreme Court Says It Won't Hear Appeal In Deadly B.C. Ferry Sinking
    The justices have dismissed Karl-Heinz Arthur Lilgert's request to appeal his convictions on two counts of criminal negligence causing death.

    Supreme Court Says It Won't Hear Appeal In Deadly B.C. Ferry Sinking

    Supreme Court Says It Won't Hear Appeal In Deadly B.C. Ferry Sinking

    Supreme Court Says It Won't Hear Appeal In Deadly B.C. Ferry Sinking
    The justices have dismissed Karl-Heinz Arthur Lilgert's request to appeal his convictions on two counts of criminal negligence causing death.

    Supreme Court Says It Won't Hear Appeal In Deadly B.C. Ferry Sinking