Close X
Monday, February 17, 2025
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

    Man Convicted In Via Train Terror Plot To Undergo Psychiatric Assessment

    Man Convicted In Via Train Terror Plot To Undergo Psychiatric Assessment
    TORONTO — A judge has agreed to order a mental health assessment for one of two men found guilty of terrorism charges in a case involving a plot to derail a passenger train.

    Man Convicted In Via Train Terror Plot To Undergo Psychiatric Assessment

    Tom Mulcair Troubled By Claim Military Planned To Ignore Misconduct Recommendations

    OTTAWA — NDP Leader Tom Mulcair says he's troubled by a report that says the country's top soldier told the military to be prepared to ignore key recommendations of a report on sexual misconduct in the Canadian Forces.

    Tom Mulcair Troubled By Claim Military Planned To Ignore Misconduct Recommendations

    Alberta Could Kick Coal Habit Under Incoming NDP Premier Rachel Notley

    Alberta Could Kick Coal Habit Under Incoming NDP Premier Rachel Notley
    CALGARY — Rachel Notley's sweeping election victory in Alberta has raised the possibility of big changes for the future of coal in the province.

    Alberta Could Kick Coal Habit Under Incoming NDP Premier Rachel Notley

    U.S. bank reform violates NAFTA, Finance Minister Joe Oliver says

    U.S. bank reform violates NAFTA, Finance Minister Joe Oliver says
    NEW YORK — Canada's finance minister says sweeping American bank reforms introduced in the aftermath of the financial crisis violate the North American Free Trade Agreement.

    U.S. bank reform violates NAFTA, Finance Minister Joe Oliver says

    Man Taken To Hospital After Being Shot By Mountie In Burnaby: Police

    Man Taken To Hospital After Being Shot By Mountie In Burnaby: Police
    Kellie Kilpatrick of the Independent Investigations Office of B.C. says the incident happened at about 1:45 a.m. Wednesday.

    Man Taken To Hospital After Being Shot By Mountie In Burnaby: Police

    Christy Clark Says First Nations Opposition A Bump In The Road For LNG

    Christy Clark Says First Nations Opposition A Bump In The Road For LNG
    BURNABY, B.C. — B.C. Premier Christy Clark insists the possible rejection by a First Nation over an agreement for a liquefied-natural-gas terminal is nothing more than a bump in the road for a multibillion-dollar pipeline project.

    Christy Clark Says First Nations Opposition A Bump In The Road For LNG