Close X
Wednesday, October 9, 2024
ADVT 
National

Undercover Terrorism Sting Was Only Means To Investigate B.C. Couple: Lawyer

The Canadian Press, 13 Jun, 2016 01:16 PM
    VANCOUVER — A Crown lawyer says a controversial undercover police sting was the only way for officers to investigate a couple later found guilty of plotting to murder people at Canada Day festivities in Victoria.
     
    Closing arguments are being heard in B.C. Supreme Court into whether John Nuttall and Amanda Korody were entrapped by Mounties into planting explosives at the provincial legislature in 2013.
     
    A jury found the pair guilty last summer following an elaborate sting, but the verdicts have not been entered while lawyers argue whether police manipulated them into carrying through with a bomb plot.
     
    Crown lawyer Peter Eccles says the question is no longer whether Nuttall and Korody are guilty, but whether  reasonable people in their position would have followed through with what he describes as "ideologically inspired mass murder."
     
    Eccles describes the operation as "innovative and effective."
     
    Defence lawyers have said police exploited the couple's vulnerabilities as isolated former drug addicts living on welfare to draw them into what was portrayed as a shadowy terrorist organization.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Vice Media Appeals Court Order To Give RCMP Records Of Terrorist Interviews

    Vice Media Appeals Court Order To Give RCMP Records Of Terrorist Interviews
      Documents filed this week show Vice Media also wants the Ontario Court of Appeal to allow publication of the information police relied on to get their order for the records.

    Vice Media Appeals Court Order To Give RCMP Records Of Terrorist Interviews

    Education Ministers Says Firings Vancouver Trustees Last Resort As School Board Approves Deficit

    Education Ministers Says Firings Vancouver Trustees Last Resort As School Board Approves Deficit
    Education Minister Mike Bernier is set to meet with the chairman of the Vancouver School Board next week in hopes of helping trustees submit a balanced budget by the June deadline.

    Education Ministers Says Firings Vancouver Trustees Last Resort As School Board Approves Deficit

    Bottle Found On Nova Scotia Beach Has A Message, Human Ashes - And Money For A Drink

    Bottle Found On Nova Scotia Beach Has A Message, Human Ashes - And Money For A Drink
    A Nova Scotia man says plans are underway to fulfil the wishes of the late Gary Robert Dupuis after the mystery man's ashes washed up on the shores of Cape Breton inside a tequila bottle.  

    Bottle Found On Nova Scotia Beach Has A Message, Human Ashes - And Money For A Drink

    Regulation Bans Nova Scotia's Emergency Helicopter From Landing At Hospital Pads

     A recent decision by Transport Canada has left the Nova Scotia government scrambling to replace the emergency helicopter that transports patients to the rooftop helipads at hospitals in Halifax and Digby.

    Regulation Bans Nova Scotia's Emergency Helicopter From Landing At Hospital Pads

    Nova Scotia Hires Two Lawyers To Prosecute Internet Child Exploitation

    Justice Minister Diana Whalen says the government is dedicating more resources to the issue due to a perceived rise in Internet child exploitation.

    Nova Scotia Hires Two Lawyers To Prosecute Internet Child Exploitation

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Spends A Day On Troubled Reserve, Hauls Water

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Spends A Day On Troubled Reserve, Hauls Water
    SHOAL LAKE, Ont. — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau hauled large jugs of drinking water and spoke with school children Thursday as he was immersed in the daily struggles of an isolated reserve that has been under a boil advisory for 19 years.

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Spends A Day On Troubled Reserve, Hauls Water