Close X
Sunday, October 13, 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

    'I Impute No Bad Motives': Arbitrator Slashes Amount Owing For 14 Senators

    'I Impute No Bad Motives': Arbitrator Slashes Amount Owing For 14 Senators
    Former Supreme Court justice Ian Binnie has ruled that 14 senators who owed $322,611 properly billed the Senate for travel and hospitality expenses half the time

    'I Impute No Bad Motives': Arbitrator Slashes Amount Owing For 14 Senators

    Newfoundland Family Posts Video In Bid To Identify Piggy Bank Burglar

    Newfoundland Family Posts Video In Bid To Identify Piggy Bank Burglar
    Denyse Thompson says her 14-year-old daughter was saving for a vacation, but preferred not to discuss how much money she lost to the thief. 

    Newfoundland Family Posts Video In Bid To Identify Piggy Bank Burglar

    Injured Seal Pup Dies Weeks After Taken To Nova Scotia Wildlife Centre

    A grey seal pup that was hit by a vehicle on a Nova Scotia road has died while being treated for serious injuries at a wildlife rehabilitation centre.

    Injured Seal Pup Dies Weeks After Taken To Nova Scotia Wildlife Centre

    Trial Of Two Men Accused In Tim Bosma Murder Resumes In Hamilton

    Trial Of Two Men Accused In Tim Bosma Murder Resumes In Hamilton
    HAMILTON — The trial of two men accused of killing a Hamilton father is set to resume today after a week-long break.

    Trial Of Two Men Accused In Tim Bosma Murder Resumes In Hamilton

    Saskatchewan Doctors Want Better Seniors Care Raised As An Election Issue

    Saskatchewan Doctors Want Better Seniors Care Raised As An Election Issue
    The Saskatchewan Medical Association says the current model is sometimes very narrowly focused on long-term care.

    Saskatchewan Doctors Want Better Seniors Care Raised As An Election Issue

    Government Can Help People And Still Balance Books, Rona Ambrose Says On Budget Eve

    Government Can Help People And Still Balance Books, Rona Ambrose Says On Budget Eve
    The Conservatives say it is possible to protect Canada's most vulnerable while still balancing the federal government's books.

    Government Can Help People And Still Balance Books, Rona Ambrose Says On Budget Eve