Close X
Sunday, October 6, 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

    Conservatives Considering Leadership Bid Take Stock At Party's Convention

    Conservatives Considering Leadership Bid Take Stock At Party's Convention
    VANCOUVER — As former Tory cabinet minister Peter MacKay stood at the entrance to his party's policy convention in Vancouver on Saturday, a fellow party member ambled past.

    Conservatives Considering Leadership Bid Take Stock At Party's Convention

    GPS Collars To Provide Data On B.C. Bears Saved From Death After Their Mom Died

    GPS Collars To Provide Data On B.C. Bears Saved From Death After Their Mom Died
    VANCOUVER — Two orphaned black bears whose lives were spared when a conservation officer refused to kill them are being prepared for release as early as mid-June after nearly a year of rehabilitation at a Vancouver Island facility.

    GPS Collars To Provide Data On B.C. Bears Saved From Death After Their Mom Died

    Justin Trudeau Urges Liberal Delegates To Replace 'Outdated' Party Constitution

    The prime minister made his remarks supporting the change during his speech at the Liberal's policy convention in Winnipeg.

    Justin Trudeau Urges Liberal Delegates To Replace 'Outdated' Party Constitution

    Almost All South Asian Grandparent Live With Grandchildren In A Multigenerational Home

    Almost All South Asian Grandparent Live With Grandchildren In A Multigenerational Home
    South Asian grandparents are eight times as likely to live with their grandchildren as grandparents of some other ethnic groups in Canada, including Japanese and Caucasians, according to Statistics Canada data.

    Almost All South Asian Grandparent Live With Grandchildren In A Multigenerational Home

    Police Investigating After Trespassing Man, Woman Have Sex In Okanagan Homeowner’s Hot Tub

    Police Investigating After Trespassing Man, Woman Have Sex In Okanagan Homeowner’s Hot Tub
    RCMP say around 9:30 a.m. on Wednesday, a report of trespass, mischief and theft from a property in the 1900 block of McDougall Street came in.

    Police Investigating After Trespassing Man, Woman Have Sex In Okanagan Homeowner’s Hot Tub

    Winnipeg Man Sentenced To 15 Years In Child Prostitution Ring Case

    Darrell Ackman was found guilty in March of 14 charges, including living off the avails of prostitution.

    Winnipeg Man Sentenced To 15 Years In Child Prostitution Ring Case