Ottawa Citizen

B.C. terror suspect could plead not criminally responsibl­e: lawyer

Man charged in Canada Day plot planned pressure-cooker bombing

- JAMES KELLER

VANCOUVER VANCOUVER One of the suspects in an alleged terrorism plot to bomb the British Columbia legislatur­e on Canada Day has been “certified” under mental-health laws and transferre­d to a forensic hospital, raising the possibilit­y he could argue he is not criminally responsibl­e, his lawyer said Wednesday.

John Nuttall was charged last month along with his girlfriend, Amanda Korody, in what the RCMP described as an al-Qaida-inspired plan to use pressure cooker bombs to target holiday festivitie­s in Victoria.

The couple made a brief appearance Wednesday in B.C. Supreme Court, where Korody blew a kiss toward Nuttall as a judge adjourned the case until late September.

Korody, whose hair was tied back in a ponytail with a pink band, was otherwise expression­less during the brief appearance, though as it finished, she turned to Nuttall and appeared to ask, “Does that mean we can go home?”

Nuttall, a tall slender man with shaggy hair and an unkempt beard, alternated his gaze between Korody and the public gallery, which was full of journalist­s and two courtroom sketch artists.

Nuttall’s lawyer, Tom Morino, said a psychiatri­st determined Nuttall should be moved from a provincial jail to a forensic hospital in Coquitlam, east of Vancouver, though Morino said he hadn’t yet learned what precisely prompted the transfer.

He declined to say whether Nuttall has a history of mental illness, though he suggested the jailhouse psychiatri­c assessment could be significan­t at trial.

“In my opinion, there’s a sufficient nexus in time between this certificat­ion and the alleged incidents that it certainly raises the spectre of NCRMD (not criminally responsibl­e by reason of mental disorder) — or as we used to call it, ‘insanity,”’ Morino said outside court.

Morino declined to say whether he intended to use such an argument, adding, “It is absolutely impossible to tell at this early stage.”

Korody is being represente­d by a separate lawyer, Mark Jette, though he wasn’t in court on Wednesday and could not be reached for comment.

Morino declined to answer questions about Korody, such as whether she was in jail or, like Nuttall, had been transferre­d to a mental-health facility.

Nuttall and Korody were arrested on Canada Day and each charged with facilitati­ng terrorist activity and making or possessing explosives.

At the time, the RCMP described the pair as “self-radicalize­d” and inspired by an “al-Qaida ideology,” but also said there was no evidence the pair had any links to outside groups.

The Mounties alleged the plot involved homemade bombs built using pressure cookers, similar to those used during the Boston Marathon bombings in April, though investigat­ors insisted the devices connected to the B.C. plot were inert and could not have exploded.

Morino said Nuttall and Korody have yet to enter a formal plea, but “not guilty” pleas have been entered on their behalf.

When asked whether Nuttall denies the allegation­s against him, Morino responded with a simple “No comment.”

Their next appearance is set for Sept. 20.

 ?? FELICITY DON/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? John Nuttall, left, holding a Qur’an, and Amanda Korody, shown in this courtroom sketch, appeared in provincial court in Surrey, B.C., on Tuesday. Nuttall has been ‘certified’ under mental-health laws and transferre­d to a forensic hospital.
FELICITY DON/THE CANADIAN PRESS John Nuttall, left, holding a Qur’an, and Amanda Korody, shown in this courtroom sketch, appeared in provincial court in Surrey, B.C., on Tuesday. Nuttall has been ‘certified’ under mental-health laws and transferre­d to a forensic hospital.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada