Times Colonist

Man accused of military centre attack acquitted of terror charges

- PETER GOFFIN

TORONTO — A man with schizophre­nia who attacked soldiers at a military recruitmen­t centre in Toronto was acquitted of terror charges and found not criminally responsibl­e for lesser offences on Monday as a judge ruled his actions didn’t fit the intended scope of the country’s terrorism laws.

Ayanle Hassan Ali’s radical religious and ideologica­l beliefs were largely the result of his mental illness, Judge Ian MacDonnell found as he ordered the 30-yearold to remain at a forensic psychiatry unit while plans for his care could be determined.

“While it is common ground that the defendant had become radicalize­d, there is no evidence of any connection between him and any other person or group in relation to the attack,” MacDonnell said. “The intention of Parliament in enacting [the relevant terror legislatio­n] was not to capture the kind of lone-wolf criminal behaviour engaged in by the defendant,” he added.

Ali’s attack was nonetheles­s a “deeply disturbing assault on one of the pillars of Canadian peace and security,” MacDonnell said, as he found him not criminally responsibl­e for attempted murder, assault and weapons offences.

At least two military personnel were left with minor injuries after Ali entered a recruitmen­t centre in north Toronto in March 2016 and began slashing at people with a kitchen knife.

Ali had pleaded not guilty to three counts of attempted murder, three counts of assault with a weapon, two counts of assault causing bodily harm and one count of carrying a weapon for the purpose of committing an offence, all in associatio­n with, for the benefit, or at the direction of a terror organizati­on.

His lawyers said their client should never have faced terror charges which, by definition, require that the accused commits an offence “for the benefit of, at the direction of or in associatio­n with” a terror group.

“This was a case where the Crown overreache­d,” defence attorney Nader Hasan said outside court. “They had someone who they thought looked the part of the terrorist when, in reality, they had someone who committed a terrible, terrible act who is mentally ill and they should have proceeded in that fashion, rather than overreachi­ng for terrorism.”

Hasan and his co-counsel Maureen Addie argued that because Ali committed his actions alone and had never been in contact with any terror groups, he should be found not guilty on the terror charges and ruled “not criminally responsibl­e” for the lesser included offences. That designatio­n acknowledg­es the accused committed an offence but, as a result of a mental disorder, could not appreciate the consequenc­es, legality or moral wrongness of their actions.

The prosecutio­n argued at trial that Canadian terror laws could apply to Ali because he acted as a “terrorist group of one.”

Hasan said he hopes Ali’s case leads to a reexaminat­ion of Canadian terror laws and how they are applied. “The definition of terrorism and terrorist activity in Canadian law is extremely broad and when laws are extremely broad the result is that it’s left almost entirely up to the Crown to decide when they get used,” Hasan said.

“The history of these terrorist provisions being used in Canada have been one where they happen to be used far more frequently when the individual accused is of Arab or African or Muslim descent [like Ali].”

Ali appeared in court in the same grey suit and white checked shirt he has worn on every day of the trial. Sitting in the accused’s box, he kept his head bowed and his hands clasped as MacDonnell delivered his decision.

MacDonnell said he agreed with two psychiatri­sts who testified at trial that Ali should be found not criminally responsibl­e for his actions.

Defence witness Dr. Gary Chaimowitz, who has supervised Ali’s care since 2016, and Crown witness Dr. Philip Klassen, who met with Ali for hours and reviewed his files, both told the court Ali had shown signs of schizophre­nia, including delusions and paranoia, for several years before the attack.

Ali believed around the time of the attack that the government was listening to him, and that he was being possessed by spirits from Muslim mythology known as Jinns, the doctors told the court.

Ali became angry over Canadian military involvemen­t in Muslim countries and came to feel that if he martyred himself all his sins would be forgiven in the afterlife, the doctors said.

 ??  ?? Ayanle Hassan Ali was found not criminally responsibl­e for lesser offences due to mental illness.
Ayanle Hassan Ali was found not criminally responsibl­e for lesser offences due to mental illness.

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