Truro News

Crown wants conviction­s for B.C. pair earlier accused of terror-related crimes

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A British Columbia judge was wrong to throw out findings of guilt against a pair of accused terrorist sympathize­rs who planted what they thought were pressure-cooker bombs on the lawn of the provincial legislatur­e, the Crown says.

In documents filed in B.C.’S Court of Appeal, the Crown says Justice Catherine Bruce of the B.C. Supreme Court had no basis to conclude the RCMP manipulate­d John Nuttall and Amanda Korody into plotting to kill dozens of innocent people and first responders on Canada Day in 2013.

A months-long jury trial ended in June 2015 when Nuttall and Korody were found guilty of conspiring to commit murder, possessing an explosive substance and placing an explosive in a public place, all on behalf of a terrorist group.

The conviction­s were put on hold until a year later, when Bruce ruled the pair had been entrapped by police, who she said used trickery, deceit and veiled threats to engineer the bomb plot.

The Crown is appealing the ruling and proceeding­s are scheduled to begin Monday.

The Crown says in arguments filed with the court that Nuttall and Korody were completely responsibl­e for crafting and carrying out the plan and the undercover RCMP operation did not qualify as either manipulati­ve or an abuse of process.

“Mr. Nuttall and Ms. Korody eagerly conspired to build improvised explosive devices and detonate them in a public space during a national holiday ... as an act of ‘jihad,’ to ‘strike terror’ in the hearts of Canadian ‘infidels,’ ” the document says. “An average person, standing in their shoes, would never have done so.”

Lawyers for Nuttall and Korody say in their arguments that there is no reason to reverse the stays of proceeding­s. They say in a court document that the couple feared they would be killed by the shadowy terrorist group they believed they were involved with if they didn’t follow through with the bomb plot.

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