Vancouver Sun

A REPORTED $10.5M SETTLEMENT REACHED BETWEEN OTTAWA AND OMAR KHADR COULD ENABLE HIS AMERICAN VICTIM’S WIDOW TO COLLECT, SAYS EX-ADVISER TO HARPER. PLUS, BLATCHFORD ON A JIHADIST’S PAYDAY.

Had won $134M judgment in Utah court

- MARIE-DANIELLE SMITH National Post mdsmith@postmedia.com

OTTAWA• A reported multimilli­on-dollar payout from the Canadian government to former Guantanamo Bay prisoner Omar Khadr could create an opportunit­y for the widow of the man Khadr was convicted of killing to seek compensati­on.

Tabitha Speer could “absolutely” go after Khadr’s assets once he has some, said Howard Anglin, a former deputy chief of staff and legal adviser to former prime minister Stephen Harper.

Khadr sued the Canadian government for wrongful imprisonme­nt after a Supreme Court decision in 2010 found his rights had been violated, with Canadian officials complicit in his imprisonme­nt and alleged torture at Guantanamo Bay prison.

In 2002, when Khadr was 15 and living with a father who was a high-ranking member of al-Qaida, he was accused of throwing a grenade in an Afghanista­n firefight that killed American special forces medic Christophe­r Speer. Another soldier, Layne Morris, was blinded in one eye. Khadr was also partially blinded.

In 2010, Khadr agreed to plead guilty to murder, saying later he only did so in order to get out of Guantanamo. He was returned to Canada in 2012 to serve the rest of his sentence and was released in 2015.

According to media reports Tuesday, the government has decided to settle his $20 million lawsuit with an apology and $10.5 million.

Speer’s wife and Morris sued Khadr for damages and won a default judgment of $134 million in 2015 in a Utah court. The settlement was never enforced.

Anglin said the U.S. lawsuit didn’t factor into discussion­s about the Khadr case while he was in government. But its resolution could offer Speer and Morris an opportunit­y.

“When you get a judgment in another country, in a legal system that Canada generally recognizes, like the U.S., you need to get a court in Canada to recognize that judgment. So you’d bring an action in Canada to get the Utah judgment recognized,” Anglin said. “I suspect that they didn’t do that previously because (Khadr) had no assets. So you’d be spending money on legal fees, coming to court with no prospect of recovering anything. So now that there are assets, in theory at least, they should be able to get the judgment enforced. … I’d be surprised if they didn’t.”

Conservati­ve foreign affairs critic Tony Clement said he thinks Speer should pursue any legal action she can, but Khadr should pre-empt it. “We call on Mr. Khadr to give any funds he receives to the widow and family of Christophe­r Speer.”

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