Vancouver Sun

Pair aimed to be ‘al-Qaida Canada’: Crown

Surrey couple accused of plotting death and destructio­n at Canada Day ceremonies

- IAN MULGREW VANCOUVER SUN imulgrew@vancouvers­un.com

An undercover RCMP officer befriended a Surrey couple by pretending jihadist sympathies, took them shopping for matériel, and provided phoney explosives so they thought they were going to emulate the Boston Marathon bombers.

While portraying them as a “homegrown terrorist cell” — calling themselves “al-Qaida Canada” — prosecutor Peter Eccles said he didn’t have to show the two accused of plotting slaughter at Canada Day ceremonies in 2013 have any real connection to Islamic extremists.

“They don’t have to know the secret handshake or have the secret decoder ring,” Eccles insisted in his opening address Monday at the trial of John Nuttall and Amanda Korody. “We don’t think al-Qaida knew anything about them … or cared.”

Allegedly self-radicalize­d Muslim converts, Nuttall and Korody have pleaded not guilty to four charges of conspiracy and knowingly facilitati­ng a terrorist plan on July 1, 2013.

The six-woman, eight-man jury heard it will be a lengthy trial in B.C. Supreme Court, with an expected 20 witnesses for the Crown being called over the next four months.

Eccles explained that the entire case rests on a months-long undercover operation that began in February 2013.

Mounties pretending to be supportive of Islamist extremism prompted the pair to construct three pressure-cooker bombs from parts purchased at Walmart and London Drugs, and to record videos taking responsibi­lity urging similar violence in the name of Allah, Eccles said.

Some 40 hours of surveillan­ce recordings made in stores, cars, hotel rooms and elsewhere in Metro Vancouver and Victoria will be entered as evidence, he added.

Defence lawyers, however, warned that although the jury would hear “very dramatic testimony,” jurors should wait until everything was put in context before making up their mind.

Nuttall’s lawyer, Marilyn Sandford, said her client’s beliefs at the time were “repugnant” but the case would turn on his motivation.

She quoted from a wiretap that indicated the couple feared being killed by the undercover officers play-acting scary Arabic accomplice­s.

Nuttall warned his wife about the “serious, seriousity of the situation” that could see them wearing “cement galoshes at the bottom of the ocean.”

Sandford said the jury should ask themselves about Nuttall’s personalit­y, his health, his level of sophistica­tion and his relationsh­ip with the RCMP.

Korody’s lawyer, Mark Jette, told the jury his client was “ensnared” by the undercover operation and that during that time the recovering addict with a methadone prescripti­on was vomiting daily and consuming Gravol as if it were “one of the major food groups.”

The pair sat impassivel­y following proceeding­s except for one brief human moment.

From inside a Plexiglas prisoner’s dock in the province’s bombproof, high-security courtroom, Nuttall spotted his mother, Maureen Smith, and grandmothe­r, Loreen, in the public gallery.

They mouthed “I love you” to each other.

He pointed them out to Korody, sitting in her own dock in an olive head scarf, who also brightened and smiled. Otherwise, she was sombre throughout.

Eccles said the two were inspired by the Boston Marathon bombing on April 15, 2013, and downloaded the same plans from the Internet for building improvised explosive devices.

In that attack, three people were killed and nearly 300 injured by two pressure-cooker bombs that exploded about 12 seconds apart.

Eccles claimed Korody, who was 29 at the time, and Nuttall, who was 38, wanted to slaughter as many as possible by planting three devices, two wired together for a bigger bang, the first timed to explode at 10 a.m., and the second 15 minutes later to massacre first responders.

Eccles said Nuttall believed a bloodbath would make people “rethink the decision to send troops overseas to kill Muslims,” especially when they learned “a white guy did it.”

“This is going to rock the world ... al-Qaida Canada, that’s who we are,” the prosecutor quoted him as saying. “We’re Mujahedeen, we’re secret agents, we’re sleepers.”

 ?? FELICITY DON/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? In this artist’s sketch, John Nuttall, left, and Amanda Korody appear in court in Vancouver on Monday at the beginning of their trial.
FELICITY DON/THE CANADIAN PRESS In this artist’s sketch, John Nuttall, left, and Amanda Korody appear in court in Vancouver on Monday at the beginning of their trial.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada