Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Accused B.C. Terrorist Didn't Know Whose Plan He Was Following: Trial

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Apr, 2015 11:32 AM
    VANCOUVER — A series of plans proposed by a British Columbia man on trial for plotting to blow up the provincial legislature was "hokey and harebrained," an undercover officer has told a Vancouver court.
     
    The officer, who cannot be identified, said in B.C. Supreme Court Thursday that John Nuttall's hands were shaking nervously as he tabled his ideas that included hijacking a nuclear submarine and firing rockets at a Vancouver Island military base.
     
    Nuttall and his wife Amanda Korody have pleaded not guilty to four terrorism-related charges stemming from an elaborate police sting in 2013.
     
    In covert audio played in court on Thursday, Nuttall is heard telling the officer, who was posing as a high-ranking terrorist, that he wasn't sure exactly whose idea it ultimately was to plant pressure-cooker bombs on the legislature grounds.
     
    "Whose plan is this?" the officer is heard asking Nuttall during a supposedly private meeting.
     
    "It's kind of all of our plan," replied Nuttall, referring to other undercover officers involved in the sting. "We all kind of chipped in."
     
    When pressed further, Nuttall said it was the best they could come up with in the three days available, and that it would have been nice to have more time.
     
    The officer testifying in court played the role of the supposed terrorist leader who Nuttall had to convince to provide the C4 plastic explosives.
     
    In her cross-examination, defence lawyer Marilyn Sandford highlighted how Nuttall habitually deferred to another undercover officer, posing as an Arab businessman, for direction in how much C4 was needed.
     
    Nuttall ultimately pegged the amount at four kilograms for three pressure-cooker bombs.
     
    Following his script, the apparent munitions peddler eventually blows up at Nuttall, berating him for having wasted his time with a poorly formulated plan.
     
    "This is just a bunch of crap, just a bunch of crap you see on CNN," he fumes in the audio recording. "I'm going to wait in my car and cool down a little bit because I'm very angry right now."
     
    The trial has run nearly 40 days and will continue Monday.
     
    Nuttall and Korody were recent converts to Islam, and evidence already presented in court has heard they saw themselves as soldiers in a holy war with the western world.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Landing An Aircraft In Bad Weather Depends On Many Variables, But Ultimately Up To Pilot

    Landing An Aircraft In Bad Weather Depends On Many Variables, But Ultimately Up To Pilot
    HALIFAX — Pilots make the final call on whether it's safe to land a plane in bad weather, such as the conditions that prevailed early Sunday when an Air Canada passenger jet crashed at Halifax airport, aviation industry experts say.

    Landing An Aircraft In Bad Weather Depends On Many Variables, But Ultimately Up To Pilot

    Lawyer For Man Accused Of Child Pornography Says Films Of Naked Boys Weren't Sexual

    Lawyer For Man Accused Of Child Pornography Says Films Of Naked Boys Weren't Sexual
    TORONTO — The lawyer for a man accused in a sweeping child pornography investigation says the movies his client distributed online weren't sexual in nature but simply showed "naked boys doing silly things."

    Lawyer For Man Accused Of Child Pornography Says Films Of Naked Boys Weren't Sexual

    Sentencing Hearing Resumes In Deadly Sunrise Propane Explosion Case

    Sentencing Hearing Resumes In Deadly Sunrise Propane Explosion Case
    TORONTO — A sentencing hearing for Sunrise Propane, the Ontario company convicted in a deadly explosion at a Toronto propane plant, has resumed today after a 10-month adjournment.

    Sentencing Hearing Resumes In Deadly Sunrise Propane Explosion Case

    'The Plane Came Down, Bang!' Passengers Tell Of Surviving Plane Crash In Halifax

    'The Plane Came Down, Bang!' Passengers Tell Of Surviving Plane Crash In Halifax
    HALIFAX — Passengers on board an Air Canada flight that crashed Sunday morning as it landed in Halifax shared their experiences after the plane skidded along a runway. Here are some of their stories:

    'The Plane Came Down, Bang!' Passengers Tell Of Surviving Plane Crash In Halifax

    Opposition Calls On Manitoba Government To Release Review Into Teen's Death

    Opposition Calls On Manitoba Government To Release Review Into Teen's Death
    WINNIPEG — Manitoba's Opposition says an internal investigation into how a 15-year-old girl in the care of social workers disappeared before being found dead in the Red River is complete and should be released.

    Opposition Calls On Manitoba Government To Release Review Into Teen's Death

    Safety Board Investigators Sifting Through Plane Wreckage, Interviews Passengers

    Safety Board Investigators Sifting Through Plane Wreckage, Interviews Passengers
    HALIFAX — The Transportation Safety Board says investigators will spend the today documenting the site and sorting through the debris after an Air Canada flight crashed Sunday at Halifax's airport.

    Safety Board Investigators Sifting Through Plane Wreckage, Interviews Passengers