Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
National

Accused In Amanda Todd Case Heads To Court In Netherlands, More Delays Possible

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Apr, 2016 11:50 AM
    VANCOUVER — The trial of a Dutch man facing dozens of child pornography and online extortion charges related to the suicide of a British Columbia teenager is slated to begin Friday morning in Amsterdam, despite Dutch media reports that his lawyer has quit on the eve of the hearing.
     
    Aydin Coban is accused of using webcam video with sexual content to blackmail up to 39 victims from various countries, many of them underage.
     
    The federal government has asked the Netherlands to extradite Coban to Canada, so he can stand trial on five separate charges linked to the 2012 death of 15-year-old Amanda Todd of Port Coquitlam.
     
    Todd killed herself following relentless bullying that was sparked after an Internet harasser allegedly distributed nude photos of her online.
     
    The Dutch court postponed the trial last month after Coban released his first lawyer. In the latest development, media reports from the Netherlands said Coban's second lawyer, Robert Malewicz, quit Thursday after the court refused another extension.
     
    A good defence is far more than just a file read fast, Malewicz is quoted in Dutch as saying in the news outlet Omroep Brabant.
     
    A suspect has the right to a fair, adequate defence, he added.
     
    The lawyer who preceded Malewicz, Christian van Dijk, said in an interview the case file contains 25,000 pages.
     
    "It's impossible for him, in my opinion, to read and to prepare himself," van Dijk said.
     
    Coban faces more than 72 charges in the Netherlands, including making, distributing and possessing child pornography, according to a spokeswoman from the Dutch National Prosecutor. They also include assault, attempted assault and luring young victims, she said.
     
    The majority of those charges involve 34 underage victims from the Netherlands, Norway, the United Kingdom, the United States and Canada.
     
     
    Five charges involve five men from Australia and the U.K., who Coban is accused of blackmailing.
     
    The trial is scheduled to run into the latter half of May, with a ruling scheduled for June 13. It's unclear how a possible shuffle in lawyers will affect scheduling.
     
    None of the allegations have been proven in court.
     
    Canada is the only country that has asked for Coban's extradition. That proceeding is scheduled to begin June 14.
     
    The request for extradition was made by the federal government, but it was triggered by B.C.'s attorney general.
     
    The provincial Justice Ministry said in a statement that, if found guilty, Coban wouldn't necessarily have to serve his entire sentence in the Netherlands prior to being extradited.
     
    Todd is not included in the criminal proceedings taking place in the Netherlands.
     
    "The case against Mr. Coban is a serious one that has affected British Columbians and it should be tried locally," wrote the ministry.
     
    "The tragic consequences for Ms. Todd in this matter had a significant impact on British Columbians, and they have the right to see that justice is served in their community."
     
    The Netherlands could postpone Coban's extradition, if approved, until criminal proceedings were complete or his sentence was served, though he could be extradited to Canada for prosecution, said the Dutch prosecution service.
     
    Still, van Dijk said it's unlikely the extradition will be approved.
     
     
    Both Todd's case, and that of the other 39 alleged victims, revolve around the use of controversial police surveillance software called a keylogger, which was used to collect evidence against Coban, van Dijk said.
     
    A keylogger is a covert device that monitors computer activity by recording which keys are pressed on a keyboard.
     
    "If the Dutch court or the European court decides that the keylogger is not lawful ... then this whole case will collapse like a card house," said van Dijk.
     
    That would mean no conviction against Coban and likely no extradition to Canada because the same keylogger was used to gather evidence in the Todd case, he said.
     
    Todd's death, as well as those of several other young Canadians, helped spur Ottawa to pass anti-bullying legislation that criminalized the distribution of intimate images without consent. The law came into effect in March 2015.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canada Revenue Agency Mailed SIN Numbers To Wrong People — Twice: MP

    Canada Revenue Agency Mailed SIN Numbers To Wrong People — Twice: MP
    Charlie Angus has asked the office of federal privacy commissioner Daniel Therrien to investigate the apparent violations.

    Canada Revenue Agency Mailed SIN Numbers To Wrong People — Twice: MP

    Ontario Changes Program After Buyers Of $1.1 Million Porches Get $5,000 Rebates

    Ontario Changes Program After Buyers Of $1.1 Million Porches Get $5,000 Rebates
    5 Ontario drivers who purchased a Porsche Spyder hybrid, which retails for about $1.1 million, got $5,000 rebates from the province's electric vehicle incentive program last year.

    Ontario Changes Program After Buyers Of $1.1 Million Porches Get $5,000 Rebates

    Go Ahead, Move To Canada: Donald Trump Tells Celebrities Threatening To Immigrate

    Go Ahead, Move To Canada: Donald Trump Tells Celebrities Threatening To Immigrate
     Donald Trump has a message for some of the celebrities musing about leaving for Canada if he's elected president: Don't let the door hit you on the way out.

    Go Ahead, Move To Canada: Donald Trump Tells Celebrities Threatening To Immigrate

    French Court Sentences ‘Horror Dentist' Who Was Extradited From Canada

    French Court Sentences ‘Horror Dentist' Who Was Extradited From Canada
    Dutch dentist Jacobus Van Nierop had fled to Canada in late 2013. He was arrested in New Brunswick in 2014 and then ordered extradited.

    French Court Sentences ‘Horror Dentist' Who Was Extradited From Canada

    N.S. Sex Assault Centre Tries Crowdfunding After Post-Ghomeshi Surge In Business

    A Halifax sexual assault centre has become the first in Canada to crowdfund online, saying a string of high-profile cases has tripled wait times for some services.

    N.S. Sex Assault Centre Tries Crowdfunding After Post-Ghomeshi Surge In Business

    Justice Minister Has Confidence In Advice From Officials Who Fought Assisted Dying

    Justice Minister Has Confidence In Advice From Officials Who Fought Assisted Dying
    In any event, Wilson-Raybould says Justice officials were not the ones who decided on the restrictive measures included in a proposed new law on assisted death.

    Justice Minister Has Confidence In Advice From Officials Who Fought Assisted Dying