Thursday, December 11, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Terror Suspect Initially Unsure About Targeting Legislature In Attack

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Mar, 2015 01:03 PM
    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia terrorism suspect was skeptical the provincial legislature was the best place to target with pressure-cooker bombs on Canada Day, but he appeared to change his mind after touring the area with an undercover RCMP officer, his trial heard Thursday.
     
    The trial for John Nuttall and his wife Amanda Korody listened to an audio recording in which Nuttall worries there will be no one at the legislature to be killed if they detonated their homemade bombs at around 9 or 10 a.m. on July 1, 2013.
     
    But Nuttall becomes more enthusiastic after the undercover officer shows him bushes where the bombs could be hidden and his wife assures him the attack will send a political message.
     
    "That's the capital building, that's the legislature. OK?" says Nuttall. "You destroy that, it's the same as destroying the White House. It's the equivalent of Canada's White House."
     
    The exchange took place on the evening of June 30 and was captured by a recording device worn by the officer, who was posing as an Arab businessman.
     
    In the recording, the officer drives the couple around downtown Victoria as they check out potential targets, including banks and apartment buildings.
     
    At one point, Nuttall suggests planting the bombs near an office building.
     
    "At nine o'clock in the morning, everyone'll be there for work," he says. "Kind of like the World Trade Centre, you know? Everyone had just gotten to work."
     
    "Don't forget, tomorrow there is no work," the officer reminds him. "It's Canada Day. That's why you chose to do it on Canada Day."
     
    Frustrated, Nuttall says he wishes they could postpone by two days to spend more time check out locations. But the group pushes on, and eventually Nuttall suggests they drive toward the legislature lawn.
     
    He says the couple's original plan was to detonate bombs on the lawn at night, when he estimated tens of thousands of people would be gathered to watch the Canada Day fireworks.
     
    But the pair had since abandoned that plan, instead scrawling a list of downtown Victoria locations on a notepad.
     
    Nuttall and his wife had recently assembled the pressure-cooker bombs in a Vancouver-area motel room, before being introduced to another officer who said he had access to C-4 explosives.
     
    The undercover officer posing as an Arab businessman had told the couple he stuffed the C-4 inside the bombs and arranged timers to go off a few hours after they are planted at 5 a.m. on July 1.
     
    When Nuttall says no one will be outside the legislature in the morning, the officer notes there is a pancake breakfast scheduled.
     
    "That's like old senior citizens and stuff," Nuttall complains. "Nobody goes to the pancake breakfast."
     
    The Mountie then shows Nuttall some bushes on the front lawn where the bombs could be hidden.
     
    The Crown has previously said the bombs were rendered inert and would not have exploded.
     
    Nuttall asks his wife what message they will send if they attack the legislature.
     
    "That people want to destroy the government," she replies.
     
    He begins to embrace the idea, saying that people will talk about the attack "forever."
     
    "Books will be written about it. OK?" says Nuttall.
     
    Nuttall later decides that he wants to place the bombs in bushes that are directly against the walls of the legislature, rather than the ones on the front lawn the Mountie had suggested.
     
    After making a trip to Wal-Mart to buy dark-coloured hoodies, the group heads back to the legislature to check out the targets again.
     
    Nuttall says his priority now is to destroy the building.
     
    "If we were doing this at night time, then I would (place them on the lawn), because then I would get maximum kills," he says. "But... people will be more sympathetic to the Muslim plight if we just attacked the government and not the people."
     
    Both Nuttall and Korody have pleaded not guilty to four terrorism-related charges.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. ferry navigator convicted of negligence turns to Supreme Court of Canada

    OTTAWA — A former ferry navigator who was convicted of criminal negligence in a fatal sinking off the British Columbia coast is asking the Supreme Court of Canada to review his case.Karl Lilgert was convicted of two counts of criminal negligence causing death and sentenced to four years for his role in the 2006 sinking of the Queen of the North.

    B.C. ferry navigator convicted of negligence turns to Supreme Court of Canada

    B.C. terror suspects build bombs ahead of alleged Canada Day plot: trial

    B.C. terror suspects build bombs ahead of alleged Canada Day plot: trial
    VANCOUVER — Just days ahead of an alleged bomb plot, a British Columbia man grew fearful that he and his wife would be forced to "take the fall" if they became a liability to an Arab businessman they believed was helping them carry out their planned Canada Day attack, their trial has heard.In a video played at the couple's terrorism trial Monday, John Nuttall confides in his wife, Amanda Korody, that he believe they could be killed by shadowy figures up the chain of command. 

    B.C. terror suspects build bombs ahead of alleged Canada Day plot: trial

    Police say nurse injured, patient facing arrest after attack at B.C. hospital

    ABBOTSFORD, B.C. — Police say a nurse is injured and a patient is facing imminent arrest after an attack at an Abbotsford, B.C., hospital.Const. Ian MacDonald says a 39-year-old nurse was suddenly struck several times while he was providing treatment to a 23-year-old patient over the weekend.

    Police say nurse injured, patient facing arrest after attack at B.C. hospital

    Come Prepared to Laugh: Die Fledermaus Review

    Come Prepared to Laugh: Die Fledermaus Review
    Big on farcical plot twists, Vancouver Opera’s production of Die Fledermaus is deliciously funny.

    Come Prepared to Laugh: Die Fledermaus Review

    Vancouver police warning campaign targets fentanyl in street drugs

    Vancouver police warning campaign targets fentanyl in street drugs
    Vancouver police and B.C. health agencies are launching a campaign to warn drug users about the presence of the potentially fatal narcotic fentanyl in heroin and other street drugs. Const. Sandra Glendinning says the campaign has been prompted by an increase in the number of deaths caused by fentanyl throughout the Vancouver area and on southern Vancouver Island.

    Vancouver police warning campaign targets fentanyl in street drugs

    Sex offender who fled Canada for Seattle arrested in rape case: Sheriff's office

    Sex offender who fled Canada for Seattle arrested in rape case: Sheriff's office
    SEATTLE — A high-risk sex offender who fled Canada for Seattle has been arrested in the rape of a 69-year-old woman, authorities said Monday.Michael Sean Stanley, 49, made news reports in 2013 when he cut off an electronic-monitoring ankle bracelet and crossed the U.S. border unchallenged. He's a U.S. citizen, and American authorities said they had no reason to arrest him. Canada decided not to ask for his extradition, and he registered in Seattle as a sex offender.

    Sex offender who fled Canada for Seattle arrested in rape case: Sheriff's office