Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

Final Arguments Begin In B.C. Terrorism Trial With Focus On 'Spiritual Guidance'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Jun, 2016 12:13 PM
    VANCOUVER — The lawyer for a man found guilty of plotting to bomb the British Columbia legislature says spiritual guidance offered by undercover police officers lies at the heart of the entrapment case.
     
    Closing arguments have begun in B.C. Supreme Court over whether John Nuttall and Amanda Korody were manipulated into planting explosives on the legislature lawn during Canada Day in 2013.
     
    The pair was arrested three years ago following an elaborate undercover sting operation.
     
     
    Nuttall's lawyer, Marilyn Sandford, says police took it upon themselves to provide spiritual guidance and did so in a way that dismissed the concerns her client repeatedly raised over committing violence in the name of Islam.
     
    A jury found Nuttall and Korody guilty of conspiring to commit a terrorism act last June.
     
    The judge in the case put the convictions on hold to allow Nuttall and Korody's lawyers to argue that their clients had been entrapped by police.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Animal Lovers To Try Working With Authorities To Rescue Pets Left In Fort Mac

    Animal Lovers To Try Working With Authorities To Rescue Pets Left In Fort Mac
    Members of the group said that by Sunday afternoon, they'd received thousands of emails from evacuees of the northern Alberta wildfire whose pets were left behind.

    Animal Lovers To Try Working With Authorities To Rescue Pets Left In Fort Mac

    Fatal Fall, Unprepared Hikers, Challenge Vancouver's North Shore Teams In Separate Rescues

    Fatal Fall, Unprepared Hikers, Challenge Vancouver's North Shore Teams In Separate Rescues
    VANCOUVER — The BC Coroners Service is investigating the death of a hiker on Vancouver's North Shore.

    Fatal Fall, Unprepared Hikers, Challenge Vancouver's North Shore Teams In Separate Rescues

    Six Year Prison Sentence For Ontario Daycare Operator Convicted In Child's Death

    Six Year Prison Sentence For Ontario Daycare Operator Convicted In Child's Death
      April Luckese was found guilty in March in the death of 14-month-old Duy-An Nguyen after a judge determined she lost her patience and assaulted the child, causing a skull fracture.

    Six Year Prison Sentence For Ontario Daycare Operator Convicted In Child's Death

    Foreign Buyers Crushing Home Dreams In Vancouver As Canada, B.C. Do Zip: Study

    The Canadian and British Columbia governments are complicit in fuelling Vancouver's housing crisis as foreign Chinese buyers continue to shut local residents out of the market, a new study says.

    Foreign Buyers Crushing Home Dreams In Vancouver As Canada, B.C. Do Zip: Study

    Pilot Found Dead After Single-Engine Plane Crashes In Alberta Field

    Pilot Found Dead After Single-Engine Plane Crashes In Alberta Field
    RCMP say they were called to the crash 13 kilometres west of Sylvan Lake on Saturday afternoon.

    Pilot Found Dead After Single-Engine Plane Crashes In Alberta Field

    Low Quebec Birthrate Spurs Some Calls For Increased Immigration

    Low Quebec Birthrate Spurs Some Calls For Increased Immigration
    The province's statistics bureau said the 2015 rate was 1.6 children per woman, down one per cent from 2014 and marking the sixth consecutive year it had edged lower.

    Low Quebec Birthrate Spurs Some Calls For Increased Immigration