Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

ID Of RCMP Agent To Stay Secret In Case Of Accused Pakistani Bomb Plotter

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Apr, 2015 09:25 PM
    TORONTO — The identity of an undercover RCMP officer who befriended a Pakistani man accused of plotting terror attacks in Toronto should remain secret, the Immigration and Refugee Board ruled Tuesday.
     
    The ruling overturns an earlier board decision in the case of Jahanzeb Malik that Ottawa had failed to make its case for the need for secrecy.
     
    During several hours of closed-door hearings, the board's Harry Adamidis heard a new application from Canada Border Services Agency for a publication ban on the identity of the undercover officer.
     
    Malik's lawyer Anser Farooq opposed the application on the basis there was no new information to warrant hearing it.
     
    Farooq also argued the case against his client turns on the conduct and credibility of the officer and said the hearing should be open to the public.
     
    However, Jessica Lourenco, lawyer for the immigration minister, argued she had new information that warranted hearing the new application.
     
    The RCMP officer, who is a proposed witness at future hearings involving Malik, is still active in the field of criminal investigations, Lourenco argued.
     
    As a result, she said, revealing his real identity or even the pseudonym he uses could put him in potential danger and make him a target for both criminals and Islamic State supporters.
     
    In siding with the government, Adamidis said in summarizing the proceedings that hearing the matter in private was appropriate to avoid "muzzling" any of the participants.
     
    It was reasonable to infer that disclosure of the officer's identity could cause harm, Adamidis said. As a result, he ordered a publication ban on any information that could reveal the agent's ID.
     
    Adamidis also ordered Malik, 33, detained in immigration custody pending a fourth detention review, tentatively scheduled for May 11 or 12. The decision relied on previous government submissions — none of which has been tested or proven — that the flooring contractor represents a flight risk and a public danger.
     
    At previous hearings, Lourenco said Malik talked about blowing up the U.S. consulate and buildings in Toronto's financial district and videotaping the attacks to inspire others.
     
    Without presenting any evidence, she also said Malik tried to radicalize the undercover officer by showing him videos apparently of Islamic State beheadings and expressed support for al-Qaida.
     
    Farooq, who has appealed to the government of Pakistan to help spring his client and smooth the way for him to return to Pakistan, made no submissions on the ongoing detention. He did say no one has come forward to stand surety for the divorced father of two, who was arrested March 9.
     
    Ottawa promised to expedite an admissibility hearing for Malik, who came to Canada as a student in 2004 and became a permanent resident in 2009.
     
    Farooq has previously complained about the government's unexplained decision to try to deport Malik — who is essentially being held in solitary confinement at a jail in Lindsay, Ont. — rather than charge him criminally.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    George Abbott Says Scrapping Treaty Commissioner Appointment Will Cost B.C. Liberals

    George Abbott Says Scrapping Treaty Commissioner Appointment Will Cost B.C. Liberals
    VANCOUVER — The man whose job was pulled from under him as the head of the B.C. Treaty Commission says he's convinced Premier Christy Clark will pay a political price for what he says is a short-sighted approach to First Nations negotiations.

    George Abbott Says Scrapping Treaty Commissioner Appointment Will Cost B.C. Liberals

    Accused Killer Denies Any Involvement In Triple Shooting In Princeton

    Accused Killer Denies Any Involvement In Triple Shooting In Princeton
    PENTICTON, B.C. — A man accused of murdering two people and wounding another flatly denied any involvement in the shootings near Princeton, B.C., while testifying in his own defence.

    Accused Killer Denies Any Involvement In Triple Shooting In Princeton

    Judicial Pretrial For Ghomeshi Sex Assault Case To Continue On April 28

    Judicial Pretrial For Ghomeshi Sex Assault Case To Continue On April 28
    In a brief appearance at a Toronto courtroom Friday, Ghomeshi's lawyer said she and a Crown prosecutor had met before a judge earlier in the day for a judicial pretrial.

    Judicial Pretrial For Ghomeshi Sex Assault Case To Continue On April 28

    Montreal Man Signs Peace Bond Amid RCMP Terrorism Fears

    Montreal Man Signs Peace Bond Amid RCMP Terrorism Fears
    MONTREAL — A Montreal man the RCMP fears will commit a terrorism offence has signed off on a peace bond that will severely restrict his movements and have him under tight surveillance for the next year.

    Montreal Man Signs Peace Bond Amid RCMP Terrorism Fears

    Hookah As Harmful As Cigarette

    Hookah As Harmful As Cigarette
    That hookah is less harmful than cigarette is a popular misconception that may have serious ramifications for the youth, warns a new study.

    Hookah As Harmful As Cigarette

    Environmental Green Light Given To Gold, Silver Mine In Northwest B.C.

    Environmental Green Light Given To Gold, Silver Mine In Northwest B.C.
    VICTORIA — The B.C. government has granted environmental approval to an underground gold-and-silver mine near the Alaska border.

    Environmental Green Light Given To Gold, Silver Mine In Northwest B.C.