Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

RCMP inspector says he didn't know details of terrorism case in B.C.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Oct, 2015 10:51 AM
    VANCOUVER — An RCMP officer who oversaw an undercover terrorism investigation in British Columbia says he didn't know all the details about the case.
     
    John Nuttall and his wife Amanda Korody were found guilty in June of planning to set off homemade pressure-cooker bombs at the B.C. legislature grounds on Canada Day in 2013, but lawyers are now arguing they were entrapped by police.
     
    B.C. Supreme Court heard Monday that undercover officers had been working with the pair for months when Insp. Stephen Corcoran was put in charge of monitoring the command team in May 2013.
     
    Corcoran says he was told about many aspects of the case, including that Nuttall's plans — which included launching rockets at the legislature building — were grandiose and had very little action behind them.
     
    But the inspector testified he wasn't told that Nuttall, a recent convert to Islam, had asked an undercover officer posing as a jihadist extremist to provide him with spiritual guidance.
     
    Corcoran says he doesn't recall having any conversations with undercover officers about how the investigation would end.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    The Election That Could Kill TPP Trade Deal: No, Not The Canadian One

    The Election That Could Kill TPP Trade Deal: No, Not The Canadian One
     There was plenty of chatter at international free-trade talks about the election that could kill the new Trans-Pacific Partnership deal.

    The Election That Could Kill TPP Trade Deal: No, Not The Canadian One

    Canadian Olympic Committee Unaware Of Harassment, Says Interim President

    Canadian Olympic Committee Unaware Of Harassment, Says Interim President
    Aubut stepped down on the weekend after women accused him of sexual comments and unwanted touching.

    Canadian Olympic Committee Unaware Of Harassment, Says Interim President

    Saskatchewan Residents Tell Consultation 'No' To Foreign-owned Farms

    Eighty-seven per cent of the more than 3,200 people who responded to a farmland ownership consultation say they don't support foreign ownership of Saskatchewan farmland.

    Saskatchewan Residents Tell Consultation 'No' To Foreign-owned Farms

    Auto Sector Says Harper's $1-billion Pledge Key To Industry's Post-TPP Survival

    Auto Sector Says Harper's $1-billion Pledge Key To Industry's Post-TPP Survival
    Harper announced that a re-elected Conservative government would provide a $1-billion package over a decade by extending the government's Automotive Innovation Fund.

    Auto Sector Says Harper's $1-billion Pledge Key To Industry's Post-TPP Survival

    Richard Oland Crime Scene Was Among Bloodiest Officer Had Seen: Court Hears

    Richard Oland Crime Scene Was Among Bloodiest Officer Had Seen: Court Hears
    Sgt. Mark Smith is facing cross-examination today in the second-degree murder trial of Dennis Oland in New Brunswick's Court of Queen's Bench.

    Richard Oland Crime Scene Was Among Bloodiest Officer Had Seen: Court Hears

    Conservatives Dump Jagdish Grewal Who Supported Therapies To Turn Gay Youth Straight

    Conservatives Dump Jagdish Grewal Who Supported Therapies To Turn Gay Youth Straight
    Jagdish Grewal, who is running in Mississauga-Malton, wrote an editorial entitled "Is it wrong for a homosexual to become a normal person?" that referred to homosexuality as "unnatural behaviour" and heterosexuals as "normal."

    Conservatives Dump Jagdish Grewal Who Supported Therapies To Turn Gay Youth Straight