Tuesday, December 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

Terror Suspect Aaron Driver Spoke Of His Disaffected Youth, Belief In Islam

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Aug, 2016 01:43 PM
    STRATHROY, Ont. — A young man who was allegedly plotting a terrorist attack on a Canadian city was largely an unknown loner in the small southwestern Ontario town where he died in a police takedown.
     
    But Aaron Driver had in the past provided glimpses into his journey from the "happy" Christian-born son of an Air Force corporal to an Islamic State sympathizer.  
     
    Driver, 24, was a high school dropout who lived with his sister, Eileen Driver Dumont, in Strathroy, west of London, Ont., under court-imposed conditions. She is married with four children.
     
    His father, Wayne Driver, lives in Cold Lake, Alta. His mother died when he was seven.
     
    In an interview with the Toronto Star in February 2015, Driver said he took advantage of the fact that his immediate family — siblings, father and step-mother — was far-flung when he was younger.
     
    "I partied a lot," he told the Star in an interview under his Muslim name, Harun Abdurahman. "I got into a little bit of trouble. But I think I decided eventually that I didn't want to live my life like that. I was looking for something different."
     
    He began studying the Qur’an, he told the Star, and was drawn to Islam's "all-encompassing way of life." His family, meantime, thought it was a passing phase.
     
     
    "Being members of the military, they're involved in fighting Muslims, whether directly or indirectly," he told the Star.
     
    Driver's family members could not be reached for comment by The Canadian Press. But his father told CTV he hadn't seen his son for two years. He'd recently tried to connect with his son, Wayne Driver said, only to have him hang up on him.
     
    "It was kind of unbelievable, how could he go so far and then reality sets in, and it's, 'Oh my God, my son is dead – what was he thinking?" Wayne Driver said.
     
    He added his son was a happy child who "changed" when his mother died.
     
    "He kind of blamed me for her death and he was very withdrawn after that."
     
    In Strathroy, most neighbours say they never saw or knew Driver — although Leo's Taxi Service did.
     
    "We've driven him before back and forth to work. Nice kid, polite, thank you, have a nice day and all of that stuff. Nobody ever thought this was going to happen," said Brenda Carreiro, who works at the company with her husband, Eddy.
     
    Added Eddy: "I really liked the kid .... He was a very lovely kid, very polite to me."
     
    A driver for Leo's suffered an arm injury when he was dispatched to the nondescript Strathroy home to pick up Driver late Wednesday afternoon and take him to a shopping mall in nearby London, Ont.
     
     
    "He pulled in, the kid got in the car, and ... he was starting to back up and heard 'pop, pop, pop, pop, pop,'" said Brenda Carreiro. The back windows of the cab were blown out during the confrontation, and the driver suffered shock in the hours following the ordeal.
     
    The couple, meantime, expressed anger that the RCMP placed the cab driver at risk.
     
    "They stopped one of our other cab drivers, dropping off a neighbour; why didn't they stop this cab driver?" Brenda Carreiro said. "We're baffled. Why would you put the driver at risk like that? Don't jeopardize somebody's life."
     
    Neighbours in Strathroy also said they should have been warned that a man believed to be a terrorist was in their midst.
     
    "I think they should have (told us), just so that we're well aware of this, so that we can keep an eye out ourselves too," said Harry Denharton, who lives nearby and heard two loud bangs Wednesday afternoon but only later learned what had happened.
     
    "We should have the right to know."
     
    Another neighbour of Driver's said he couldn't recall ever seeing the man around town.
     
    But he said Wednesday's incident — and the discovery that a terror suspect lived only a stone's throw away — hit "a little too close to home."
     
    "For me, having two kids and my wife and a possible terrorist ... sympathizer down the street, it's kind of ... it's a little crazy."
     
     
    Last year, federal authorities were so suspicious Driver might have ties to a terrorist group that he bounced in and out of jails and courtrooms for months, all without any actual charges ever being laid — and he had no criminal record at the time.
     
    In June 2015, Driver was first picked up in Winnipeg. Published reports at the time suggested Driver posted messages on social media that praised terrorist activities, including the attack on Parliament Hill in October 2014 by Michael Zehaf-Bibeau.
     
    Mounties applied for a peace bond to impose limits on Driver's activities, alleging in provincial court documents that investigators believed he might help with terrorist group activities.
     
    When Driver was released later that month, he was ordered to comply with 18 different conditions, including wearing a GPS tracking device.
     
    Among the conditions was that he live in a rental suite in a Winnipeg home owned by Genevieve Van Oers. After Driver gave media interviews that month, Van Oers filed a document on June 26, 2015, requesting to be relieved of her obligation to house him. 
     
    "I can no longer approve or have him stay in my home ... and have requested him to move into a Muslim home to be better educated within that religion," she said in the filing.
     
     
    "His comments against the police are worrisome and therefore have a discrepancy with my beliefs. Have also requested him to speak to a clergyman but he is not yet in agreement to this."
     
    In an interview with the CBC in June 2015, Driver was asked what it would take for him to reconsider his pro-terrorism beliefs.
     
    "What it would take would be for the West to just stop killing Muslims, you know, stop bombing. Stop arresting Muslims," he said.
     
    "Take responsibility for the crimes they've committed in the past and just stay at home and work on their own problems instead of trying to solve other people's problems by dropping bombs on them or trying to force democracy on them."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Protesters Gathers Outside Mount Polley Mine, Site Of Disaster 2 Years Ago

    On Aug. 4, 2014, a tailings storage facility burst at the mine, sending 24 million cubic metres of waste and water into nearby lakes and rivers.

    Protesters Gathers Outside Mount Polley Mine, Site Of Disaster 2 Years Ago

    Dangerous Offender Hearing Scheduled For Man Who Attacked Homeless Saskatchewan Woman

    PRINCE ALBERT, Sask. — A man who pleaded guilty to a brutal attack on a Saskatchewan homeless woman is to face a dangerous offender hearing next year.

    Dangerous Offender Hearing Scheduled For Man Who Attacked Homeless Saskatchewan Woman

    New Commander Promises To Fix Much-maligned Military Support Unit

    New Commander Promises To Fix Much-maligned Military Support Unit
    OTTAWA — The new head of the military's support unit for ill and injured military personnel is promising to address the many problems that have plagued the oft-criticized system for years.

    New Commander Promises To Fix Much-maligned Military Support Unit

    Telus Turns In Solid Q2 Results, Earnings Slightly Above Estimates

    VANCOUVER — Telus Corp. (TSX:T) says its net profit, adjusted earnings and revenue were up from the same time last year as it attracted more customers to its wireless division as well as its residential Internet and Optik TV services.

    Telus Turns In Solid Q2 Results, Earnings Slightly Above Estimates

    Newfoundland Man Charged After Plane Allegedly Taken On Joyride, Crashed Into Woods

    Newfoundland Man Charged After Plane Allegedly Taken On Joyride, Crashed Into Woods
    RCMP say the Cessna 180 was taken from the Jeffrey's area without the owner's consent.

    Newfoundland Man Charged After Plane Allegedly Taken On Joyride, Crashed Into Woods

    Prison Break Villain Plays Hero While Rescuing Injured Canada Goose In Vancouver

    Prison Break Villain Plays Hero While Rescuing Injured Canada Goose In Vancouver
    Robert Knepper was in Vancouver recently to shoot a revival of the Prison Break series that ran on FOX from 2005 to 2009. In a post on his Instagram page, the 57-year-old describes how he saved one of Vancouver's feathered inhabitants.

    Prison Break Villain Plays Hero While Rescuing Injured Canada Goose In Vancouver