琉璃神社

Skip to content

Couple accused in legislature bomb plot free to go, B.C. top court says

Appeals court issues scathing ruling against the RCMP in the case of John Nuttall and Amanda Korody

The couple who planted pressure cooker bombs on the lawn of the B.C. Legislature on Canada Day 2013 is free to go, after the BC Court of Appeal upheld a ruling that stayed proceedings against them and said police had 鈥減ushed鈥 the pair to commit the crime.

In a stinging decision on Wednesday, Justice Elizabeth Bennett said the RCMP 鈥渄id everything necessary to facilitate鈥 John Nuttall and Amanda Korody鈥檚 plans when they provided them with explosive material they could not have gotten on their own.

Bennett said police 鈥渨ent far beyond investigating鈥 when they 鈥渕anufactured鈥 the bomb plot.

鈥淚 therefore agree鈥 that the overall conduct of this investigation was a travesty of justice,鈥 Bennett wrote in her 142-page decision.

READ MORE:

The decision upheld part of a 2016 ruling from B.C. Supreme Court Justice Catherine Bruce that stayed proceedings against Nuttall and Korody, after they accused the RCMP of entrapment. Crown counsel appealed the stay earlier this year.

Nuttall and Korody, who lived in Surrey, first came to the authorities鈥 attention on suspicions of terrorism in 2012. Nuttall had a long unrelated rap sheet of assault, kidnapping and robbery convictions. He also had a drug dependency and mental health issues.

The two had recently converted to Islam, and Nuttall was known in the community for 鈥渆spousing violent jihadist views.鈥

In early 2013, the Canadian Security Intelligence Service told police Nuttall was a threat to national security and that he had tried to buy materials to make explosives, although investigators were unable to corroborate the claim.

RCMP began an undercover sting to determine if Nuttall and Korody were a threat. Numerous officers played the part of agents in a terrorist investigation.

As soon as Nuttall expressed interest in jihad after seeing a Qur鈥檃n in the back seat of an officer鈥檚 car, police began exploring terror plots with the couple to see whether they would pursue one on their own.

Eventually, the police, Nuttall and Korody settled on pressure cooker bombs targeting the B.C. Legislature on Canada Day 2013.

With help from RCMP officers, the couple prepared the bombs and dropped them off on the lawn of the legislature. Police provided the explosive C-4, as well as fake detonators.

The bombs did not go off and Nuttall and Korody were arrested shortly after and were eventually convicted of conspiracy, possessing an explosive substance, and placing an explosive in a public place on behalf of a terror group in 2015.

In her ruling Wednesday, Bennett agreed with Bruce鈥檚 decision that the RCMP鈥檚 conduct was an 鈥渁buse of process.鈥

Bennett said police frequently infiltrate terrorist groups as part of their investigations, but they cannot do whatever they want to investigate a crime.

The RCMP eventually knew the couple had little to no ability to commit an act of terror, she said, and only carried out the bomb plot after police 鈥減ushed and pushed and pushed鈥 them.

Bennett did not agree with two parts of the lower court ruling. She said police did have 鈥渞easonable suspicion鈥 to investigate given Nuttall鈥檚 extremist views and past criminal history, and that an average person would not have done what Nuttall and Korody did, as police gave them 36 opportunities to back out.

鈥淭he ruling upheld our views鈥. that this was entrapment and police-manufactured crime,鈥 Nuttall鈥檚 lawyer Marilyn Sandford said. 鈥淎 court has drawn a line that these types of American-style sting operations are not going to be tolerated here.鈥

Korody鈥檚 lawyer, Scott Wright, said the couple were 鈥渧ery relieved鈥 and 鈥渉oping to move on with life as much as possible.鈥

Their next court date is scheduled for Jan. 7 for a Crown-requested peace bond.

Crown counsel said it would be 鈥渞eviewing the decision.鈥 They declined to comment further but has 60 days to appeal.


katya.slepian@bpdigital.ca

Like us on and follow us on .

14860683_web1_CPT402520523
John Nuttall, left, and Amanda Korody, leave jail after a judge ruled the couple were entrapped by the RCMP in a police-manufactured crime, in Vancouver, B.C., on Friday July 29, 2016. British Columbia鈥檚 Appeal Court is scheduled to release a decision today on a couple whose guilty verdict over plotting to blow up the provincial legislature was thrown out by a lower court judge. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck




(or

琉璃神社

) document.head.appendChild(flippScript); window.flippxp = window.flippxp || {run: []}; window.flippxp.run.push(function() { window.flippxp.registerSlot("#flipp-ux-slot-ssdaw212", "Black Press Media Standard", 1281409, [312035]); }); }