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RCMP exploited poverty, addiction, isolation of B.C. terror suspects: Lawyer

By , on July 14, 2015


RCMP (Doug Schnurr / Shutterstock)
RCMP (Doug Schnurr / Shutterstock)

VANCOUVER — The lead investigator of an RCMP sting wanted a pair of British Columbia terrorism suspects out of their home and away from the distractions of drugs and video games to keep them focused on their bomb plot, a court has heard.

Staff-Sgt. Vaz Kassam testified that removing John Nuttall and Amanda Korody from “their element” would give police a better assessment of the couple’s commitment to threatening public safety.

“A person that is committed to something ? will carry (through) with the scenario,” Kassam told B.C. Supreme Court on Monday. “However, if they’re not motivated or they don’t want to do something they’ll say, ‘Look, I’m out,’ or make up excuses.”

Last month, a jury found Nuttall and Korody guilty of planning to detonate homemade pressure-cooker explosives on the grounds of the B.C. legislature on Canada Day in 2013.

The second stage of their trial began Monday, with defence lawyers arguing the RCMP entrapped the pair through a months-long undercover operation.

Korody’s lawyer Mark Jette suggested to Kassam that police removed his client and her husband from the house because otherwise “they weren’t motivated to do much of anything except play video games.”

“It sounds to me like your assessment is that if they were at home they were unfocused and unmotivated and using drugs but if you got them out of the house you might be able to motivate them to do something,” Jette suggested.

“I disagree,” Kassam replied. “I think it’s more of a commitment level as to how serious they are.”

Kassam was appointed primary investigator in charge of the undercover file on June 24, 2013, one week before Nuttall and Korody were arrested.

He testified that when he took over the case the other officers appeared frustrated that the suspects weren’t moving forward with their bomb plot as predicted.

Jette argued that the RCMP exploited Nuttall and Korody’s vulnerabilities, including their drug addiction, poverty, social isolation and status as recent converts to Islam. He also alleged police used love, friendship, loyalty, gratitude and fear to manipulate the couple.

Nuttall and Korody were recovering heroin addicts living on welfare in a basement suite in Richmond, B.C., when police first made contact with them.

“Weren’t you concerned at all that due to the vulnerabilities of these people as you came to know them that police actions might unduly influence what they did?” Jette asked Kassam.

Kassam said the average person would not talk about committing jihad, reading an al-Qaida-inspired online magazine or storming a naval base using AK-47 machine guns.

“I believed that posed a risk to public safety and we would be remiss, the police, if we didn’t do anything.”

Court earlier heard how Nuttall had floated a myriad of ideas for a terrorist plot, from hijacking a nuclear submarine to firing rockets and from overpowering a military base to taking train passengers hostage.

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