Couple entrapped by police in terror plot don’t need peace bond: defence
VANCOUVER — Crown lawyers in British Columbia are trying to use a peace bond hearing as a second chance to prosecute a man freed after a judge ruled police had manipulated him into carrying out a terrorist act, his lawyer says.
Marilyn Sandford, who represents John Nuttall, told a provincial court judge on Thursday that a push by the Crown to submit evidence that was already ruled on during her client’s earlier terrorism trial is unfair and illegal.
Lawyers for Nuttall and his common-law wife Amanda Korody are arguing in advance of a planned peace bond hearing that could force them to be of good behaviour and obey conditions set by the court.
In June 2015, a B.C. Supreme Court jury found the pair guilty of terrorism-related charges after they planted what they believed were explosives at the provincial legislature on Canada Day in 2013.


