{"id":28543,"date":"2024-02-23T16:02:31","date_gmt":"2024-02-23T10:32:31","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/farratanews.online\/canadian-man-found-guilty-sentenced-life-for-truck-attack-killing-muslim-family\/"},"modified":"2024-02-23T16:02:31","modified_gmt":"2024-02-23T10:32:31","slug":"canadian-man-found-guilty-sentenced-life-for-truck-attack-killing-muslim-family","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/farratanews.online\/canadian-man-found-guilty-sentenced-life-for-truck-attack-killing-muslim-family\/","title":{"rendered":"Canadian man found guilty, sentenced life for truck attack killing Muslim family"},"content":{"rendered":"
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A Canadian man found guilty of using his pickup truck to kill four members of a Muslim family on Thursday was sentenced to life in prison as a judge ruled that the actions of the “admitted white nationalist” amounted to terrorism.<\/p>\n
Nathaniel Veltman has also been sentenced to a concurrent life sentence for the attempted murder of a boy who survived the 2021 attack.<\/p>\n
Veltman, 23, was found guilty in November of four counts of first-degree murder and one count of attempted murder for hitting the Afzaal family with his truck while they were out for a walk.<\/p>\n
FRENCH TEEN, 13, DIES AFTER DOG SLED CRASH NEAR MONTREAL WHILE ON VACATION WITH FAMILY<\/strong><\/p>\n Prosecutors argued that Veltman purposely ran his truck into the Afzaal family while they were out for a walk on June 6, 2021, to intimidate Muslims into leaving Canada. The defense sought to show he wasn\u2019t criminally liable saying he had mental health problems.<\/p>\n Justice Renee Pomerance, who presided over the trial, delivered her sentencing decision to a packed London, Ontario courtroom on Thursday. Adults found guilty of first-degree murder in Canada face an automatic life sentence with no chance of parole for 25 years.<\/p>\n “The brutality of the crime, its random character, the hatred that fueled that and the consequences … calls for the imposition of the strictest penalty known to Canadian law,” the judge said.<\/p>\n The case was the first time Canada\u2019s terrorism laws were put before a jury in a first-degree murder trial.<\/p>\n In delivering her sentencing decision, Pomerance ruled that Veltman\u2019s actions constituted terrorism.<\/p>\n “The offender did not know the victims. He had never met them. He killed them because they were Muslim,” she said.<\/p>\n “It is an inescapable conclusion that the offender committed a terrorist act. One might go so far as to characterize this as a textbook example of terrorist motive and intent.”<\/p>\n