Warning: This story contains distressing details:
It’s hard to imagine a stronger case for terrorism than the one against a man who wrote a white supremacist manifesto, deliberately drove his pickup truck into a London, Ont., family, and confessed to wanting to send a violent message to other Muslims and inspire other angry white men, prosecutors told a sentencing hearing Tuesday.
The sentencing of Nathaniel Veltman that began earlier this month with two days of victim impact statements continued in London with legal arguments on the issue of whether his crimes against five members of the Afzaal family meet the legal definition of terrorism.
Alongside the
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