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       Court hears accused in Coutts blockade thought protest could lead to
       'war'
        
 (HTM) Source
        
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       One of two men accused of conspiring to kill Mounties at the border
       blockade at Coutts, Alta., characterized the protest as a last stand
       and told his mother there "will be a war" if police moved in.
        
       "Mom, I am fine. If they start the violence, I am just telling you
       there will be war and casualties of war," read one of the text
       messages relayed in court Tuesday from Chris Carbert's phone.
        
       "The sooner you wake up to what's happening the sooner you'll
       understand why I have to do what I have to do."
        
       Carbert and Anthony Olienick are on trial charged with conspiring to
       commit murder at the blockade, which tied up traffic for two weeks at
       the busy Canada-U.S. border crossing at Coutts in 2022 to protest
       COVID-19 restrictions and vaccine mandates.
        
       Court heard Carbert was determined to see the protest through and that
       there was no going back.
        
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       "Mom I won't be home until laws are passed and the government is
       toppled," he texted her.
        
       She replied, "I thought maybe you would go home for a couple days,
       then go back."
        
       Carbert wrote: "I don't think you truly understand what this is for
       and about. If we lose here, I will likely die in war."
        
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       Around the same time Carbert was texting his mother, he received a
       message from someone else telling him to stay calm and that the
       protest was not worth a criminal record or jail time. The person
       reminded Carbert he has a son.
        
       1:19 Undercover RCMP officer gives testimony as Coutts blockade trial
       continues
        
       Images of guns from Carbert's phone were also shown Tuesday, with some
       of the weapons on a couch or a bed.
        
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       Last week, the trial heard about texts that painted a similar picture
       of rage and determination against any who sought to dismantle the
       blockade.
        
       One message characterized the blockade as "our last stand," while
       another person promised to leave only in "a body bag."
        
       After police made arrests and seized weapons near the blockade, the
       remaining protesters left Coutts peacefully.
        
       Carbert and Olienick are also charged with mischief and possession of
       a weapon for a dangerous purpose. Olienick faces a further charge of
       possessing a pipe bomb.
        
       1:26 Coutts blockade conspiracy trial begins
        
       The Crown has presented witness and physical evidence to argue that
       Olienick and Carbert were conspiring to kill police.
        
       Officers seized weapons, body armour and ammunition in trailers near
       the blockade, along with a firearms licence in Carbert's name.
        
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       They later located at Olienick's home more weapons, buckets of
       ammunition and two pipe bombs.
        
       The Crown has also presented eyewitness testimony from undercover
       officers.
        
       The officers, posing as volunteers at the blockade, told court that
       Olienick said he believed Mounties were the tools of "devil" Prime
       Minister Justin Trudeau and deserved to be hanged. The officers
       testified that Olienick said if police raided the blockade, he would
       "slit their throats."
        
       In a police interrogation video shown to the jury, Olienick denied
       targeting police but said he feared an invasion by United Nations
       troops or Chinese communists.
        
       He characterized himself and others as "sheepdogs" protecting "the
       flock" from tyrannical invaders.
        
       &copy 2024 The Canadian Press
        
        
        
        
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