Man accused in military centre stabbing acquitted of terror charges, not criminally responsible for actions
TORONTO — A man with schizophrenia who attacked soldiers at a military recruitment centre in Toronto was acquitted of terror charges and found not criminally responsible for lesser offences on Monday as a judge ruled his actions didn’t fit the intended scope of the country’s terrorism laws.
Ayanle Hassan Ali’s radical religious and ideological beliefs were largely the result of his mental illness, Judge Ian MacDonnell found as he ordered the 30-year-old to remain at a forensic psychiatry unit while plans for his care could be determined.
“While it is common ground that the defendant had become radicalized, there is no evidence of any connection between him and any other person or group in relation to the attack,” MacDonnell said.
“The intention of Parliament in enacting (the relevant terror legislation) was … not to capture the kind of lone-wolf criminal behaviour engaged in by the defendant,” he added.


