
Upgrade to charge against man with al-Qaida ties as punishment for alleged terrorism
MONTREAL — A federal prosecutor has announced he will invoke a little-used provision on terrorism in the Criminal Code that would allow a man with al-Qaida ties to be sentenced to life in prison for allegedly uttering threats.
Prosecutor Samuel Monfette-Tessier told a Montreal courtroom on Monday that he’s upgrading the charge against Mohamed Abdullah Warsame using Section 83.27 of the code. The maximum sentence for uttering threats is usually five years, the prosecutor said, but now if the accused is convicted he could spend life in prison.
“This also means the charge of uttering threats is now considered a terrorism offence,” Monfette-Tessier told the court.
Warsame, 51, was charged last month with uttering threats after allegedly telling an employee at a Montreal homeless shelter on May 27 that he wanted to build bombs and detonate them on public transit. The Old Brewery Mission, which runs several homeless shelters in Montreal, contacted police. RCMP took charge of the investigation and announced Warsame’s arrest on June 5.