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Alberta judge gives instructions to jury in murder-conspiracy trial of Coutts protesters

WATCH ABOVE: (From July 2, 2024) The trial continues for two men accused of conspiracy to commit murder at the Coutts border blockade. – Jul 2, 2024

Jurors deciding the fate of two men accused of conspiring to murder police at the Coutts, Alta., border crossing were urged by a judge Wednesday to block out background noise in the high-profile case.

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Justice David Labrenz told jurors to focus on the evidence.

“Try and reach a just verdict,” Labrenz said in his final instructions in the Court of King’s Bench trial in Lethbridge, Alta.

The jury was expected to be sequestered later Wednesday to reach a verdict in the case of Anthony Olienick and Chris Carbert.

The men were arrested after police confiscated weapons and made arrests in shutting down the blockade in early 2022.

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The barricade of vehicles at the Canada-U.S. border crossing choked off traffic for two weeks to protest COVID-19 restrictions and vaccine mandates.

It was one of many demonstrations at the time across the country, as rules aimed at restricting the spread of COVID-19 butted up against individual rights and freedoms.

The Crown presented evidence of guns near the blockade site and statements and text messages from the accused warning that the protest was a last stand against a tyrannical federal government.

The defence argued the two men went to Coutts to make a statement that freedoms must be protected.

Court heard comments from the accused disparaging police, but the defence said that doesn’t equate to a conspiracy to kill.

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