eric portrayed himself as the head of a local package delivery company that also operated in a “gray area” outside of its legitimate business — using police and other connections to “make (criminal) charges go away.”
“it was not a ‘gray area’ but an illegal area,” bertrand’s lawyer, bobby russon, said monday.
rcmp sgt. shelly schedewitz, who interviewed bertrand on the day of his arrest, was on the witness stand monday. during cross-examination, russon argued his client was never told he did not have to speak with the investigator.
russon also questioned whether bertrand even knew the specifics of the serious charge he was facing before the young man began opening up about his communications with far-right organizations and describing acts of harassment and vandalism committed in windsor.
bertrand is not on trial for any specific act of terrorism, simply for allegedly making an effort to join and participate in a neo-nazi terrorist network placed on canada’s list of terrorist organization in early 2021. atomwaffen division has been implicated in serious crimes, including murder.
what put bertrand on the radar of the rcmp’s integrated national security enforcement team (inset) was his arrest by windsor police in april 2021 in connection to a series of hate attacks earlier that year at a same-sex couple’s home and at the trans wellness ontario office on tecumseh road east that offers transgender support.