Canadian Nathaniel Veltman, who ran over Muslim family with his truck, convicted of murder

A Canadian man who used his truck to run down a Muslim family out for a walk was found guilty on Thursday in Canada’s first murder trial in which jurors were asked to consider a terrorism motive related to white supremacy.

Nathaniel Veltman, 22, was convicted of four counts of first degree or premeditated murder, and one count of attempted murder. He faces up to life in prison when sentenced.

He acknowledged striking the Afzaal family with his pickup truck in June 2021 in London, Ontario, which left three generations of the family dead and a young boy orphaned.

The prosecution argued at trial that he was motivated by white supremacist ideology and sought to intimidate or terrorise Muslims.

Tabinda Bukhari, mother of Madiha Salman, reads a statement while being joined by family and friends outside the Superior Court of Justice after a verdict in the Nathaniel Veltman murder trial was reached on Thursday. Photo: Canadian Press via AP

The defence said he had suffered a mental decline – which did not, however, meet the requirements for an insanity plea – and was in “a state of extreme confusion” after consuming hallucinogenic psilocybin mushrooms that weekend.

“Today’s verdict is a monumental step in the fight against hate and Islamophobia,” Imam Abdul Fattah Twakkal said outside the courthouse.

“It sets a precedent against white nationalist terrorism,” he said. “It sends a clear message that such hate has no place in our society.”

But he added, “the evidence that came out of this trial shows us that there is still a lot of work to be done to ensure that the next radicalised young man is not out there.”

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Tabinda Bukhari, the mother of one of the adult victims, told reporters: “The enduring grief, trauma and the irreplaceable void left by the loss of multiple generations of one family has pierced us profoundly.”

The verdict, she added, provides “some solace”.

The jury in the almost 10-week trial heard Veltman had penned a “terrorist manifesto”, found on his computer, in which he espoused white nationalism and described his hate for Muslims.

He “dressed like a soldier,” wearing body armour and a helmet, with a “crusader T-shirt” with a red cross, prosecutor Fraser Ball said in closing arguments earlier this week. “He was hunting for Muslims to kill,” he said.

Imam Abdul Fattah Twakkal speaks to the media outside the Superior Court of Justice after a verdict in the Nathaniel Veltman murder trial was reached on Thursday. Photo: Canadian Press via AP

When Veltman passed the Afzaal family on a London street on that warm Sunday evening, the Crown lawyer said, he turned his pickup truck around and accelerated “pedal to the metal,” jumping the curb as he drove into them.

Bodies flew into the air.

Salman Afzaal, 46, his wife Madiha Salman, 44, their 15-year-old daughter Yumnah and her grandmother Talat Afzaal, 74, were killed. A nine-year-old boy orphaned in the ramming suffered serious but non-life-threatening injuries.

Bits of the victims’ clothing were found embedded in the grill of Veltman’s truck after he surrendered in a nearby car park. He told police he had wanted to “send a strong message” against Muslim immigration.

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Ball said that message was “brutal and terrifying: leave this country or you and your loved ones could be next.”

The defence argued that a combination of mental disorders, childhood traumas and drug use left Veltman feeling detached or disconnected from reality.

The attack two years ago “changed Canadian Muslims’ relationship with their country,” said Omar Khamissa, head of the National Council of Canadian Muslims. “For the first time for many of us, we felt unsafe and targeted just for walking down the street.”

Former federal minister Omar Alghabra said on X, formerly Twitter, that this case was “an example of how hateful words could lead to radicalisation which could lead to deadly violence”,

Peter Ketcheson and Christopher Hicks (left), defence lawyers for Nathaniel Veltman, speak to the media outside the Superior Court of Justice in Windsor, Canada on Thursday. Photo: Canadian Press via AP

Defence lawyer Christopher Hicks said that Veltman was, after the verdict, “in shock, because he knows he’s looking at 25 years in jail without hope of parole”.

A date for a sentencing hearing will be scheduled on December 1.

The slaying was the deadliest anti-Muslim attack in Canada since a shooting at a mosque in Quebec City in 2017 that left six dead. The perpetrator of that shooting was not accused of terrorism.

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