Police suspected two COVID-19 protesters at Coutts, Alta., were set to receive a covert, late-night shipment of guns, but a courier told court Wednesday it was socks, underwear and a guitar.
Jaclyne Martin made the comment while testifying at the Court of King’s Bench trial of Anthony Olienick and Chris Carbert, who are charged with conspiring to kill police at the border blockade.
Martin said she and her partner handed off goods in a camouflage bag to Olienick and Carbert in a farmer’s field near Coutts in February 2022, just days before police made raids and arrests that ended the standoff.
“We were picking up socks and underwear, a grinder (hand-held power tool) and a guitar,” Martin told court under questioning from Olienick’s lawyer, Marilyn Burns.
“When I arrived (at the drop site), I saw a black SUV parked, still running,” she added.
“Two females (were) on the inside. The interior light was on, so I could see them. I saw Chris Carbert and Tony Olienick standing talking to the females in the SUV.”
She said she drove past them into a second field, turned her truck around, backed onto a hill with the headlights on and waited.
After the women left, Martin said, she handed most of the goods over to Olienick and Carbert.
“The guitar stayed in the truck,” she added.
Martin’s testimony is set against evidence delivered earlier in the trial by female undercover police officers who infiltrated the blockade disguised as fellow protesters.
One of those officers testified to a conversation she and her undercover partner had with Olienick in which they asked him if he needed them to pick up anything.
She said Olienick replied that he had a package coming in. When they asked if it was guns, Olienick and Carbert made eye contact with each other and didn’t deny it, the officer said. She said she took that as silent confirmation that the shipment was weapons.
Police have presented evidence that they found guns, ammunition and body armour near the blockade site. They later seized more guns along with ammunition and two pipe bombs at Olienick’s acreage.
During cross-examination by Crown prosecutor Steven Johnston, Martin said she faces criminal charges stemming from the blockade, which tied up traffic for two weeks at the busy Canada-U.S. border crossing in protest of COVID-19 restrictions and vaccine mandates.
She said she was charged with mischief over $5,000 and possessing a weapon dangerous to the public peace.
“Those are all charges related to your involvement in the evidence you just gave today. You know that?” said Johnston.
“Sure. OK. Yes,” Martin replied.
The Crown has argued the accused were intent on killing Mounties to keep the blockade intact.
One undercover officer testified Olienick characterized police as pawns of “devil” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and told them if police tried to shut down the blockade he would “slit their throats.”
Burns has told the jury Olienick was part of a group who believed they had a responsibility to act against a totalitarian government seeking to end individual freedoms.