Warning: This story contains disturbing details.

The 23-year-old man convicted of murder in the 2021 attack on a Muslim family in London, Ont. — in what the judge called a “textbook” case of terrorism — is seeking to appeal his convictions, his lawyer says.

Word of the appeal move comes less than two months after Nathaniel Veltman was sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 25 years in the June 6, 2021, attack. It left four members of the Afzaal family dead and a boy, who was nine years old at the time, injured and orphaned.

Yumnah Afzaal, 15, her parents — Madiha Salman, 44, an engineer, and Salman Afzaal, 46, a physiotherapist — were killed, as was family matriarch Talat Afzaal, 74, a teacher and artist.

Veltman was convicted of four counts of first-degree murder and one count of attempted murder in November following a 10-week jury trial in Windsor. His sentencing hearings, in London, were held earlier this year.

WATCH | Relatives of the Afzaal family react to judge’s terror label in 2021 attack:

Afzaal family’s murder ‘textbook’ terrorism, judge rules

A judge in London, Ont., ruled the actions of the man who ran down a Muslim family with his truck in 2021, killing four people, were a ‘textbook example of terrorist motive and intent.’ Nathaniel Veltman was already sentenced to life in prison for murdering four members of the Afzaal family.

Defence lawyer Christopher Hicks said Monday his client has filed an inmate notice of appeal with the court to extend his appeal deadline past 30 days and that a solicitor’s notice of appeal will be filed within a month or two. 

A notice of appeal has to be approved by a court in order for it to proceed.

“Why would we want to retrial? Well, we think, first of all, we think he was wrongfully convicted,” Hicks told CBC News.

Lawyer outlines reasons for appeal attempt

Hicks believes they have “very arguable grounds” for an appeal, including that a statement Veltman gave to investigators shouldn’t have been admitted to trial, and Crown prosecutors addressed jurors in a way that was “unfair and prejudicial.”

“It was ongoing until objection was made by the trial judge, so [Peter] Ketcheson and I are very interested in that as well,” he said, referring to the convicted man’s other lawyer. 

“It takes about a year to two years to get an appeal heard in the Court of Appeal, so it’ll take that long. If we are successful, there are two possible outcomes from an appeal, but the most likely one here, the only likely one, is a new trial.”

The Afzaals were out for an evening walk in the area of Hyde Park and South Carriage roads when they were struck by a pickup truck driven by Veltman, according to an agreed statement of facts from the trial.

At a sentencing hearing in February, Superior Court Justice Renee Pomerance told the court that his actions on that day constituted terrorist activity and she refused to refer to the convicted killer by his name. The case marked the first time terror charges were considered under Canadian law against someone following a white nationalist ideology.

The Crown had argued Veltman was motivated by political, ideological or religious ideas when he drove his truck into the family and that he had targeted the Afzaals because of their Muslim faith.

The defence lawyers argued their client didn’t intend to kill the family and made a case for him to be convicted of manslaughter instead.

‘Much work to be done to address hatred’

After the guilty verdict in November, Tabinda Bukhari, Madiha Salman’s mother, told reporters the attack wasn’t just a crime against the Muslim community, but “rather an attack against the safety and security of all Canadians.”

“This trial and verdict are a reminder there is still much work to be done to address hatred in all forms that lives in our communities,” Bukhari said.

WATCH | Family of the Afzaals reject convicted killer’s apology:

Afzaal family members reject killer’s apology

Relatives of the family killed in a 2021 London, Ont., truck attack said the convicted killer’s apology at a sentencing hearing Tuesday came too late and rang hollow. ‘This is one more strategy in a series of ploys that have not stopped for two and a half years,’ said Hina Islam, aunt of Madiha Salman, who was one of the four people killed.

During the sentencing hearing in January, the convicted man told court he couldn’t “undo this pain and suffering. I cannot turn back time. … I plan to take every opportunity available to me to better myself.”

“Over the course of the days, months and years following June 6, I have not fully grasped but I have seen the extent of the pain and suffering that my actions have caused.”



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