Dutch police installed covert microphones and cameras in home linked to accused in Amanda Todd case - Action News
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British Columbia

Dutch police installed covert microphones and cameras in home linked to accused in Amanda Todd case

A Dutch police officer testified Monday that he was part of a team of investigators who mounted a covert operation to install microphones and video cameras in a residence linked to the man accused of sextorting Amanda Todd.

Court hears police in the Netherlands secretly searched residence a month before Aydin Coban was arrested

Two mugshots of Aydin Coban. He is wearing a black shirt with white stripes. He has medium-length grey flowing hair amd a black French beard.
Aydin Coban is shown in photographs from the time of his arrest, entered into an exhibit at his trial in B.C. Supreme Court. The 44-year-old has pleaded not guilty to extortion, possession of child pornography and child luring in relation to the cyberbullying of Amanda Todd. (B.C. Supreme Court)

A Dutch police officer testified Monday about leading a team of investigators who mounted a covert operation to install microphones and video cameras in a residence linked to the man accused of sextorting Amanda Todd.

Chief Insp. Joerie van Schijndel said he and three other officers entered the rural holiday bungalow in December 2013, a month before Aydin Coban's arrest, taking care to ensure no one was home when they walked through the front door.

He said they installed microphones and cameras and made copies of the contents of computers and hard drives over the course of two days all under the scrutinyof a judge, who watchedthem make their way through the residence via a secure video and audio link.

In dramatic testimony, van Schijndel who now leads the Dutch national police force's digital intrusion team said he was alsopart of the surveillance team that kept tabs on Coban from a nearby location over the next month.

He returnedwith two of his officerstothe bungalow onJan.13, 2014 to arrest thesuspect.

'We went through the front door'

Crown prosecutors saypolice in the Netherlands were crucial in linkingCoban to an array of social media accounts used to harass Amanda Todd, who died by suicide at the age of 15.

The 44-year-oldhas pleaded not guilty to five criminal charges, including extortion, possession of child pornography and child luring. He is not charged with Todd's death.

Van Schijndel was one of three Dutch investigators to testify Monday.

He described the arrest in detail, saying he and two plainclothes colleagues had planned to handcuff Coban as he sat behind the screen of his computer in one of the bungalow's two bedrooms.

But things didn't work out exactly as they hoped.

"It was a silent entry. We went through the front door," van Schijndel said.

Chief Insp. Joerie van Schijndel leaves the New Westminster courthouse after testifying at the trial of Aydin Coban, who is accused of extortion, possession of child pornography and child luring in relation to Amanda Todd. (Jason Proctor/CBC)

The officer said Coban emerged from the bedroom to go to the bathroom as police stood in the hallway.

"There was a mirror in the hallway.Through the mirror you could see him coming, and he could probably also see from his point of view the police officers standing in the living room," van Schijndel said.

Van Schijndel said the arrest started in the hallway, but moved into another bedroom as his men struggled to control Coban. The officer said the suspectcuthis right eye on a radiator before he was handcuffed.

Once they had Coban under control, van Schijndel said the men blindfolded him and stuck headphones over his ears so that he could not see the police officers removing the microphones and video cameras that had been hiddenin the home.

A prosecutor asked van Schijndelif he could identify the man he had arrested.

Heturned to his left and looked directly at the prisoner's box before pointingat Coban.

Face-to-face with accused

Earlier Monday, Insp.Sjaak Meervelddescribed Coban's appearance as theysat opposite each otherduring 10 hoursof interviews conductedin January 2014 after the arrest.

Meerveld said he was a tactical investigator with the child exploitation team when hemet Coban at a "complex for arrested persons" in the province of Utrecht.

A Dutch police investigator identified this picture taken from a passport photo as depicting Aydin Coban. The picture was entered into evidence in relation to a man who two witnesses knew as 'Jay.' (B.C. Supreme Court)

He said he and another officer satacross atable from Coban, who was given a transcript of their conversation at the end of every meeting.

"Mr.Coban had light-coloured skin, long straight hair,black with a little bit of grey," Meerveld said.

"I have seen him both with a light beard anda little bit of stubble,but also clean shaven."

Coban is now clean shaven, with grey hair slicked back to a point just above the open-necked collar of the untucked, dark colouredshirts he wears each day.

The Crown prosecutor who questioned Meerveld did not ask the officer what they talked about during the interviews.

Meerveld also identified Coban from a passport photograph entered into the trial as an exhibit during testimony from earlier witnesses.

Two women testified last week about their separate attempts to rent an apartment in Rotterdam from a man they knew as "Jay"who provided them with rental contracts that included a passportpage containing the photograph of the man Meerveldrecognizedas Coban.

Extorted intoso-called 'sex-shows'

Crown prosecutors claim Cobanbegan communicating with Amanda Todd in 2009 after coming into possession of images of her exposing her breasts and sticking her hand in her underwear.

During the next three years when Todd was between the ages of 12 and 15 years old the prosecution says Coban hid behind 22 fake social media identities to extortTodd into performing so-called "sex shows" in exchange for promises not to sharegraphic images of her with family, friends and classmates.

Amanda Todd smiles for a picture. She is wearing a white top.
Amanda Todd is seen in a photograph entered into evidence at the trial of the man accused of extorting and harassing her. Todd died in October 2012. (B.C. Supreme Court)

Amanda Todd's namehas been closely linked with the impacts of cyberbullying ever sincea video discovered after her death in October 2012 went viral.

Dutch police witnesses have testified both in personand through a video link from the Netherlands about the two separate searches of the bungalow linked to Coban both the covert operation mounted byvan Schijndeland his colleagues in December 2013 and thesearch that culminated in hisarrest a month later.

Van Schijndel testified that he wasinvolved in a surveillance operation mounted from a nearby bungalow used by Dutch police in the weeks between the first secret search and Coban's arrest.

He said he returned three or four timesfor three to four hours at a time, and observedonly "the defendant, Aydin Coban" going in and out of the residence.

In cross-examination, Coban'slawyers asked one of his friends last weekabout the accused'sattempts to drum up work as a computer repairperson, suggestingit was not unusual for himto be in possession of multiple digital devices.

Prosecutors claim Coban was using a neighbour's Wi-Fito go online, introducing evidence that suggesteda router in a nearby home had been accessed by other computers.

Van Schijndel gave evidence about discovering acable in the home linked to Coban, which he said ledfrom a computer tower to an antenna.

Coban's lawyers have repeatedly questioned whether the trees surrounding the bungalow would have make it difficult to access a Wi-Firouter outside the brick walls of the residence.

The trial is expected to last seven weeks.