QAnon Figure Applies for Intervenor Status in Tamara Lich Criminal Trial
Norman Traversy asks judge to let him intervene in Tamara Lich’s criminal trial so he can prosecute Justin Trudeau for “terrorism” and “war crimes”
A Canadian sovereign citizen is applying for “intervenor status” in the criminal trial of Freedom Convoy leaders Tamara Lich and Chris Barber.
According to papers filed November 6 at the Superior Court of Justice in Ottawa, Norman Traversy is asking Judge Heather Perkins-McVety to give him standing in the trial so that he may present “new evidence.”
Traversy’s application accuses Justin Trudeau of “terrorism” and “war crimes.”
Recommended by “Q”: Traversy is best known for a leading a mob of far-right figures and anti-vaxxers to the US Embassy in Ottawa on Canada Day 2020 to serve sovereign citizen-style documents requesting Donald Trump and the Mexican government open a joint investigation into Justin Trudeau.
Video from the event, in which Traversy led hundreds of people in chanting the QAnon slogan “Where We Go One We Go All,” was subsequently shared by the figure known as “Q,” leading Traversy to become a kind of folk hero among Canada’s QAnon movement.
“Kabuki theatre”: While the application does not specify any “new evidence,” it does denounce the entire criminal trial as a diversionary tactic:
“The case of R vs Lich is Kabuki Theatre; a fishing expedition and a distraction meant to divert attention from the real criminals — Justin Trudeau and his Privy Council … We are askng for status in this proceeding. In so doing with this fresh evidence, we will shine a light on the dark deeds that our ‘leaders’ have committed.”
Ukrainian cavalrymen: Among the more eyebrow raising allegations detailed in the application is Traversy’s assertion that Justin Trudeau imported units of Ukrainian mercenaries into Canada to end the Freedom Convoy.
“The forces deployed against the Freedom Convoy were neither Canadian Armed Forces, nor any Canadian Police Force,” the application states. “Many witnesses clearly heard them speaking Ukraininan.”
"These mercenaries were seen, photographed, and recorded being flown in by UN jets to airports in Sudbury and North Bay."
The application alleges that a group of police horses deployed to clear convoy occupiers were not with the Toronto Police Service, as indicated by police, but were, in fact, “foreign horsemen” — specifically “Ukrainian mercenaries who had only learned to ride in the very recent past.”
Don’t blame horses for war crimes: The application goes on to accuse Trudeau and his “foreign mercenaries” of violating “the Law of War, an international treaty that prohibits targeting civilians.”
One alleged war crime detailed in the application involves an incident where Ukrainian cavalrymen purportedly murdered a convoy supporter, a claim that is unsupported by any evidence nor were any deaths ever reported:
“One man was knocked to the ground and his head was trampled by a horse. He was swiftly dragged behind the mercenaries' line. A witness stated that his skull was caved in and he died.”
Traversy is careful not to blame the horses themselves, explaining that they were “draught horses, not horses trained to be ridden” and “neither the riders nor the horses knew what they were doing.”
“This is why they trampled the protesters, something that a horse would never purposely do.”
Here is a full copy of Norman Traversy’s application for intervenor status: