Send this page to someone via email

STRATHROY, Ont. – A taxi driver who was in the car when a terrorist sympathizer was gunned down by officers in southwestern Ontario has slammed police, saying they needlessly put his life in jeopardy.

Terry Duffield has told The London Free Press that police didn’t warn him as he waited in the driveway for five minutes for Aaron Driver before the 24-year-old got into the back of his cab.

He says police swarmed them only after he began reversing the car out of the driveway, which is when he says Driver set off an explosive device.

Duffield says a pack of cigarettes saved his life because he reached over for them just as the explosion went off and bullets started flying – saying the seat protected him, not police.

READ MORE: Aaron Driver died of a gunshot wound after detonating explosive: police

Driver died during a confrontation with RCMP in Strathroy, Ont., last Wednesday after making a martyrdom video that suggested he was planning to detonate a homemade bomb in an urban centre.

Story continues below advertisement

Driver had been under a court order not to associate with any terrorist organizations or to use a computer or cellphone, but he wasn’t under continuous surveillance despite concern he might participate or contribute to the activity of a terrorist group.

“As I’m laying on the ground, I hear an officer say, loud, ‘He’s still twitching.’ Then I hear pop, pop, pop, pop, like four or five shots, and then it was complete silence,” Duffield, 47, told the London Free Press. Tweet This

Ontario Provincial Police, who took over the investigation into his death, said Tuesday that Driver died from a gunshot wound, but gave no other details.

READ MORE: Aaron Driver timeline: Police intercepted terror suspect in a cab heading to London, Ont.

Driver moved to Strathroy earlier this year to live with his sister.

Canadian authorities were tipped off about his activities by the FBI and confronted him hours later.

Driver’s father has said his son was a troubled child but appeared to have turned his life around after converting to Islam. But then the father said CSIS contacted him in January 2015 about disturbing posts his son had made on social media.

Duffield told The London Free Press he has post-traumatic stress from the incident

Story continues below advertisement

“Why did the police put my life jeopardy? They did absolutely nothing to help me at any time,” Duffield told the newspaper.