The lawyer for a woman accused of orchestrating the delivery of five suspicious packages to five separate businesses across Saskatoon says she has been granted bail.

Brian Pfefferle, who is Emerson's lawyer, says she will be living in Alberta, but her trial is still scheduled to begin in May in Saskatoon. 

Her bail conditions include a no-contact order with a large number of people, and she cannot be within 50 kilometers of Saskatoon except to appear in court and for meetings with a psychiatrist. 

The 31-year-old, who is also known as Amanda Totchek, pleaded not guilty last month to five counts each of mischief, public mischief and uttering threats to cause bodily harm.

She was one of three people arrested after the Nov. 29 incidents, which saw several suspicious packages delivered across the city within a two-hour span.

More than $80,200 was spent on emergency response, buildings were evacuated and streets were closed off because of the packages, which tests eventually showed contained baking soda and talcum powder.

The other two who were arrested were released without charges after police alleged Emerson hired the man and woman to deliver the packages. The two were unaware of the contents, police said.

Pfefferle has said Emerson was in police custody when the packages were being delivered. He said she turned herself in to police that morning in connection to charges related to an October incident.

According to a court document, Emerson is accused of sending videos, depicting herself being bound, assaulted and threatened, to a number of people. The videos were intended to mislead a police officer into suspecting a man of committing a crime he did not commit, the documents allege.

She pleaded not guilty to those charges — criminal harassment, public mischief and providing false information — last month.

She’ll be tried in May on both sets of charges.