It went largely unnoticed yesterday when the RCMP announced their investigators were looking into the SNC-Lavalin/JWR/Trudeau affair. It's hard to imagine they're looking at anything other than possible obstruction of justice.
I expect they'll be focusing on s. 139(2) of the Criminal Code that reads:
(2) Every one who wilfully attempts in any manner other than a manner described in subsection (1) to obstruct, pervert or defeat the course of justice is guilty of an indictable offence and liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding ten years.For starters, I don't believe that Justin Trudeau, either alone or in conjunction with Butts and Wernick, went so far as to commit obstruction, perversion or an attempt to defeat the course of justice. Even Jody said as much.
Yet if I'm wrong on 139(2), I have immense difficulty trusting the RCMP to investigate this.
The RCMP has a history of wrongful meddling in parliamentary matters, usually, it seems, to the benefit of the Tories.
Think back to then Commissioner Zaccardelli, who took the unusual step of announcing in the midst of a federal election campaign that Ralph Goodale (of all people, Goodale) was under active RCMP investigation. That was when Paul Martin was trying to get out from under the Chretien-era 'sponsorship scandal.' It was enough of a leg up for Harper to win a minority.
The telling part is that afterwards when Goodale was cleared and Zaccardelli was called before MPs to explain himself and his 'unusual' action in mid-campaign, he simply refused to answer their questions. Lawful questions and the top Mountie clammed up. Now you may have a different idea of 'benefit of the doubt' but I was left with very little doubt that Zac wanted to throw the election to the Conservatives.
Then there was the RCMP pension scandal.
On March 28, [2007] RCMP officials provided damning testimony to the public accounts committee, saying there were major accounting irregularities in the force's pension and insurance plans in 2002.
The officers said when they tried to report the wrongdoing, they were either stonewalled or punished by top officials in the force, including Zaccardelli.
Some of those same officials appeared as witnesses Monday, alongside Zaccardelli.
But Zaccardelli said none of them had ever been punished for reporting wrongdoing.
Zaccardelli denied that Chief Supt. Fraser Macaulay, who was sent to work at the Department of National Defence, was punished for reporting his concerns.Somehow the whole scandal went nowhere and Zaccardelli resigned with his pension intact.
More recently there was the Duffy/Harper/Wright affair. Duffy refused to play ball about the housing allowance scandal (it's a long, convoluted saga). The RCMP, under then Commissioner Bob Paulson, was called in.
It was said that Harper's crew figured that they could launch a criminal pogrom that would either give Duffy a heart attack or bankrupt him in legal costs.
Sure enough the RCMP came up with a 'kitchen sink' list of charges, 31 charges. When was the last time you heard of somebody, anybody indicted on 31 charges that didn't involve massive drug trafficking or multiple murders? When was the last time you heard of someone indicted on 31 charges for padding the expense account? Then again, when was the last time you heard of anyone standing trial on 31 charges and winding up convicted on none, not one, the learned trial judge concluding that crimes were committed, just not by Duffy?
That was the proceeding that gave birth to the 'immaculate bribe' offence in which Duffy was supposedly guilty of taking a bribe for which no one was culpable of giving him that very bribe. It was the criminal law equivalent of the virgin birth.
Paulson's team of topnotch investigators went at length into some evidence while ignoring the smoking gun that created the entire scandal and became Harper's nightmare.
I was inadvertently involved in Duffy's defence when I pointed out to a member of his legal team that the truth was obvious from the Duffy email that someone sent to Bob Fife who then broke the story.
The email, written while the scheme was still very private, outlined the terms of the deal Duffy had been given by Wright and Harper. Duffy would do certain things. They would do certain things. He would be put into funds needed to pay off his Senate expenses tab. The most critical part of that initial email was that it was contemporaneous. It set out a series of events, each of which subsequently happened, before Bob Fife got his hands on it. Afterwards, only one person's evidence was consistent with that telltale email - Duffy's. Every one else's story was a flimsy contrivance and, at trial, that's precisely what Justice Vaillancourt found.
After Duffy was acquitted and on reading the Reasons for Judgment I was left with the powerful belief that this whole thing had been a set up and that the RCMP surely must have been party to that.
After all these shenanigans it is difficult for me to believe that the RCMP can be trusted in anything dealing with the Liberals, particularly Justin Trudeau and the SNC-Lavalin affair. That's especially true as we near another federal election campaign. We should not tolerate a Ralph Goodale II.
I have little sympathy for Justin Trudeau or Butts or Wernick. They went too far, crossed ethical lines, and that should have consequences. Would we have demanded anything less for Harper? I just don't believe that a criminal investigation with an election two months away is warranted, especially if it is in the hands of the RCMP.
Trust, once broken, is hard to restore. Trust, repeatedly broken, can be extremely hard to rebuild.
ReplyDeleteEverything I've read about JWR
(esp. the timing of her 'whistle-blowing', trying to put a r.w. judge on the Supreme Ct. and the taping of a colleague)
makes me wonder why Jr ever exposed his gov't to this kind of treachery.
Great vetting.
However, after the ERRE and TMX betrayals, a certain amount of schadenfreude is in order.
Meanwhile in the real world ....
http://news.cornell.edu/stories/2019/08/study-fracking-prompts-global-spike-atmospheric-methane#.XVWCKs2Qvp4.twitter
What exactly is a "r.w. judge"?
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteI believe, Fred, that it's a reference to a judge Wilson-Raybould was touting for elevation to the SCC. If I recall correctly her favoured candidate was a Conservative and JT wouldn't hear of it.
I'm not sure that has much if any bearing on the SNC-Lavalin business. Pretty much inuendo.
Ummm Glen Clark's deck anyone ? Railroading the NDP premier into resigning with a huge steaming nothing burger. And then actually doing nothing when the BC Neo-Liberals stole our railroad. Why hasn't the NDP taken a re-look at the 6 million payoff to "guilty??" people that got a deal no one was authorised to give ? Lot's of examples of the RCMP with their fingers on the scales of justice.
ReplyDeleteJustin won't apologize for being a scheming brat, the little zit. He only apologizes in emotional terms on behalf of Canada, not for his personal good self, because he's perfect and never does anything wrong. Simple Simon agrees and says that Ethics Commissioner Dion is wrong. Glad that's all cleared up then, because even Mound agrees it wasn't criminal obstruction of justice. And back in early February, so as not to be flung from the Libs because she enjoyed the perks as a cabinet minister, JWR said that there wasn't anything criminal about all the pressure she was on the sharp end of despite carping on about the very same, so she's malleable. Off the hook then, the shiteload of Lib PMO grifters and schemers, free to flash their Pepsodent smiles and ask me for my vote. It was all just an "aw shucks we didn't really mean it, boys will be boys" bit of horsing around. Phew. Thank goodness for that.
ReplyDeleteBut wait! Say the RCMP want to investigate. The RCMP are secret Conservatives so shouldn't be trusted to investigate the Liberals anyway, you say?
Might as well chuck the country in if that's truly the case. And in my general rage today, that's about the way I feel. Completely f**cked by liars and cheats professing to be bound by the rule of law. Not an institution left to trust.
BM
BM, enlighten me. I didn't make bare allegations. I gave facts that I hope we would all be aware of. Am I mistaken as to these events or my conclusions?
ReplyDeleteI followed the Zac episodes in part because when he beat his retreat to Interpol my own dear classmate, Bill "Bubbles" Elliott, a personal friend and Tory backroom guy right out of law school, was installed as the first 'civilian' commissioner of the RCMP. It was the first overtly partisan political appointment to head the service.
I carry no brief for Liberals, especially JT, but I believe the RCMP has something of a sullied record that's never been addressed. Justice Vaillancourt's Reasons for Judgment to me are a tacit indictment of the RCMP and the prosecutorial service.
I saw the 'fix' right from the git go. I wrote about it extensively on this blog. If there was ever a Smoking Gun it was that Duffy/Fife email.
Trust me, when a judge of Vaillancourt's stature finds that crimes have been committed only not by the defendant but by others not before him, that's screaming "corruption." That began in the PMO and ultimately passed to the investigators and the prosecutors.
I could be wrong about all that. If there's another explanation please enlighten me.
I don't think the national police agency would try it again and I don't think the appointment of Ralph Goodale to serve as Minister of Public Safety was not a masterstroke. It's perhaps the most sage thing Justin has done in his first, possibly last term in office.
Remember , a DPV is perfectly legal. Denying one could, if the reasons for denial are unsavory , be obstruction of justice.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteThat's a novel idea, Rumley.
.. folks love to complicate this matter.. some folks love to play to partisan positions on the matter.. it gets blurry & and due to Mainstream muddying of the water (a fine tactic) what is the electorate to make of it.. (quick, you have 10 seconds of the general public's attention or interest) 30 % will vote Conservative out of some vestigial belief or injured brain syndrome or because their granfather did.. about the same or more will vote Liberal regardless of anything.. cuz Grandma always did.. that leaves the table scraps for the NDP .. approx 15% and approx 50 % of Canadian won't vote anyways.. How do you like my math ?? The Greens ? I don't believe they can dent the 'conservative' vote much.. In Alberta, Sask and Manitiba so they will need to earn Liberal and NDP votes.. and ideally, at the very least, have a real seat at the table.. and hmm.. those Indy seats.. Mrs Phipott, Ms Wilson-Raybould.. they could play too..
ReplyDeleteI guess my point is.. nobody really cares.. about the Trudeau's in India or hangin with the Agga Can, nope, don't care about Scheer as flabby froth talking point slinger, or getting to 'know him', or an. NDP guy in a turban. They have jobs, children, tasks, responsibilities.. and by my informal count, barely care there's an idiot in The White House. Scheer ? Who cares what 'strategies' emanate via Hamish and the war room. Gerald Butts ? Who? Who cares?.. Warren Kinsella ? One might pay attention or care if they're on Twitter.. Scheer blathers daily.. the media jumps for him.. especially PostMedia.. who are just freaky silly and a complete sellout. The boss here suggest that in her mind Trudeau will keep a majority.. and the 'conservatives will be look for a new leader under the Christmas tree...
ReplyDeleteYour "boss" could be onto something, Sal. I hope it's not a majority. Not when you're elected on a platform you have no real commitment to implement by a minority of less than two out of five who turn out to vote.
As Teddy Roosevelt argued, those who are elected on promises they later fail to keep should be run out of office. We once understood that.
According to Butts, Trudeau wore a business suit for nearly all the photo ops in India, except for a few wearing local bridegroom clothes for his wife which were the only ones to make the news. Kind of like how Stanfield caught the football half a dozen times but the fumble was the only one to make the news.
ReplyDeleteI find the Dion report with its novel interpretation of personal enrichment was tailor made to draw out the hidden Con supporters masquerading as Greens or disillusioned Liberals. The comments are just a little too well crafted given how quickly they appeared after the report. Splitting the vote is their only hope of propelling Scheer into power.
There are a lot of interests who want him in power. The US style health insurers are just one, while Andy talks about his mom getting free health care, he of course will allow a second health system to be started which will quickly gut the public one. The rich can already choose to pay for health care and keep themselves out of the queue thus helping the rest of us, but they currently have to leave the country for treatment. So while it is touted as freedom of choice, it is really again just about making it cheaper for the rich to pay for their health care and eventually not have to pay into the public system at all.
Another example is the energy industry. Trudeau will get TMX built so Canada can make some money selling pavement to the world (you only release CO2 when you burn it; keeping it below the ground or on the ground doesn't do that). Paradoxically Scheer will end up ensuring TMX does not get built, so the energy industry can continue to stiff the government by having subsidiaries sell to each other over the border so that the price at crossing is as low as possible which makes the royalty as low as possible. They don't want us selling "their" bitumen to anyone else, because they will need it when the high depletion rate fracking wells are done.
Climate change, while real is actually a red herring in all this, and is being used to try and discredit the Liberals which anyone with half a brain knows will only benefit the Cons. The pipe dream that somehow we will not put the Cons in power by finger wagging at Trudeau supporting the energy industry is straight out of the Con war room. In reality, our GHG contribution is small in absolute terms, but we are leveraging it to fund the research where we punch far and away above our weight. We can virtue signal by fractionally reducing the world's GHGs while the next battery breakthroughs are made elsewhere or we can make the breakthroughs here. It's likely only one or two more before the avalanche happens that replaces over three quarters of the cars with electrics probably in 5 years and starts seriously decarbonizing the trucks and even planes. I'd like to see those cars and batteries made by us.
ReplyDeleteAnon, you should spend more time reading and less time writing. Canada is not a major emitter of GHGs? We are in the Top Ten for overall emissions and in the Top Three for per capita emissions. Yes, our tiny little country, with 0.5% of the global population, is in the Top Ten overall emitters. If Trudeau manages to expand bitumen production as projected we could easily move up two or three rankings in the Top Ten. So, please, don't peddle that bullshit here.
As for Dion's report you exhibit the modern tendency of seeing a dark conspiracy when you don't like or perhaps even don't understand the decision. I guess that takes all the worry out of being wrong, eh? To me it's sometimes a sign of a feeble mind.
Interesting point about selling bitumen as pavement. Let's not forget the market in selling it to First Nations to pitch their birch bark canoes. Well there's this rule that holds he who propounds must prove. You propound that the bitumen we export is used for road building. Where's your proof or are you just pulling that out of your ass too?
So this is an issue of saving the poor from the rich, protecting health care, and building battery powered airplanes. Is there any nonsense you haven't thrown in?
There was a time when specious logic and conspiracy theories were the preserve of the right. I wish it could have stayed there but, sadly, it has spread.
Yes it is true our emissions are higher than our weight, about 3 times higher in fact, yet it remains 1.6% of the global amount overall. So we can drop them to zero by drastic means and have negligible effect, or we can use the money to develop solutions that can be exported and actually affect the other 98% of emissions. We invented the telephone because of our long distances and we can develop real solutions because we use more fossil fuels per capita and so anything we come up with can be test driven here. Other countries are working on solutions but Canada has been a world leader in the past and can be today. Even the slight nudge of the current carbon tax pushes industry to solve problems. When car companies automate to reduce labour, which is only 7% of the price of a car, a small nudge is often all that is needed.
ReplyDeletePlease try to get better material than claiming I have a feeble mind or am otherwise not as smart as you are. Your efforts to depose our current PM will clearly produce a government that will not do anything for climate change and make most of us poorer in the long run because others will do something. Fortunately, putting the Cons in power will not cause the climate catastrophe you predict, because that ship has sailed and major efforts are now being made, such as the 1000 km battery and the high energy flow batteries that yes, could power airplanes.
I'm sure you actually know that, which is why you seem not to care that your efforts could put the Cons in power, with all the dismantling of our current systems that will entail. But your desire to say "don't blame me" just in case will simply let other countries develop the solutions and sell them back to us, just as we now sell our trees to others and buy the furniture from them.
"Remember , a DPV is perfectly legal. Denying one could, if the reasons for denial are unsavory , be obstruction of justice.
ReplyDelete3:14 AM, August 16, 2019
The Mound of Sound said...
That's a novel idea, Rumley."
Blocking the DPA as obstruction of Justice ... puts the shoe on the other foot. I love it.
..........................................
Mound:
This type of 'innuendo' would render our courts as useless as many of those south of the border.
"Jody Wilson-Raybould recommended in 2017 that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau nominate a conservative Manitoba judge to be chief justice of the Supreme Court, even though he wasn't a sitting member of the top court and had been a vocal critic of its activism on Charter of Rights issues, The Canadian Press has learned."
Anon, it's called 'global' warming. It's a global problem and to mask our part in it by saying we're so small that we don't matter is specious. 1.6 per cent for a 0.5 per cent population share is atrocious.
ReplyDeleteThe Gordion Knot of climate change is the excuse game. There's a big country excuse and a little country excuse. The big countries, i.e. China and India, fall back on per capita emissions which, while growing, are still relatively small compared to ours. The small country excuse that you drag out is that we're just a drop in the bucket because of our minuscule population. Everybody has an excuse, cause to point fingers at others, and that is a big part of why fossil fuel consumption is projected by the IEA, OPEC and others to grow steadily at least to 2040. So, yeah, I think you're talking shit.
As for the prospects of Scheer forming government, I'm sorry but that's not my doing. Your boy couldn't or wouldn't keep his campaign promises. That's what the somewhat less than two out of five Canadian voters who handed him a false majority were banking on. We only get that one day to be heard every four years and when A., most of aren't heard, and B., what the minority of us who are heard have been fed horse shit by the winner, there is no democracy. You might remember there was a day when we realized that the legitimacy of government depended on the informed consent of the governed. We haven't had honest government since before Harper.
Teddy Roosevelt opined that a government elected on promises it doesn't keep should be run straight out of office. He was right.
Your "my guy is better than the other guy" is a piss poor reason that either of them should hold office. So, please, spare me the sophistry.