Gerry Hummel’s latest – the official “Take Back Our BC” design – soon to grace collectible T-shirts and posters around the province!
Category Archives: Canada
Shocking End to Basi-Virk Makes Me Sick – Literally!
What a grand day for the BC Liberals! What a great relief to former Minister Gary Collins! I can’t wait to hear Gordon Campbell praise the Crown, Crown Counsel Berardino, and the Justice system! The Crown bails out of the
Basi-Virk trial! How does that grab you?
Meanwhile I, as a lawyer, feel sick. I kid you not, when I received the news I felt a wave of nausea.
Before going further, it’s not uncommon to “cop a plea”. It’s a gamble the Crown and defense play when the Crown isn’t sure it can make the charges stick, and the defence, knowing full well that they’re guilty as hell, want to make the best of it. BUT, copping a plea usually comes at or near the beginning of the trial, not after years have passed and millions have been spent.
Now, if the accused were not guilty and at this advanced stage of the case Crown was unsure of its case, that would be one thing, but for God’s sake, the accused pled guilty! Not to a reduced charge but what they were charged with!
What then could the Crown have been thinking? What motivated this bizarre, quick ending?
I don’t know the answer, but this much is true: the appointment of Mr. Berardino in the first place has been criticized as putting him in at the very least a perception of conflict of interest. This calls into question the confidence the public has in the ability of the assistant deputy minister of the Criminal Law Division to appoint Crown Counsel without any outside interference. It’s not that I don’t trust the assistant deputy – it’s his boss and his boss’s boss I don’t trust to behave properly.
He’s Crown Counsel selected under the Crown Counsel Act, used when the accused is high profile and it’s desirable that there be no question of the Crown Counsel being in any way compromised. Here’s what the Criminal Justice Branch of the Ministry of Attorney General says “The Criminal Justice Branch operates independently of government and within the justice system. They do not represent the government, the police or the victim of an offence.” (My emphasis)
The reality of it is that Mr. Berardino, whether he knows it himself, was acting for the government in the sense that the government had a huge interest in the outcome. That interest was not as a bystander wondering if Basi and Virk would be convicted but whether or not the evidence pointed to wrongdoing by the government, any of its ministers, even the premier. Surely no one not having just arrived from Mars would doubt that this trial was the political trial of all political trials. Assuming that Mr. Berardino knew this, surely it’s fair to question his judgment in taking the case in the first place.
(I digress to make this point. Lawyers are fond of saying that their code of independence is such that even in a case where conflict appears, they can be counted upon to be the very soul of impartiality. If that’s so, why did we need a Crown Counsel Act in the first place?)
I cast and intend no inferences – I have no evidence that Mr Berardino has ever felt any pressure by the government, make no such allegations, nor ask that any adverse inferences be drawn.
What I do say is that it looks like hell and the “appearance”, the “perception” is awful. Surely common sense would say that since Mr. Berardino acts for the Crown and is paid by the government regularly, he cannot be counsel when that same government has a massive interest in the outcome of the case.
Let’s pause for a moment. It’s important to note that the “Crown” and the “government” are not the same thing. In the old legal saw, “the Crown neither wins nor loses – it simply places the evidence fairly before the court.” The question is not whether or not Mr. Berardino should have acted for the Crown but should he have acted where the evidence might embarrass the Crown’s agent, the provincial government?
The law is abundantly clear on the test to be applied: here is the oft cited aphorism of Lord Hewart from Rex v. Sussex Justices; Ex parte McCarthy:
“… it is not merely of some importance but is of fundamental importance, that justice should not only be done, but should manifestly and undoubtedly be seen to be done.” (Emphasis mine)
As a consequence of this “deal” these things have happened:
- Basi and Virk, on very serious charges which one would think should have brought serious consequences, plead guilty as charged but all but get off scot free.
- Gary Collins, then Minister in charge of the “lease” of BC Rail to CN, does not have to give evidence
- Gordon Campbell will not have to testify which, considering his difficulty with the truth in other matters, avoids what for him might take considerable exertion
- A case bringing more and more uncomfortable evidence by the day for the Campbell government is suddenly over
- What really happened in this matter can only be speculated upon
I leave it with you, the citizens of British Columbia – was the settled test as enunciated by Lord Justice Hewitt, namely, “justice should not only be done, but should manifestly and undoubtedly be seen to be done” met in this case?
I doubt that even the 9% of the public that supports Mr. Campbell would think that it was.
Campbell’s Hypocritical Letter from 1998 on “Open Government”
The document below – obtained recently by The Common Sense Canadian – is a slap
in the face to the many British Columbians who are all to familiar with this ruling
government’s secretive ways. Authored in 1998 by Campbell himself whilst Leader of
the Opposition, to the then director of the BC Freedom of Information and Privacy
Association, the letter slams the NDP government of the day for not being more
“open” with the public.
“Open government is the hallmark of free and democratic societies,” he begins.
“Regrettably, the NDP have abandoned their commitment to open government.
Expenditure cuts, the threat of fee increases, and the excessive reliance on FOI as
the only way of obtaining routine government documents are all evidence of a
government which prefers the practice of concealment to the culture of openness.
This is unacceptable.”
And on that one note, we wholeheartedly concur. If only Campbell hadn’t followed
this rant with the most secretive, obstructionist, and anti-democratic government in
the history of our province, we could now applaud his bold statement in hindsight.
But on the heels of the infamous Hansen HST memos – obtained only by FOI long after
the fact, and full of large tracts of white space covering up redacted text – it
reads now like a bad, Orwellian joke.
In the spirit of openness, see for yourself…
Top oil and gas bureaucrat leaves for oil and gas firm
Article by Sean Holman at Public Eye Online. “Senior bureaucrats aren’t supposed to work for any company they’ve recently had substantial involvement with for at least a year after leaving the provincial civil service. But the Campbell administration decided those guidelines didn’t conflict with the former head of the government’s oil and gas division [Gordon Goodman] joining the Canadian subsidiary of EOG Resources Inc. – a Houston, Texas-based firm developing natural gas reserves in northeastern British Columbia.”
Read article
Can the BC Liberal Party Survive?
Article by Rafe Mair in The Tyee.
“In my lifetime I have witnessed four political meltdowns, four parties that had the wheels fall off. They were: The Bennett crash, the Zalm slam, the Kim Campbell gamble, and the New Dem sinking.”
Read article
And the plain brown envelope, please
Article by Elizabeth James in the North Shore News. David Hutton: “The Public Servants Disclosure Protection Act, which is supposed to protect whistleblowers and ensure that wrongdoing is exposed, is being used instead to obscure the nature and extent of wrongdoing and to protect the wrongdoers from being publicly identified.”
Read article
Politics and the Environment in BC
The chickens are coming home to roost for Premier Gordon (Pinocchio) Campbell. The question is how do we best handle the political consequences.
I spent a lot of time with Carole James during the election a year ago last May and came to like her and admire her in spite of the fact she, or rather the NDP, ran a terrible campaign. I told her partway through the campaign that it looked to me as if someone had a death wish for her.
The result wasn’t really her second loss, although it was that if one proceeds simply numerically. It’s not fair to pin the previous loss on Ms. James because she did bring the party back from the grave’s edge. The election in 2013 is hers to win or lose.
I’ve been hard on Ms. James for her present tactics of staying off the battlefield and mingling with the crowd. In fairness, that may have as much to do with my own combativeness as any other factor. I was weaned in the politics of hand-to-hand combat with lots of blood being spilt. Maybe we have to wait and see whether Ms. James and her advisers are right. In fact, she may be right – for a special reason I’ll talk about it a moment.
No one can be something they’re not. When I went into radio in 1981, the great Jack Webster had two bits of advice: if you’re interviewing your mother, have a piece of paper with Mom written on, for you’ll be amazed at whose name you can forget under pressure; and be yourself, don’t try to ape any other broadcasters including me.
Ms. James simply would not be herself if she were to enter pitched battles and try to win by noise and figurative bloodshed what you should win by reason.
Here’s the special reason Ms. James may be on the right track. For the first time I can remember, the “environment” is a big issue – indeed it’s huge. And there isn’t a nook or a cranny where this government and especially this leader are not in high odour on this issue.
In the past, governments have always been able to play off one group against another but this isn’t going to be so easy in 2013. I’ll guarantee that there will be much more unity of action by environmentalists. It will scarcely be any kind of coalition because such are simply not possible. By their very nature, many groups are concentrated on one issue or one geographical area or both. There are conflicts for available money. All have different histories. This does not mean that they cannot get together for a political purpose.
What will become, to the surprise of many no doubt, a serious matter for Campbell is the coming together for the purposes of defeating him – groups that have been and perhaps still are on separate issues in separate areas. To save this province from the wanton destruction by this government is a common goal and will bring, I believe, a much closer-knit political response.
If I’m right about the high profile of the environment and if there can be a common cause of defeating Campbell, Carole James must convince British Columbians of two things: that she cares for the environment, and that as premier she will do something about it; and she must convince people that she won’t make a balls-up of the economy.
These two factors support the notion that the NDP leader should travel the province convincing people that she will reverse the environmental policies of the Campbell gang and that she will be a safe pair of hands to run the province.
My own philosophy in the 2009 election as repeated to audiences around the country was pragmatic – I simply said that while I didn’t believe they will, if the NDP screw up the economy a later government can fix it; what a later government cannot do is bring back the destroyed rivers, the ruined salmon runs, and BC Hydro. They can be no more restored into their old form than scrambled eggs can ever go back into their shells.
But Carole James cannot win on that sort of fatalism – she must convince the public that the NDP can be trusted to do a better job than the Liberals can which is a pretty low bar indeed as I’m sure you will agree. She must convince groups around the province that she is capable and those groups must include all sections of society.
To follow such a course will take guts especially if she will be up against Carole Taylor or Dianne Watts. Of course Ms. Taylor brings her own baggage: she didn’t resign in protest as she should have and is thus responsible for much of the destructive policy of this government, and so far as I know hasn’t issued forth a peep about the Energy Policy and Fish Farms policy of the government, and, frankly, I would be surprised if knows anything about these issues. Having heard nothing to the contrary I assume she supports this government’s insane and destructive Gateway project and Deltaport enhancement.
Diane Watts is a very popular mayor of Surrey but that’s a hell of a long way from the premier’s chair in Victoria. In fact I would be surprised if Ms. Watts changed her declared position that she’s not interested.
I remain principally concerned about the environment and especially rivers and fish. I haven’t cast a fly line since 2005 so it’s not my hobby I’m fighting for but the very soul of this province, our trademark: our rivers and our salmon.
In saying that I respect and will always support other environmentalists who have their own important priorities. As John Donne said over 300 years ago and is as true today as then, “No man is an island entire of itself; every man is a piece of the continent, a part of the main”. When you ponder the truth of that powerful message it becomes clear that we must all see the bigger picture. I know that pipelines destroy fish and rivers, as tanker accidents do. We know that this government’s insane highway development destroys valuable farmland and habitat and that Burns Bog is sacred as are the Pink salmon runs in the Broughton Archipelago. As we know that the blot of destruction spreads everywhere, all of us must fight that destruction where we’re best able to do so and help others wherever they may be.
And that’s the key to success – fight our damndest in areas where we have prioritized and help others do the same as we gather together in the political arena to support those who share our values, which are no more than to save and protect our province for the sake of those who come after us.
The BC Rail Scandal And The New Lawlessness
Article by Robin Mathews at ViveleCanada.ca. “The New Lawlessness (subscribed to, I allege, by Gordon Campbell, Stephen Harper, and Ed Stelmach in Canada) is nothing more than a seamless alliance between governments and huge private corporations to elude law – where corporate interests are pursuing unregulated pollution, cheapest exploitation of resources, get-rich-quick manufacture of fraudulent securities, dubious ownership transfers, sales of non-existent commodities – or, in fact, any action or design that previously would be (and now should be) criminal in private corporate behaviour intended to enrich Corporation ‘principals’ at the expense of the public.” Read article
B.C. Auditor-General questions government’s accounting
Story in the Globe and Mail. “B.C. Auditor-General John Doyle says the province’s budget deficit should be $73-million higher than reported after his review of the government’s financial statements for the 2009/2010 fiscal year.” Read article