Wednesday, June 17, 2026
ADVT 
National

Alberta Asks B.C. Conflicts Commissioner To Look Into Redford Ethics Probe

The Canadian Press, 06 Apr, 2016 12:35 PM
    EDMONTON — Alberta's ethics commissioner is asking her counterpart in British Columbia to decide if there should be a renewed conflict-of-interest investigation of former premier Alison Redford.
     
     
    In a letter to Alberta's Justice Department, Marguerite Trussler says she cannot give her opinion because she is friends with two of the people involved.
     
    "I am not able to take on the task of providing you advice on this matter as I have what could be perceived as a personal conflict of interest," Trussler wrote in the letter Tuesday.
     
    Trussler has worked as a lawyer and as a judge in Court of Queen's Bench.
     
    Trussler says in the letter that B.C. conflict-of-interest commissioner Paul Fraser will step in to decide if an investigation is warranted.
     
    Redford resigned as Alberta's premier more than two years ago following a scandal over lavish spending on herself and those in her inner circle.
     
    Then-ethics commissioner Neil Wilkinson investigated her in 2013, while she was still premier, for a decision she made in 2010 while serving as justice minister. 
     
    Redford had selected the ITRL consortium, a group of law firms, to sue tobacco companies on behalf of the province to recover related health-care costs.
     
    One of the law firms in the ITRL consortium includes the firm employing Robert Hawkes, who is Redford's former husband and became her political adviser.
     
    Wilkinson's investigation found that Redford made a fair decision based on the advice given to her to pick the winner from three equally strong applicants.
     
    But a CBC report said Wilkinson may not have had access to all the relevant documentation to make a sound decision, so Justice Minister Kathleen Ganley asked former Supreme Court justice Frank Iacobucci to investigate.
     
    On Monday, Ganley released Iacobucci's report.
     
    He said Wilkinson was not given all the information and an earlier recommendation dismissing ITRL's bid as inadequate was removed from the final briefing document given to Redford.
     
    ITRL remains in charge of the $10-billion lawsuit and Ganley said there's no reason to change.
     
    She has also said that even though Redford is no longer a sitting legislature member, the matter still needs to be examined so that people can have confidence in the integrity of government decisions.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Matthew Hutchinson, B.C. Student Killed In New York Remembered By Junior Hockey Team As Leader

    Matthew Hutchinson, B.C. Student Killed In New York Remembered By Junior Hockey Team As Leader
    A junior hockey team in Chilliwack, B.C., is remembering a former player who once dressed as Santa Claus for a gift exchange and is now among the victims in a murder-suicide that left three people dead in New York state.

    Matthew Hutchinson, B.C. Student Killed In New York Remembered By Junior Hockey Team As Leader

    Four Alberta Snowmobilers Rescued In B.C. Could Be Facing Big Price Tag

    Four Alberta Snowmobilers Rescued In B.C. Could Be Facing Big Price Tag
    Four male snowmobilers from Alberta could be facing a hefty price tag after they had to be rescued on the weekend from Quartz Creek, west of Golden, B.C.

    Four Alberta Snowmobilers Rescued In B.C. Could Be Facing Big Price Tag

    No Parole For Stanley Tippett, Convicted Of Attack On 12-Year-Old Ontario Girl

    No Parole For Stanley Tippett, Convicted Of Attack On 12-Year-Old Ontario Girl
    The Parole Board of Canada says Stanley Tippett remains "an untreated sex offender" who has not addressed his risk to reoffend.

    No Parole For Stanley Tippett, Convicted Of Attack On 12-Year-Old Ontario Girl

    Coding On Deck For Grade-school Students As B.C. Unveils New Curriculum

    Coding On Deck For Grade-school Students As B.C. Unveils New Curriculum
    Students in British Columbia's public elementary schools are on track to become the first generation to get basic training in computer coding as the province answers a call from its thriving tech sector.

    Coding On Deck For Grade-school Students As B.C. Unveils New Curriculum

    Canadians' Vulnerability To Debt Set To Climb In Coming Years: Budget Office

    Canadians' Vulnerability To Debt Set To Climb In Coming Years: Budget Office
    The parliamentary budget office released a report Tuesday predicting the ratio of debt payments — including principal and interest payments — relative to disposable income will creep upwards over the next five years as interest rates rise.

    Canadians' Vulnerability To Debt Set To Climb In Coming Years: Budget Office

    How Canadian Lottery Odds Stack Up Against The US Powerball

    How Canadian Lottery Odds Stack Up Against The US Powerball
    Anyone with a ticket for the record-high prize last week had merely a one in more than 292 million chance to win.

    How Canadian Lottery Odds Stack Up Against The US Powerball