Sunday, July 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. Speaker yelled at staff during inquiry: Trial

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Feb, 2022 03:16 PM
  • B.C. Speaker yelled at staff during inquiry: Trial

VANCOUVER - A former employee of British Columbia's legislature says he was "screamed at like a dog" by the former Speaker and his special adviser during an investigation into misspending allegations against former clerk Craig James.

Randall Ennis, who served as acting sergeant-at-arms in 2018, told the B.C. Supreme Court in James's fraud and breach of trust trial that the locks to the clerk's office were changed after James was suspended.

Ennis testified there were only two sets of keys to the clerk's office and he felt "uncomfortable" when then-Speaker Darryl Plecas demanded the second set, because he believed the rooms should be sealed for the police investigation.

He says Plecas and Alan Mullen, the man Plecas hired to examine James's administrative duties,went through the clerk's office, at one point set off an alarm.

Ennis says when Plecas and Mullen told him the RCMP were coming to investigate, Ennis responded that the acting clerk should be informed, at which point they "yelled and screamed" that he was either "with us or against us."

Defence lawyer Gavin Cameron told Associate Chief Justice Heather Holmes he is concerned several witnesses will testify they had similar experiences with Plecas and it's relevant to the assessment of their evidence.

"The Speaker had ultimate power over all staff at the legislative assembly," Cameron said, to which Ennis agreed.

Ennis told the court that Plecas and Mullen accused him of trying to impede an investigation, to which he responded, "No sir, I'm not."

"I felt that the clerk should be aware of what was going on. They took a judgment of that and started yelling and screaming at me," he said.

"They said you're with us or against us," Cameron asked.

Cameron told the judge the atmosphere in 2018 was important to understand because some stories told in 2022 about what happened won't be "the truth as it existed."

Ennis says he wishes RCMP had quarantined the rooms in part because Plecas would later accuse him of removing evidence. The allegation is "very false," he said.

Plecas alleged "a lot of things against a lot of people," Ennis said, and the allegations still bother him.

"I was disappointed and upset, yes. I still am."

Plecas and Mullen's move to clone the hard drives of legislative staff contributed to Ennis's decision to retire in May 2019, he testified.

James denies charges of fraud and breach of trust relating to his claim to a $258,000 retirement allowance, travel expense claims and the purchase of a wood splitter and trailer with public funds.

He was escorted from the legislature in November 2018 and Plecas produced a report detailing allegations of misspending in early 2019.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Police and SAR searching for Shannon White: Kamloops RCMP

Police and SAR searching for Shannon White: Kamloops RCMP
As part of the investigation, police received information confirming Ms. White’s vehicle left town for a 45-minute period on Nov. 1, shortly after Ms. White was supposed to have arrived at work.  Her vehicle was observed travelling west on the Trans Canada Highway, leading officers to the area being searched.  

Police and SAR searching for Shannon White: Kamloops RCMP

Canada could OK kids vaccine in '1 to 2 weeks'

Canada could OK kids vaccine in '1 to 2 weeks'
Canada's chief medical adviser Dr. Supriya Sharma said in a conference call with reporters Friday that the regulator is "actively continuing" its review of the Pfizer-BioNtech jab for children aged five to 11, which was authorized for use in the United States earlier this month.

Canada could OK kids vaccine in '1 to 2 weeks'

Ng disappointed, not daunted by US protectionism

Ng disappointed, not daunted by US protectionism
Mary Ng said that includes the revival of Buy American provisions in President Joe Biden's massive new infrastructure bill, which are creating more hurdles for foreign companies to bid on lucrative projects.

Ng disappointed, not daunted by US protectionism

B.C. Remembrance Day gatherings disrupted

B.C. Remembrance Day gatherings disrupted
A lawyer says he and his two young daughters left what he thought was a Remembrance Day ceremony In Kamloops after it turned out to be a protest against British Columbia's vaccine mandate. 

B.C. Remembrance Day gatherings disrupted

VPD investigates city's 15th homicide

VPD investigates city's 15th homicide
Yesterday morning, staff at a social housing complex near Main and East Cordova streets found Joshua Hough, 43, deceased in his suite. One arrest has been made, and the investigation is ongoing.

VPD investigates city's 15th homicide

Woman hurt in Toronto van attack dies of injuries

Woman hurt in Toronto van attack dies of injuries
Toronto police say in a release that Amaresh Tesfamariam, who was 65, died on Oct. 28. She had been in hospital since April 23, 2018, after Alek Minassian drove a rental van down the sidewalk of Yonge Street killing 10 people and injuring another 16.

Woman hurt in Toronto van attack dies of injuries