Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

Government wants integrity czar's probe of alleged RCMP wrongdoing tossed out

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Nov, 2014 11:15 AM

    OTTAWA — The Conservative government is trying to quash a finding of the federal integrity commissioner concerning alleged wrongdoing within the RCMP.

    In a notice of application, the government is asking the Federal Court to set aside an Oct. 31 decision of the Public Sector Integrity Commissioner's office.

    The notice says the commissioner's office began investigating in November 2013 following a disclosure from a whistleblower.

    There is little other public information about the case, and details of the purported offence remain a mystery.

    In the court filing, the government argues the integrity commissioner's decision — which remains under wraps — should be tossed out because the matter is already being dealt with under another, unspecified parliamentary provision.

    Failing this, the government contends, the integrity commissioner violated procedural fairness by inadequately explaining the substance of the alleged wrongdoing, relying upon evidence not fully disclosed to the RCMP, and not permitting the Mounties to submit further relevant evidence to the commissioner.

    It also argues the commissioner failed to notify all parties who may be adversely affected by the investigation.

    Finally, the government says the commissioner made a legal mistake by basing his decision on an "erroneous finding of fact."

    The government has asked the integrity commissioner to disclose:

    — All documents considered by the commissioner's investigators during the almost year-long probe;

    — All notes from interviews;

    — Any material obtained from interviewees or subject matter experts.

    A spokeswoman for the integrity commissioner's office said confidentiality provisions prevented her from discussing the file.

    The Justice Department lawyer the government has assigned to the case did not answer a phone message left last week.

    The RCMP had no immediate comment.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    CFB Petawawa Soldier Working On Coyote Patrol Vehicle At Time Of Deadly Incident

    CFB Petawawa Soldier Working On Coyote Patrol Vehicle At Time Of Deadly Incident
    CFB PETAWAWA, Ont. — The military says a Canadian soldier who died at CFB Petawawa in eastern Ontario was doing mechanic work on an armoured vehicle when the incident that killed him occurred.

    CFB Petawawa Soldier Working On Coyote Patrol Vehicle At Time Of Deadly Incident

    'Nude Judge' Misconduct Case To Start Anew With Sex Photos Off-limits For Now

    'Nude Judge' Misconduct Case To Start Anew With Sex Photos Off-limits For Now
    TORONTO — A second hearing into whether a senior Manitoba judge should be kicked off the bench is finally set to start in Winnipeg on Monday but sex photos central to the allegations against her will be off-limits — at least for the time being.

    'Nude Judge' Misconduct Case To Start Anew With Sex Photos Off-limits For Now

    City Of Ottawa Says Confident No Sensitive Details Leaked After Website Hacked

    City Of Ottawa Says Confident No Sensitive Details Leaked After Website Hacked
    OTTAWA — The City of Ottawa says it doesn't believe any sensitive information has been compromised after its website was hacked.

    City Of Ottawa Says Confident No Sensitive Details Leaked After Website Hacked

    More Arrests At B.C. Pipeline Protest; 11-year-old Girl Taken Into Custody

    More Arrests At B.C. Pipeline Protest; 11-year-old Girl Taken Into Custody
    The protesters were taken away Saturday after crossing a police line on Burnaby Mountain, where crews have been conducting survey work for the proposed Trans Mountain pipeline expansion.

    More Arrests At B.C. Pipeline Protest; 11-year-old Girl Taken Into Custody

    No Road Work, But Road Signs In Manitoba

    No Road Work, But Road Signs In Manitoba
    WINNIPEG - The Manitoba government has a policy that allows signs touting its economic agenda to be erected at construction sites long before work begins and to be left up over the winter lull, The Canadian Press has learned.

    No Road Work, But Road Signs In Manitoba

    $200m Allocated For Military Mental Health

    $200m Allocated For Military Mental Health
    OTTAWA - The federal government has announced $200 million over six years to support mental health needs of military members, veterans and their families.

    $200m Allocated For Military Mental Health