Thursday, December 25, 2025
ADVT 
National

Improper Spending And A Gas Thief: Reports Shed Light On Misbehaving Bureaucrats

The Canadian Press, 24 Sep, 2016 03:16 PM
    OTTAWA — A federal worker who was given a corporate credit card ended up losing her job after racking up personal purchases that left the government on the hook for a $24,000 credit card bill.
     
    The employee, known only by the pseudonym Julie in an internal inspection report, "ignored all communications" when officials tried to nudge her into paying off the balance.
     
    Her case is just one of a handful sent to senior officials at Public Services and Procurement Canada, offering a glimpse at questionable practices by four civil servants, two of whom ended up losing their jobs: Julie and a man whose pseudonym is Vincent.
     
    Julie was given the credit card to cover expenses while she was on assignment away from home with another organization. Neither the location nor the organization are listed in the documents, obtained by The Canadian Press under the Access to Information Act.
     
    The investigation found Julie made three payments on the card worth a total of about $18,000 — a far cry from the total charges of $41,150. Of that, $14,150 was for 127 personal expenses, none of which are described in the reports.
     
    Even after the $18,000 worth of payments, she continued to make personal purchases and "did not make a plan to repay the card," the report said.
     
    In the end, the federal government had to pay the outstanding balance of $23,150. Once confronted with the investigation report, Julie opted to cover the costs by having her salary clawed back.
     
    A disciplinary council decided that she should be terminated for her misspending ways.
     
    Vincent, meanwhile, lost his job after security cameras caught him repeatedly filling his personal vehicle with taxpayer-purchased gasoline — intended solely for use in federally owned lawn mowers and pickup trucks.
     
    The total value of the gasoline was between $695 to $907, investigators wrote.
     
    When confronted about the matter, Vincent appears to have added fuel to the fire by suggesting the missing gas was the result of government vehicles being left to idle for too long.
     
    Investigators didn't buy his excuse, and said the gas thefts "were not isolated incidents committed on impulse," and recommended Vincent be fired.
     
    That's not to say they didn't look into his claims, however.
     
    The documents show investigators interviewed co-workers to figure out how long the vehicles are typically left to idle, then turned to the toxic emissions research group at Environment and Climate Change Canada to calculate fuel usage per each minute of idling.
     
    Their calculations showed that the idling of vehicle or small engines like those in lawn mowers couldn't account for the missing gasoline.
     
    "There is no circumstantial or contextual information to validate or to support Vincent's claims regarding his gasoline consumption concerns or habits," the investigators wrote.
     
    "Testimonial evidence actually points in another direction."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Two Teen Girls Dead After Truck Rollover In Rural Manitoba

    Two Teen Girls Dead After Truck Rollover In Rural Manitoba
    WINNIPEG — Two teenagers are dead and three others injured after a pickup truck crashed in Manitoba.

    Two Teen Girls Dead After Truck Rollover In Rural Manitoba

    Two Tornadoes Touch Down, One Destroys Home And Barns In Saskatchewan

    Two Tornadoes Touch Down, One Destroys Home And Barns In Saskatchewan
    Environment Canada said the first tornado hit the ground at about 4 p.m. Sunday north of Melville, Sask., which ripped apart a barn, trees and tossed bins and bales about.

    Two Tornadoes Touch Down, One Destroys Home And Barns In Saskatchewan

    Hamilton Man To Be Charged With Murder After Woman Found Dead In Fire

    Hamilton Man To Be Charged With Murder After Woman Found Dead In Fire
    Hamilton police say firefighters were called to the blaze Sunday afternoon in an apartment building in downtown Hamilton.

    Hamilton Man To Be Charged With Murder After Woman Found Dead In Fire

    Derek Hatfield, Canadian Who Sailed Around The World Twice, Dead At 63

    Derek Hatfield, Canadian Who Sailed Around The World Twice, Dead At 63
    A Canadian sailor celebrated for two solo voyages around the world and years of passionate charitable work has reportedly died.

    Derek Hatfield, Canadian Who Sailed Around The World Twice, Dead At 63

    Teacher Gang-Raped Near Bareilly Highway, Incident Filmed

    Teacher Gang-Raped Near Bareilly Highway, Incident Filmed
    The assailants also filmed the gang-rape and threatened to post it on social media sites if she complained

    Teacher Gang-Raped Near Bareilly Highway, Incident Filmed

    Justin Trudeau Announces New Selection Process For Supreme Court Of Canada Judges

    The government announced Tuesday it will change the manner in which a Supreme Court justice is appointed, saying it's time for the process to "demonstrate a degree of rigour and responsibility" that may have been missing in the past.

    Justin Trudeau Announces New Selection Process For Supreme Court Of Canada Judges