Monday, June 15, 2026
ADVT 
National

Many Protesters Flattering Themselves If They Think CSIS Is Watching: Former Spy

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Mar, 2015 11:24 AM
  • Many Protesters Flattering Themselves If They Think CSIS Is Watching: Former Spy

OTTAWA — Many demonstrators are flattering themselves when they publicly fret about coming under the scrutiny of security services, says a former spymaster.

The Canadian Security Intelligence Service had the resources to monitor only those threats "in the red, high-risk, high-probability zone" when he served as the agency's assistant director of intelligence earlier this decade, Ray Boisvert said Thursday.

"That meant that we had no time to even consider looking at any sort of lesser evils that were emerging out there," Boisvert told the House of Commons public safety committee, which is studying a sweeping new security bill.

Boisvert, now a security consultant, said he takes "great offence" to commonly voiced concerns that the legislation would effectively place legitimate protest under the CSIS lens, adding that groups and individuals "should not flatter yourself to that degree."

Boisvert and David Harris, another retired CSIS officer, backed a legislative proposal that would allow the spy agency to actively derail terror plots — not just gather information about them.

The powers would give CSIS flexible options to handle threats, Harris told the MPs. "These can be very important in moving decisively when there may be a risk situation developing," said Harris, also a private consultant.

Under the bill, CSIS could take clandestine measures that violate the Charter of Rights and Freedoms as long as a judge approves the actions.  

The provisions would conscript judges into the "dirty business" of spying, said Ziyaad Mia of the Canadian Muslim Lawyers Association.

"It turns the role of the judiciary completely upside-down," he told the committee. "This is not the role of judges in our system."

The Conservatives brought in the 62-page security bill following the murders of two Canadian soldiers just days apart last October. There was no direct link between the attacks in Ottawa and St-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Que., but it appears both assailants were inspired by extremist thinking.

The bill would also make it easier for police to limit the movements of a suspect, expand no-fly list powers, take aim at terrorist propaganda on the Internet and dismantle barriers to sharing security-related information.

The NDP opposes the legislation. The Liberals plan to support it, but outlined several proposed changes Thursday, including creation of a full-fledged national security committee of parliamentarians.

MORE National ARTICLES

Second man who pleaded guilty in Rehtaeh Parsons case gets year of probation

HALIFAX — A second young man who pleaded guilty in the Rehtaeh Parsons child pornography case in Halifax was sentenced Thursday to a year of probation.

Second man who pleaded guilty in Rehtaeh Parsons case gets year of probation

21-Year-Old Langford Man In Critical Condition After Being Stabbed In Leg: Police

21-Year-Old Langford Man In Critical Condition After Being Stabbed In Leg: Police
RCMP in the southern Vancouver Island city say paramedics responded to the incident at about 5:15 p.m. Wednesday.

21-Year-Old Langford Man In Critical Condition After Being Stabbed In Leg: Police

Homicide-Suicide Behind Death Of B.C. Teens In Lake: RCMP Investigators

Homicide-Suicide Behind Death Of B.C. Teens In Lake: RCMP Investigators
PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. — Mounties are ruling the deaths of two teens in a central B.C. lake last May the result of a homicide-suicide.

Homicide-Suicide Behind Death Of B.C. Teens In Lake: RCMP Investigators

Ottawa Still Plans To Balance Budget, Fulfil Commitments, Despite Cheap Oil

Ottawa Still Plans To Balance Budget, Fulfil Commitments, Despite Cheap Oil
VANCOVUER, B.C. — Federal Finance Minister Joe Oliver says the government still plans to balance the budget and keep its commitments despite the collapse of oil prices.

Ottawa Still Plans To Balance Budget, Fulfil Commitments, Despite Cheap Oil

B.C. Upholds Certificates For Controversial Prosperity, Tulsequah Mines

B.C. Upholds Certificates For Controversial Prosperity, Tulsequah Mines
The New Prosperity mine has been granted a five-year extension of its certificate, while the Tulsequah Chief Mine has been determined to have "substantially started," allowing the certificate to remain in effect for the life of the project.

B.C. Upholds Certificates For Controversial Prosperity, Tulsequah Mines

No decision on retrial for Calgary reservist convicted in training accident

No decision on retrial for Calgary reservist convicted in training accident
CALGARY — There's still no decision on whether a Calgary reservist who won an appeal of his conviction in a deadly Afghanistan training accident will face a new trial.

No decision on retrial for Calgary reservist convicted in training accident