Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Scheer Again Urges RCMP To Investigate PM

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Aug, 2019 07:51 PM

    OTTAWA - Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer says the federal ethics commissioner's stinging conclusions about Justin Trudeau's handling of the SNC-Lavalin affair appear to align with a criminal offence.

     

    Speaking in St. Catharines, Ont., Scheer says he's asked the head of the Mounties to take another look at the prime minister's actions to determine whether he violated the Criminal Code for obstructing justice.

     

    "Today, in light of both the ethics commissioner's findings and the revelations about the RCMP's previous involvement, I have formally requested the RCMP take another look," Scheer told a news conference Monday.

     

    "This shocking conclusion against a sitting prime minister appears to align with Sec. 139 of the Criminal Code defining obstruction of justice."

     

    Scheer shared a letter he wrote to RCMP commissioner Brenda Lucki in which he urged her to use all the resources at her disposal to investigate the matter. It's the second time he's made such a request, the first being at the height of the controversy back in February.

     

    Last week, a report by ethics watchdog Mario Dion concluded that Trudeau violated the Conflict of Interest Act by improperly pressuring former attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould to stop a criminal prosecution of SNC-Lavalin on corruption charges.

     

    Dion concluded that Trudeau's attempts to influence Wilson-Raybould on the matter contravened the act, which prohibits public office holders from using their position to try to influence a decision that would improperly further the private interests of a third party.

     

    Trudeau has said he disagrees with some of Dion's findings and he has refused to apologize for his actions, insisting he was "standing up for Canadian jobs."

     

    He's also said he takes "full responsibility" for what occurred and has promised to create a new protocol for ministers, staff and bureaucrats when discussing a specific prosecution with the attorney general.

     

    Wilson-Raybould said in a statement that the RCMP contacted her last spring "regarding matters that first came to the public's attention on Feb. 7." It was in apparent reference to the Globe and Mail report that said Trudeau's aides pressed her to intervene in the SNC-Lavalin case and help it avoid prosecution through a plea-bargain-type deal.

     

    She declined further comment on the content of her discussions with the Mounties.

     

    Last Friday, Wilson-Raybould said the police force had not contacted her since the release of Dion's report earlier in the week.

     

    Polls have suggested that Trudeau's popularity took a big hit after the SNC-Lavalin affair erupted. After the allegations first appeared, the prime minister lost two senior cabinet ministers, his most trusted adviser and the country's top public servant.

     

    At the heart of the controversy are allegations that Wilson-Raybould felt improperly pressured to halt the criminal prosecution of the Montreal engineering and construction giant.

     

    Last fall, the director of public prosecutions refused to negotiate a remediation agreement with the company. The deal would have allowed the firm to avoid a criminal conviction, which would have barred it from receiving federal contracts for 10 years.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Victoria B.C. Mom Tells Inquest Into Teen Son's Death That She Found Drugs In His Room

    VICTORIA — The mother of a Victoria teen who died of a drug overdose last year says she was shocked to discover her son had sedation drugs from her dental office stashed in his bedroom.

    Victoria B.C. Mom Tells Inquest Into Teen Son's Death That She Found Drugs In His Room

    Quebec Adopts Secularism Bill That Bans Religious Symbols For State Workers

    Quebec Adopts Secularism Bill That Bans Religious Symbols For State Workers
    Quebec's contentious secularism bill banning religious symbols for teachers, police officers and other public servants in positions of authority was voted into law late Sunday.    

    Quebec Adopts Secularism Bill That Bans Religious Symbols For State Workers

    Vancouver Police Arrest 50-Year-Old Man Following Violent West End Home Invasion

    Vancouver Police have arrested 50-year-old Paul Doczi for a violent West End home invasion that sent a woman to hospital with serious injuries the morning of June 14.

    Vancouver Police Arrest 50-Year-Old Man Following Violent West End Home Invasion

    19-Year-Old International Student Stabbed After Fight Over Limo Outside Vancouver Nightclub

    19-Year-Old International Student Stabbed After Fight Over Limo Outside Vancouver Nightclub
    Just before 3:00 , two groups of teens got into a dispute over a limo for hire on Seymour Street near Dunsmuir. The groups did not know each other.

    19-Year-Old International Student Stabbed After Fight Over Limo Outside Vancouver Nightclub

    Fierce Blaze Guts North Vancouver Home, Leaves Resident With Serious Burns

    Fierce Blaze Guts North Vancouver Home, Leaves Resident With Serious Burns
    VANCOUVER — A woman has been badly burned and a large North Vancouver home has been gutted in a pre-dawn fire.

    Fierce Blaze Guts North Vancouver Home, Leaves Resident With Serious Burns

    B.C. RCMP Rolls Out Online Reporting Tool Starting In Surrey On Monday

    Surrey RCMP is set to become the first detachment to test a new online crime reporting tool on Monday, followed by proposed tests in three other B.C. communities later this summer.  

    B.C. RCMP Rolls Out Online Reporting Tool Starting In Surrey On Monday