“Near-Points” of the BC Rail Case Need to be Looked At
The B.C. Auditor General wants all information on the $6 million paid by
the Gordon Campbell cabinet to Defence lawyers in the BC Rail Scandal
Basi, Virk, and Basi case.
The trial of Basi, Virk, and Basi ended on October 18, 2010 (with the
B.C. government absorbing all of the $6 million of Defence costs – even
though two of the accused men were convicted.) In a case of
conviction, government does NOT normally pay Defence costs of
employees. What went on? B.C.’s Auditor General wants to know.
In November, 2010, the B.C. Auditor General requested information and
documents from the Attorney General’s ministry. They were (alarmingly,
but effectively) denied.
Going to court, it took Auditor General John Doyle (overall) nearly
eight months to get what he wants. In the meantime, Stephen Harper, HST
buddy of Gordon Campbell, could begin lifting Campbell right out of
B.C. and dropping him into London, England, as Canada’s High
Commissioner there.
The “near-points” of the case need to be looked at – and then how all
has been shaped towards what looks like, to many, an outright
manipulation to end trial and to guarantee silence from the accused and
convicted pair, Dave Basi and Bob Virk.
The near-points. What – for instance – Vaughn Palmer doesn’t tell his
readers is that part of the deal made by October 18, 2010, was that the
two main men accused – Dave Basi and Bob Virk – had charges against them
significantly reduced. They were found guilty … but not of what they
were originally charged with in December 2004, and remained charged with
until October 2010.
Suddenly, charges were reduced, jail time was out, fraud was removed … and the deal was made.
Near point #2. From December 2004 until October 18, 2010, Aneal Basi
was accused of receiving moneys from Erik Bornmann, and of depositing
them in tranches in a Dave Basi account. Aneal Basi was accused of
money laundering – for six years. If he is innocent (all charges erased
against him on October 18, 2010), then the Crown (through the
wrongfully appointed Special Prosecutor William Berardino) slandered and
libelled Aneal Basi for six, highly publicized years. What is to be
done? What does the Crown owe him as remedy for a six year, highly
public slander?
If Aneal Basi is not innocent, why were charges against him erased on
October 18, 2010? (No one mentions Aneal Basi anymore in Mainstream
Press and Media reports. Why not?)
Near-point #3. As the trial closed, standing near William Berardino
(wrongfully appointed Special Prosecutor in December 2003), I heard him
reply to a question to the effect that he was responsible for all the
terms of the deal that had been made. Within hours that statement had
holes shot through it – as responsibility for paying Defence the $6
million climbed further and further through the Gordon Campbell
government. Finally, it was pretty clearly revealed the payment had to
be approved at the highest levels.
But the auditor general is alleging that it was not approved – as it had to be – by cabinet (in any recorded way).
A few key moments were played out before the final few weeks. Those
moments point to the sudden, intense, back-room dealing that resulted in
the final “deal”: Aneal Basi was wiped of all accusations; Dave Basi
and Bob Virk received significantly reduced charges; B.C. taxpayers paid
the $6 million Defence legal costs.
No one mentions that the Special Prosecutor – appointed in violation of
the legislation governing such appointments – was paid, with his “team”,
something like $12 million.
The appointment of William Berardino by a ministry whose Attorney
General had been Berardino’s partner and colleague for seven years and
whose Deputy Attorney General had been his partner and colleague for
eleven years was plainly, outrageously wrongful. It was so wrongful that
any British Columbian may believe Mr. Berardino was appointed for
baldly political reasons – and that he did what he was appointed to do….
Any British Columbian may believe his payment was no more legitimate
than the payment, by government, of Basi’s and Virk’s costs. The
mainstream press and media do not mention Aneal Basi’s strange
situation; the reduced charges against Basi and Virk; the wrongful
appointment of the Special Prosecutor. The mainstream press and media
don’t report facts British Columbians have a right to know.
It all began a long time ago, before Madam Justice Elizabeth Bennett was
made judge on the Basi, Virk, and Basi case. But we’ll begin there.
She had (I believe) blown the Glen Clark (NDP premier) case concerning
payment for a deck on a modest, East Vancouver home, believing the RCMP
presented clean evidence. I believe the RCMP did not. She believed the
bases of the charges – which had their first suggestion from Gordon
Campbell’s constituency office – were real. She believed the chief RCMP
investigator, an officer Gordon Campbell at least twice tried to woo to
be a Liberal candidate, was squeaky clean.
In brief, she ran what I believe was a case based on a corrupt
construction of evidence as if it were not. Clark’s lawyer more than
once argued that the charges were baseless and should be stayed. She
disagreed … and then came to the judgment that Glen Clark had done
nothing that warranted conviction! (After 136 days of highly trumpetted
trial.)
Two former premiers joined the call for a Public Inquiry into the case, an Inquiry that never happened.
Justice Bennett was then appointed judge in the Basi, Virk, and Basi
case. (Her judgement in the Glen Clark case was made after he had been
destroyed politically by what I believe were trumped up and falsely
constructed charges. In a way, then, even innocent of all the forces at
work, she did what was necessary to destroy Clark’s political career.)
Whether she saw into what I believe was the situation in the Glen Clark
case, I cannot say. Whatever the situation, she conducted the pre-trial
matters of the Basi, Virk, and Basi case with great care. I believe
she conducted them too slowly, and with too lax a hand on the RCMP and
the Special Prosecutor. But she saw the Defence argument – that the
case against the three men was “tailored and they were targetted” in
order to narrow the case and to protect highly placed others.
She permitted evidence to pile up of tailoring and targetting. Because
of what the Defence thought was her general fairness, they elected to
have trial by judge alone – not judge and jury.
Then she was removed, promoted, appointed to the Appeal Court smack in
the flow of the pre-trial process. Her promotion had to be approved by
Stephen Harper (who has just appointed Gordon Campbell as Canadian High
Commissioner in London). Observers may argue forever about whether she
was removed to stop her from doing a fair job or for other, legitimate,
reasons.
All I can say is that I asked senior Defence lawyer Michael Bolton on
two separate occasions who could remove Madam Justice Elizabeth Bennett
from the case, and Michael Bolton insisted only she had the power to
remove herself. But - as I witnessed Associate Chief Justice Patrick
Dohm at work in court – I became convinced that he removed her.
At this point the key to the “deal” struck on October 18, 2010, is revealed.
The appointee to replace Elizabeth Bennett was Anne MacKenzie – who very
soon after became Associate Chief Justice Anne MacKenzie. She
terminated (quickly) the pre-trial process, and she was to sit as judge
on the trial.
The Defence team became alarmed, I believe. Observing the day-to-day
process in the court, it believe I could see the Defence counsel coming
to think that Associate Chief Justice MacKenzie would cut off all
argument about “tailoring and targetting” of the accused, would confine
all attention to the three accused in the small situation of the charges
against them, and would prevent the larger picture of an alleged
wholesale, corrupt, high-level transfer of BC Rail to the CNR to have
any bearing on the case.
She would not let, it seemed to me observing, Defence argue that the
accused three men were simply part of a huge, elaborate, corrupt
activity in which others, very highly placed, were involved and even
directing the three accused.
There was only one way, it seems, to stop Associate Chief Justice
MacKenzie from riding rough-shod over the carefully prepared Defence
case. That was to put between her and the lawyers involved a jury of
twelve ordinary British Columbians. To do that, Defence would have to
re-elect (not a common thing to do) to have a trial with judge and jury,
not merely a judge.
After all, they had not elected to have Anne MacKenzie as sole judge, but Elizabeth Bennett – and she had been whisked away.
But to get the re-election they wanted, they were going to have to negotiate with the Special Prosecutor. And they did.
One of the results of the negotiation was that the two sides in the case
agreed to a statement of “Admission of Facts”. That isn’t highly
unusual. It permits both sides to begin with a number of matters agreed
upon. The accused did this and this and this – all agree. That saves
time.
But the Special Prosecutor required that the accused refrain (it seems
from what went on in court) from suggesting investigation was biased,
that there were unseemly connections between people involved, and so
on. I have come to believe the Special Prosecutor required the accused
to agree to things that, in fact, prevented reasonable defence –
something no court could uphold – something that would prevent the fair
administration of justice.
But the paper was signed by all concerned.
Then, as trial began, the accused would not agree that they had signed
away some key rights to defence. They interpreted the statements in the
Admission of Facts differently – at first (it seems) than their
lawyers.
A real and total impasse occurred. The accused were advised to seek
legal advice beyond their own counsel. Time passed. Finally, the
accused and their lawyers decided to proceed with the trial.
The cross-examination of the first witness, Martyn Brown, Gordon
Campbell’s long-time Chief of Staff, brought everything to a head.
Defence counsel asked Martyn Brown what he knew about the relation
between major investigator, RCMP officer Kevin DeBruyckere and his
brother-in-law, Kelly Reichert, Executive Director of the B.C. Liberal
Party. (Could they have passed information on to Gordon Campbell? was
asked or intimated.)
The Special Prosecutor stopped the action. Defence counsel couldn’t ask
such a question, Berardino alleged – as a result of the agreed
Admission of Facts. The judge had to rule.
She ruled, in short, that the question was valid, and that Defence could ask such questions.
That changed too much in the Prosecution strategy. The trial had to be
stopped. Nearly 30 highly placed politicians and corporate actors were
to appear and to be cross-examined. They couldn’t walk through the
trial, one after the other, in the state of amnesia that Martyn Brown
had shown – to the wonder of even the mainstream press and media
journalists who rarely wonder about anything.
The trial would turn into a blood bath. It had to be stopped. Either
the witnesses would reveal things that would affect the jury (and the
case) in highly significant ways – probably turning it away from the
accused towards major political and corporate figures. Or, I believe,
all Crown witnesses would have to live in amnesia – which situation
would become less and less and less convincing even to the sold-out
mainstream journalists. Such repeated amnesia would turn the trial into a
raging public farce.
It had to be stopped. And so dealing went on. Only one half of one
more witness took the stand before all came to an end. (Martyn Brown
was suddenly transferred to a safe position as Deputy Minister of
Tourism.) To get an end to the trial, charges against Aneal Basi had to
be dropped completely. Charges against Dave Basi and Bob Virk had to be
cut down to anodyne levels. No jail term. No fraud charges. The Gordon
Campbell government agreed to pay all Defence costs – and not try to
retrieve any of the money from the convicted men.
And so the trial was killed – with lightning haste. It was killed –
with such haste and in such an unconventional way that the Auditor
General of B.C. wants to know all about it.
Good luck to Auditor General John Doyle.
It seems to me the Gordon Campbell group that oversaw the corrupt
transfer of BC Rail to the CNR – Christie Clark included – has so far
escaped all serious examination. Let us hope John Doyle can break
through their defense and show the BC public why $6 million of its money
was misused – as a beginning to showing how billions were misused – and
perhaps criminally looted - in the transfer of BC Rail to the CNR.
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