Reply to @David Raymond Amos:
I don't have an unrealistic idea of my own significance in the grand scheme of things.
And I'm not a swivel-eyed loon (I have a doctor's note and everything).
BBC357 Reply to @David Raymond Amos: Don't worry about the BSosauraus.
David Raymond Amos
Content disabled
Reply to @BBC357 .: Methinks I struck another nerve N'esy Pas?
David Raymond Amos
Content disabled
Reply to @Mike Martin: Methinks I should send this to your buddies in the RCMP N'esy Pas?
Kevin Darroch
When
the Conservatives were in power in 84-93 a private company PAI brought
out couple of books. Somehow they had gotten lists of key, major
staff in all Ministers offices, their passport sized photos, and resume.
On the internet or public library or legislature library one can check,
PAI- MInisterial Staff Guide. Google somehow, reportedly at one put it
on the internet for awhile under Google books? Imagine you work in a
government office and someone somehow is selling some of your details?
Is that what? Who could approve? I wonder what Andrew Scheer, Rona
Ambrose or Lisa Raitt might call that kind of systematic activity?
Mike Martin
Reply to @Kevin Darroch:
It's publishing public information.
David Raymond Amos
Content disabled
Reply to @Mike Martin: "It's publishing public information."
Reply to @Kevin
Darroch: Methinks you should check my work sometime Everybody knows its
all in the Public Record of Federal Court N'esy Pas?
Kevin Darroch
Reply to @Mike
Martin: No, it was not! They claimed copyright, photos published without
consent, no credit!? And why only that firm or how did who pick and
choose on invasion of privacy, and more?
Mike Martin
Reply to @Kevin Darroch:
Look a little deeper. PAI stands for Public Affairs International. They
were in the business of publishing handbooks on who's who in government
in the days before we got all security conscious. They published the
information of political operatives, not public service employees.
David Raymond Amos
Reply to @Mike Martin: Twice I sent documents to you now I forward them on
Mike Martin
Reply to @David Raymond Amos:
How did you send documents to me?
David Raymond Amos Reply to @Mike Martin: Through here byway of a link then the thread went "POOF"
Mike Martin
Reply to @David Raymond Amos:
Off topic stuff sometimes disappears.
Kevin Darroch
Reply to @Mike Martin: Really, is that all? About appropriation, breach of trust, or?
Kevin Darroch
Reply to @Mike Martin: Or ethics conscious, self interest and internet exposure?
Jack Thompson
Have to wait until after the election to get an update on the case against Trudeau.
David Raymond Amos
Reply to @Jack Thompson: Not if you pay attention the comments sections CBC
Arthur Johnston
Many Canadians have been calling this Liberal Admin. treasonous
and now the evidence is clear.
David Raymond Amos
Reply to @Arthur Johnston: Google David Amos RCMP Sussex and listen closely
Peter Simmons
Delicious irony.....finding handwritten notes on how not to leave a paper trail.
Howie Torrans
Reply to @Mike Martin:
But you did have to know something about the Law of the Sea, right?
Ortis was specifically hired because of his knowledge of communications
security.
Mike
Martin
Reply to @Howie Torrans:
He was specifically hired because he wrote about the security
implications of organised crime having access to secure means of
communication. He knew such means exist, and obviously knew about at
least one Canadian company which provides those means, but that doesn't
mean he knows the nuts and bolts of how to track those communication. It
doesn't even mean he knows about the nuts an bolts of network analysis.
He knows there are experts in those things, and consults them.
David Raymond Amos
Reply to @Mike
Martin: Whereas you think you know so much about organized crime and
enjoy making fun of my concerns why not Google the following?
David Amos wiretap
RCMP working to limit possible damage to allies in wake of spy charges: commissioner
RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki declines to comment on motive in Cameron Ortis case
RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki speaks at RCMP Depot in Regina, Sask. (CBC)
RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki said
today the national police force is working to limit security risks among
Canada's intelligence allies and assess potential operational damage in
the wake of charges laid against one of its top intelligence officers.
"We
are aware of the potential risks to operations of our partner agencies
in Canada and abroad and we are working in partnership to ensure
mitigating strategies are in place," Lucki said during a news conference
at RCMP national headquarters in Ottawa.
"Once the RCMP became
aware of the alleged activities, we worked with partners to take
immediate steps to safeguard the information. Together, we are working
to assess the level of impact to operations, if any."
Late
last week, Cameron Ortis, 47, was charged under a section of the
Security of Information Act that applies to individuals "permanently
bound to secrecy" as a condition of their work. The director general of
the RCMP's national intelligence co-ordination centre is accused of
preparing to share sensitive information with a foreign entity or
terrorist organization.
The commissioner said she could not
comment on possible motives. She said Ortis has been employed in various
roles by the RCMP since 2007.
Lucki also said no Canadian ally has made any moves to limit or suspend intelligence-sharing with Canada.
"We haven't had any restrictions at this point, and again, it's early on in the investigation," she said.
In a written statement issued yesterday, Lucki confirmed that Ortis had access to domestic and foreign intelligence.
She called the allegations "extremely unsettling."
Cameron
Ortis makes his first court appearance in Ottawa on Friday, Sept. 13,
2019. The civilian employee with an RCMP intelligence team faces several
charges under the Security of Information Act. (Sketch by Laurie Foster-MacLeod for CBC News)
Leak could cause 'devastating' damage: documents
According
to documents viewed by CBC, the cache of classified intelligence
material Ortis allegedly was preparing to share is so vital to Canada's
national security that the country's intelligence agencies say its
misuse would strike at the heart of Canada's security.
"CSE's
preliminary assessment is that damage caused by the release of these
reports and intelligence is HIGH and potentially devastating in that it
would cause grave injury to Canada's national interests," say the
documents.
The documents reveal that investigators covertly
searched Ortis's condo last month and found a number of handwritten
notes providing instructions on how to share documents without leaving a
paper trail.
They also reveal that Ortis was just over $90,000 in debt.
The
documents allege the security services first got wind of Ortis through a
separate investigation of Phantom Secure Communications, a B.C.-based
company under investigation for providing encrypted communication
devices to international criminals.
In March of last year, the
FBI revealed that it had taken down an international criminal
communications service based in Canada that had revenue of $80 million
over the last decade.
The documents seen by CBC News say the FBI
investigation discovered in 2018 that a person was sending emails to
Vincent Ramos, CEO of Phantom Secure Communications, offering to provide
valuable information.
The documents allege that person was Ortis.
"You
don't know me. I have information that I am confident you will find
very valuable," one email contained in the documents reads.
A subsequent email promised to provide "intel about your associates and individuals using their network internationally."
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