https://mobile.twitter.com/DanKinsellaHRP/status/1528738241125523457
https://masscasualtycommission.ca/calendar/event/69336/
Agenda
- Presentation of Foundational Document: Truro Police Services - April 19, 2020
- Witness: Chief Dave MacNeil, Truro Police Service (TPS), to provide context for TPS operations during the mass casualty, and to explain his role as a municipal police chief, and TPS relationships with the Nova Scotia Department of Justice, the Nova Scotia Chiefs of Police and the RCMP as the provincial police service.
Note
- Foundational Documents will be posted to our website as they are entered into evidence during the proceedings.
- The Commission will work to have source material posted within two business days of marking it as an exhibit during proceedings although in rare instances there may be further delays.
- If links within the Foundational Document are taking you to a page that states “Page not found or document unavailable,” it means they are not yet posted to the website.
- All timing, agendas, format and schedules are subject to change and will be updated here as required.
Truro police chief calls RCMP lockdown request 'a last-minute Hail Mary'
On April 18-19, 2020, the Mounties had limited contact with the nearest municipal police force
On Monday morning the public inquiry examining the rampage that left 22 people dead, injured others and devastated communities, is examining the Truro Police Service's role and communications between the two police forces.
Truro's police chief, Dave MacNeil, is testifying about the events of April 18-19, 2020.
He said while RCMP eventually asked for Truro to lock down the town after they realized the gunman was on the move the morning of April 19, he had no idea what that practically meant.
With no details about which roads to block, McNeil said it seemed like a pretty wide open statement.
"It was very vague and kind of time sensitive — it takes some time to lock down a community," McNeil said.
"It's a little bit of a last-minute Hail Mary type of a thing, I think."
CBC News previously reported the municipal police agency's only direct involvement overnight was to station an officer at the town's hospital following a request from the emergency department when staff there learned RCMP were searching for someone after a shooting in Portapique, N.S., about 38 kilometres away.
Twenty-two people died on April 18 and 19, 2020. Top row from left: Gina Goulet, Dawn Gulenchyn, Jolene Oliver, Frank Gulenchyn, Sean McLeod, Alanna Jenkins. Second row: John Zahl, Lisa McCully, Joey Webber, Heidi Stevenson, Heather O'Brien and Jamie Blair. Third row from top: Kristen Beaton, Lillian Campbell, Joanne Thomas, Peter Bond, Tom Bagley and Greg Blair. Bottom row: Emily Tuck, Joy Bond, Corrie Ellison and Aaron Tuck. (CBC)
The hospital remained locked down into the morning and Truro police officers guarded the entrance. Some family members of those being treated spoke to them in the overnight hours.
Call logs obtained by CBC News show that minutes after the first call from the hospital at midnight, a Truro corporal called the RCMP for the first time. About an hour later, an RCMP dispatcher called back to advise they were responding to an active shooter situation and the suspect was linked to a former police car that might have a type of decal on it.
Early in the morning on April 19, Truro police Cpl. Rick Hickox encountered in the town two Mounties from Antigonish who were looking for directions to the dispatch centre after notifying someone in the town their loved ones had been killed.
The pair told him there were four or five people killed in Portapique and that RCMP didn't know where the gunman was, he told the inquiry. "We had no indication the person was outside Colchester [County]," he told the commission.
Between 1 a.m. and 9 a.m., the RCMP called Truro police five times, relaying information gathered about the suspect's vehicles, and it sent three "be on the look out" (BOLO) bulletins to police agencies in the province. Shortly after 8 a.m. the notice described the replica police cruiser and said Gabriel Wortman was "arrestable for homicide and is armed and dangerous."
(CBC News)
Records released to the CBC through freedom of information legislation also showed that MacNeil emailed the two highest-ranking Mounties in the province at 9:50 a.m. offering assistance. Chief Supt. Chris Leather responded at 10 a.m. saying they believed the suspect was "pinned down" in Wentworth.
Leather and Supt. Darren Campbell later clarified in a June 2020 press conference that Leather's comment related to believing the suspect was contained at a home in Glenholme, N.S., a community 34 kilometres closer to Truro.
But at 10 a.m., the gunman was actually in Debert, N.S., even closer to Truro, where he killed Heather O'Brien and Kristen Beaton, Victorian Order of Nurses colleagues who were in separate vehicles on Plains Road.
He then drove into Truro and continued south toward Halifax, injuring one RCMP officer and killing three more people: Const. Heidi Stevenson, Joey Webber and Gina Goulet.
(CBC News)
Receiving that email at a time when officers in Truro were talking about calling in more people — and about 20 minutes after they heard from an RCMP dispatcher that the suspect might be heading toward the town — changed his team's perspective, MacNeil previously told the Mass Casualty Commission.
"We kind of took a collective deep breath and figured this was a done deal," he said in an August 2021 interview.
"The decisions I made the rest of the day were based on that email."
Several senior Mounties have told the inquiry just how hectic it was responding to the shootings and in particular how things shifted quickly Sunday morning after they realized the gunman was on the move again and targeting people on the roadside.
'Fragmented' information
That Sunday morning, it was difficult for Truro police to follow where the gunman had been spotted, especially after the email about Wentworth, and that they did not receive clear tasks from the RCMP, MacNeil told the commission.
"The information we were getting was fragmented and it really didn't make a lot of sense to us," the police chief told inquiry investigators.
The police service did ask the officers working that morning to drive around the town and tell people who were out walking they should go back inside. MacNeil said fortunately most businesses were closed because of COVID but his dispatchers did try to call the big stores that were open to advise them of a situation in the county.
Commission documents show Truro police called in one extra person overnight and five extra officers Sunday morning.
Request to lock down Truro
At 10:37 a.m., an RCMP dispatcher called a Truro dispatcher to pass on that Staff Sgt. Bruce Briers, the risk manager working out of the RCMP's Operational Communications Centre, wanted the municipal police force "to lock down" the town.
By then the gunman had already driven through downtown Truro, but neither police agency knew that at the time.
When Truro police Cpl. Ed Cormier asked what locking down meant, the RCMP dispatcher suggested "maybe you can do some roadblocks on the main," according to the transcripts previously released to CBC.
Though the RCMP sent police in Truro updates about their suspect's believed location, the information was not up to date or accurate. (CBC News)
Truro police Insp. Darrin Smith told the commission he felt he didn't have enough information about setting up roadblocks and felt it was "obvious … the information … was all over the board, all over the map."
"It was almost like it was a panic statement thrown out by somebody to the dispatcher without any real forethought of what they were asking us to do," Smith said in his interview with the inquiry.
Smith said up until that point, he'd thought the threat was half an hour away and that only then did he learn about the deaths in Wentworth and Debert.
In an affidavit filed in response to a lawsuit launched by families, Supt. Darren Campbell described the exchange as telling Truro "to advise them to secure the perimeter of Truro."
MacNeil called the RCMP's characterization as "a bit of a misrepresentation of the truth." He said it would've been helpful to have been told something more specific about where to set up a roadblock, when interviewed by the inquiry.
Within half an hour, Truro police did respond to a possible sighting of the gunman at a Sobeys in Lower Truro, N.S., that was unfounded.
The gunman's replica police vehicle captured on security camera driving on Esplanade St. in Truro, N.S., the morning of April 19, 2020. (RCMP)
When the gunman drove through Truro, he passed close to the police station but did not cross paths with the three Truro cruisers out in the community, the public inquiry found after analyzing GPS data from the vehicles.
MacNeil did not find out the gunman drove through the downtown until the RCMP released surveillance photos of the replica cruiser captured from local businesses in a press conference nearly a week after the shootings.
He felt "completely blindsided" and would have appreciated a heads up from the RCMP, he told the commission in his interview.
In it, the police chief also spoke about how he felt the RCMP was resistant to his force's plans to release documents detailing a 2011 warning about the gunman through freedom of information.
Sheriff warned judge to leave home
The Mass Casualty Commission's report also explained why a provincial court judge in Truro was warned about the gunman being a possible threat.
Judge Alain Bégin previously represented the gunman's uncle in a civil dispute involving a property in Portapique.
The inquiry determined Sgt. Jason Power, who worked for Nova Scotia Sheriff Services, anticipated his team might have to interact with the gunman and started a risk assessment after seeing an RCMP tweet identifying him.
When he found reference to the civil case and Bégin, he anticipated a possible conflict of interest and notified his supervisor, who then called the judge.
After learning about the replica cruiser, the supervisor, Supt. Cody Zielie, told Bégin to go for a drive and later followed up to let the judge know the gunman had been killed.
Corrections
- A previous version of this story said Truro Police Chief Dave MacNeil emailed RCMP Chief Supt. Chris Leather at 8:50 a.m. This was an incorrect time due to an erroneous reference to the time in another email. In fact, MacNeil sent the email at 9:50 a.m. This version has been corrected.Jun 06, 2022 11:06 AM AT
Families of N.S. mass shooting victims end boycott, to return to inquiry hearings
---------- Original message ----------
From: Justice Minister <JUSTMIN@novascotia.ca>
Date: Fri, 27 May 2022 21:32:19 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: :I called AGAIN today Correct???
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
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Subject: Thank you for your email
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
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From: Ministerial Correspondence Unit - Justice Canada <mcu@justice.gc.ca>
Date: Fri, 27 May 2022 21:27:13 +0000
Subject: Automatic Reply
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
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---------- Original message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
Date: Fri, 27 May 2022 18:23:52 -0300
Subject: :I called AGAIN today Correct???
To: dmacneil@truro.ca, dpike@amherst.ca, bourdap@halifax.ca,
mayor@halifax.ca, mackins@halifax.ca
Cc: motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>, PREMIER
<PREMIER@gov.ns.ca>, JUSTMIN@novascotia.ca, mcu@justice.gc.ca
https://davidraymondamos3.
Friday, 27 May 2022
RCMP wanted 2011 tip about N.S. gunman to 'go away': Truro police chief
https://www.cbc.ca/news/
RCMP wanted 2011 tip about N.S. gunman to 'go away': Truro police chief
Chief Dave MacNeil talked to public inquiry about dealings with RCMP
in wake of mass shooting
---------- Original message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
Date: Mon, 4 Apr 2022 13:38:43 -0300
Subject: I just called correct???
To: police@truro.ca, versailles@versaillescom.com, mcu <mcu@justice.gc.ca>
Cc: motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
Guy Versailles, 514 386 9774, versailles@versaillescom.com
https://www.truro.ca/police-
Chief of Police
Truro Police Service
776 Prince Street
Truro, Nova Scotia
Canada B2N 1G9
Tel: 902-895-5351 (This contact number is staffed 24/7)
Fax: 902-893-1629
Email: police@truro.ca
https://davidraymondamos3.
Friday, 1 April 2022
N.S. man stood guard with a shotgun after the mass shooter rang his doorbell
https://www.cbc.ca/news/
Commission examining N.S. mass killing announces inquiry participants
Participants include families, advocacy groups, police organizations
Frances Willick · CBC News · Posted: May 13, 2021 11:48 AM AT
https://davidraymondamos3.
Tuesday, 20 November 2018
I read the news today about the RCMP lawsuits and just shook my head
at the malicious nonsense but when Guy Versailles laughed at me I got
truly pissed off
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-scotia/2011-tip-gunman-truro-police-foipop-1.6451236
RCMP wanted 2011 tip about N.S. gunman to 'go away': Truro police chief
Chief Dave MacNeil talked to public inquiry about dealings with RCMP in wake of mass shooting
Truro's police chief felt the RCMP was resistant to his force's plans to release a 2011 bulletin warning that the gunman who went on a shooting rampage in 2020 had weapons and threatened to "kill a cop," according to documents released by the public inquiry examining the tragedy in Nova Scotia.
Two weeks after Gabriel Wortman killed 22 people, including a pregnant woman and an RCMP officer, CBC News requested all of the Truro Police Service's records related to the mass shooting through freedom-of-information legislation.
Chief Dave MacNeil told investigators with the Mass Casualty Commission he had informed the RCMP in advance that his legal advisors had determined they were bound by legislation to release their files. In response, he said two of the most senior Mounties in the province, Chief Supt. Chris Leather and Chief Supt. Janis Gray, arranged a call.
"To me [the message] was, this bulletin needs to not surface. We need to explain this bulletin away," MacNeil said in his interview with the public inquiry.
"I felt as if, I'm not going to say pressured, but I felt … if the bulletin could go away they would be very happy. And I wasn't able to do that because that's not the way I do business."
MacNeil, who the commission interviewed in August 2021, said he felt it was "not ethically and morally correct" to withhold the public records requested by CBC and Global. He said he declined the RCMP's request to review their files in that May 2020 call.
The police chief declined to speak with CBC News Thursday, citing his participation in the inquiry. He expects to be called as a witness in June.
Truro police chief Dave MacNeil told CBC in May 2020 that officer safety bulletins are issued rarely and one of his officers submitted one about the gunman in 2011 that was circulated across the province. He said they didn't investigate it directly because the shooter lived in Dartmouth and Portapique, N.S. (Elizabeth McMillan/CBC)
The RCMP told CBC News it would be inappropriate to comment on specific documents or testimony while the inquiry is underway.
In an emailed statement, Cpl. Chris Marshall said Leather and Gray got in touch with Truro earlier, on April 24, because they were looking "for more details, including the context of the information in the bulletin and whether additional information was available."
Officer safety bulletin
The records released to CBC in May 2020 included transcripts of dispatch communications on April 18 and 19, bulletins circulated by the RCMP about the active shooter on April 19 and emails that refer to an anonymous tip that Cpl. Greg Densmore received in 2011 about Gabriel Wortman.
Densmore had sent an "officer safety bulletin" to other police agencies at the time warning them he'd heard from an unnamed source that Wortman had several guns and a source said he was experiencing some mental issues.
Prior to CBC publishing a story about the 2011 tip, the RCMP had not mentioned it publicly — though records show municipal police forces flagged the bulletin in the hours after the gunman's name became public on April 19 and the RCMP began looking into it within days.
A screenshot from a 2011 officer safety bulletin, released to CBC in May of 2020, which contained a tip about the man who, nine years later, killed 22 people in rural Nova Scotia. (Truro Police Service)
MacNeil said the release of the tip became a "contentious" issue and that the RCMP wanted him and other municipal chiefs to be part of a joint press conference about it.
"It became very clear to the three chiefs that this was about 'how do I move the narrative and put it on someone else.' And we weren't playing ball," he told the commission.
Marshall said the purpose of a May 26, 2020, call with police chiefs from Amherst, Truro and Halifax was to discuss a potential press conference about the bulletin given "it was associated" with all three municipal forces. An officer from Amherst had found the bulletin in his files.
MacNeil told the inquiry, as he told CBC News at the time, the tip related to someone who didn't live in his force's jurisdiction so his agency's involvement ended after it was submitted and it would've been up to other agencies to investigate.
'Rock bottom' relationship with RCMP
Though the RCMP did not ask the municipal force to respond on April 19, except for a late request to "lock down" the town and to investigate a possible sighting of the shooter at grocery store on April 19, Truro's police chief told the inquiry it had a profound impact on his team and community.
"The incident caused a lot of angst and grief among our officers," he said. "A lot of them thought the thing was a complete mess…. [They] weren't given information, but we didn't have information to give them."
In his interview with the commission, he said his front-line officers still have a good relationship with their Mountie counterparts in Colchester County and they share information as needed. But he said at the senior level, the strained dealings with RCMP hit "rock bottom" in the wake of the tragedy.
He said at the provincial level, the RCMP dealt with his command team with "intimidation and spin doctoring and lack of transparency."
The commission had initially planned to release this week its preliminary report on the involvement of municipal police agencies on April 18 and 19, 2020. The release of that foundational document has not yet been rescheduled.
HRP made calls after 2011 tip
When asked in the spring of 2020 about how officers responded to the 2011 tip, the RCMP initially said they had purged the records from their system and did not have access to the bulletin on April 18 and 19. In a June 4, 2020 press conference, they said they were looking into contact an officer had with Wortman.
Documents released this spring by the public inquiry showed that after the bulletin circulated in 2011, a police officer in Halifax who'd looked into a previous complaint that the gunman threatened his parents followed up with Densmore.
Cordell Poirier, who has since retired from the Halifax police force, told the commission that he had contacted RCMP Const. Greg Wiley in Bible Hill following the 2010 threats complaint. Wiley described himself as a friend of the gunman's and told Poirier he'd try to speak with Wortman about the complaint directly.
Poirier told the commission said he found it "strange" to learn that more than a month later, Wiley had not done so. Poirier closed the file in late August without ever hearing from Wiley.
Wiley told RCMP investigators in a June 2021 interview that he didn't remember speaking to Poirier, and described Wortman as a "very very polite guy."
After the 2011 bulletin was released, Poirier — describing Wortman in his notes as a "viable threat" — contacted the Bible Hill RCMP detachment again and told on-duty supervisor Const. John MacMinn about the previous year's incident. MacMinn, who hadn't seen the bulletin, said he'd follow up with Wiley and contact Poirier with an update.
"I never got that update," Poirier told the commission. "I don't know if he contacted somebody in our department and passed the information along, but I never got any information."
Twenty-two people died on April 18 and 19, 2020. Top row from left: Gina Goulet, Dawn Gulenchyn, Jolene Oliver, Frank Gulenchyn, Sean McLeod, Alanna Jenkins. Second row: John Zahl, Lisa McCully, Joey Webber, Heidi Stevenson, Heather O'Brien and Jamie Blair. Third row from top: Kristen Beaton, Lillian Campbell, Joanne Thomas, Peter Bond, Tom Bagley and Greg Blair. Bottom row: Emily Tuck, Joy Bond, Corrie Ellison and Aaron Tuck. (CBC)
Other FOIPOP requests denied
CBC filed the same request for records sent to Truro police to the Amherst Police Department and Halifax Regional Police. Amherst released its records but Halifax did not, citing the ongoing investigation.
Halifax police also denied a subsequent request for information about how it responded to the 2011 tip. CBC appealed both matters and they have yet to be resolved.
CBC has also filed numerous access-to-information requests to the RCMP.
Some requests were denied because the material requested related to the "the detection, prevention or suppression of crime," one of a number of reasons public bodies are allowed to make exceptions. None of the records released included reference to the 2011 tip.
CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices
Look how old the Truro Bullshit is Clearly the FEDS had over 2 years to polish this turd and spin it
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-scotia/ns-gunman-2011-warning-1.5589277
2011 tip that warned N.S. gunman wanted 'to kill a cop' was purged from RCMP records
RCMP can’t say what was done with the bulletin that was sent to police agencies in 2011
Police agencies across Nova Scotia were warned in May 2011 that a denturist named Gabriel Wortman had a stash of guns and said he wanted "to kill a cop," according to records newly obtained by CBC News.
But the Nova Scotia RCMP can't say what, if anything, was done with the tip about the man who police believe went on to kill 22 people, including an RCMP officer, in rural Nova Scotia in April.
The 2011 warning came after an unnamed source approached Truro police Cpl. Greg Densmore with detailed information about where Wortman kept his guns, including that he may have been transporting a handgun between his home in Dartmouth and his cottage in Portapique, N.S.
CBC News obtained a copy of Densmore's report from the Truro Police Service through an access-to-information request. Sections are redacted, but it shows the bulletin was distributed through the Criminal Intelligence Service of Nova Scotia, a network of policing agencies that share information.
There appear to be contradictions around who was responsible for acting on the tip.
RCMP vehicles block the crime scene in Portapique on April 26. (Olivier Lefebvre/CBC)
Wortman's cottage in Portapique is in RCMP territory, but his principal residence in Dartmouth was not in RCMP jurisdiction, said Cpl. Jennifer Clarke, spokesperson for the Nova Scotia RCMP.
She doesn't know if anyone from the RCMP ever followed up on the concerns.
"I don't know what was done or what wasn't done at the time," she told CBC News.
CBC followed up with Clarke on Friday, but she wasn't able to provide any additional details about what the RCMP did with the 2011 tip.
"We can't speak about specifics of the follow up to the 2011 bulletin because our database records have been purged as per our retention policies," Clarke wrote in an email.
"Preliminary indications are that we were aware and at minimum provided assistance to [Halifax Regional Police], which aligns with the RCMP's approach for such enquiries."
Bulletin purged from RCMP records
The Halifax Regional Police say they investigated the tip at the time and even interviewed some of Wortman's relatives. Investigators determined that any information about weapons was related to Wortman's cottage and not his property in Dartmouth.
They sent their findings to the RCMP, according to Const. John MacLeod, a spokesperson for the Halifax Regional Police.
Cpl. Jennifer Clarke, a spokesperson for the RCMP in Nova Scotia, isn't sure what was done to follow up on a tip from 2011 about the man who later carried out a mass shooting in Nova Scotia. (CBC)
But Clarke said that as the manhunt for the gunman began in Portapique late on April 18, the RCMP didn't have the information in the 2011 bulletin at their disposal as it had been purged from their records. She said the force typically keeps such warnings for only two years.
When asked whether that information could have been helpful to officers who responded to the shooting, Clarke said it was difficult to say.
"I mean, it's hypothetical if there is something that could've been done to prevent this," she said. "I think myself and any number of people would want to know that. But I don't know."
'It's a piece of the story'
The bulletin came to light April 19 when an officer from the Amherst Police Service recognized Wortman's name and dug up the 2011 notice in his email. He shared the information with his supervisor, who passed it on to the RCMP, according to Amherst Police Chief Dwayne Pike.
Truro Police Chief Dave MacNeil said one of his officers also recovered the nine-year-old document about a week later, after it was brought to their attention.
Truro Police Chief Dave MacNeil says officer safety bulletins are issued rarely, and one of his officers submitted the one about Wortman in 2011. (Elizabeth McMillan/CBC)
It's the latest indication that there were warning signs years in advance that Wortman was dangerous.
"This is the largest mass [shooting] in Canada's history, and it's a piece of the story," MacNeil said in an interview.
"What piece that plays, I don't know. I'm not at liberty to speculate on that, but it's information that should be shared with the public."
The 2011 bulletin was the second time in less than a year that police had been made aware of Wortman's possibility for violence, the documents revealed.
The bulletin describes how Wortman was investigated for "uttering death threats to his parents" on June 2, 2010. That investigation also included information that he had several guns.
Halifax Regional Police investigated, but closed the file without laying charges, according to its spokesperson.
He said there wasn't enough evidence to lay charges or get search warrants.
The 2011 tip
In the officer safety bulletin from 2011, Densmore writes that he received information from an unnamed source on May 3 saying that Wortman had "stated he wants to kill a cop" and was upset with how police investigated a break-and-enter complaint he made.
"He believes police did not do their job in relation to this investigation," Densmore wrote.
The tipster told police that Wortman was "under a lot of stress lately" and was starting to have some mental health issues, describing him as "becoming a little squirrelly."
A screenshot from a 2011 officer safety bulletin, which contained a tip about Wortman, who earlier this year killed 22 people in rural Nova Scotia. (Truro Police Service)
Densmore's submission also noted that Wortman kept a handgun within arm's length — in his nightstand while he slept and with him when he travelled. The tipster said they saw Wortman's guns themselves.
"Mr. [Wortman] may also be in possession of several long rifles located at his cottage located at [address redacted]; these firearms are stored in a compartment located behind the flue," Densmore's submission stated.
Officer urged caution when dealing with Wortman
Densmore indicated that he was disseminating the tip to warn any officers that might come into contact with Wortman.
"This information is from an uncoded and unproven source but had to be fanned out for officer safety just in case, so if any officers [have] dealings with Mr Wortman, they should use caution," Densmore wrote in a May 3, 2011, email to a redacted RCMP email address, according to the documents obtained by CBC News.
The email correspondence included discussion of the vehicles Wortman drove between Dartmouth and Portapique. The records say Wortman had six plated vehicles registered in his name at that time, and one unplated vehicle.
MacNeil, who now sits on the executive of the Criminal Intelligence Service Nova Scotia, said officer safety bulletins like the one Densmore submitted are rare — only a few are sent per year, usually when it's thought that someone has the means, motive and desire to cause harm to an officer.
Typically, when Truro Police receive that type of information pertaining to their coverage area, the force would treat it like a tip from Crime Stoppers and act on it, MacNeil said.
"We would open an investigation. We would open a file on it, we would assign an investigator and we would try to determine the validity of the information with an eye to criminal charges if they're warranted at the end of the day," he said.
The faces of the 22 people killed by a gunman in Nova Scotia last month. (CBC)
Because the tip about Wortman didn't fall into Truro's coverage area, he said, his police force's involvement ended after it was submitted. He couldn't comment on what other jurisdictions did with the information.
"We've never dealt with this gentleman. We've never investigated him other than we received this information from a member of the public, which our officer was, thankfully, engaged enough to say 'Hey, this is important. I'd better make note of it,'" he said.
But Clarke, the spokesperson for the Nova Scotia RCMP, said while the bulletin's contents were "concerning," RCMP often receive similar bulletins about people from other jurisdictions or who might be passing through theirs.
"This incident is massive, and it's going to take a lot of analysis to determine what, if anything, we can learn, how we can change, and I don't know that any of that is being discussed right now," Clarke said.
"Right now we're focused on the investigation and ensuring that the families are kept apprised of what's happening as the investigation develops."
If you are seeking mental health support during this time, here are resources available to Nova Scotians.
Do you have a tip about this story? Please click here to get in touch.
With files from Kayla Hounsell
Inside the ER: How a Truro hospital responded to a mass shooting during a pandemic
'Because we care so much about those we serve, it was particularly painful,' says doctor
It was Saturday, April 18, just after 11 p.m., when the emergency physician got the call. There had been a shooting in nearby Portapique, N.S. There were multiple victims.
"As soon as we got the initial notification that we might be receiving patients, we jumped into action," she said.
Sommers is the chief of the emergency department at the Colchester East Hants Health Centre, the hospital in Truro. It was one of four health centres locked down during the Nova Scotia shooting rampage that would leave 22 victims dead.
Sommers said staff are heartbroken, but their work responding to the fallout of that night is far from over.
Hospital staff have been reluctant to talk about what happened. Sommers said staff think their efforts pale in comparison to the hard work of RCMP members, Emergency Health Services and other first responders who were out in the field.
"We just want to acknowledge the sacrifices they have made," she said.
Dr. Jan Sommers, head of the emergency department in Truro, says staff expect to see patients struggling with the fallout of the killings for months. (Dave Laughlin/CBC)
Inside the hospital, those on duty found themselves in a remarkable position. They were dealing with a shooting and a pandemic at the same time.
Just last year, Truro emergency staff held a training exercise on handling a mass shooting.
"I never thought I would be using the knowledge gained in that exercise." Sommers said.
A quiet night at first
By chance, some aspects of the double crisis worked in their favour.
There were three physicians on staff instead of the usual two because of COVID-19. There were about a dozen nurses in the department. The hospital was quiet, and it was a rare night with some empty beds.
The team called in a radiologist and surgeon. Employees from other parts of the hospital came to take on the emergency patients who were not connected to the shootings.
Truro police officers came to guard the doors.
"We're a very close-knit hospital," said Sommers. "People were eager to help."
The Nova Scotia Health Authority won't say how many victims were taken to each site.
In smaller locations, the fear is even the smallest detail could identify any patients, said Sommers. All she will say, is that they didn't treat as many people as they expected.
"I'm not sure I can describe the stillness of an emergency department that's waiting to receive victims that don't come. It got emotional for sure."
Sommers is from Truro and has been in the emergency department for 13 years. She said while they've dealt with major emergencies before, including the 1998 Swiss Air crash that killed 229 people in waters near Peggys Cove, this one is the hardest.
This act was intentional. Every employee has been affected by a loss.
"Because we care so much about those we serve, it was particularly painful," Sommers said. "I don't think any of us ever imagined that something like this would happen in our beautiful town."
Past trauma
While the immediate crisis has ended, staff have seen patients in the emergency department who are traumatized. They expect that to continue for months.
Sommers urged people to reach out if they needed help or to call the provincial mobile crisis line.
"We are prepared for what is going to come through our door," she said. "Despite being heartbroken about what's happened, we're here to serve the community in whatever way we can."
Sommers said support has also been offered to her team.
"Some days are better than others for each of us," she said.
"We have received condolences and messages of support from hospitals across the Maritimes and even across Canada. We would just like to say thank you for the support, it makes a big difference."
If you are seeking mental health support during this time, here are resources available to Nova Scotians.
https://adamrodgers.ca/2022/04/25/book-and-book-launch-review-22-murders-by-paul-palango/
I attended the launch event for Paul Palango’s book on the NS Mass Shooting, entitled ’22 Murders’. The launch was held at the Old Triangle in downtown Halifax, the pub to which the statue of Joseph Howe points from it’s perch at Province House. Any journalist would be proud to be associated with Mr. Howe, and Palango is just such a fearless journalist that would have fit Howe’s hopes for the future.
There was a good crowd for the launch, including many people who were previously known to me more by their usernames. Jordan Bonaparte, from Nighttime Podcast was there, as was Andrew Douglas from Frank Magazine. Many from the Portapique and Onslow-Belmont areas were on hand as well. Palango did not read extensively from the book, instead choosing to highlight a certain passage and then invite the subject of the note to come up to speak.
This was my first opportunity to meet Palango in person. I have had a few chances to talk with him on the phone, and before that had taken in several of his podcast appearances on The Nighttime Podcast with Jordan Bonaparte. I have also kept up on his journalism since the early days after Gabriel Wortman’s killing spree. His reporting has been invaluable for me as an analyst, being detailed and specific about what he has been able to discover, and being unafraid to venture into potentially sensitive material.
Knowing that I was going to be attending the launch, I finished the book itself a few days ahead of time, so I would have a chance to digest and reflect on what it contained, and of course so as to be able to converse about it at the event. Palango’s writing style is very engaging, drawing you into the story from a first-person narrative perspective. It follows the author’s own discovery journey to the facts, and also the perspectives of those he has interviewed, all of which helps give the reader a sense of how difficult it is to get straight answers from the RCMP. In that sense, it is also a good guide for those interested in pursuing journalism as a potential career option.
Many of the details Palango was able to uncover come from civic-minded, sometimes anonymous sources, including some within the RCMP itself. Those familiar with his reporting will already know this, but in the book the background and context to those revelations are fleshed out in greater detail, building a strong circumstantial case around various RCMP coverups. He does not force conclusions upon the reader, but rather gives enough information so as to allow the reader to form their own.
Palango self-identifies his journalistic style as being an incrementalist, building a story over time, rather than presuming the first look is complete or accurate. He is always trying to say something new to move a story along, but to also write in such a way as to invite the readers to add to the story as well with information they may have, and which they might be inclined to provide to him. Throughout the book, there are examples of this methodology being effective.
The book was written before the Mass Casualty Commission proceedings began, and yet Palango has many of the details laid out with precision and accuracy in the book, which were otherwise unreported prior to the proceedings. Unlike the MCC (so far at least) Palango then also tests various hypotheses against the known facts, and works out some plausible (and as yet unrefuted) theories of what went wrong. His analysis is all the more useful and compelling, given his background knowledge of how policing operates in Canada. Included in the book are some histories of some of the leading RCMP supervisors in Nova Scotia, and what brought them all here.
There is much to recommend about the book. It is written with an appropriate level of cynical awareness of how institutions like the RCMP market themselves to the public, while not venturing into conspiracy-mindedness. At the same time, if a theory fits the known facts, Palango is not afraid to express it.
There were some brave people involved in putting this together, and their efforts have certainly been of great benefit to me as I do my legal analysis work through The Rodgers Brief. They are also of great benefit to the public in helping us all understand what took place, what went wrong, and what kind of things need to change. I highly recommend the book, and hope to see more great work from Paul and his team of citizen-journalists.
Shots, Lies and Videotape - Frank Magazine
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iXWTefe-J1Y&ab_channel=CBCNews%3ATheNational
https://twitter.com/NightTimePod/status/1528442232444960772
In this photo
Attending Paul Palango's '22 Murders' Book Launch Event (Old Triangle - April 24, 2022)
'The nicest people': Daughter remembers father, stepmom killed in N.S. rampage
'They would have done anything for anybody and not thought twice about it,' says Taylor Andrews
The McLeod and Jenkins household in West Wentworth, N.S., was known for two things: fun and laughter.
Whether it was huddling inside with friends in the winter or jumping from the backyard into the Wallace River in the summer, the property was always alive with people.
"They had the house everybody always wanted to be at," Taylor Andrews told CBC's Mainstreet. "They loved having a full house, everybody was always welcome to stay there."
Andrews is the daughter of Sean McLeod. Over the weekend, he and his partner, Alanna Jenkins, died in one of the largest mass killings in Canadian history.
Andrews said they were warm, caring people, with a long list of family and friends who loved them.
One of those people was Josh Jenkins, Alanna's brother.
Sean McLeod and Alanna Jenkins were Corrections Canada employees. They are shown here in a family handout photo. (Taylor McLeod via The Canadian Press)
"They were the best. Alanna was my big sister and best friend. I couldn't have picked a better partner for her in Sean. He was my brother and my friend, these two will be so deeply missed by all of us," Josh Jenkins wrote in a message to CBC News.
He said his family is having a tough time dealing with the loss.
"She was a beautiful human," he said.
Both McLeod and Jenkins worked hard to have an open and inviting home.
'My friends loved them'
Andrews and her friends would often head out to the house and spend the day with McLeod and Jenkins.
"We would go tubing in the backyard right off their property and they loved when I brought my friends out," said Andrews. "My friends loved them."
This time last year, McLeod and Jenkins took Andrews, her husband and their small child on a trip to Florida. It's a memory that Andrews cherishes.
"I'm so glad we got to do that with them," she said.
The couple also loved doting on Andrews' soon-to-be two-year-old daughter — she was supposed to be visiting them on Saturday night, but didn't end up going over.
WATCH | Tributes to the heroes and victims killed in Nova Scotia rampage:
In his obituary, McLeod, 44, was remembered as the backbone of the family who enjoyed hunting in the woods, floating on the river and "Saturday night hoedowns."
McLeod was a proud member of the Cobequid Education Centre rugby team and the Truro Saints Rugby Cub where his daughter continued his passion for the game.
"Sean always had a smile on his face. We will miss him forever and a day," it reads.
Jenkins is remembered as "the light of our life that never stopped shining."
The 36-year-old is described in her obituary as a beautiful, strong, warm and loving soul who "lit up a room whenever she walked into it."
It says she and her husband loved hosting family events, cooking together for everyone and celebrating Thanksgiving and Christmas.
"If you were lucky to be her friend, you knew she always had your back. Together she and Sean lived life to the fullest," her obituary reads.
Their two Labrador retrievers, Bama and Remi, were also killed with them.
'They would have done anything for anybody'
McLeod and Jenkins were both Corrections Canada employees. McLeod worked at the federal prison in Springhill, N.S., and Jenkins worked at the Nova Institution for Women in Truro, N.S.
In an email, Corrections Canada said both were correctional managers "who carried out their responsibilities with the highest level of integrity and professionalism."
Public Safety Minister Bill Blair said in a news release the couple "would be remembered for their commitment to public safety," and they would be greatly missed by co-workers, family and friends.
"They would have done anything for anybody and not thought twice about it," said Andrews.
"They were the nicest people I know."
WATCH | Cartoonist pays tribute to fallen Nova Scotia RCMP officer:
McLeod's obituary says he attended Holland College, eventually becoming a skilled crisis negotiator before starting his 23-year career at Springhill.
"As a past founder of the Union of Canadian Correctional Officers, he was Springhill's first local president and said to always have the health and safety of all members in mind," it reads.
"Although Sean had a great career with CSC, he was counting down the days until retirement and looked forward to a house full of grandbabies and loved ones."
Jenkins's obituary says she worked at Nova Institute for 15 years and was, by all accounts, "very good at her job" and was well respected.
If you are seeking mental health support during this time, here are resources available to Nova Scotians.
With files from CBC's Mainstreet and Laura Fraser
About
1 Comment
The Sheldon MacLeod Show
Nov 26A chat with the legendary Steve Murphy
2 Comments
Cape Breton Post
May 27 3 Comments
Jim Mac LeodCape Breton Post
May 26 Cape Breton Post
May 26 Thinking Out Loud with Sheldon MacLeod
Judy Pal
10-8 Communications
With more than 30 years’ experience, Judy Pal has served in management positions for police, private sector and the professional sports and entertainment industry in both Canada and the U.S.
"One of the individuals who was instrumental in training my Command Staff was Ms Judy Pal. I can say with all sincerity and candor, Ms . Pal is one of the best at what she does. Each and every time I had a critical or sensitive situation I always asked for her insight and wisdom."
Prior to embarking on a full-time teaching and consulting career she served as an Assistant Commissioner with the NYPD, Director of Operations for FBI-LEEDA, Chief of Staff with the Baltimore and Milwaukee Police Departments, and was a member of the command staff of the Atlanta, Savannah, and Halifax (Canada) police departments.
She is proud to have conducted image and media training for more than 200 commanders with the NYPD and thousands of law enforcement professionals during her more than two decades of work in law enforcement. She is also a regular contributing trainer at FBI Regional Command Colleges across the country.
She has consulted for international police agencies in Canada, Chile and Trinidad and has taught and spoken at events across North America, as well as Australia, Uruguay and Manilla.
Pal is a past president of the National Information Officers Association, holds a Master’s Degree in Public Relations and earned her Certificate in Police Leadership from Dalhousie University in Canada.
She spent five years in television news, and is the proud owner of a Stanley Cup ring from the Edmonton Oilers and worked for the New York Rangers and Madison Square Garden.
MY TAKE WITH SHELDON MacLEOD: Truth and trauma at the MCC
- 314 episodes16 hours, 4 minutesFeaturedTruth and trauma at the MCC
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Sheldon MacLeod has been a broadcast professional for close to 30 years. Eyewitness to the transition from 45s and magnetic tape to CDs, MP3s, computers, websites, blogs and the worldwide web. And through all of the technology one thing remains constant: the satisfaction of sharing compelling stories with other humans. The responsibility of knowing better, is doing better. Sheldon is based in Halifax, N.S. Reach out to Sheldon at sheldon.macleod@saltwire.com.
the Nova Scotia Mass Shooting - May 15 2022 - Weekly Updates with Paul and Jordan
12 Comments
---------- Original message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
Date: Fri, 27 May 2022 10:46:11 -0300
Subject: Fwd: Does Allan Caroll or anyone else recall what went down
between the lawyers Tilly Pillay and Adam Rodgers and I in 2018???
To: nighttimepodcast@gmail.com, "Marco.Mendicino"
<Marco.Mendicino@parl.gc.ca>, "Mark.Blakely"
<Mark.Blakely@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, PREMIER <PREMIER@gov.ns.ca>,
"blaine.higgs" <blaine.higgs@gnb.ca>
Cc: motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
---------- Original message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
Date: Fri, 27 May 2022 11:47:00 -0300
Subject: Fwd: Does Allan Caroll or anyone else recall what went down
between the lawyers Tilly Pillay and Adam Rodgers and I in 2018???
To: tmacdonald@bloisnickerson.com, jane@lenehanmusgravelaw.ca,
lhupman@burchellmacdougall.com
Cc: motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
Date: Fri, 27 May 2022 11:47:00 -0300
Subject: Fwd: Does Allan Caroll or anyone else recall what went down
between the lawyers Tilly Pillay and Adam Rodgers and I in 2018???
To: tmacdonald@bloisnickerson.com, jane@lenehanmusgravelaw.ca,
lhupman@burchellmacdougall.com
Cc: motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
---------- Original message ----------
From: "Higgs, Premier Blaine (PO/CPM)" <Blaine.Higgs@gnb.ca>
Date: Fri, 27 May 2022 13:49:43 +0000
Subject: RE: Does Allan Caroll or anyone else recall what went down
between the lawyers Tilly Pillay and Adam Rodgers and I in 2018???
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
Hello,
Thank you for taking the time to write.
Due to the volume of incoming messages, this is an automated response
to let you know that your email has been received and will be reviewed
at the earliest opportunity.
If your inquiry more appropriately falls within the mandate of a
Ministry or other area of government, staff will refer your email for
review and consideration.
Merci d'avoir pris le temps de nous écrire.
En raison du volume des messages reçus, cette réponse automatique vous
informe que votre courriel a été reçu et sera examiné dans les
meilleurs délais.
Si votre demande relève plutôt du mandat d'un ministère ou d'un autre
secteur du gouvernement, le personnel vous renverra votre courriel
pour examen et considération.
If this is a Media Request, please contact the Premier’s office at
(506) 453-2144 or by email
media-medias@gnb.ca<mailto:med
S’il s’agit d’une demande des médias, veuillez communiquer avec le
Cabinet du premier ministre au 506-453-2144.
Office of the Premier/Cabinet du premier ministre
P.O Box/C. P. 6000 Fredericton New-Brunswick/Nouveau-
Tel./Tel. : (506) 453-2144
Email/Courriel: premier@gnb.ca <mailto:premier@gnb.ca%20> /
premierministre@gnb.ca<mailto:
---------- Original message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
Date: Fri, 27 May 2022 05:41:45 -0300
Subject: Does Allan Caroll or anyone else recall what went down
between the lawyers Tilly Pillay and Adam Rodgers and I in 2018???
To: adam@adamrodgers.ca, lori.ward@justice.gc.ca, "Brenda.Lucki"
<Brenda.Lucki@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, "Frank.McKenna" <Frank.McKenna@td.com>
Cc: motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>, tim
<tim@halifaxexaminer.ca>, Newsroom <Newsroom@globeandmail.com>
https://www.youtube.com/watch?
MCC Day 27 – Participants’ Boycott Continues, and Local District
Commander Testifies (by Video)
401 views
May 26, 2022
Adam Rodgers
549 subscribers
The Mass Casualty Proceedings continued today from Truro, with
testimony from Staff Sgt. Al Carroll, who was the District Commander
for Colchester County at the time of the shootings. Outside of the
facility where the proceedings were taking place, family members and
supporters were protesting the Commission’s decision-making on witness
accommodation requests for RCMP supervisors. This was day two of the
boycott of proceedings by many of the family participants. Some were
protesting outside of the proceedings venue, calling for changes to
the Commission procedures to allow more fulsome participation (and
specifically cross-examination) by participants and their lawyers.
Staff Sgt. Carroll, along with two other staff sergeants (none of whom
had direct experience with violence or exposure to scenes of violence
during the events of the mass casualty) have been given permission to
testify by video, with limits on cross-examination. Those protesting
are justified in their criticisms of the Commission’s approach.
Today’s testimony was a good demonstration of why the accommodation
requests need not have been granted. Staff Sgt. Carroll testified for
3 ½ hours in the morning, then another hour in the afternoon, with no
unscheduled breaks being requested by him, and he displayed no obvious
signs of discomfort, nor certainly trauma. He displayed little emotion
of any kind, or much energy, in his answers. The National Police
Federation has requested accommodations previously for lower ranking
officers. These had been rejected, and the officers thereafter also
testified with no obvious signs of discomfort or trauma. All of this
serves to undermine the credibility of both the NPF and the
Commission.
8 Comments
David Amos
Go Figure
> ---------- Original message ----------
> From: Allan Carroll <allan.carrollatrcmp-
> Date: Mon, 12 Aug 2013 18:14:09 -0400
> Subject: Re: Trust that Murray Segal's appointment to whitewash the
> Rehteah Parsons matter did not surprise me after the meail I sent this
> weekend (AOL)
> To: David Amos <motomaniac333atgmaildotcom>
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Fraser, Sean - M.P." <Sean.Fraser@parl.gc.ca>
Date: Wed, 25 May 2022 20:12:43 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: Fwd Does anyone recall what went down
between the lawyers Tilly Pillay and Adam Rodgers and I in 2018???
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
Thank you for your message. This is an automated reply.
Facebook: facebook.com/SeanFraserMP<http
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Toll free: 1-844-641-5886
Please be advised that this account is for matters related to Central
Nova. If you live outside of Central Nova and your issue pertains to
immigration, please contact Minister@cic.gc.ca
I am currently receiving an extremely high number of emails.
If you are inquiring about Canada’s commitment to welcome vulnerable
Afghan refugees, you can find more information on Canada’s response to
the situation in Afghanistan
here<https://www.canada.ca/en/
The Government of Canada remains firm in its commitment to welcome
Afghan refugees to Canada, and will be working to increase the number
of eligible refugees to 40,000. This will be done through 2 programs:
1. A special immigration program for Afghan nationals, and their
families, who assisted the Government of Canada.
You don’t need to currently be in Afghanistan or return to Afghanistan
to be eligible or to have your application processed once you’re able
to apply.
Find out more about this special immigration
program<https://www.canada.ca/
2. A special humanitarian program focused on resettling Afghan
nationals who
· are outside of Afghanistan
· don’t have a durable solution in a third country
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How to reach us
Contact us using our web
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to learn more.
To inquire about the status of an immigration case,click
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For other general questions about Canadian immigration, click
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Thank you.
/////
Veuillez noter que je reçois actuellement un nombre extrêmement élevé
de courriels.
Si vous vous renseignez sur l'engagement du Canada à accueillir les
réfugiés afghans vulnérables, vous pouvez trouver plus d'information
sur la réponse du Canada à la situation en Afghanistan
ici<https://www.canada.ca/fr/
Le gouvernement du Canada reste ferme dans son engagement à accueillir
des réfugiés afghans au Canada, et s'efforcera d'augmenter le nombre
de réfugiés admissibles à 40 000. Cela se fera par le biais de deux
programmes :
Un programme d'immigration spécial pour les ressortissants afghans, et
leurs familles, qui ont aidé le gouvernement du Canada.
Vous n'avez pas besoin d'être actuellement en Afghanistan ou d'y
retourner pour être admissible ou pour que votre demande soit traitée,
une fois que vous serez en mesure de présenter une demande.
Pour en savoir plus sur ce programme d'immigration
spécial<https://www.canada.ca/
2. Un programme humanitaire spécial axé sur la réinstallation des
ressortissants afghans qui
· se trouvent à l'extérieur de l'Afghanistan
· n’ont pas de solution durable dans un pays tiers
· font partie de l'un des groupes suivants :
· femmes leaders,
· défenseurs des droits de la
personne<https://www.canada.
· minorités religieuses ou ethniques persécutées,
· personnes LGBTI,
· journalistes et personnes ayant aidé des journalistes canadiens.
Comment nous joindre
Veuillez communiquer avec nous en utilisant notre formulaire
Web<https://specialmeasures-
Veuillez ne pas envoyer de photos ou d'autres pièces jointes jusqu'à
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Par téléphone au +1-613-321-4243.
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Si vous ou un de vos proches êtes un citoyen canadien ou un RP
actuellement en Afghanistan, communiquez dès que possible avec le
Centre de veille et d'intervention d'urgence 24/7 d'Affaires mondiales
Canada par téléphone (+1-613-996-8885), par courriel
(sos@international.gc.ca) ou par texto (+1-613-686-3658).
Si vous souhaitez immigrer au Canada, veuillez cliquer
ici<https://www.canada.ca/fr/
pour en savoir plus.
Pour vous renseigner sur l'état d'un dossier d'immigration, cliquez
ici<https://www.canada.ca/fr/
Vous pouvez également contacter votre député local pour obtenir une
assistance supplémentaire. Si vous ne savez pas qui est votre député,
vous pouvez le découvrir ici, https://www.noscommunes.ca/
Si vous avez été victime d'une fraude ou si vous voulez signaler une
activité frauduleuse, veuillez appeler la ligne d'assistance
téléphonique de l'Agence des services frontaliers du Canada au
1-888-502-9060.
Pour d'autres questions générales sur l'immigration canadienne,
cliquez ici<canada.ca/immigration>.
Merci.
---------- Original message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
Date: Wed, 25 May 2022 17:10:51 -0300
Subject: Fwd Does anyone recall what went down between the lawyers
Tilly Pillay and Adam Rodgers and I in 2018???
To: bgrimes@lsnl.ca, jherman@flsc.ca, johnh@cba.org, john@iilace.org,
secretary@lsz.co.zw, fwilson@flsc.ca, luke.rheinberger@lst.org.au,
rsteinmann@lawsocietynamibia.
marie-christine.fiset@
hc@hklawsoc.org.hk, marie-claude.bibeau@parl.gc.ca
Premier@ontario.ca, "Candice.Bergen" <Candice.Bergen@parl.gc.ca>,
editor@pictouadvocate.com, Newsroom <Newsroom@globeandmail.com>,
"Robert. Jones" <Robert.Jones@cbc.ca>, PREMIER <PREMIER@gov.ns.ca>,
birgittajoy <birgittajoy@gmail.com>
Cc: motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>, "Marco.Mendicino"
<Marco.Mendicino@parl.gc.ca>, mcu <mcu@justice.gc.ca>, "blaine.higgs"
<blaine.higgs@gnb.ca>, "hugh.flemming" <hugh.flemming@gnb.ca>,
"robert.mckee" <robert.mckee@gnb.ca>, "rob.moore"
<rob.moore@parl.gc.ca>, shane.moffatt@greenpeace.org, "Sean.Fraser"
<Sean.Fraser@parl.gc.ca>, Pamela.Murray@greenpeace.org,
davidmckiec@gmail.com, fvjones@gmail.com, info@nsbs.org
https://iilace.org/executive/
https://flsc.ca/about-us/
https://www.pictouadvocate.
Suspended lawyer keeping public up-to-date on Mass Casualty proceedings
Janet Whitman For the Advocate
May 5, 2022
With a year hiatus from his law practice, Adam Rodgers is taking the
time to try and help Nova Scotians hold the commission investigating
April 2020’s mass shooting rampage accountable.
Contact Us
21 George Street
Pictou, Nova Scotia
B0K 1H0
Main line: 902-485-8014
Raissa Tetanish | editor@pictouadvocate.com
https://www.cbc.ca/news/
Desmond inquiry lawyer Adam Rodgers given one-year suspension for
professional misconduct
Rodgers has asked that the suspension be delayed until the fatality
inquiry has ended
Laura Fraser · CBC News · Posted: Mar 23, 2021 9:40 AM AT
https://www.nationalobserver.
Getting dirty palm oil out of Canadian dairy requires federal action
By Shane Moffatt | Opinion | March 12th 2021
Think global, act local
We clearly need a new vision for the food we consume — one that
prioritizes resilience, accessibility, transparency and ecology. We
have the right to know where our food comes from, who produced it and
how it affects the planet. Agriculture Minister Marie-Claude Bibeau
has a mandate that talks about fighting climate change, stopping
biodiversity loss and building resilience, but there is clearly some
internal resistance to change.
---------- Original message ----------
From: Tilly Pillay <tpillay@nsbs.org>
Date: Mon, 5 Nov 2018 16:57:54 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: After reading the news this weekend about
Nova Scotia LIEbranos I did the lawyers Tilly Pillay and Adam Rodgers
a favour told their assistants I would be publishing these emails etc
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
I am out of the office on vacation until November 8. If your matter is
urgent, please contact my assistant, Anne Broughm, at
abroughm@nsbs.org or 902 422 1491. Thank you.
Tilly
---------- Original message ----------
From: Kennedy.Stewart@parl.gc.ca
Date: Mon, 5 Nov 2018 16:57:55 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: After reading the news this weekend about
Nova Scotia LIEbranos I did the lawyers Tilly Pillay and Adam Rodgers
a favour told their assistants I would be publishing these emails etc
To: david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
Many thanks for your message. Your concerns are important to me. If
your matter is urgent, an invitation or an immigration matter please
forward it to burnabysouth.A1@parl.gc.ca or
burnabysouth.C1@parl.gc.ca. This email is no longer being monitored.
The House of Commons of Canada provides for the continuation of
services to the constituents of a Member of Parliament whose seat has
become vacant. The party Whip supervises the staff retained under
these circumstances.
Following the resignation of the Member for the constituency of
Burnaby South, Mr. Kennedy Stewart, the constituency office will
continue to provide services to constituents.
You can reach the Burnaby South constituency office by telephone at
(604) 291-8863 or by mail at the following address: 4940 Kingsway,
Burnaby BC.
Office Hours:
Tuesday - Thursday: 10am - 12pm & 1pm - 4pm
Friday 10am - 12pm
---------- Original message ----------
From: Premier of Ontario | Premier ministre de l’Ontario <Premier@ontario.ca>
Date: Mon, 5 Nov 2018 16:57:51 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: After reading the news this weekend about
Nova Scotia LIEbranos I did the lawyers Tilly Pillay and Adam Rodgers
a favour told their assistants I would be publishing these emails etc
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
Thank you for your email. Your thoughts, comments and input are greatly valued.
You can be assured that all emails and letters are carefully read,
reviewed and taken into consideration.
There may be occasions when, given the issues you have raised and the
need to address them effectively, we will forward a copy of your
correspondence to the appropriate government official. Accordingly, a
response may take several business days.
Thanks again for your email.
______
Merci pour votre courriel. Nous vous sommes très reconnaissants de
nous avoir fait part de vos idées, commentaires et observations.
Nous tenons à vous assurer que nous lisons attentivement et prenons en
considération tous les courriels et lettres que nous recevons.
Dans certains cas, nous transmettrons votre message au ministère
responsable afin que les questions soulevées puissent être traitées de
la manière la plus efficace possible. En conséquence, plusieurs jours
ouvrables pourraient s’écouler avant que nous puissions vous répondre.
Merci encore pour votre courriel.
---------- Original message ----------
From: Birgitta Jonsdottir <birgitta@this.is>
Date: Mon, 5 Nov 2018 09:11:44 -0800
Subject: e-mail overload Re: Fwd: After reading the news this weekend
about Nova Scotia LIEbranos I did the lawyers Tilly Pillay and Adam
Rodgers a favour told their assistants I would be publishing these
emails etc
To: david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
Thank you for writing to me. I get so many emails that it is
impossible for me to even read them all. If you have an urgent matter
to discuss. Please put Priority in the subject. Please refrain from
sending email to multitude of email addresses you might have for me.
Only send one email with priority in the subject. It means I will read
it and will do my very best to reply asap :)
---------- Original message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
Date: Mon, 5 Nov 2018 12:57:43 -0400
Subject: After reading the news this weekend about Nova Scotia
LIEbranos I did the lawyers Tilly Pillay and Adam Rodgers a favour
told their assistants I would be publishing these emails etc
To: "Dominic.Cardy" <Dominic.Cardy@gnb.ca>, "kris.austin"
<kris.austin@gnb.ca>, "David.Coon" <David.Coon@gnb.ca>, "Mitton, Megan
(LEG)" <megan.mitton@gnb.ca>, "Arseneau, Kevin (LEG)"
<Kevin.A.Arseneau@gnb.ca>, "robert.gauvin" <robert.gauvin@gnb.ca>,
"Furey, John" <jfurey@nbpower.com>, wharrison <wharrison@nbpower.com>,
premier <premier@gnb.ca>, "terry.seguin" <terry.seguin@cbc.ca>,
"Alex.Johnston" <Alex.Johnston@cbc.ca>, "darrow.macintyre"
<darrow.macintyre@cbc.ca>, Hon.ralph.goodale@canada.ca,
"Pierre.Paul-Hus.a1" <Pierre.Paul-Hus.a1@parl.gc.ca
"pierre.poilievre.a1" <pierre.poilievre.a1@parl.gc.
pierre.paul-hus@parl.gc.ca,
ps.publicsafetymcu-
<ralph.goodale@parl.gc.ca>, mcu <mcu@justice.gc.ca>,
"Jody.Wilson-Raybould" <Jody.Wilson-Raybould@parl.gc.
"clare.barry" <clare.barry@justice.gc.ca>, "david.hansen"
<david.hansen@justice.gc.ca>, Newsroom <Newsroom@globeandmail.com>,
"Dale.Morgan" <Dale.Morgan@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, "david.eidt"
<david.eidt@gnb.ca>, "serge.rousselle" <serge.rousselle@gnb.ca>,
"brian.gallant" <brian.gallant@gnb.ca>, "blaine.higgs"
<blaine.higgs@gnb.ca>, lorri.warner@justice.gc.ca, "jan.jensen"
<jan.jensen@justice.gc.ca>, "Nathalie.Drouin"
<Nathalie.Drouin@justice.gc.ca
<bill.pentney@justice.gc.ca>, "andrew.baumberg"
<andrew.baumberg@fct-cf.gc.ca>
<Norman.Sabourin@cjc-ccm.gc.ca
"marc.giroux" <marc.giroux@fja-cmf.gc.ca>, "Brenda.Lucki"
<Brenda.Lucki@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, "Liliana.Longo"
<Liliana.Longo@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>
<washington.field@ic.fbi.gov>, "Boston.Mail" <Boston.Mail@ic.fbi.gov>,
english@rcinet.ca, "kennedy.stewart" <kennedy.stewart@parl.gc.ca>,
pvanloan@airdberlis.com, nicola.diiorio@bcf.ca, "Nicola.DiIorio"
<Nicola.DiIorio@parl.gc.ca>, "Catherine.Tait" <Catherine.Tait@cbc.ca>,
"sylvie.gadoury" <sylvie.gadoury@radio-canada.
<Sophia.Harris@cbc.ca>, PREMIER <PREMIER@gov.ns.ca>, premier
<premier@ontario.ca>, premier <premier@gov.ab.ca>, Office of the
Premier <scott.moe@gov.sk.ca>, "David.Raymond.Amos"
<David.Raymond.Amos@gmail.com>
oldmaison <oldmaison@yahoo.com>, "greg.byrne" <greg.byrne@gnb.ca>,
"len.hoyt" <len.hoyt@mcinnescooper.com>, "david.young"
<david.young@mcinnescooper.com
<macpherson.don@dailygleaner.
<David.Akin@globalnews.ca>, "steve.murphy" <steve.murphy@ctv.ca>,
news919 <news919@rogers.com>, sfine <sfine@globeandmail.com>, news
<news@hilltimes.com>, news <news@kingscorecord.com>, newstips
<newstips@cnn.com>
Cc: motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>, tpillay@nsbs.org,
Adam@boudrotrodgers.com, "lyle.howe" <lyle.howe@eastlink.ca>,
jason@boudrotrodgers.com
Monday, 5 November 2018
After reading the news this weekend about Nova Scotia LIEbranos I did
the lawyers Tilly Pillay and Adam Rodgers a favour told their
assistants I would be publishing these emails etc
Tilly Pillay is not in her office this week and things went as far as
they always do whenever I call or email her very questionable Law
Society Here hoping Adam Rodgers finally acts with some semblance of
Integrity. However after all this time I am not betting on it.
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 6 Jan 2016 18:22:05 -0400
Subject: Re Federal Court File No: T-1557-15 Did you order Harper and
the NDP to ignore me as well???
To: Liberal / Assistance <nbd_cna@liberal.ca>, cmunroe@glgmlaw.com, pm
<pm@pm.gc.ca>, "justin.trudeau.a1" <justin.trudeau.a1@parl.gc.ca>
<mcu@justice.gc.ca>
Cc: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
How about Dizzy Lizzy May and the Bloc?
On 1/6/16, Cmunroe (Liberal / Assistance) <nbd_cna@liberal.ca> wrote:
> RealChange.ca | DuVraiChangement.ca
>
> ------------------------------
>
> Cmunroe, Jan 6, 14:28
>
> Hello all,
>
> I would ask that you please do not respond to this e-mail (in the event that
> you were inclined to do so.)
>
> Let me know if you have any questions or concerns.
>
> Regards,
>
> Craig Munroe
> (Party Legal and Constitutional Advisor)
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: David Amos [mailto:motomaniac333@gmail.
> Sent: Wednesday, January 06, 2016 11:09 AM
> To: Craig Munroe <cmunroe@glgmlaw.com>; nbd_cna@liberal.ca; pm
> <pm@pm.gc.ca>; ljulien@liberal.ca; pmilliken <pmilliken@cswan.com>; bdysart
> <bdysart@smss.com>; bdysart <bdysart@stewartmckelvey.com>;
> Braeden.Caley@vancouver.ca; robert.m.schuett@schuettlaw.
> jda@nf.aibn.com; eclark@coxandpalmer.com; office@liberal.ns.ca;
> president@lpco.ca; david@lpcm.ca; emerchant@merchantlaw.com
> Cc: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
> Fortin <info@ndp.ca>; stephen.harper <stephen.harper.a1@parl.gc.ca>
> Subject: Re: Attn Dr. John Gillis Re Federal Court File No: T-1557-15 Trust
> that I called and tried to reason with a lot of Liberals begore I am before
> the court again on Monday Jan 11th
>
> On 1/6/16, David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com> wrote:
>> BTW the nice guys who talked to me and didn't dismiss me I put in the
>> BCC line
>>
>> Dr. John Gillis
>> P.O. Box 723
>> 5151 George Street, Suite 1400
>> Halifax, Nova Scotia
>> Canada B3J 2T3
>> Tel: (902) 429-1993
>> Email: office@liberal.ns.ca
>>
>> John Allan, President
>> Liberal Party of Newfoundland & Labrador
>> T: (709) 685-1230
>> jda@nf.aibn.com
>>
>>
>> Braeden Caley
>> Office of the Mayor, City of Vancouver
>> 604-809-9951
>> Braeden.Caley@vancouver.ca,
>>
>>
>> Britt Dysart QC
>> Suite 600, Frederick Square
>> 77 Westmorland Street
>> P.O. Box 730
>> Fredericton, NB, Canada
>> E3B 5B4
>>
>> P 506.443.0153
>> F 506.443.9948
>>
>>
>> Evatt F. A. Merchant
>> Merchant Law Group LLP
>> First Nations Bank Bldg.
>> 501-224 4th Ave. S.
>> Saskatoon, Saskatchewan S7K 5M5
>> Phone: 306-653-7777
>> Email: emerchant@merchantlaw.com
>>
>>
>> Ewan W. Clark
>> Montague
>> Phone: (902) 838-5275
>> Fax: (902) 838-3440
>> eclark@coxandpalmer.com
>>
>> Robert M. Schuett
>> #200, 602 11th Avenue SW
>> Calgary Alberta T2R 1J8
>> Phone: (403) 705-1261
>> Fax: (403) 705-1265
>> robert.m.schuett@schuettlaw.
>>
>>
>> http://www.liberal.ca/
>>
>> Who are we?
>>
>> We are volunteers from across the country who care passionately about
>> Canada’s future and promoting Liberal values. We are community
>> leaders, parents, and professionals who volunteer our time in this
>> role. The board works together to provide oversight and guidance to
>> the Party in matters both fiduciary, and strategic. We meet regularly
>> in person and by phone with the objective of ensuring the Party is
>> prepared for the next federal election. It is an honour to work with
>> such a distinct and talented group of individuals. Please don’t
>> hesitate to reach out to us at nbd_cna@liberal.ca.
>> Anna Gainey
>>
>> President, Liberal Party of Canada
>>
>> T @annamgainey
>> Leader Justin Trudeau
>> National President Anna Gainey
>> Acting National Director Christina Topp
>> National Vice-President (English) Chris MacInnes
>> National Vice-President (French) Marie Tremblay
>> National Policy Chair Maryanne Kampouris
>> National Membership Secretary Leanne Bourassa
>> Past National President Mike Crawley
>> President, Liberal Party of Newfoundland & Labrador John Allan
>> President, Liberal Party of Prince Edward Island Ewan Clark
>> President, Nova Scotia Liberal Party John Gillis
>> President, New Brunswick Liberal Association Britt Dysart
>> President, Liberal Party of Canada (Québec) Linda Julien
>> President, Liberal Party of Canada (Ontario) Tyler Banham
>> President, Liberal Party of Canada (Manitoba) Sachit Mehra
>> President, Liberal Party of Canada (Saskatchewan) Evatt Merchant
>> President, Liberal Party of Canada (Alberta) Robbie Schuett
>> President, Liberal Party of Canada (British Columbia) Braeden
>> Caley
>> President, Federal Liberal Association of Yukon Blake Rogers
>> President, Liberal Party of Canada (Northwest Territories) Rosanna
>> Nicol
>> President, Federal Liberal Association of Nunavut Michel Potvin
>> Caucus Representative Francis Scarpaleggia
>> Co-Chair, Aboriginal Peoples’ Commission (Female) Caitlin Tolley
>> Co-Chair, Aboriginal Peoples’ Commission (Male) Kevin Seesequasis
>> President, National Women’s Liberal Commission Carlene Variyan
>> President, Young Liberals of Canada Justin Kaiser
>> Co-Chair, Senior Liberals’ Commission (French) Anne Adams
>> Co-Chair, Senior Liberals’ Commission (English) Kenneth D. Halliday
>> Chair, Council of Presidents Veena Bhullar
>> Chief Financial Officer Chuck Rifici
>> Chief Revenue Officer Stephen Bronfman
>> CEO, Federal Liberal Agency of Canada Mike Eizenga
>> National Campaign Co-Chair Katie Telford
>> Constitutional and Legal Adviser (English) Craig Munroe
>> Constitutional and Legal Adviser (French) Elise Bartlett
>>
>> Craig T. Munroe, Partner
>> Email: cmunroe@glgmlaw.com
>> Phone: (604) 891-1176
>>
>>
>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>> From: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
>> Date: Mon, 21 Dec 2015 19:32:00 -0400
>> Subject: Re Federal Court File No: T-1557-15 the CBC, the RCMP, their
>> new boss Justin Trudeau and his Ministers of Justice and Defence etc
>> cannot deny their knowledge of Paragraphs 81, 82, 83, 84, and 85 now
>> CORRECT G$?
>> To: Paul.Samyn@freepress.mb.ca, "carolyn.bennett"
>> <carolyn.bennett@parl.gc.ca>, Doug@dougeyolfson.ca,
>> doug.eyolfson@parl.gc.ca, fpcity@freepress.mb.ca,
>> w.kinew@uwinnipeg.ca, "Paul.Lynch" <Paul.Lynch@edmontonpolice.ca>
>> "Marianne.Ryan" <Marianne.Ryan@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>
>> <sunrayzulu@shaw.ca>, mcu <mcu@justice.gc.ca>, dnd_mdn@forces.gc.ca,
>> "john.green" <john.green@gnb.ca>, chiefape <chiefape@gmail.com>
>> Cc: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
>> <gopublic@cbc.ca>, oldmaison <oldmaison@yahoo.com>, radical
>> <radical@radicalpress.com>, newsonline <newsonline@bbc.co.uk>,
>> newsroom <newsroom@globeandmail.ca>, nmoore <nmoore@bellmedia.ca>,
>> andre <andre@jafaust.com>
>>
>> http://davidraymondamos3.
>> html
>>
>> David Raymond Amos Versus The Crown T-1557-15
>>
>> 81. The Plaintiff states that matters of harassment that the police
>> refuse to investigate would have entered the realm of ridiculous in
>> 2012 if the reasons behind the suicides of teenagers did not become
>> well known by the corporate media. In the summer of 2012 a new member
>> of the FPS who as a former member of the EPS had inspired a lawsuit
>> for beating a client in Edmonton called the Plaintiff and accused him
>> of something he could not do even if he wanted to while he was arguing
>> many lawyers byway of emails about a matter concerning cyber stalking
>> that was before the SCC. The member of the FPF accused the Plaintiff
>> of calling the boss of Bullying Canada thirty times. At that time his
>> MagicJack account had been hacked and although he could receive
>> incoming calls, the Plaintiff could not call out to anyone. The
>> Plaintiff freely sent the FPF his telephone logs sourced from
>> MagicJack after his account restored without the Crown having to issue
>> a warrant to see his telephone records. He asked the FPF and the RCMP
>> where did the records of his phone calls to and from the FPF and the
>> RCMP go if his account had not been hacked. The police never
>> responded. Years later a Troll sent Dean Roger Ray a message through
>> YouTube providing info about the Plaintiff’s MagicJack account with
>> the correct password. Dean Roger Ray promptly posted two videos in
>> YouTube clearly displaying the blatant violation of privacy likely to
>> protect himself from the crime. The Plaintiff quickly pointed out the
>> videos to the RCMP and they refused to investigate as usual. At about
>> the same point in time the Plaintiff noticed that the CBC had
>> published a record of a access to information requests. On the list of
>> requests he saw his name along with several employees of CBC and the
>> boss of Bullying Canada. The Plaintiff called the CBC to make
>> inquiries about what he saw published on the Internet. CBC told him it
>> was none of his business and advised him if he thought his rights had
>> been offended to file a complaint. It appears the Plaintiff that
>> employees of CBC like other questionable Crown Corporations such as
>> the RCMP rely on their attorneys far too much to defend them from
>> litigation they invite from citizens they purportedly serve. The
>> employees of CBC named within the aforementioned and the CBC Legal
>> Dept. are very familiar with the Plaintiff and of the Crown barring
>> him from legislative properties while he running for public office.
>>
>> 82. The Plaintiff states that any politician or police officer should
>> have seen enough of Barry Winter’s WordPress blog by June 22, 2015
>> particularly after the very unnecessary demise of two men in Alberta
>> because of the incompetence of the EPS. Barry Winters was blogging
>> about the EPS using battering ram in order to execute a warrant for a
>> 250 dollar bylaw offence at the same time Professor Kris Wells
>> revealed in a televised interview that the EPS member who was killed
>> was the one investigating the cyber harassment of him. It was obvious
>> why the police and politicians ignored all the death threats, sexual
>> harassment, cyberbullying and hate speech of a proud Zionist who
>> claimed to be a former CF officer who now working for the Department
>> of National Defence (DND). It is well known that no politician in
>> Canada is allowed to sit in Parliament as a member of the major
>> parties unless they support Israel. Since 2002 the Plaintiff made it
>> well known that he does not support Israeli actions and was against
>> the American plan to make war on Iraq. On Aril 1, 2003 within two
>> weeks of the beginning of the War on Iraq, the US Secret Service
>> threatened to practice extraordinary rendition because false
>> allegations of a Presidential threat were made against him by an
>> American court. However, the Americans and the Crown cannot deny that
>> what he said in two courts on April 1, 2003 because he published the
>> recordings of what was truly said as soon as he got the court tapes.
>> The RCMP knows those words can still be heard on the Internet today.
>> In 2009, the Plaintiff began to complain of Barry Winters about
>> something far more important to Canada as nation because of Winters’
>> bragging of being one of 24 CF officers who assisted the Americans in
>> the planning the War on Iraq in 2002. In the Plaintiff’s humble
>> opinion the mandate of the DND is Defence not Attack. He is not so
>> naive to think that such plans of war do not occur but if Barry
>> Winters was in fact one of the CF officers who did so then he broke
>> his oath to the Crown the instant he bragged of it in his blog. If
>> Winters was never an officer in the CF then he broke the law by
>> impersonating an officer. The Plaintiff downloaded the emails of the
>> Privy Council about Wikileaks. The bragging of Barry Winters should
>> have been investigated in 2009 before CBC reported that documents
>> released by WikiLeaks supported his information about Canadian
>> involvement in the War on Iraq.
>>
>> 83. The Plaintiff states that now that Canada is involved in more war
>> in Iraq again it did not serve Canadian interests and reputation to
>> allow Barry Winters to publish the following words three times over
>> five years after he began his bragging:
>>
>> January 13, 2015
>> This Is Just AS Relevant Now As When I wrote It During The Debate
>>
>> December 8, 2014
>> Why Canada Stood Tall!
>>
>> Friday, October 3, 2014
>> Little David Amos’ “True History Of War” Canadian Airstrikes And
>> Stupid Justin Trudeau
>>
>> Canada’s and Canadians free ride is over. Canada can no longer hide
>> behind Amerka’s and NATO’s skirts.
>>
>> When I was still in Canadian Forces then Prime Minister Jean Chretien
>> actually committed the Canadian Army to deploy in the second campaign
>> in Iraq, the Coalition of the Willing. This was against or contrary to
>> the wisdom or advice of those of us Canadian officers that were
>> involved in the initial planning phases of that operation. There were
>> significant concern in our planning cell, and NDHQ about of the dearth
>> of concern for operational guidance, direction, and forces for
>> operations after the initial occupation of Iraq. At the “last minute”
>> Prime Minister Chretien and the Liberal government changed its mind.
>> The Canadian government told our amerkan cousins that we would not
>> deploy combat troops for the Iraq campaign, but would deploy a
>> Canadian Battle Group to Afghanistan, enabling our amerkan cousins to
>> redeploy troops from there to Iraq. The PMO’s thinking that it was
>> less costly to deploy Canadian Forces to Afghanistan than Iraq. But
>> alas no one seems to remind the Liberals of Prime Minister Chretien’s
>> then grossly incorrect assumption. Notwithstanding Jean Chretien’s
>> incompetence and stupidity, the Canadian Army was heroic,
>> professional, punched well above it’s weight, and the PPCLI Battle
>> Group, is credited with “saving Afghanistan” during the Panjway
>> campaign of 2006.
>>
>> What Justin Trudeau and the Liberals don’t tell you now, is that then
>> Liberal Prime Minister Jean Chretien committed, and deployed the
>> Canadian army to Canada’s longest “war” without the advice, consent,
>> support, or vote of the Canadian Parliament.
>>
>> What David Amos and the rest of the ignorant, uneducated, and babbling
>> chattering classes are too addled to understand is the deployment of
>> less than 75 special operations troops, and what is known by planners
>> as a “six pac cell” of fighter aircraft is NOT the same as a
>> deployment of a Battle Group, nor a “war” make.
>>
>> The Canadian Government or The Crown unlike our amerkan cousins have
>> the “constitutional authority” to commit the Canadian nation to war.
>> That has been recently clearly articulated to the Canadian public by
>> constitutional scholar Phillippe Legasse. What Parliament can do is
>> remove “confidence” in The Crown’s Government in a “vote of
>> non-confidence.” That could not happen to the Chretien Government
>> regarding deployment to Afghanistan, and it won’t happen in this
>> instance with the conservative majority in The Commons regarding a
>> limited Canadian deployment to the Middle East.
>>
>> President George Bush was quite correct after 911 and the terror
>> attacks in New York; that the Taliban “occupied” and “failed state”
>> Afghanistan was the source of logistical support, command and control,
>> and training for the Al Quaeda war of terror against the world. The
>> initial defeat, and removal from control of Afghanistan was vital and
>> essential for the security and tranquility of the developed world. An
>> ISIS “caliphate,” in the Middle East, no matter how small, is a clear
>> and present danger to the entire world. This “occupied state,”
>> or“failed state” will prosecute an unending Islamic inspired war of
>> terror against not only the “western world,” but Arab states
>> “moderate” or not, as well. The security, safety, and tranquility of
>> Canada and Canadians are just at risk now with the emergence of an
>> ISIS“caliphate” no matter how large or small, as it was with the
>> Taliban and Al Quaeda “marriage” in Afghanistan.
>>
>> One of the everlasting “legacies” of the “Trudeau the Elder’s dynasty
>> was Canada and successive Liberal governments cowering behind the
>> amerkan’s nuclear and conventional military shield, at the same time
>> denigrating, insulting them, opposing them, and at the same time
>> self-aggrandizing ourselves as “peace keepers,” and progenitors of
>> “world peace.” Canada failed. The United States of Amerka, NATO, the
>> G7 and or G20 will no longer permit that sort of sanctimonious
>> behavior from Canada or its government any longer. And Prime Minister
>> Stephen Harper, Foreign Minister John Baird , and Cabinet are fully
>> cognizant of that reality. Even if some editorial boards, and pundits
>> are not.
>>
>> Justin, Trudeau “the younger” is reprising the time “honoured” liberal
>> mantra, and tradition of expecting the amerkans or the rest of the
>> world to do “the heavy lifting.” Justin Trudeau and his “butt buddy”
>> David Amos are telling Canadians that we can guarantee our security
>> and safety by expecting other nations to fight for us. That Canada can
>> and should attempt to guarantee Canadians safety by providing
>> “humanitarian aid” somewhere, and call a sitting US president a “war
>> criminal.” This morning Australia announced they too, were sending
>> tactical aircraft to eliminate the menace of an ISIS “caliphate.”
>>
>> In one sense Prime Minister Harper is every bit the scoundrel Trudeau
>> “the elder” and Jean ‘the crook” Chretien was. Just As Trudeau, and
>> successive Liberal governments delighted in diminishing,
>> marginalizing, under funding Canadian Forces, and sending Canadian
>> military men and women to die with inadequate kit and modern
>> equipment; so too is Prime Minister Stephen Harper. Canada’s F-18s are
>> antiquated, poorly equipped, and ought to have been replaced five
>> years ago. But alas, there won’t be single RCAF fighter jock that
>> won’t go, or won’t want to go, to make Canada safe or safer.
>>
>> My Grandfather served this country. My father served this country. My
>> Uncle served this country. And I have served this country. Justin
>> Trudeau has not served Canada in any way. Thomas Mulcair has not
>> served this country in any way. Liberals and so called social
>> democrats haven’t served this country in any way. David Amos, and
>> other drooling fools have not served this great nation in any way. Yet
>> these fools are more than prepared to ensure their, our safety to
>> other nations, and then criticize them for doing so.
>>
>> Canada must again, now, “do our bit” to guarantee our own security,
>> and tranquility, but also that of the world. Canada has never before
>> shirked its responsibility to its citizens and that of the world.
>>
>> Prime Minister Harper will not permit this country to do so now
>>
>> From: dnd_mdn@forces.gc.ca
>> Date: Fri, 27 May 2011 14:17:17 -0400
>> Subject: RE: Re Greg Weston, The CBC , Wikileaks, USSOCOM, Canada and
>> the War in Iraq (I just called SOCOM and let them know I was still
>> alive
>> To: david.raymond.amos@gmail.com
>>
>> This is to confirm that the Minister of National Defence has received
>> your email and it will be reviewed in due course. Please do not reply
>> to this message: it is an automatic acknowledgement.
>>
>>
>> ---------- Original message ----------
>> From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
>> Date: Fri, 27 May 2011 13:55:30 -0300
>> Subject: Re Greg Weston, The CBC , Wikileaks, USSOCOM, Canada and the
>> War in Iraq (I just called SOCOM and let them know I was still alive
>> To: DECPR@forces.gc.ca, Public.Affairs@socom.mil,
>> Raymonde.Cleroux@mpcc-cppm.gc.
>> william.elliott@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
>> dnd_mdn@forces.gc.ca, media@drdc-rddc.gc.ca, information@forces.gc.ca,
>> milner@unb.ca, charters@unb.ca, lwindsor@unb.ca,
>> sarah.weir@mpcc-cppm.gc.ca, birgir <birgir@althingi.is>, smari
>> <smari@immi.is>, greg.weston@cbc.ca, pm <pm@pm.gc.ca>,
>> susan@blueskystrategygroup.com
>> eugene@blueskystrategygroup.
>> Cc: "Edith. Cody-Rice" <Edith.Cody-Rice@cbc.ca>, "terry.seguin"
>> <terry.seguin@cbc.ca>, acampbell <acampbell@ctv.ca>, whistleblower
>> <whistleblower@ctv.ca>
>>
>> I talked to Don Newman earlier this week before the beancounters David
>> Dodge and Don Drummond now of Queen's gave their spin about Canada's
>> Health Care system yesterday and Sheila Fraser yapped on and on on
>> CAPAC during her last days in office as if she were oh so ethical.. To
>> be fair to him I just called Greg Weston (613-288-6938) I suggested
>> that he should at least Google SOUCOM and David Amos It would be wise
>> if he check ALL of CBC's sources before he publishes something else
>> about the DND EH Don Newman? Lets just say that the fact that your
>> old CBC buddy, Tony Burman is now in charge of Al Jazeera English
>> never impressed me. The fact that he set up a Canadian office is
>> interesting though
>>
>> http://www.
>>
>> http://www.cbc.ca/news/arts/
>> launch.html
>>
>> Anyone can call me back and stress test my integrity after they read
>> this simple pdf file. BTW what you Blue Sky dudes pubished about
>> Potash Corp and BHP is truly funny. Perhaps Stevey Boy Harper or Brad
>> Wall will fill ya in if you are to shy to call mean old me.
>>
>> http://www.scribd.com/doc/
>>
>> The Governor General, the PMO and the PCO offices know that I am not a
>> shy political animal
>>
>> Veritas Vincit
>> David Raymond Amos
>> 902 800 0369
>>
>> Enjoy Mr Weston
>> http://www.cbc.ca/m/touch/
>> ikileaks.html
>>
>> "But Lang, defence minister McCallum's chief of staff, says military
>> brass were not entirely forthcoming on the issue. For instance, he
>> says, even McCallum initially didn't know those soldiers were helping
>> to plan the invasion of Iraq up to the highest levels of command,
>> including a Canadian general.
>>
>> That general is Walt Natynczyk, now Canada's chief of defence staff,
>> who eight months after the invasion became deputy commander of 35,000
>> U.S. soldiers and other allied forces in Iraq. Lang says Natynczyk was
>> also part of the team of mainly senior U.S. military brass that helped
>> prepare for the invasion from a mobile command in Kuwait."
>>
>> http://baconfat53.blogspot.
>>
>> "I remember years ago when the debate was on in Canada, about there
>> being weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. Our American 'friends"
>> demanded that Canada join into "the Coalition of the Willing. American
>> "veterans" and sportscasters loudly denounced Canada for NOT buying
>> into the US policy.
>>
>> At the time I was serving as a planner at NDHQ and with 24 other of my
>> colleagues we went to Tampa SOUCOM HQ to be involved in the planning
>> in the planning stages of the op....and to report to NDHQ, that would
>> report to the PMO upon the merits of the proposed operation. There was
>> never at anytime an existing target list of verified sites where there
>> were deployed WMD.
>>
>> Coalition assets were more than sufficient for the initial strike and
>> invasion phase but even at that point in the planning, we were
>> concerned about the number of "boots on the ground" for the occupation
>> (and end game) stage of an operation in Iraq. We were also concerned
>> about the American plans for occupation plans of Iraq because they at
>> that stage included no contingency for a handing over of civil
>> authority to a vetted Iraqi government and bureaucracy.
>>
>> There was no detailed plan for Iraq being "liberated" and returned to
>> its people...nor a thought to an eventual exit plan. This was contrary
>> to the lessons of Vietnam but also to current military thought, that
>> folks like Colin Powell and "Stuffy" Leighton and others elucidated
>> upon. "What's the mission" how long is the mission, what conditions
>> are to met before US troop can redeploy? Prime Minister Jean Chretien
>> and the PMO were even at the very preliminary planning stages wary of
>> Canadian involvement in an Iraq operation....History would prove them
>> correct. The political pressure being applied on the PMO from the
>> George W Bush administration was onerous
>>
>> American military assets were extremely overstretched, and Canadian
>> military assets even more so It was proposed by the PMO that Canadian
>> naval platforms would deploy to assist in naval quarantine operations
>> in the Gulf and that Canadian army assets would deploy in Afghanistan
>> thus permitting US army assets to redeploy for an Iraqi
>> operation....The PMO thought that "compromise would save Canadian
>> lives and liberal political capital.. and the priority of which
>> ....not necessarily in that order. "
>>
>> You can bet that I called these sneaky Yankees again today EH John
>> Adams? of the CSE within the DND?
>>
>> http://www.socom.mil/
>>
>>
>> 84. The Plaintiff states that the RCMP is well aware that he went to
>> western Canada in 2104 at the invitation of a fellow Maritimer in
>> order to assist in his attempt to investigate the murders of many
>> people in Northern BC. The Plaintiff has good reasons to doubt his
>> fellow Maritimer’s motives. The fact that he did not tell the
>> Plaintiff until he had arrived in BC that he had invited a Neo Nazi he
>> knew the Plaintiff strongly disliked to the same protest that he was
>> staging in front of the court house in Prince George on August 21,
>> 2014. The Plaintiff was looking forward to meeting Lonnie Landrud so
>> he ignored the Neo Nazi. Several months after their one and only
>> meeting, Lonnie Landrud contacted the Plaintiff and asked him to
>> publish a statement of his on the Internet and to forward it to anyone
>> he wished. The Plaintiff obliged Landrud and did an investigation of
>> his own as well. He has informed the RCMP of his opinion of their
>> actions and has done nothing further except monitor the criminal
>> proceedings the Crown has placed against the Neo Nazi in BC and save
>> his videos and webpages and that of his associates. The words the
>> Plaintiff stated in public in Prince George BC on August 21, 2014 were
>> recorded by the Neo Nazi and published on the Internet and the RCMP
>> knows the Plaintiff stands by every word. For the public record the
>> Plaintiff truly believes what Lonnie Landrud told him despite the fact
>> that he does not trust his Neo Nazi associates. Therefore the
>> Plaintiff had no ethical dilemma whatsoever in publishing the
>> statement Lonnie Landrud mailed to him in a sincere effort to assist
>> Lonnie Landrud’s pursuit of justice. The Crown is well aware that
>> Plaintiff’s former lawyer, Barry Bachrach once had a leader of the
>> American Indian Movement for a client and that is why he ran against
>> the former Minister of Indian Affairs for his seat in the 39th
>> Parliament.
>>
>> 85. The Plaintiff states that while he was out west he visited
>> Edmonton AB several times and met many people. He visited the home of
>> Barry Winters and all his favourite haunts in the hope of meeting in
>> person the evil person who had been sexually harassing and threatening
>> to kill him and his children for many years. The Crown cannot deny
>> that Winters invited him many times. On June 13, 2015 Barry Winters
>> admitted the EPS warned him the Plaintiff was looking for him.
>>
>> On 12/21/15, David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>>> From: "Rabson, Mia" <Mia.Rabson@freepress.mb.ca>
>>> Date: Mon, 21 Dec 2015 20:45:36 +0000
>>> Subject: Automatic reply: Attn Wab Kinew
>>> To: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
>>>
>>> I will be out of the office until Monday, January 4.
>>> If you need immediate assistance please contact our city desk at 613
>>> 697 7292 or fpcity@freepress.mb.ca.
>>> Happy Holidays!
>>>
>>> Mia Rabson
>>> Parliamentary Bureau Chief
>>> Winnipeg Free Press
>>>
>>>
>>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>>> From: "Sarra R. Deane" <s.deane@uwinnipeg.ca>
>>> Date: Mon, 21 Dec 2015 20:10:12 +0000
>>> Subject: Automatic reply: Attn Wab Kinew
>>> To: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
>>>
>>> I will be out of the office until Thursday, Nov. 12th. I will
>>> respond to emails upon my return. Miigwech and all the best.
>>>
>>>
>>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>>> From: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
>>> Date: Mon, 21 Dec 2015 16:45:29 -0400
>>> Subject: Fwd: Attn Wab Kinew
>>> To: mia.rabson@freepress.mb.ca, Paul.Samyn@freepress.mb.ca,
>>> "carolyn.bennett" <carolyn.bennett@parl.gc.ca>, Doug@dougeyolfson.ca,
>>> doug.eyolfson@parl.gc.ca
>>> Cc: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
>>>
>>> http://www.winnipegfreepress.
>>>
>>> Peacemaker
>>> Group pushes for Truth and Reconciliation chairman to get Nobel Prize
>>>
>>> By: Mia Rabson
>>> Posted: 12/19/2015 3:00 AM | Last Modified: 12/19/2015 6:12 AM
>>>
>>> " Murray Sinclair already has an impressive resumé.
>>>
>>> He's the first aboriginal judge appointed to the bench in Manitoba,
>>> co-commissioner of the Aboriginal Justice Inquiry and chairman of the
>>> Truth and Reconciliation Commission.
>>>
>>> But if a group of Canadians has its way, he will get one of the
>>> highest honours in the world to add to the list: Nobel Peace Prize
>>> recipient.
>>>
>>> "He and Phil Fontaine should share a Nobel Peace Prize," said Wab
>>> Kinew, associate vice-president for indigenous relations at the
>>> University of Winnipeg.
>>>
>>> Kinew said a group of people in Winnipeg, Toronto and Ottawa are
>>> collaborating to nominate the two men, who they believe are jointly
>>> responsible for giving back hope to Canada's indigenous people that
>>> hasn't existed in a long time.
>>>
>>> "They made it into something that is peace-building and
>>> nation-building," Kinew said. "It has really transformed our country."
>>>
>>> Mia Rabson, Ottawa Bureau Chief
>>> 613-369–4824
>>>
>>> Paul
>>> Samyn, Editor
>>> 204–697–7295
>>>
>>>
>>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>>> From: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
>>> Date: Mon, 21 Dec 2015 16:05:01 -0400
>>> Subject: Attn Wab Kinew
>>> To: w.kinew@uwinnipeg.ca, "Paul.Lynch"
>>> <Paul.Lynch@edmontonpolice.ca>
>>> <Marianne.Ryan@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>
>>> Cc: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
>>>
>>> https://baconfatreport.
>>> -to-know-anything-about-
>>>
>>> http://www.uwinnipeg.ca/about/
>>> Vice-President, Indigenous Affairs
>>>
>>> Wab Kinew
>>> phone: 204.789.9931
>>> email: w.kinew@uwinnipeg.ca
>>> Biography/Publications
>>>
>>> Executive Assistant
>>>
>>> Sarra Deane
>>> phone: 204.988.7121
>>> email: s.deane@uwinnipeg.ca
>>>
>>
>
>
>
> --- Confidentiality Warning: This message and any attachments are
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> This email is a service from Liberal / Assistance.
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> [J6PE8E-0WQN]
After the mass murders of April 2020, Truro police chief Dave MacNeil stood up to RCMP “fixers”
Morning File, Friday, May 13, 2022
News
1. Truro police chief stood up to RCMP “fixers”
Truro police chief Dave MacNeil’s August 3, 2021 interview with Mass Casualty Commission investigators has been published.
MacNeil explained that Truro police were not kept in the loop about the unfolding mass murders of April 18/19, 2020.
But at about midnight, the Colchester East Hants Medical Centre called the Truro police to say they were treating a man who had been shot in Portapique — this was Andrew MacDonald. Sergeant Rick Hickox, who was on duty, sent a couple of officers to the hospital to help with a lockdown.
At around 12:55am, RCMP notified Truro police that there was an active shooter situation in Portapique, but gave no details.
At around 8:30am Sunday morning, April 19, MacNeil was home, out working in his yard, when Hickox texted to say there were five people killed in Portapique. But that information didn’t come from the RCMP — “he said it’s on social media kind of thing,” said MacNeil. “I had no official notice from anybody other than that.”
Truro Police Inspector Darren Smith, working on limited information, called in extra officers to work at the hospital and to warn people on the streets — “[Smith] told everybody that was in, get in the cars, start telling people if you see them walking their dog or head back home, there’s an incident unfolding in the county.” Most businesses were closed because of the COVID lockdown, but officers called the WalMart and other open businesses to alert them. “We didn’t have a lot of information, but he wanted to do something proactive,” said MacNeil.
MacNeil emailed RCMP Chief Superintendent Chris Leather and Assistant Commissioner Lee Bergerman to offer the assistance of Truro police, but he didn’t hear back immediately.
Leather emailed back at about 10am and said “thank you for the offer, looks like we have the suspect pinned down in Wentworth.” In the days after the murders, it was clear that Leather had a poor understanding of the geography of the murders; presumably, in that email, he was referring to the RCMP response at the Fishers’ house in Glenholme.
“So from there, the decisions I made the rest of the day were based on that email that they had some suspect in Wentworth,” said MacNeil.
But MacNeil’s daughter had seen a post on social media about gunfire at the Onslow fire hall, which isn’t far from Truro, so he decided to go into work.
Commission investigators told MacNeil there was a communication from RCMP Staff Sergeant Aaron MacGillivray at 10:15am “to request Truro PD to close all access points to their town in case suspect heads there.” It’s not clear who MacGillivray made the request to, but MacNeil said Truro Police weren’t notified of the request by RCMP dispatch until 10:37am. In the interim — from 10:16-10:19am — the killer had driven right through the main streets of Truro in the fake police car. By 10:37, he had already killed Heidi Stevenson and Joey Webber in Shubenacadie.
(MacNeil didn’t learn that the killer had driven through Truro until July 28 — more than three months after the murders — when it was reported on the TV news. The RCMP had collected videos of the fake police car from businesses in Truro without telling Truro police, and didn’t even give Truro police a “heads up” that the video clips were being made public.)
MacNeil said the request to lock down was vague, providing no details, and besides, he soon started receiving information that the killer was elsewhere.
At 10:59, Truro police were told the killer was in Milford, but then at 11:12 the call came in saying a man with a gun had been spotted at the Truro Sobeys. This made no sense to MacNeil, but MacNeil dispatched officers to Sobeys. (I very much want to know who made the 911 call about Sobeys — it confused and distracted the police response in the final hour of the rampage.)
By 11:29, MacNeil was told the suspect was killed in Enfield.
“I think the community has a lot of questions,” said MacNeil. “And I know the families have a lot of questions. And as a police leader in Nova Scotia, we have an obligation to do better. And I don’t know if this tragedy happened today if it would be any different, to be quite honest; in an RCMP policed area, that’s my honest to God take on it. I think the relationship between the police and the RCMP in Nova Scotia is worse than —from this incident than it’s even been.”
“A change in the leadership at the RCMP provincial level is a big part of it,” continued MacNeil. “The relationship is not good, and it never has been this bad. Like, this is rock bottom. I’ve never seen it this bad, and it doesn’t show any signs of getting better. I know Lee Bergerman has announced her retirement. We’ll see who her replacement may be. Maybe that’s a breath of fresh air. I don’t know.”
Bergerman took the position of commanding officer of the Nova Scotia RCMP in 2018, and retired in October 2021.
Internal review versus inquiry
After the murders, an internal review of the mass murders was proposed.
“Minister of Justice Mark Furey… wanted all the police chiefs of Nova Scotia to sign this document saying we support the review, no matter where they are,” said MacNeil. So Cape Breton regional chief, Annapolis Royal, the other end of the province, didn’t matter, he wanted all the police chiefs to sign on like good soldiers and say, hey, we support this review, which we didn’t.”
MacNeil refused to sign the letter. “I felt it was a mis-justice to the families and to the communities that wanted answers. And a lot of people thought it was a coverup.”
MacNeil agreed with victims’ families that there should be a full public inquiry.
Police bulletin warning about the killer
MacNeil did not know that there was a police bulletin his department had generated in 2011 naming the killer as someone who might kill police. That bulletin was rediscovered during the mass murder spree by an Amherst town cop with a great memory, who recalled the killer’s name so went through his old emails and found the old bulletin. That cop then sent the bulletin to the RCMP. Truro police reviewed their files and found the bulletin.
The CBC filed a freedom of information request with the Truro police for all documents related to the killer, and the town’s lawyer said the old bulletin had to be released. But then MacNeil received a request for a phone call with RCMP Superintendent Chris Leather and RCMP Halifax District Superintendent Janice Gray. MacNeil knew the call was about the bulletin, so brought his deputy chief in on the call.
“The gist of the call,” said MacNeil, “was, you know, you’re aware of the bulletin. Yeah. You know this is going to be FOIPOP’d? Yeah, it is. And it’s going to go out? Yeah, it is. And it’s potentially going to cause some problems, and I said, no, not for us. So anyway, we had this discussion and the RCMP wanted to come and have a look at our records and our holding and bring in an investigative triangle, and all that stuff. So right away, the deputy and I got a little hinky on that and said, no that’s not happening.”
“So I think they realized that it was going to get out,” continued MacNeil. “During this whole process, they brought in people from Ottawa, superintendents, and they were called the Issues Management Team. And that really offended me, too, that they took this tragedy and defined it as an issue. Right. So they have these two guys from Ottawa, their whole job in this is called Issues Management. So they’re basically here as the fixers. How can I shut these Nova Scotians up?”
“They had a whole package done on this,” said MacNeil. “And Amherst Police Chief Pike, myself, and Chief Kinsella from Halifax were brought into this because all our officers, all our agencies were somewhat involved. Halifax because the guy’s address was Dartmouth, us because we created the bulletin, and Amherst because they still had the bulletin. And it became to me about a blame game. Like, what did you do, Truro, to investigate this? And I’m thinking, no, no, you’re not going down that road with me. And then Dan Kinsella, what did Halifax do? And then Amherst, how did you have this bulletin, and why is it still alive?… It became very clear that this is how do I take this bull’s eye and put it on three agencies.”
MacNeil was asked to take part in an RCMP press conference related to the bulletin, but “I said no, this badge isn’t going on TV to talk about the bulletin because it has nothing to do with us.”
“It became very, very clear to the three chiefs that this was about how do I move the narrative and put it on somebody else.”
MacNeil said he felt the RCMP wanted him to make the bulletin “go away.”
“It’s not the way I do things,” said MacNeil. “This is not ethically and morally correct. I could say this, but you know, I don’t lie. I mean, it is here, it’s here. It’s a document we have in our possession, whether we think we should have purged it or not, irrelevant. We have it, and we have a duty to disclose it. And I was upfront with them… and the vibe I got was nudge nudge a little brother, we’re going to put a little heat on you until it goes away.”
MacNeil refused to budge.
---------- Original message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
Date: Mon, 4 Apr 2022 13:38:43 -0300
Subject: I just called correct???
To: police@truro.ca, versailles@versaillescom.com, mcu <mcu@justice.gc.ca>
Cc: motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
Guy Versailles, 514 386 9774, versailles@versaillescom.com
https://www.truro.ca/police-
Chief of Police
Truro Police Service
776 Prince Street
Truro, Nova Scotia
Canada B2N 1G9
Tel: 902-895-5351 (This contact number is staffed 24/7)
Fax: 902-893-1629
Email: police@truro.ca
https://davidraymondamos3.
Friday, 1 April 2022
N.S. man stood guard with a shotgun after the mass shooter rang his doorbell
https://www.cbc.ca/news/
Commission examining N.S. mass killing announces inquiry participants
Participants include families, advocacy groups, police organizations
Frances Willick · CBC News · Posted: May 13, 2021 11:48 AM AT
https://davidraymondamos3.
Tuesday, 20 November 2018
I read the news today about the RCMP lawsuits and just shook my head
at the malicious nonsense but when Guy Versailles laughed at me I got
truly pissed off
>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>> From: David Amos motomaniac333@gmail.com
>> Date: Mon, 10 Jun 2013 01:20:20 -0300
>> Subject: Yo Fred Wyshak and Brian Kelly your buddy Whitey's trial is
>> finally underway now correct? What the hell do I do with the wiretap
>> tapes Sell them on Ebay?
>> To: Brian.Kelly@usdoj.gov, us.marshals@usdoj.gov,
>> Fred.Wyshak@usdoj.gov, jcarney@carneybassil.com,
>> bbachrach@bachrachlaw.net, wolfheartlodge@live.com,
shmurphy@globe.com, >> jonathan.albano@bingham.com, mvalencia@globe.com
>> Cc: david.raymond.amos@gmail.com, oldmaison@yahoo.com,
>> PATRICK.MURPHY@dhs.gov, rounappletree@aol.com
>>
>>
http://www.bostonglobe.com/
>>
>> http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/
>>
>> As the CBC etc yap about Yankee wiretaps and whistleblowers I must
ask
>> them the obvious question AIN'T THEY FORGETTING SOMETHING????
>>
>> http://www.youtube.com/watch?
>>
>> What the hell does the media think my Yankee lawyer served upon the
>> USDOJ right after I ran for and seat in the 39th Parliament baseball
>> cards?
>>
>> http://www.archive.org/
>>
>>
http://archive.org/details/
>>
>> http://davidamos.blogspot.ca/
>>
>> http://www.archive.org/
>>
>> http://archive.org/details/
>>
>> FEDERAL EXPRES February 7, 2006
>> Senator Arlen Specter
>> United States Senate
>> Committee on the Judiciary
>> 224 Dirksen Senate Office Building
>> Washington, DC 20510
>>
>> Dear Mr. Specter:
>>
>> I have been asked to forward the enclosed tapes to you from a man
>> named, David Amos, a Canadian citizen, in connection with the matters
>> raised in the attached letter.
>>
>> Mr. Amos has represented to me that these are illegal FBI wire tap
tapes.
>>
>> I believe Mr. Amos has been in contact with you about this
previously.
>>
>> Very truly yours,
>> Barry A. Bachrach
>> Direct telephone: (508) 926-3403
>> Direct facsimile: (508) 929-3003
>> Email: bbachrach@bowditch.com
>>
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: "David Amos" david.raymond.amos@gmail.com
>> To: "Rob Talach" rtalach@ledroitbeckett.com
>> Sent: Tuesday, June 12, 2012 10:59 PM
>> Subject: Re: Attn Robert Talach and I should talk ASAP about my suing
>> the Catholic Church Trust that Bastarache knows why
>>
>> The date stamp on about page 134 of this old file of mine should mean
>> a lot to you
>>
>> http://www.checktheevidence.
>>
>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>> From: David Amos motomaniac333@gmail.com
>> Date: Wed, 21 Nov 2012 15:37:08 -0400
>> Subject: To Hell with the KILLER COP Gilles Moreau Wh>> maritme_malaise@yahoo.ca, Jennifer.Nixon@ps-sp.gc.ca,
>> bartman.heidi@psic-ispc.gc.ca, Yves.J.Marineau@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
>> david.paradiso@erc-cee.gc.ca, desaulniea@smtp.gc.ca,
>> denise.brennan@tbs-sct.gc.ca, anne.murtha@vac-acc.gc.ca,
>> webo@xplornet.com, julie.dickson@osfi-bsif.gc.ca,
>> rod.giles@osfi-bsif.gc.ca, flaherty.j@parl.gc.ca, toewsv1@parl.gc.ca,
>> Nycole.Turmel@parl.gc.ca,Cleme
maritime_malaise@yahoo.ca, >> oig@sec.gov, whistleblower@finra.org,
whistle@fsa.gov.uk,
>> david@fairwhistleblower.ca
>> Cc: j.kroes@interpol.int, david.raymond.amos@gmail.com,
>> bernadine.chapman@rcmp-grc.gc.
>> Juanita.Peddle@rcmp-grc.gc.ca, oldmaison@yahoo.com,
>> Wayne.Lang@rcmp-grc.gc.ca, Robert.Trevors@gnb.ca,
>> ian.fahie@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>
>>
>> http://www.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/nb/
>>
>> http://nb.rcmpvet.ca/
>>
>> From: Gilles Moreau Gilles.Moreau@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
>> Date: Wed, 21 Nov 2012 08:03:22 -0500
>> Subject: Re: Lets ee if the really nasty Newfy Lawyer Danny Boy
>> Millions will explain this email to you or your boss Vic Toews EH
>> Constable Peddle???
>> To: David Amos motomaniac333@gmail.com
>>
>> Please cease and desist from using my name in your emails.
>>
>> Gilles Moreau, Chief Superintendent, CHRP and ACC
>> Director General
>> HR Transformation
>> 73 Leikin Drive, M5-2-502
>> Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0R2
>>
>> Tel 613-843-6039
>> Cel 613-818-6947
>>
>> Gilles Moreau, surintendant principal, CRHA et ACC
>> Directeur général de la Transformation des ressources humaines
>> 73 Leikin, pièce M5-2-502
>> Ottawa, ON K1A 0R2
>>
>> tél 613-843-6039
>> cel 613-818-6947
>> gilles.moreau@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
>>
>
> First things first have a Look at the 3 documents hereto attached (Not
> a big read)
>
> Listen to these old voicemails from interesting FEDS at about the
> same point in time (Won't take long)
>
> http://www.archive.org/
>
> then ask youselves or the lawyers Senator Shelby or Spizter or Cutler
> or Bernie madoff's old buddy Robert Glauber where the webcast and
> transcript went for a very important hearing held in late 2003 by the
> United States Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs.
>
>
http://www.banking.senate.gov/
>
> Review of Current Investigations and Regulatory Actions Regarding the
> Mutual Fund Industry
>
> November 20, 2003 02:00 PM
> The Committee will meet in OPEN SESSION to conduct the second in a
> series of hearings on the “Review of Current Investigations and
> Regulatory Actions Regarding the Mutual Fund Industry.”
>
> Archived Webcast
>
> Witness Panel 1
>
> Mr. Stephen M. Cutler
> Director - Division of Enforcement
> Securities and Exchange Commission
> cutler.pdf (175.5 KBs)
>
> Mr. Robert Glauber
> Chairman and CEO
> National Association of Securities Dealers
> glauber.pdf (171.1 KBs)
>
> Eliot Spitzer
> Attorney General
> State of New York
> spitzer.pdf (68.2 KBs)
>
> Permalink:
>
http://www.banking.senate.gov/
>
>
> Trust that the evil women and men that PM Trudeau "The Younger"
> appointed to to his cabinet will continue to play dumb because of
> their oath to The Privy Council. However it does not follow that
> everybody who works for them are dumb and they have no such oath to
> uphold N'esy Pas?.
>
> Veritas Vincit
> David Raymond Amos
> 902 800 0369
>
>
>
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: Lisa Porteous <lporteous@kleinlyons.com>
> Date: Thu, 6 Jun 2013 14:46:22 +0000
> Subject: RCMP
> To: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
>
> David,
>
> Thank you for your email inquiring about our class action against the
> RCMP. As you may know, the Notice of Claim was filed in the Brit> brought by former RCMP constable Janet Merlo on behalf of female RCMP
> members. Unfortunately, we cannot assist you with your claim.
>
> We recommend that you contact Mr. Barry Carter of Mair Jensen Blair
> LLP to discuss any claim you may have against the RCMP for harassment.
> His contact information is as follows:
>
> Mr. Barry Carter
> Mair Jensen Blair LLP
> 1380-885 W. Georgia Street
> Vancouver, BC V6C 3E8
> Phone: 604-682-6299
> Fax 1-604-374-6992
>
> This is not intended to be an opinion concerning the merits of your
> case. In declining to represent you, we are not expressing an opinion
> as to whether you should take further action in this matter.
>
> You should be aware that there may be strict time limitations within
> which you must act in order to protect your rights. Failure to begin
> your lawsuit by filing an action within the required time may mean
> that you could be barred forever from pursuing a claim. Therefore, you
> should immediately contact another lawyer ( as indicated above) to
> obtain legal advice/representation.
>
> Thank you again for considering our firm.
>
> Yours truly,
>
> Lisa Porteous
> Case Manager/Paralegal
>
> lporteous@kleinlyons.com
> www.kleinlyons.com
>
> KLEIN ∙ LYONS
> Suite 400-1385 West 8th Avenue
> Vancouver BC V6H 3V9 Canada
> Office 604.874.7171
> Fax 604.874.7180
> Direct 604.714.6533
>
> This email is confidential and may be protected by solicitor-client
> privilege. It is intended only for the use of the person to whom it is
> addressed. Any distribution, copying or other use by anyone else is
> strictly prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error, please
> telephone us immediately and destroy this e-mail.
>
> Please consider the environment before printing this email.
>
---------- Original message ----------
From: Jody.Wilson-Raybould@parl.gc.
Date: Tue, 20 Nov 2018 17:03:10 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: I read the news today about the RCMP
lawsuits and just shook my head at the malicious nonsense but when Guy
Versailles laughed at me I got truly pissed off
To: david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
Thank you for writing to the Honourable Jody Wilson-Raybould, Member
of Parliament for Vancouver Granville.
This message is to acknowledge that we are in receipt of your email.
Due to the significant increase in the volume of correspondence, there
may be a delay in processing your email. Rest assured that your
message will be carefully reviewed.
To help us address your concerns more quickly, please include within
the body of your email your full name, address, and postal code.
Please note that your message will be forwarded to the Department of
Justice if it concerns topics pertaining to the member's role as the
Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada. For all future
correspondence addressed to the Minister of Justice, please write
directly to the Department of Justice at
mcu@justice.gc.camcu@justice.
> or call 613-957-4222.
Thank you
-------------------
Merci d'?crire ? l'honorable Jody Wilson-Raybould, d?put?e de
Vancouver Granville.
Le pr?sent message vise ? vous informer que nous avons re?u votre
courriel. En raison d'une augmentation importante du volume de
correspondance, il pourrait y avoir un retard dans le traitement de
votre courriel. Sachez que votre message sera examin? attentivement.
Pour nous aider ? r?pondre ? vos pr?occupations plus rapidement,
veuillez inclure dans le corps de votre courriel votre nom complet,
votre adresse et votre code postal.
Veuillez prendre note que votre message sera transmis au minist?re de
la Justice s'il porte sur des sujets qui rel?vent du r?le de la
d?put?e en tant que ministre de la Justice et procureure g?n?rale du
Canada. Pour toute correspondance future adress?e ? la ministre de la
Justice, veuillez ?crire directement au minist?re de la Justice ?
mcu@justice.gc.ca ou appelez au 613-957-4222.
Merci
https://www.blueline.ca/dan-kinsella-is-halifaxs-next-police-chief/
Dan Kinsella is Halifax’s next police chief
June 19, 2019 By Staff
Dan Kinsella is Halifax’s next police chief.
Kinsella, who is currently deputy chief of operations for the Hamilton Police Service, assumes his new role on July 1.
After 32 years of experience, he will take over the position previously held by Jean-Michel Blais.
Halifax Regional Police Executive Management Team
Chief Daniel J. Kinsella, M.O.M.
Serving as Chief of Police since July 1, 2019, Chief Dan Kinsella leads Halifax Regional Police, Atlantic Canada’s largest municipal police service.
Chief Kinsella has 33 years of experience in policing and management, and, served as Deputy Chief with Hamilton Police Service (HPS) prior to his current role as Chief. Working with national and provincial law enforcement partners, Chief Kinsella acted as HPS’ command lead for multi-jurisdictional investigations and major case management, including, homicide, provincial internet child exploitation, human trafficking, fraud, drug and weapons investigations and traditional organized crime investigations.
Chief Kinsella is a member of the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police (CACP), the International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP) and the FBI National Academy (FBINA). He serves on the Canadian Police College Advisory Board and is Past President of the FBI National Academy Associates (FBINAA) New York State/Eastern Canada Chapter Board. He is also a life member of the Ontario Association of Chiefs of Police (OACP).
Committed to the philosophy and concept of community-based policing, Chief Kinsella recognizes that strong, sustained community partnerships are integral to effective crime prevention for a healthy and safe community. As part of that, he believes in maintaining a visible presence in the community and actively supporting local and city-wide events. Throughout his career, he has supported activities that help bridge relationships; celebrate and honour community builders; promote a shared dialogue, good citizenship, fairness and respect for each other.
His contributions to community initiatives include his advocacy, volunteerism and service as President of the John Howard Society Board of Directors, representing Hamilton, Burlington and area, as well as, Chair and member of the Banyan Community Services Board of Directors. Chief Kinsella was a member of the Aboriginal Committee and the Women’s Services Advisory Committee and volunteered as Director with HPS “Project Concern”- an in-house community outreach program.
In September 2018, Chief Kinsella was part of a cycling ride team of 170 law enforcement and police officers from across Canada who participated in the Canadian Police Memorial Ride to Remember 700 km ride from the Ontario Police College in Aylmer to the National Police & Peace Officers' Memorial in Ottawa.
Chief Kinsella was invested as a member of the Governor General’s Order of Merit of the Police Forces for distinguished policing, community and public service. In recognition of his commitment to policing and the community, he has received the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Medal. As a member of the Pan Am Games Team, he received the Hamilton City Manager's Award for Hamilton Public Service Excellence.
Chief Kinsella is a graduate of the FBI National Academy and the Rotman School of Business. He holds a Master of Arts in Criminal Justice from American Military University and a Bachelor of Arts in Labour Studies from McMaster University.
Follow Chief Kinsella on Twitter.
Deputy Chief Don MacLean
Deputy Chief Don MacLean began his policing career in 1993 and currently serves as the Deputy Chief of Operations, a position he has held since April 2020. He oversees both the patrol and criminal investigation divisions.
Prior to serving as Deputy Chief, he was the Superintendent of the Patrol Division. He also served as the first Diversity Officer for Halifax Regional Police from 2004-2006 and went on to become the Executive Officer to the Chief and later the Human Resources Officer.
A lifelong resident of Halifax, Deputy Chief MacLean serves as the Chair of the Board of Directors for St. John Ambulance NS/PEI Council, is an active member of the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police as well as on the Board of Directors for Phoenix Youth. He’s also a member of the Board of Governors for the University of Kings College and has previously received an appointment as an Honorary Aide-De-Camp to the Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia.
He attended the University of King’s College and has continued his education through Saint Mary’s University Executive and Professional Development, Dalhousie College of Continuing Education, Canadian Police College and the Simon Wiesenthal Center.
Deputy Chief Reid McCoombs
Deputy Chief Reid McCoombs began his policing career in 1989 and currently oversees the Support function that includes Administration, Finance, HR & Training and Information Technology. Prior to that, he served as the Superintendent of Administration.
In his career lasting over three decades, Deputy Chief McCoombs served in frontline and supervisory capacities in patrol, criminal investigations, and administration, as well in his role as Inspector, he was the officer-in charge of Human Resources and Training. He worked on a secondment with the Serious Incident Response Team (SiRT) and was a member of the Emergency Response Team, commanded the Public Safety Unit and remains an active Critical Incident Commander.
Deputy Chief McCoombs is a member of the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police (CACP) Education, Training and Professional Development committees. He holds a Bachelor of Commerce (Human Resource Management) from Saint Mary’s University along with numerous courses from Dalhousie University and the Canadian Police College.
Superintendent Dean Simmonds
Superintendent Dean Simmonds began his law enforcement career in 1997 and currently serves as the officer-in-charge of Administration. In this role he oversees various administration functions including training, wellness and facilities.
Before joining Halifax Regional Police, he was a community constable with the RCMP. He joined HRP in 2001 and was named Cadet of the Year in his first year of service with HRP. In 2007, he was honoured as Police Officer of the Year. Prior to his role as Superintendent, Support, he worked in many operational and investigative units including guns and gangs, special enforcement and community response and crime prevention. He also served as the Diversity Equity Officer between 2008 and 2012.
Superintendent Simmonds has continued to expand his professional development through programs from Dalhousie University, Hensen College and the Simon Wiesethal Center. He continues to play a leadership role in developing and implementing various workshops and training programs with a focus on promoting diversity, workplace equity, human rights and leadership.
He has served as a member of HRP Strategic Planning Team, HRP/RCMP Integrated Cultural Diversity Committee and Race Relation Advisory Committee in the past. He is also a board member of Basketball Nova Scotia. He continues to remain a dedicated community member both personally and professionally and is active in the community, providing mentorship programs and community lead initiatives focusing on diversity and leadership.
Superintendent Andrew Matthews
Superintendent Andrew Matthews joined Halifax Regional Police in 1999 and currently serves as the Superintendent, Criminal Investigation Division, a position he has held since April 2020. He oversees all investigative units – general investigations, homicide and cold case, sexual assault, drugs, guns and gangs, missing persons – as well as various support units, including forensic identification, digital forensics, criminal intelligence and crime analysis.
Superintendent Matthews previously served as the Information Management Officer and held various operational positions in the patrol and the criminal investigation divisions where he supervised sexualized violence investigations and went on to become a Watch Commander. He was a member of the Public Safety Unit for 10 years and has coordinated the Critical Incident Command program for Halifax Regional Police.
He has been a member of several committees and associations, most notably the Brain Tumor Foundation of Canada. He has a Certificate in Police Service Delivery from Dalhousie University and has also completed many courses through the Canadian Police College.
Superintendent Derrick Boyd
Superintendent Derrick Boyd started his career with Halifax Regional Police in 1998 and currently serves as the Superintendent, Patrol Division, a position he has held since December 2021. He oversees all uniformed operations, including specialized teams such as emergency response, crowd control, community policing as well as the mounted, traffic, marine and the aviation security units.
His past roles have included overseeing the records section, acting Watch Commander, patrol supervisor and overseeing investigative teams in the Integrated General Investigation Section and Specialized Investigation Section.
Superintendent Boyd has led major files and led operational planning for a number of high-profile events including the Air Canada crash and major crime investigations. He has a Bachelor of Commerce from Saint Mary’s University.
Superintendent Greg Mason
Superintendent Greg Mason began his career in policing in 1990 and currently serves as the Superintendent of Support. He oversees information management and support operations including traffic, prisoner care and ports/aviation security.
He has also previously served in a range of positions with general investigations, homicide, forensics, VICE, internet child exploitation and investigative support operations. He also served as officer-in-charge of Professional Standards Division and as Bureau Director with the Criminal Intelligence Service of Nova Scotia (CNISNS). In 2015, he took on the role of Watch Commander. He is a former member and coordinator of Halifax Regional Police’s Disposal Unit and is currently a Critical Incident Commander.
Superintendent Mason has volunteered for several years for local amateur sports including coaching minor hockey along with ringette and serving in board of director roles with amateur sporting organizations. He holds two certificates from Dalhousie University and several courses from the Canadian Police College.
Neera Ritcey
Neera Ritcey joined Halifax Regional Police in 2017, and currently serves as the Divisional Manager for HRP’s Corporate Affairs Division. In this role, Neera provides integrated leadership for HRP’s various strategic organizational functions, including, corporate communications, public information and education, policy development, research and planning while providing support for key organizational initiatives aligned with HRP’s 10-year strategic plan.
With a professional career in a variety of roles in public, private and non-profit sectors, Neera brings extensive experience and history of working with diverse audiences in complex, multi-jurisdictional regulatory and policy environments. Before joining HRP, she held progressive roles in the corporate sector with Nova Scotia Power and Emera Inc. (TSX:EMA) in Halifax, where she held positions encompassing corporate communications, public engagement as well as investor relations functions. Prior to that, she spent nearly seven years working with the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia in a variety of roles.
Neera currently volunteers her time as a member of the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police (CACP) Committee on Equity, Diversity and Inclusion; as a member of CACP’s National Strategic Communications Working Group, and, as an Advisory Board Member for the Salvation Army - Maritime Division. Neera holds a Post-Graduate Certificate in Public Relations (with Honours) from Humber College in Toronto. She has completed the CIRI/Ivey Investor Relations Certification Program from the Ivey Business School - University of Western Ontario. Neera holds a Bachelor of Arts and a Master of Arts from Panjab University in India.
Inspector Ron Legere
Inspector Ron Legere started his policing career in 1989 as a cadet with Metropolitan Toronto Police. In 1994 he returned to Nova Scotia as a member of the Dartmouth Police Service, which amalgamated with Halifax Regional Police in 1996. He currently serves as the officer-in-charge of the Professional Standards Division.
Inspector Legere has served in a number of roles in both patrol and criminal investigations division, as a member of the Quick Response Unit, General Investigations Section, Major Crime, Sexual Assault Investigation Team (SAIT) and the Criminal Intelligence/Technical Surveillance Units where he participated and led many operations. In addition to these roles, he was a member and later Commander of the Public Safety Unit. During his career he has also had several multi-year operational secondments, such as the RCMP Integrated Proceeds of Crime Unit (IPOC), the Nova Scotia Department of Justice Internal Investigations Unit (IIU) and the Nova Scotia Serious Incident Response Team (SiRT). He has served as a Watch Commander in the past and most recently served as the Staff Sergeant in the Professional Standards Division.
Inspector Legere has completed several courses through the Canadian Police College, along with a Criminology Certificate from St. Mary’s University and a Certificate in Police Leadership from Dalhousie University.
Inspector Stephanie Carlisle
Inspector Stephanie Carlisle began her policing career in 1999 and currently provides divisional leadership, as second in command, to the Administration Division, a position she has held since January 2020. In this role she oversees various administration functions including training, wellness and facilities.
Prior to her current role, she worked as both an officer and supervisor for the patrol and criminal investigation divisions. She served as a community officer, school response officer, member of the recruitment and diversity teams, Public Safety Unit, the first female member of the Traffic Unit and served as Watch Commander. While in the Criminal Investigation Division, she was an investigator and supervisor with the Sexual Assault Investigative Team (SAIT). She was a member of the Child Youth Advocacy Centre steering committee and an instructor of the Trauma Informed Response to Sexualized Violence course.
Inspector Carlisle has a Bachelor of Recreation Administration from Dalhousie University.
Inspector David Boon
Inspector David Boon joined Halifax Regional Police in 1995 and is currently the Central Divisional Commander, a position he has held since January 2020. He is responsible for the day-to-day police operations for Halifax.
Prior to joining HRP, he served four years with the Kentville Police Service. Throughout his career, he has been assigned to various positions in the patrol and criminal investigation divisions, including Emergency Response Team (ERT), General Investigation Section, Sexual Assault Investigative Team (SAIT) and Homicide. He was awarded Investigator of the Year in both 2006 and 2010. He was selected as NCO in charge of the Aviation Security Unity and took over armed response to pre-board alarms at the Halifax Stanfield International Airport. He was assigned to Watch Commander and is also a Critical Incident Commander.
Inspector Jeff Clarke
Inspector Jeff Clarke began his policing career in 1986 after graduating from the Atlantic Police Academy. He is currently the Central Divisional Commander, a position he was assigned since June 2021. He is responsible for the day-to-day police operations for Halifax.
Previous to this, Inspector Clarke has served as the West Divisional Commander and Watch Commander. Throughout his career, he served in a variety of frontline and supervisory capacities. These roles included assignments to various positions in the patrol and criminal investigation divisions, including Emergency Response Team (ERT), General Investigation Section, Quick Response Unit, Drug Unit, Joint Forces Drug Unit, Cold Case Unit, High-Risk Enforcement Apprehension Unit (HEAT) and Major Crime Unit where he investigated sexual assaults and homicides.
Inspector Clarke volunteered for several local amateur sports throughout the years including coaching minor soccer, baseball, hockey and football. In 2009 he was awarded the Promotion of Safe Communities Directors Award from the Halifax Regional Municipality. He has a Bachelor of Science in Recreation from Dalhousie University and several policing and leadership courses from Canadian Police College, Atlantic Police Academy and Dalhousie University (Henson College).
Inspector Carolyn Nichols
Inspector Carolyn Nichols began her law enforcement career in 1999 and currently serves as the Support Divisional Commander, a position she has held since January 2020. She is responsible for the operations of several operational units including Prisoner Care Facility, Traffic, Community Relations and Crime Prevention, Ports and the Aviation Security Unit.
She previously worked as an officer and supervisor in the Patrol Division where she was the sergeant-in-charge of the Traffic Unit and served as Watch Commander. She was also seconded to Criminal Intelligence Service Nova Scotia where she was a Criminal Intelligence Analyst. She was then transferred to the Criminal Investigation Division where she worked as a Crime Analyst. She became the first woman to join the Integrated Underwater Recovery Team.
Inspector Nichols completed numerous professional courses with the Canadian Police College and Dalhousie University, where she completed the Certificate in Police Leadership. She has also been involved in the mentoring and leadership training of women as an active member of the Atlantic Women in Law Enforcement (AWLE) and served as the AWLE president from 2014-2019.
Inspector Greg Robertson
Inspector Robertson started his career with Halifax Regional Police in 1998 and currently serves as the Information Management Officer, a position he has held since April 2020.
In his current role he oversees Integrated Emergency Services, courts, records and traffic support services. Prior to joining HRP, he worked with Nova Scotia Department of Justice Correctional Services division for six years. Inspector Robertson is experienced in many aspects of policing including roles in the criminal investigation division, professional standards office and has served as a Watch Commander. Inspector Robertson regularly collaborates with partner agencies in his role as lead Incident Commander for Ground Search and Rescue and has represented HRP at several ICS exercises.
He earned a Bachelor of Arts from Saint Mary’s University, Post-Bachelor Criminal Justice courses from Simon Fraser University, Business Administration courses from Mount Saint Vincent University and Police Leadership courses from Dalhousie University.
Inspector Christina Martin
Inspector Christina Martin joined Halifax Regional Police in 1999. She currently oversees a number of specialized function within the Support Division, a role she took on in December 2021.
Previous to that, Inspector Martin served as the West Divisional Commander and Watch Commander in the Patrol Division. Throughout her career, Insp. Martin served in various positions in the patrol and criminal investigation divisions, including being a member of the Drug Unit, Major Crime Unit, Sexual Assault Investigation Team and Crisis Negotiation Team.
In 2019 she was awarded an Exemplary Service Award for 20 years of exemplary service to policing. From 2003 to 2018 she served as a member of the Atlantic Women in Law Enforcement (AWLE). Inspector Martin has a Bachelor of Arts from Mount Saint Vincent University, a certificate in Criminology from Saint Mary’s University, a certificate in Police Leadership – Administration from Dalhousie University, and has completed several policing and leadership continuous education courses.
Mayor’s Office:
Phone: 902.490.4010
Email: mayor@halifax.ca
Street Address: 1841 Argyle Street, Halifax
Mailing Address: PO Box 1749, Halifax, NS B3J 3A5
Media Inquiries::
Shaune MacKinlay
Phone: 902.490.6531
E-mail: mackins@halifax.ca
RE CTV Twitter etc For the record I never met a Van Horne who wasn't Conservative spin doctor
---------- Original message ---------- From: Ryan Van Horne <vanhorne.ryan@gmail.com> Date: Sat, 27 Sep 2014 23:10:12 -0300 Subject: Twitter To: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com> Among your series of tweets you hint for a second time that I am a Harper spin doctor. I have never worked for the federal government or Stephen Harper. If you read my blog carefully, you will see that I worked for the NS Departments of Health and Energy -- not the federal departments. And there was no PDF attachment to your e-mail. If you'd like to try sending it to me again, I'll have a look at it. https://atlantic.ctvnews.ca/ Ryan Van Horne CTVNewsAtlantic.ca Digital Co-ordinator Halifax Ryan Van Horne is a digital co-ordinator at CTV Atlantic in Halifax. Ryan was born in Ontario, grew up in Quebec, but has been a Maritimer for 33 years. After graduating from Saint Mary's University with a degree in political science, Ryan worked at The Daily News in Halifax for 18 years as a reporter, photographer, columnist, and editor. He was part of the team that won an Atlantic Journalism Award for spot news coverage of the Westray mine explosion. Ryan worked in news, business and sports while at the paper and continued to cover a wide range of topics as a freelance journalist for six years. During that time he also wrote four plays, which have been performed in theatre festivals across Nova Scotia, and directed two documentary films. Ryan is a generalist with CTV Atlantic and has been part of team coverage of events such as the Saint John refinery fire and COVID-19 in New Brunswick. An avid hiker, Ryan also enjoys whale-watching and the many beautiful beaches of the Maritimes. Like many Canadians, he's also been known to watch the odd hockey game. He speaks English and French. ---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Ryan Van Horne <vanhorne.ryan@gmail.com> Date: Sat, 27 Sep 2014 08:24:05 -0300 Subject: Re: The Three Stooges Glen Canning, Ryan Van Horne and Rick Howe are quite likely more unethical than the cops and lawyers and other journalists are To: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com> David, Did you hang up the phone on me the other day when you called? If so, why? I needed to go somewhere and when I tried to call you back later, there was no answer either time and I wasn't able to leave a message. I don't understand why you're suggesting that what I've done is unethical. Are you in some way connected to the case of Rehtaeh Parsons? Do you have any first-hand knowledge of what happened in this case? Ryan On 27 September 2014 01:24, David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com> wrote: > ---------- Forwarded message ---------- > From: "Bourdages, Pierre" <bourdap@halifax.ca> > Date: Thu, 6 Jun 2013 12:17:48 +0000 > Subject: RE: Here is something that the RCMP and Harper will never > mention EH Franky Boy? > To: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com> > > Good morning Mr. Amos; > > I am not sure I am understanding your request...is there something we > can do to help you ? > > Cst. Pierre Bourdages > Public Information Officer > Halifax Regional Police > (902) 490-5154 Office > (902) 456-1688 cell > bourdap@halifax.ca > www.facebook.com/ > www.twitter.com/HfxRegPolice > > -----Original Message----- > From: David Amos [mailto:motomaniac333@gmail. > Sent: June-06-13 9:13 AM > To: Rath, Theresa; justmin; MacRae, Scott; jamiebaillie; Bourdages, > Pierre; Frank.McKenna; Kevin.leahy; kevin.violot; Jessica Hume; > kris.sims > Cc: David Amos; ddexter > Subject: Here is something that the RCMP and Harper will never mention > EH Franky Boy? > > > http://thechronicleherald.ca/ > > Publication ban breach probedDAN ARSENAULT CRIME REPORTER > Published September 24, 2014 - 3:12pm > Last Updated September 25, 2014 - 3:42pm Share on facebookShare on > twitterShare on linkedinMore Sharing Services > Share on facebookShare on twitterShare on linkedinMore Sharing Services > Select ratingCancel ratingPoorOkayGoodGreatAwesome > Cancel ratingPoorOkayGoodGreatAwesome. > Average: 3.7 (3 votes) > .Share on emailShare on print.Halifax Regional Police said they > are investigating another alleged publication ban violation that’s > tied to another recent court case. > > Spokesman Const. Pierre Bourdages would not confirm if it involved the > case of a 20-year-old Eastern Passage man who pleaded guilty to making > child pornography earlier this week. In that case, the judge had > ordered a ban prohibiting the publication of the name of the victim. > The accused pleaded guilty to one count stemming from the November > 2011 incident. The girl died at age 17, a few days after attempting > suicide in April 2013. > > The case drew international attention and a large number of people > wrote the victim’s name on social media in opposition to that ruling. > > “It’s been brought by a number of complaints,” Bourdages said in > reference to the second investigation. > > “We have to go with the evidence that we have. That investigation just > started yesterday (Tuesday).” > > He said if a complainant only mentioned one alleged violator of that > ban, police are still bound to investigate every situation they > uncover that appears to violate it. > > “We have to go where the evidence leads us,” he said. > > “Tell people, ‘Be very careful what you’re posting publicly because, > ultimately, you’re responsible for what you’re posting.’” > > Ryan Van Horne, a Halifax freelance journalist, acknowledged he > printed the victim’s name in a blog earlier this week. He said he was > unaware if he was under investigation as a result. > > In an interview Wednesday afternoon, he said there are differences in > the sexual assault case compared to the child pornography case, and by > extension, in the appropriateness of the publication bans. > > “In that (sexual assault) case, my understanding is that a person > (allegedly) named the victim to shame her and did so without her > permission. I considered the public interest and named the (child > pornography) victim to keep her name alive in important discussions > that we need to have about sexual consent, cyberbullying and suicide. > > “I named her with her parents’ permission and took a cue from the > Ontario Crown attorney working on the case. He opposed the ban in the > spring, so I would be surprised if there was an about-face on this.” > > CORRECTION: This story has been updated with the following correction: > An earlier version stated, in the second paragraph, that the accused > pleaded guilty to two counts from the November 2011 incident. In fact, > the accused pleaded guilty to one count. > > About the Author » > DAN ARSENAULT CRIME REPORTER > E-Mail: darsenault@herald.ca > Twitter: @CH_danatherald > . > ---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com> Date: Sun, 26 Oct 2014 02:18:50 -0600 Subject: Re: Hey Glen Canning and Kris Wells Mr Baconfat wanted you dudes to know his phone # (780 425 5075) and wished for you to view his new blog as well To: smithh@halifax.ca, sunrayzulu <sunrayzulu@shaw.ca>, Glen Canning <grcanning@gmail.com>, dexterdyne <dexterdyne@gmail.com>, merricra <merricra@gov.ns.ca>, "vanhorne.ryan" <vanhorne.ryan@gmail.com>, justmin <justmin@gov.ns.ca>, msegal <msegal@murraysegal.com>, "scott.macrae" <scott.macrae@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, bourdap <bourdap@halifax.ca>, patrick_doran1 <patrick_doran1@hotmail.com>, Paul Elam <paul@avoiceformen.com>, girlwriteswhat <girlwriteswhat@gmail.com>, "roger.l.brown" <roger.l.brown@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, "john.warr" <john.warr@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, "rod.knecht" <rod.knecht@edmontonpolice.ca>, "kris.wells" <kris.wells@ualberta.ca>, "Jonathan.Denis" <Jonathan.Denis@gov.ab.ca>, "Staples, David (Edm Journal)" <dstaples@edmontonjournal.com>, lgunter <lgunter@shaw.ca>, Glen Canning <grcanning@me.com>, deanr0032 <deanr0032@hotmail.com>, FathersCan <fatherscan@storm.ca>, maryann4peace <maryann4peace@gmail.com>, premier <premier@gov.ab.ca>, "Danielle.Smith" <Danielle.Smith@assembly.ab.ca>, Rachel Notley <Rachel.Notley@assembly.ab.ca>, "Raj.Sherman" <Raj.Sherman@assembly.ab.ca> Cc: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>, "john.green" <john.green@gnb.ca>, oldmaison <oldmaison@yahoo.com>, andre <andre@jafaust.com>, COCMoncton <COCMoncton@gmail.com>, "joshua.skurnik" <joshua.skurnik@hotmail.com>, "Kevin.leahy" <Kevin.leahy@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, "danny.copp" <danny.copp@fredericton.ca>, ppalmater <ppalmater@politics.ryerson.ca>, almabrooks26 <almabrooks26@hotmail.com> ---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: "Bourdages, Pierre" <bourdap@halifax.ca> Date: Sun, 26 Oct 2014 08:16:12 +0000 Subject: Automatic reply: Hey Glen Canning and Kris Wells Mr Baconfat wanted you dudes to know his phone # (780 425 5075) and wished for you to view his new blog as well To: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com> I will be out of the office on vacation Until November 10. If you require media or public relations assistance, please contact Cst Holly Tooke at 490-3088 or smithh@halifax.ca On 10/26/14, David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com> wrote: > On 10/25/14, BARRY WINTERS <sunrayzulu@shaw.ca> wrote: > > Little David, my wife heartily enjoyed the vulgar and really stupid tweets > from you and the so called Amos klan. YOU better give that phone number you > say is mine to "professor" Wells, and check in with your friend Glen > Canning. baconfat55 word press. Send my love and cum to your "mother" > Jeannah, little David. > > BTW My family and I have NEVER called or tweeted the nasty racist > bitch Lori Ink but well all know who did so while pretending to be us > N'esy Pas Chucky Leblanc and John Green aka G $ of QSLS in Fat Fred > City??? > > http://thedavidamosrant. > > http://baconfat53.blogspot.ca/ > > Blog has been removed > Sorry, the blog at baconfat53.blogspot.com has been removed. This > address is not available for new blogs. > > Did you expect to see your blog here? See: 'I can't find my blog on > the web, where is it?' > > http://sunrayzulu.blogspot.ca/ > > Blog has been removed > Sorry, the blog at sunrayzulu.blogspot.com has been removed. This > address is not available for new blogs. > > > http://baconfatreport. > > The Sordid Crimes of Glenford Canning and Leah Parsons > October 25, 2014 > > Rehtaeh Parsons killed herself. It took all of her eighteen years for > Rehtaeh to progress herself to self-destruction. Rehtaeh at fourteen > was the product of a dysfunctional “family,’ a disinterested “Mother,” > and apparently a “Father” that abused her for years. Rehtaeh at > fourteen habitually attended parties where she abused drugs, and > alcohol. At fourteen Rehtaeh Parsons was known to be abnormally > promiscuous, by her friends, peers and later Halifax police. Rehtaeh > Parsons attended several of these parties with the tacit approval of > her parents. It has been observed by many writers that if Halifax, and > Nova Scotia Child Welfare Services had known of Rehtaeh’s domestic > situation, she would have been removed from the custody of her > parents. > > When Rehateh was fourteen years of age, her parents Glenford Canning > and Leah Parsons maintain Rehtaeh lied to them about staying the night > with a friend, and attended a party. Rehtaeh was a habitual attendee > of these drunken celebrations, and her “parents” knew it. Rehtaeh > reportedly consumed both alcohol and drugs at this party. Rehtaeh had > reportedly made sexual overtures to her “best friend,” and the girl > she arrived at the party with, boyfriend. Rehaeh’s friend wanted to > go home. The young lady’s Mother asked Rehtaeh who was by then > standing in the centre of the room in a state of undress, if she > wanted to go home. Rehtaeh answered negatively, and remained at the > party. > > Subsequent witness, and statements to the police confirm Rehtaeh > assisted three teen-age boys into a state of undress, removed their > penises from their trousers, and proceeded to enthusiastically, and > with alacrity fellate each one of them, and later engage in coitus > with all of them together. Witness statements to police confirm that, > a “good time was had by all participants. Apparently Rehtaeh Parsons > suffered no “morning after” remorse for about a week after what Leah > Parson’s called “that fateful party.” Then a picture or pictures of > Rehtaeh’s celebratory activities emerged in cyber-space, and social > media. It was after a meeting of Rehtaeh, Glenford Canning, and Leah > Parsons, that it was decided, Rehteah was indeed, the victim “of a > vicious gang rape,” and culture of rape in Canada. > > After two exhaustive investigations not a scintilla of evidence was > found, because none existed that Rehtaeh was the “victim of a vicious > gang rape.” There was no evidence to support the laying of charges > against anyone, much less the likelihood of securing a conviction. > Some people posit and opine that in those two years betwixt that > “fateful party,” and Rehtaeh’s suicide, bullying, ridicule, and being > shunned execrably pushed Rehtaeh to self-destruction. In those two > years Rehtaeh’s “parents” were never cognizant that Rehtaeh had > stopped attending school. The Parsons / Cannning family had > disintegrated, and Rehtaeh was shunted from home to home, and to Grand > Parents. But, myself and many others think Rehtaeh was well on the way > to self-destruction well before “that fateful party.” Normal fourteen > year old teen-agers aren’t promiscuous nor addicted to drugs and > alcohol. Rehtaeh was “acting out,” at fourteen, because their was > familiar abuse in that already dysfunctional family. Tragically > Rehtaeh was already at this time well on the way to her eventual > demise.. > > Rehtaeh killed herself. Rehteah Parsons is dead. Glen Canning and Leah > Parsons, blamed and indicted, the Halifax police, the RCMP, the Crown > Prosecutor’s office, the Halifax School District, Canada’s “culture of > rape,” high school kids, and the “parents of that guy.” Everyone was > to blame in their eyes but themselves. > > The reality is.Rehtaeh Parsons is dead, because she wanted to rid > herself of her abusive and disinterested parents Glen Canning and Leah > Parsons. > > http://baconfatreport. > > Max Amos, “Professor” Kris Wells, Little Tony And Oppression > October 26, 2014 > > Little Tony Luong, and Max Amos are what some people refer to as “less > than manly,” effete, or sodomites. So called “professor” Kris Wells > calls them “sexual minorities,” and bleats loudly to whomsoever that > may lend an ear they are “oppressed,” and “unsafe.” A small and > unknown Face Book group called the Living Archive on Eugenics in > Western Canada has allied itself with the LGBTQ “community” to hold > the annual Alberta Eugenics Awareness Week. Sadly this year’s > commemoration is to be the last, due to abject disinterest. It appears > Little Tony Luong, “professor” Kris Wells, the LGBTQ “community,” and > the CRISPIE (s) have allied themselves with the soon to be defunct > Alberta Eugenics Awareness Week to…fight oppression! The LGBTQ > “community,” it’s so called “intelligentsia,” and the rest of these > “oppressed people” are assiduously attempting to revise and rewrite > history in order to promote their own perverse political agenda. > > From the early twenties through the late sixties every Canadian > province and the vast majority of political jurisdictions world-wide > had “eugenics programmes,” or “sterilization laws” on the books to > prevent who was then called the retarded from reproducing . Obviously > human-kind, and society has evolved past that. These LGBTQ ignorant > and chattering classes pontificate to all and sundry that, “State” > eugenics programmes “discouraged the breeding of Queer people, > radicalized people, (whatever those are) poor and working class people > and even women.” Thus self-described “gender creative” Tony Luong, > spokes-“person” for deviates everywhere, declares that they share a > “history of oppression” with the retards in history who had their > tubes snipped or tied. > > Stalwart resistance fighters against the forces of oppression the > CRISPIE (s) or Collaborative Radically Integrated Society in Edmonton, > a so-called “artists collective” of oppressed people, “dancing for > social change.” Were the “star attraction.” This “dance troupe” of > three faggots, two lesbians, three “gender creatives,” two behemoth > cross dressers and some girl in a wheel-chair, “shared deeply > political and personal stories of being in a body that is stigmatized > because of its differences from a perceived normal body.” Or say says > Tony Luong. Tony and the LGBTQ “community” feel “art” can be used as a > “form of resistance against dominant stories of oppression.” Whatever > that is, but alas no one would describe the CRISPIE(s) as artists. > > These “people” prevaricate, pontificate, and propagandize that of the > thousands of “mental defectives” that were legally and involuntarily > sterilized in Canada under our “sterilization laws” many were Queers, > radicalized people, poor and working class people, and women. The > so-called LGBTQ “community” are claiming being historically victimized > like the injuns and the residential schools tragedy. Of course any > intelligent human knows that only happened in the Third Reich. Not > unlike conspiracy theorists this alliance of “disabled,” stigmatized, > and “oppressed people” claim the “state” is engaging in eugenics even > today. Tony Luong says! “Eugenics is insidious, and pervasive, and > continues to be a threat to disabled and oppressed people. A real > example of this occurring would really be helpful. > > Little Tony Luong says. “living with a stigmatized body or identity > creates different ways of being in the world. There are many different > ways that we can feel pride in who we are as unique human beings.” > That’s why the University of Alberta’s so-called Gender Studies > Programme feels compelled to have “Pride Week” twice a year. The > great unwashed, and not too bright of the LGBTQ “community” maintain > and propagandize that. ” The “disabled,” oppressed, stigmatized and > sexual deviate are extremely vulnerable to “oppressive systems, such > as modern-day eugenics,” because they “constrain our behaviours and > actions.” There are laws, society has laws to “constrain behaviours > and actions.” But there are no “State” sponsored or other eugenic > programmes to provide a ” final solution,” like little Tony, and the > CPISPIE(s) are wont to claim. As always with the LGBTQ “community” > it’s all a “big shining lie.” > > http://baconfatreport. > > Indians, Commerce, And Public Art In Edmonton > October 26, 2014 > > On a bitterly cold 5:30 AM last Winter here in Edmonton, I was walking > to work. I walk down the alley from my back door one block to the > Mac’s Store on 114 St. and Jasper Avenue to get to my bus stop. This > particular morning a beat up and rusted Ford half-ton pickup drove in > front of me turned and stopped. Two very hard looking, scruffy, very > wary, “proud natives” jumped out of the truck. One of them pointed to > a crated new big screen TV in the truck bed, and said. We just found > this, just wondering what you would pay us for it,” whilst his > accomplice “kept six.” All I got is fifty bucks in my wallet, so > you’re shit outta luck.” I replied. They looked at each other and > nodded, “you gotta deal!” He said. “You can carry it home by yourself, > we gotta run.” I told him, “I ‘m quite sure you do have to run, but we > don’t have a deal, because I couldn’t have carried that thing by > myself twenty years ago, much less now.” In a nano-second our > “aboriginal entrepreneurs” jumped in the truck, and were down the > alley. > > Last night around eleven-thirty my wife, and myself were walking home, > and two doors from home a “native entrepreneur” jumped out of a parked > car, rushed to us, and in an out of breath wheezy voice said. “Wanna > buy a brand new winter jacket?” The jacket still had its sales tickets > on it. I told him, “normally would try it on, but this coat looks like > it might be too hot to wear,” and walked away. > > Chelsea Boos an “artist” who wants to “play in public spaces,” and > make Edmontonians “think,” has been recently immortalized by ersatz > Edmonton Journal “columnist David Staples. A couple of days ago a > woman “artist” was ‘making art” in chalk on the sidewalk no fifty feet > from the Gas Pump Bar and Grill on 114 Street. Now this “artist,” this > public “artist” was making sort of “hop scotch” type symbols on the > concrete, flowers, and the shape of a car, all with something at the > “artistic” skill level of a four-year old. Our “public artist” would > write some words, or non-sequitors on the pavement, that’s > significance, I haven’t a clue. At the head of one of the “hop scotch” > like figures were the words “Treaty Six,” and a couple of “stick > flowers.” The phrase, treat indigenous people with respect,” which our > “artist” spelled incorrectly was chalked on the pavement. In all, it > was a pretty pathetic attempt at “artistic expression,” or anything > else it seems. > > Some fifty feet north of our pathetic example of “public art” is the > Gas Pump Bar and Grill. A bar where “cougars” usually of the not so > attractive variety, but every now and then there is “pearl in a sow’s > ear,” are looking for a well endowed young schmuck to make them “feel > like a woman.” Almost all the “ladies” that patronize the Gas Pump > are as hot to trot, as Rehtaeh Parsons at a teen-age drinking party > and orgy in Halifax. A few short hours after my encounter with of > Edmonton’s “public artists” I had to go to Shopper’s Drug Mart for > sinus medication for my wife. As I walk up to our “little work of > art,” a large, big haired beyond chunky woman approached myself and > the “art.” She was wearing a black chiffon-like mini-dress, that > barely covered her ham hock proportioned thighs, and aircraft carrier > like ass. She was so drunk she tottered in or on her high-heeled > shoes, but alas she may well have done that sober. It was obviously a > socially unsuccessful evening for our Methuselah, not because she was > drunk, but because she didn’t have an equally intoxicated young man > leading her home for drunken, and sloppy sex. > > Methuselah stopped at the “art” looked down, frowned, and with a > particularly un lady like grunt and whoosh, vomited on the “public > art.” I as ever, the gentleman gave her my, by some strange quirk of > fate clean handkerchief. She said, both, “I’m sorry, and thank-you.” > I told her I had the very same opinion of this “public art.” Whereupon > our Methuselah tottered off unsteadily home. As I walked back to my > “beloved” and “hearth and home,” I thought it an entirely apropos > expression of disdain for “public art,” the act of a drunken Rehtaeh > Parsons type slut, it was to vomit on it. > > Oh dear, only in Edmonton it seems! > |
Integrity-yea-right txt.pdf |
https://www.amherst.ca/dwayne-pike-named-amherst-s-police-chief.html
Dwayne Pike named Amherst’s police chief
Dwayne Pike, a 23-year member of the Amherst Police Department who has been acting as chief for nine months, is the town’s new police chief.
“Chief Pike’s extensive education, policing experience and demonstrated leadership abilities, as well as his intimate knowledge of the town, make him very well suited for the position,” Mayor David Kogon said on March 25, moments after Amherst town council confirmed Pike’s appointment.
“We are so pleased to be able to make this appointment from within. This speaks to the quality of the officers and staff who work at the Amherst Police Department and confidence that we as council have in them.
“I have every confidence he will be an excellent leader of our police department. All members of council look forward to working with Chief Pike as he takes on this new role.”
CAO Greg Herrett agreed with the mayor.
“Chief Pike has shown through his more than two decades with the town police force that he is a true leader, one who will be able to guide the department well in the years to come,” Herrett said. “I know that I, the members of the police department and all town staff look forward to working with him.”
The Amherst Board of Police Commissioners “fully supports” Pike’s appointment, Paul Calder, board chairman, said.
“Dwayne has shown himself to be a forward-thinking individual who brings strong leadership to the department and shows great faith in the members under his command,” Calder said. “He is committed to the Amherst Police Department membership and to the citizens of the Town of Amherst.
“He is able to work effectively with his partners in policing and justice overall. We are indeed fortunate to be able to promote an individual from within the department who brings these strengths to the position.”
A graduate of the Atlantic Police Academy in 1995, Pike joined the Amherst Police Department as a constable in 1996. In January 2008, he became a detective and joined the major crime unit. A promotion to sergeant occurred in January 2010. Four years later, he was promoted to deputy chief. He became acting-chief with the retirement of Ian Nayor last summer.
“Being named chief means a lot to me, especially where my whole career has been here,” Pike said. “I’m proud to say this is where I learned everything I know about policing for the most part. A lot of people that I’ve worked with over the years really had a hand in getting me to where I am today.”
He praised the officers and staff who make up the Amherst Police department.
“I have an excellent team because they are always looking at what needs to be changed, are expecting those changes to come and have the vision to see policing in the future and what this town needs.”
That look to the future is necessary because “change is life now,” Pike said. “Things are no longer the same as they were five years ago, 10 years ago, 20 years ago. You always have to be looking at the horizon to see what is going to change and how do we have to adapt to that change to make sure we can provide the services the town needs and serve the community properly.”
As he takes over the town’s top police job, Pike said there are many challenges, including the cost of policing because trying to provide an efficient service that is fiscally responsible and can be paid for is “a huge challenge.”
Another challenge is ensuring members of the department are provided with proper assistance when dealing with traumatic incidents or stress-related injuries, he said.
It’s also important for his members to have the training and for the department to build partnerships with other organizations in order to ensure officers responding to incidents involving people with mental-health challenges can ensure the well-being of the person as well as the safety of the town, he added.
Another challenge is being created by changing demographics, the chief said, adding the department must be aware of the change in order to ensure the entire community is well served by its police force.
Pike said he is proud to work in Amherst.
“I came here over 20 years ago not knowing exactly what it was going to be like, but this town and community have been very, very good to me. Now it’s my chance to pay it back.”
---------- Original message ----------
From: "Higgs, Premier Blaine (PO/CPM)" <Blaine.Higgs@gnb.ca>
Date: Tue, 29 Jun 2021 00:50:26 +0000
Subject: RE: Yo Higgy Methinks the ex RCMP dude Minister Furey should
quit playng as dumb as you always do N'esy Pas?
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
Hello,
Thank you for taking the time to write.
Due to the volume of incoming messages, this is an automated response
to let you know that your email has been received and will be reviewed
at the earliest opportunity.
If your inquiry more appropriately falls within the mandate of a
Ministry or other area of government, staff will refer your email for
review and consideration.
Merci d'avoir pris le temps de nous écrire.
En raison du volume des messages reçus, cette réponse automatique vous
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If this is a Media Request, please contact the Premier’s office at
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---------- Original message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
Date: Mon, 28 Jun 2021 21:42:28 -0300
Subject: Yo Higgy Methinks the ex RCMP dude Minister Furey should quit
playng as dumb as you always do N'esy Pas?
To: mla@esmithmccrossinmla.com, "Mike.Comeau" <Mike.Comeau@gnb.ca>,
"Mitton, Megan (LEG)" <megan.mitton@gnb.ca>, "blaine.higgs"
<blaine.higgs@gnb.ca>, premier <premier@ontario.ca>, Office of the
Premier <scott.moe@gov.sk.ca>, PREMIER <PREMIER@gov.ns.ca>,
michelle.stevens@novascotia.ca
elizabeth.macdonald@
dkogon@amherst.ca, jmacdonald@amherst.ca, darrell.cole@amherstnews.ca,
lifestyle@thecoast.ca, tmccoag@amherst.ca, Newsroom
<Newsroom@globeandmail.com>, mcu <mcu@justice.gc.ca>, dpike@amherst.ca
Cc: motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>, JUSTMIN
<JUSTMIN@novascotia.ca>, Justweb@novascotia.ca, "Brenda.Lucki"
<Brenda.Lucki@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, "barbara.massey"
<barbara.massey@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
<barb.whitenect@gnb.ca>, "Boston.Mail" <Boston.Mail@ic.fbi.gov>,
washington field <washington.field@ic.fbi.gov>, "Bill.Blair"
<Bill.Blair@parl.gc.ca>
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Justice Minister <JUSTMIN@novascotia.ca>
Date: Fri, 25 Jun 2021 16:22:01 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: MLA Weekly Update Cumberland North (Case
Ref: ES3077) Methinks Elizabeth Smith-McCrossin will have to hire her
own lawyer to agrue me now N'esy Pas?
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
Thank you for your email to the Minister of Justice. Please be assured
that it has been received by the Department. Your email will be
reviewed and addressed accordingly. Thank you.
On 6/28/21, David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: mla@esmithmccrossinmla.com
> Date: Mon, 28 Jun 2021 20:49:19 +0000 (UTC)
> Subject: MLA Constituency Update for Cumberland North (Case Ref: ES3077)
> To: david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
>
>
>
> Dear David Amos
>
> MLA Weekly Update
>
> Date Monday June 28th, 2021
>
> My Mission is to:
>
> Serve the people
> Build Unity & Trust
> Influence Legislation & public policy
> For the greater good.
> Educate and Build Capacity
> Promote the people and area,
> Build a world-class health care system
> And improve population health.
>
> Before I speak about what happened last week in politics I want to say
> Congratulations to all the graduates of Cumberland North. It is a very
> special time in the lives of graduates and their families. Education
> is so important. I hope they embrace life- long learning. Learning
> keeps you in a positive space and open doors of opportunity. Hoping
> for a safe week as well for our graduates.
>
> I also want to recognize the pain our country is experiencing as more
> and more bodies of children are being found in unmarked graves
> throughout our country. As more and more us come to learn the history
> and the practices, our hearts break for the Indigenous people whose
> families were broken. Healing is needed and time for reflection as a
> country will bring us forward stronger as a Nation; as a People.
>
> Last week in Politics:
>
> I have had many questions and I would like to take some time to walk
> through a timeline of what happened.
>
> Anyone that listens/reads my weekly MLA update on a regular basis
> knows the ongoing challenges people face due to the restrictions at
> the NS NB Border since the State of Emergency was declared on March
> 22nd, 2020.
>
> For the last 15 months there has been much hardship and stress on
> people living in our border community. Yes, it has been hard on
> everyone, but exponentially greater on the people and the businesses
> in Cumberland. Much greater.
>
> The local frustration has been escalating and over the past few weeks
> as Covid cases have been low in NB and NS but border restrictions
> remained unchanged. While all Nova Scotians could travel freely
> with no restrictions, the people in Cumberland were still being denied
> the right to see their families, full access to health care services
> and businesses such as retail and tourism are locked from their
> customers.
>
>
> On June 11th Premier Higgs had included Cumberland County in NB
> reopening plan for their Phase 1.
>
> Nova Scotia Premier refused to allow Cumberland to join as a bubble.
> Neighbouring Green Party MLA Megan Mitton and I had been asking since
> last November for this. People were devastated when Premier Rankin
> refused to allow this. I spoke with Rankin personally and emphasized
> the need for this.
>
> On June 15th Premier Iain Rankin moves the opening date for the
> Atlantic bubble up a week to June 23rd from his previous plan.
>
> After June 15th: Iain Rankin signs-off on a massive $18 million
> marketing campaign to incent tourists from Atlantic Canada (mostly NB)
> to book a trip to NS. Families planned for reunion with families for
> June 23rd (last Wednesday), for they have been separated since
> November 20th, nearly 7 months, many often living 10 minutes
> apart.
>
> June 22nd at 2pm Premier Iain Rankin kicks New Brunswick out of the
> bubble the day before it is scheduled to open without even a courtesy
> call and adds new complicated NS NB Border rules.
>
> Premier Rankin slapped the people here in the face at the 11th hour,
> once again using the border and the people here as his political
> pawns. The news spread quickly. I immediately I started getting
> messages from angry irate constituents saying enough was enough and
> they were going to shut down the highway. I knew the Premier was doing
> his press conference at 3pm. I thought long and hard for 30 minutes.
>
> I decided I needed to take a stand for the people and at 2:55pm did a
> facebook live video telling the Premier what was going to happen if he
> did not backtrack on his flip flop decision to once again stop
> families from seeing one another. I believed he should know what was
> going to happen and give him a chance to make it right. I was angry
> when I did the video. I was indignant for the people whom Premier
> Rankin is using as his political pawns.
>
> I made a decision to stand with the people I represent and I have no
> regrets.
>
> I went to the protest which was forming at exit 7. The protest was
> there, 30 minutes away from NS NB Border.
>
> RCMP were onsite and I stayed in constant communication with them to
> keep things peaceful.
>
> The RCMP officer clearly told me that this was a legal peaceful
> protest and they would not shut it down and they were there to ensure
> public safety.
>
> A large number of people showed up to protest. A lot of families,
> including children.
> What an education they got that day. The right to peaceful protest is
> part of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. We even had a
> veteran Lorne Baird whom we honoured by clapping after he shared his
> thoughts. We had a speaker and microphone and gave everyone who wanted
> an opportunity to speak and share why they were there in
> protest.
>
> RCMP and protestors did allow vehicles through that had children or
> anyone with medical needs. The RCMP also rerouted traffic around exit
> 7.
>
> During the protest I called Premier Rankin several times and he
> refused to respond.
>
> As time went on, it became evident that he was not going to listen to
> the needs of our families.
>
> RCMP and I spoke and I asked the crowd if they would end the protest.
> I gave them a commitment that I would travel to Halifax in the morning
> and request and urgent meeting with the Premier. Almost all people
> agreed and dispersed. A few people remained and kept one side of the
> highway closed. The RCMP stayed with them as I left.
>
> The next morning I got up and travelled to Halifax.
>
> I heard that there was another group protesting at the NS NB Border
> and the highway was closed with no possible rerouting of traffic. The
> group leading this closure had been at the other protest and when it
> ended went to the border. They had been meeting every Sunday for the
> last 8 weeks at the border protesting and had closed down the highway
> on at least one occasion. I arrived at One Government Place and was
> told by the Commissioners that I was not allowed entry into the
> building. This was a shock to me as MLA’s we are normally
> entry to this building to both have access to the Speaker’s
> Office, Protocol and Premier’s office. So I waited outside the
> building hoping for an appointment. I soon found out that the Premier
> has left and was in Chester campaigning. While protesters had the NS
> NB blocked the Premier was ignoring this situation and making funding
> announcements on the other end of the province. I waited all day. No
> meeting. The Minister of Health did call me and asked me to call the
> protesters off but I explained to him the protesters were there on the
> own free will and not mine. I had called on them twice earlier in the
> day to open the highway and even spoke with some on the phone with
> RCMP asking for them to open the TCH and they refused. All morning I
> received messages and calls of support from various people including
> my colleagues.
>
> Then a few things happened which turned public opinion. The Premier
> made a negative statement against me and additional protesters from NB
> joined the blockade who were anti-vaxxers. Although I was not there
> physically, it appears as though the antivaxxers took over the
> protest. The media connected me with both the legal peaceful protest
> at exit 7 the night before and the illegal blockade that happened on
> Wednesday with the anti-vaxxers. Even though I was not connected, the
> leader of the PC demanded that I sign a public apology taking full
> responsibility for the blockade on Wednesday. I refused to do so. I
> will not accept responsibility for others decisions. The leader of the
> PC Party made a decision Thursday before noon to remove me from the
> party. I was devastated by his decision. I remain a member of the PC
> Party and believe in the mission and values of the progressive
> Conservative party. The PC party is part of my extended family
> throughout the province of Nova Scotia. That doesn’t change
> because one person isn’t willing to stand with me for what is
> right for the people I was elected to represent. If I signed a fake
> apology to appease the leader I would have compromised my own
> integrity and would not have stayed true to the people in Cumberland.
> How could I sign this in Halifax and then come home and hide myself in
> shame? No, I will come home and stand proudly with the people I
> represent, shoulder to shoulder.
>
> The number one question I’ve been getting is: “Elizabeth,
> how are you doing?”
>
> Believe it or not, more than anything, I feel grateful:
>
> - to the people of Cumberland North for all the supportive messages
> you have sent my way
> - to my husband of 30 years Dr. Murray McCrossin for his love and
> patience (As you may have seen, we celebrated our anniversary last
> weekend!)
> - to my children, my brothers, sisters, extended family, my friends
> and my supporters – inside and outside the constituency
> - to my constituency staff, Dan and Gladys
> - to my Cumberland North campaign team
>
> When the going gets tough, you truly find out who you can count
> on. I will never forget who has been there for me.
>
> I have received a lot of calls, texts and emails, inside and outside
> of Cumberland North. I will do my best to get back to everyone
> and appreciate everyone’s patience.
>
> In politics, you can’t imagine how hard it is to say no to the
> party leader. Party leaders have a lot of power. If you
> don’t do what they want, they can try to make you pay the
> price. The people of Cumberland North didn’t elect me to
> work for a party leader. They elected me to work for them.
> The support of the people of Cumberland North this week has sustained
> me – particularly with some of the hateful, sexist comments and
> media depictions that targeted my mental health, my appearance or my
> weight.
>
> This farm girl turned registered nurse turned businesswoman is not
> going to be bullied out of politics. I will choose whether I run
> in the next election. The people of Cumberland North will choose
> the kind of MLA they want to serve them.
>
> Do they want an MLA who works for a party leader in Halifax or an MLA
> who works for the people of Cumberland North?
>
> To the people of Cumberland North, you can count on me to serve you,
> to work with you, to fight for you.
>
> No apologies. Although this has been extremely hard on my family and
> true friends, it is so because of the worry they have of the toll this
> may have on me. The love I have surrounding me is incredible, by them
> but also from my local community and from across the province. And
> yes, my caucus colleagues who supported the leader removing me from
> caucus, I have heard from several of them privately with love and
> support.
>
> Politics can bring out the worst in human nature as people compete for
> an illusion of power. But like anything, it can also bring out the
> best in human nature.
>
> I am discussing next steps with my husband and family. In the meantime
> I am still the MLA for the people of Cumberland North, I am an
> Independent and not affiliated with a political party although my
> heart is with my progressive conservative family.
>
> My focus right now is on serving the people of Cumberland North.
>
> I have always believed that Good overcomes Evil, that Love is more
> powerful than Hate and I will continue to believe this.
>
> I will continue to work with my colleague Tory Rushton for what is
> needed for the people of Cumberland.
>
> I am seriously giving running as an independent consideration. There
> are so many people that want me to run as an Independent that I owe it
> to them to give it consideration.
>
> The only people that will decide if I will be a MLA are the people of
> Cumberland North.
>
> I would like to send birthday and anniversary greetings to anyone who
> is celebrating this week including
>
> Roger Bacon who turns 95 on Tuesday! Happy Birthday former Premier and MLA
>
> Albert and Gladys Greeno celebrate their 66th wedding
> anniversary.
>
> Sending my sympathies to the family and friends of:
>
> Laura Mary McArdle
>
> https://www.arbormemorial.ca/
>
>
> Virginia Burke
>
> https://www.arbormemorial.ca/
>
>
> Arthur Gerald Negus
>
> https://www.arbormemorial.ca/
>
>
> Michael Robert Cooke
>
> https://www.arbormemorial.ca/
>
>
> Wilhena Louise "Willie" Wright
>
> https://www.
>
> Take care everyone.
> Please contact my office if I can assist you in any way.
>
> Sincerely,
>
> Elizabeth Smith-McCrossin
> MLA Cumberland North
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On 6/25/21, David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
>> General Inquiries
>>
>> Tel: (902) 667-7227
>> Fax: (902) 667-0268
>> Police Chief - Dwayne Pike
>>
>> Email: dpike@amherst.ca
>>
>>
>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>> From: "Higgs, Premier Blaine (PO/CPM)" <Blaine.Higgs@gnb.ca>
>> Date: Fri, 25 Jun 2021 10:55:42 +0000
>> Subject: RE: MLA Weekly Update Cumberland North (Case Ref: ES3077)
>> Methinks Elizabeth Smith-McCrossin will have to hire her own lawyer to
>> agrue me now N'esy Pas?
>> To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
>>
>> Hello,
>>
>> Thank you for taking the time to write.
>>
>> Due to the volume of incoming messages, this is an automated response
>> to let you know that your email has been received and will be reviewed
>> at the earliest opportunity.
>>
>> If your inquiry more appropriately falls within the mandate of a
>> Ministry or other area of government, staff will refer your email for
>> review and consideration.
>>
>>
>> Merci d'avoir pris le temps de nous écrire.
>>
>> En raison du volume des messages reçus, cette réponse automatique vous
>> informe que votre courriel a été reçu et sera examiné dans les
>> meilleurs délais.
>>
>> Si votre demande relève plutôt du mandat d'un ministère ou d'un autre
>> secteur du gouvernement, le personnel vous renverra votre courriel
>> pour examen et considération.
>>
>>
>> If this is a Media Request, please contact the Premier’s office at
>> (506) 453-2144 or by email
>> media-medias@gnb.ca<mailto:med
>>
>> S’il s’agit d’une demande des médias, veuillez communiquer avec le
>> Cabinet du premier ministre au 506-453-2144.
>>
>>
>> General Information
>> For general information and answers to common questions on novel
>> coronavirus please visit:
>> GNB/COVID-19<https://na01.
>> or
>> Canada.ca/coronavirus<https://
>> information line 1-833-784-4397.
>>
>>
>> Safety Issues
>> For safety issues regarding place of employment/employer please call
>> WorkSafe NB 1-800-999-9775.
>>
>> Compassionate requests
>> Please call the Canadian Red Cross 1-800-863-6582.
>>
>> Non-health questions
>> Please call 1-844-462-8387. The email address is
>> helpaide@gnb.ca<mailto:helpaid
>> For questions related to travel restrictions during COVID-19
>> Please call 1-833-948-2800.
>>
>>
>> MENTAL HEALTH
>> CHIMO Helpline 1-800-667-5005
>> Hope for Wellness Helpline 1-855-242-3310
>>
>> Canadian Border Services Agency
>> CBSA has instituted a COVID-19 hotline regarding border crossing
>> concerns/questions at
>> 1-800-461-9999.
>>
>> Employment Insurance Hotline
>> Please call 1-833-381-2725.
>>
>>
>> Renseignements généraux
>> Pour obtenir des renseignements généraux et des réponses aux questions
>> les plus fréquentes sur la COVID-19, veuillez consulter le site
>> GNB/COVID-19<https://na01.
>> ou
>> Canada.ca/coronavirus<https://
>> ou composer le 1-833-784-4397.
>>
>> questions de sécurité
>> Pour les questions de sécurité concernant les lieux de travail ou les
>> employeurs, communiquez avec Travail sécuritaire NB au 1-800-999-9775.
>>
>> DEMANDES POUR RAISONS DE COMPASSION
>> Veuillez téléphoner à la Croix-Rouge canadienne au 1-800-863-6582.
>>
>> Questions non liées à la santé
>> Veuillez composer le 1-844-462-8387 ou envoyer un courriel à l’adresse
>> helpaide@gnb.ca<mailto:helpaid
>>
>> Questions liées aux restrictions de voyage pendant la pandémie de
>> COVID-19
>> :
>> Composez le 1-833-948-2800.
>>
>> SANTÉ MENTALE
>> Ligne d'aide CHIMO : 1-800-667-5005
>> Ligne d’écoute d’espoir : 1-855-242-3310
>>
>> Agence des services frontaliers du Canada
>> L’Agence a mis en place une ligne d’information sur la COVID-19 pour
>> les questions concernant la traversée de la frontière, le
>> 1-800-461-9999.
>>
>> LIGNE D’INFORMATION SUR l'assurance-emploi
>> Composez le 1-833-381-2725.
>>
>>
>>
>> Office of the Premier/Cabinet du premier ministre
>> P.O Box/C. P. 6000 Fredericton New-Brunswick/Nouveau-
>> Canada
>> Tel./Tel. : (506) 453-2144
>> Email/Courriel:
>> premier@gnb.ca/premier.
>>
>>
>> https://novascotia.ca/news/
>>
>> News release
>> Province Monitoring Issues Related to Highway Blockade
>> Inclusive Economic Growth / Emergency Management Office
>> June 23, 2021 - 3:13 PM
>>
>> Media Contact:
>> Gary Andrea
>> Cell: 902-456-6196
>> Email: Gary.Andrea@novascotia.ca
>>
>>
>> Department of Intergovernmental Affairs
>> Elizabeth MacDonald
>> elizabeth.macdonald@
>>
>> Department of Justice
>> Heather Fairbairn
>> heather.fairbairn@novascotia.
>>
>>
>> Executive Council Office
>> Michelle Stevens
>> michelle.stevens@novascotia.ca
>>
>>
>> Deja Vu Ayone???
>>
>> http://davidraymondamos3.
>>
>> Wednesday, 29 July 2020
>> Federal and provincial governments to hold public inquiry into Nova
>> Scotia mass shootings
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> ---------- Original message ----------
>> From: Premier of Ontario | Premier ministre de l’Ontario
>> <Premier@ontario.ca>
>> Date: Fri, 28 Jun 2019 16:38:41 +0000
>> Subject: Automatic reply: RE The call from the Boston cop Robert Ridge
>> (857 259 9083) on behalf of the VERY corrupt Yankee DA Rachael Rollins
>> To: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
>>
>> Thank you for your email. Your thoughts, comments and input are greatly
>> valued.
>>
>> You can be assured that all emails and letters are carefully read,
>> reviewed and taken into consideration.
>>
>> There may be occasions when, given the issues you have raised and the
>> need to address them effectively, we will forward a copy of your
>> correspondence to the appropriate government official. Accordingly, a
>> response may take several business days.
>>
>> Thanks again for your email.
>> ______
>>
>> Merci pour votre courriel. Nous vous sommes très reconnaissants de
>> nous avoir fait part de vos idées, commentaires et observations.
>>
>> Nous tenons à vous assurer que nous lisons attentivement et prenons en
>> considération tous les courriels et lettres que nous recevons.
>>
>> Dans certains cas, nous transmettrons votre message au ministère
>> responsable afin que les questions soulevées puissent être traitées de
>> la manière la plus efficace possible. En conséquence, plusieurs jours
>> ouvrables pourraient s’écouler avant que nous puissions vous répondre.
>>
>> Merci encore pour votre courriel.
>>
>>
>>
>> ---------- Original message ----------
>> From: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
>> Date: Thu, 18 May 2017 11:55:57 -0400
>> Subject: Re the CBA, the RCMP, Federal Court File # T-1557-15 and the
>> Hearing before the Federal Court of Appeal on May 24th 2017
>> To: ray.adlington@mcinnescooper.
>> "bob.paulson" <bob.paulson@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, "hon.ralph.goodale"
>> <hon.ralph.goodale@canada.ca>, "Jody.Wilson-Raybould"
>> <Jody.Wilson-Raybould@parl.gc.
>> <bill.pentney@justice.gc.ca>, "jan.jensen" <jan.jensen@justice.gc.ca>
>> Cc: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
>> <Mordaith@gmail.com>, "leanne.murray"
>> <leanne.murray@mcinnescooper.
>> "Jacques.Poitras" <Jacques.Poitras@cbc.ca>, "nick.moore"
>> <nick.moore@bellmedia.ca>, "jeremy.keefe"
>> <jeremy.keefe@globalnews.ca>, "steve.murphy" <steve.murphy@ctv.ca>,
>> "Gilles.Blinn" <Gilles.Blinn@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, "Gilles.Moreau"
>> <Gilles.Moreau@forces.gc.ca>, sallybrooks25 <sallybrooks25@yahoo.ca>,
>> oldmaison <oldmaison@yahoo.com>, andre <andre@jafaust.com>, jbosnitch
>> <jbosnitch@gmail.com>, "serge.rousselle" <serge.rousselle@gnb.ca>,
>> premier <premier@gnb.ca>, "brian.gallant" <brian.gallant@gnb.ca>,
>> "Larry.Tremblay" <Larry.Tremblay@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
>> <luc.labonte@gnb.ca>
>>
>> As I told the RCMP who called me last month the proper time and place
>> to discuss the CBA and your former partner Judge Richard Bell is the
>> Federal Court of Canada
>>
>> Raymond G. Adlington Partner
>> McInnes Cooper
>> 1300-1969 Upper Water St., Purdy's Wharf Tower II PO Box 730, Stn.
>> Central
>> Halifax, Nova Scotia B3J 2V1
>> Phone: (902) 444-8470
>> Fax: (902) 425-6350
>> E: ray.adlington@mcinnescooper.
>>
>> http://www.mcinnescooper.com/
>>
>> Ray Adlington named to CBA Board of Directors
>>
>> May 2, 2017
>>
>> Halifax partner Ray Adlington was recently named to the CBA Board of
>> Directors.
>>
>> In their announcement yesterday the CBA advised that the board would
>> come into effect September 1st, 2017.
>>
>> After collecting extensive input over the past two years, we know
>> that CBA members believe it’s important for the organization to have a
>> Board of Directors that reflects the diversity of the legal
>> profession, including a mix of practice types, experience, skills,
>> geography and more.
>> Our new Board of Directors exemplifies this principle.
>>
>> The board is composed from one member from each province as well as
>> the CBA President.
>>
>> Congratulations Ray on this well deserved appointment.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>> ---------- Original message ----------
>>> From: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
>>> Date: Wed, 26 Jun 2019 16:15:59 -0400
>>> Subject: Hey Ralph Goodale perhaps you and the RCMP should call the
>>> Yankees Governor Charlie Baker, his lawyer Bob Ross, Rachael Rollins
>>> and this cop Robert Ridge (857 259 9083) ASAP EH Mr Primme Minister
>>> Trudeau the Younger and Donald Trump Jr?
>>> To: pm@pm.gc.ca, Katie.Telford@pmo-cpm.gc.ca,
>>> Ian.Shugart@pco-bcp.gc.ca, djtjr@trumporg.com,
>>> Donald.J.Trump@donaldtrump.com
>>> Frank.McKenna@td.com, barbara.massey@rcmp-grc.gc.ca,
>>> Douglas.Johnson@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
>>> washington.field@ic.fbi.gov, Brenda.Lucki@rcmp-grc.gc.ca,
>>> gov.press@state.ma.us, bob.ross@state.ma.us, jfurey@nbpower.com,
>>> jfetzer@d.umn.edu, Newsroom@globeandmail.com, sfine@globeandmail.com,
>>> .Poitras@cbc.ca, steve.murphy@ctv.ca, David.Akin@globalnews.ca,
>>> Dale.Morgan@rcmp-grc.gc.ca, news@kingscorecord.com,
>>> news@dailygleaner.com, oldmaison@yahoo.com, jbosnitch@gmail.com,
>>> andre@jafaust.com>
>>> Cc: david.raymond.amos333@gmail.
>>> wharrison@nbpower.com, David.Lametti@parl.gc.ca, mcu@justice.gc.ca,
>>> Jody.Wilson-Raybould@parl.gc.
>>>
>>>>
>>>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>>>> From: "Murray, Charles (Ombud)" <Charles.Murray@gnb.ca>
>>>> Date: Wed, 20 Mar 2019 18:16:15 +0000
>>>> Subject: You wished to speak with me
>>>> To: "motomaniac333@gmail.com" <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
>>>>
>>>> I have the advantage, sir, of having read many of your emails over the
>>>> years.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> As such, I do not think a phone conversation between us, and
>>>> specifically one which you might mistakenly assume was in response to
>>>> your threat of legal action against me, is likely to prove a
>>>> productive use of either of our time.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> If there is some specific matter about which you wish to communicate
>>>> with me, feel free to email me with the full details and it will be
>>>> given due consideration.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Sincerely,
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Charles Murray
>>>>
>>>> Ombud NB
>>>>
>>>> Acting Integrity Commissioner
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>> From: Justice Website <JUSTWEB@novascotia.ca>
>>>>> Date: Mon, 18 Sep 2017 14:21:11 +0000
>>>>> Subject: Emails to Department of Justice and Province of Nova Scotia
>>>>> To: "motomaniac333@gmail.com" <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
>>>>>
>>>>> Mr. Amos,
>>>>> We acknowledge receipt of your recent emails to the Deputy Minister of
>>>>> Justice and lawyers within the Legal Services Division of the
>>>>> Department of Justice respecting a possible claim against the Province
>>>>> of Nova Scotia. Service of any documents respecting a legal claim
>>>>> against the Province of Nova Scotia may be served on the Attorney
>>>>> General at 1690 Hollis Street, Halifax, NS. Please note that we will
>>>>> not be responding to further emails on this matter.
>>>>>
>>>>> Department of Justice
>>>>>
>>>>> On 8/3/17, David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> If want something very serious to download and laugh at as well
>>>>>> Please
>>>>>> Enjoy and share real wiretap tapes of the mob
>>>>>>
>>>>>> http://thedavidamosrant.
>>>>>> ilian.html
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> As the CBC etc yap about Yankee wiretaps and whistleblowers I must
>>>>>>> ask them the obvious question AIN'T THEY FORGETTING SOMETHING????
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> http://www.youtube.com/watch?
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> What the hell does the media think my Yankee lawyer served upon the
>>>>>>> USDOJ right after I ran for and seat in the 39th Parliament baseball
>>>>>>> cards?
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> http://archive.org/details/
>>>>>>> 6
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> http://davidamos.blogspot.ca/
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> http://www.archive.org/
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> http://archive.org/details/
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> FEDERAL EXPRES February 7, 2006
>>>>>>> Senator Arlen Specter
>>>>>>> United States Senate
>>>>>>> Committee on the Judiciary
>>>>>>> 224 Dirksen Senate Office Building
>>>>>>> Washington, DC 20510
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Dear Mr. Specter:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I have been asked to forward the enclosed tapes to you from a man
>>>>>>> named, David Amos, a Canadian citizen, in connection with the
>>>>>>> matters
>>>>>>> raised in the attached letter.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Mr. Amos has represented to me that these are illegal FBI wire tap
>>>>>>> tapes.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I believe Mr. Amos has been in contact with you about this
>>>>>>> previously.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Very truly yours,
>>>>>>> Barry A. Bachrach
>>>>>>> Direct telephone: (508) 926-3403
>>>>>>> Direct facsimile: (508) 929-3003
>>>>>>> Email: bbachrach@bowditch.com
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>>>>>> From: David Amos motomaniac333@gmail.com
>>>>>> Date: Mon, 12 Jun 2017 09:32:09 -0400
>>>>>> Subject: Attn Integrity Commissioner Alexandre Deschênes, Q.C.,
>>>>>> To: coi@gnb.ca
>>>>>> Cc: david.raymond.amos@gmail.com
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Good Day Sir
>>>>>>
>>>>>> After I heard you speak on CBC I called your office again and managed
>>>>>> to speak to one of your staff for the first time
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Please find attached the documents I promised to send to the lady who
>>>>>> answered the phone this morning. Please notice that not after the Sgt
>>>>>> at Arms took the documents destined to your office his pal Tanker
>>>>>> Malley barred me in writing with an "English" only document.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> These are the hearings and the dockets in Federal Court that I
>>>>>> suggested that you study closely.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> This is the docket in Federal Court
>>>>>>
>>>>>> http://cas-cdc-www02.cas-satj.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> These are digital recordings of the last three hearings
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Dec 14th https://archive.org/details/
>>>>>>
>>>>>> January 11th, 2016 https://archive.org/details/
>>>>>>
>>>>>> April 3rd, 2017
>>>>>>
>>>>>> https://archive.org/details/
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> This is the docket in the Federal Court of Appeal
>>>>>>
>>>>>> http://cas-cdc-www02.cas-satj.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The only hearing thus far
>>>>>>
>>>>>> May 24th, 2017
>>>>>>
>>>>>> https://archive.org/details/
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> This Judge understnds the meaning of the word Integrity
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Date: 20151223
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Docket: T-1557-15
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Fredericton, New Brunswick, December 23, 2015
>>>>>>
>>>>>> PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Bell
>>>>>>
>>>>>> BETWEEN:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> DAVID RAYMOND AMOS
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Plaintiff
>>>>>>
>>>>>> and
>>>>>>
>>>>>> HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Defendant
>>>>>>
>>>>>> ORDER
>>>>>>
>>>>>> (Delivered orally from the Bench in Fredericton, New Brunswick, on
>>>>>> December 14, 2015)
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The Plaintiff seeks an appeal de novo, by way of motion pursuant to
>>>>>> the Federal Courts Rules (SOR/98-106), from an Order made on November
>>>>>> 12, 2015, in which Prothonotary Morneau struck the Statement of Claim
>>>>>> in its entirety.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> At the outset of the hearing, the Plaintiff brought to my attention a
>>>>>> letter dated September 10, 2004, which he sent to me, in my then
>>>>>> capacity as Past President of the New Brunswick Branch of the
>>>>>> Canadian
>>>>>> Bar Association, and the then President of the Branch, Kathleen
>>>>>> Quigg,
>>>>>> (now a Justice of the New Brunswick Court of Appeal). In that letter
>>>>>> he stated:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> As for your past President, Mr. Bell, may I suggest that you check
>>>>>> the
>>>>>> work of Frank McKenna before I sue your entire law firm including
>>>>>> you.
>>>>>> You are your brother’s keeper.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Frank McKenna is the former Premier of New Brunswick and a former
>>>>>> colleague of mine at the law firm of McInnes Cooper. In addition to
>>>>>> expressing an intention to sue me, the Plaintiff refers to a number
>>>>>> of
>>>>>> people in his Motion Record who he appears to contend may be
>>>>>> witnesses
>>>>>> or potential parties to be added. Those individuals who are known to
>>>>>> me personally, include, but are not limited to the former Prime
>>>>>> Minister of Canada, The Right Honourable Stephen Harper; former
>>>>>> Attorney General of Canada and now a Justice of the Manitoba Court of
>>>>>> Queen’s Bench, Vic Toews; former member of Parliament Rob Moore;
>>>>>> former Director of Policing Services, the late Grant Garneau; former
>>>>>> Chief of the Fredericton Police Force, Barry McKnight; former Staff
>>>>>> Sergeant Danny Copp; my former colleagues on the New Brunswick Court
>>>>>> of Appeal, Justices Bradley V. Green and Kathleen Quigg, and, retired
>>>>>> Assistant Commissioner Wayne Lang of the Royal Canadian Mounted
>>>>>> Police.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> In the circumstances, given the threat in 2004 to sue me in my
>>>>>> personal capacity and my past and present relationship with many
>>>>>> potential witnesses and/or potential parties to the litigation, I am
>>>>>> of the view there would be a reasonable apprehension of bias should I
>>>>>> hear this motion. See Justice de Grandpré’s dissenting judgment in
>>>>>> Committee for Justice and Liberty et al v National Energy Board et
>>>>>> al,
>>>>>> [1978] 1 SCR 369 at p 394 for the applicable test regarding
>>>>>> allegations of bias. In the circumstances, although neither party has
>>>>>> requested I recuse myself, I consider it appropriate that I do so.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> AS A RESULT OF MY RECUSAL, THIS COURT ORDERS that the Administrator
>>>>>> of
>>>>>> the Court schedule another date for the hearing of the motion. There
>>>>>> is no order as to costs.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> “B. Richard Bell”
>>>>>> Judge
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Below after the CBC article about your concerns (I made one comment
>>>>>> already) you will find the text of just two of many emails I had sent
>>>>>> to your office over the years since I first visited it in 2006.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I noticed that on July 30, 2009, he was appointed to the the Court
>>>>>> Martial Appeal Court of Canada Perhaps you should scroll to the
>>>>>> bottom of this email ASAP and read the entire Paragraph 83 of my
>>>>>> lawsuit now before the Federal Court of Canada?
>>>>>>
>>>>>> "FYI This is the text of the lawsuit that should interest Trudeau the
>>>>>> most
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> ---------- Original message ----------
>>>>>> From: justin.trudeau.a1@parl.gc.ca
>>>>>> Date: Thu, Oct 22, 2015 at 8:18 PM
>>>>>> Subject: Réponse automatique : RE My complaint against the CROWN in
>>>>>> Federal Court Attn David Hansen and Peter MacKay If you planning to
>>>>>> submit a motion for a publication ban on my complaint trust that you
>>>>>> dudes are way past too late
>>>>>> To: david.raymond.amos@gmail.com
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Veuillez noter que j'ai changé de courriel. Vous pouvez me rejoindre
>>>>>> à
>>>>>> lalanthier@hotmail.com
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Pour rejoindre le bureau de M. Trudeau veuillez envoyer un courriel à
>>>>>> tommy.desfosses@parl.gc.ca
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Please note that I changed email address, you can reach me at
>>>>>> lalanthier@hotmail.com
>>>>>>
>>>>>> To reach the office of Mr. Trudeau please send an email to
>>>>>> tommy.desfosses@parl.gc.ca
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Thank you,
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Merci ,
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> http://davidraymondamos3.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> 83. The Plaintiff states that now that Canada is involved in more
>>>>>> war
>>>>>> in Iraq again it did not serve Canadian interests and reputation to
>>>>>> allow Barry Winters to publish the following words three times over
>>>>>> five years after he began his bragging:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> January 13, 2015
>>>>>> This Is Just AS Relevant Now As When I wrote It During The Debate
>>>>>>
>>>>>> December 8, 2014
>>>>>> Why Canada Stood Tall!
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Friday, October 3, 2014
>>>>>> Little David Amos’ “True History Of War” Canadian Airstrikes And
>>>>>> Stupid Justin Trudeau
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Canada’s and Canadians free ride is over. Canada can no longer hide
>>>>>> behind Amerka’s and NATO’s skirts.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> When I was still in Canadian Forces then Prime Minister Jean Chretien
>>>>>> actually committed the Canadian Army to deploy in the second campaign
>>>>>> in Iraq, the Coalition of the Willing. This was against or contrary
>>>>>> to
>>>>>> the wisdom or advice of those of us Canadian officers that were
>>>>>> involved in the initial planning phases of that operation. There were
>>>>>> significant concern in our planning cell, and NDHQ about of the
>>>>>> dearth
>>>>>> of concern for operational guidance, direction, and forces for
>>>>>> operations after the initial occupation of Iraq. At the “last minute”
>>>>>> Prime Minister Chretien and the Liberal government changed its mind.
>>>>>> The Canadian government told our amerkan cousins that we would not
>>>>>> deploy combat troops for the Iraq campaign, but would deploy a
>>>>>> Canadian Battle Group to Afghanistan, enabling our amerkan cousins to
>>>>>> redeploy troops from there to Iraq. The PMO’s thinking that it was
>>>>>> less costly to deploy Canadian Forces to Afghanistan than Iraq. But
>>>>>> alas no one seems to remind the Liberals of Prime Minister Chretien’s
>>>>>> then grossly incorrect assumption. Notwithstanding Jean Chretien’s
>>>>>> incompetence and stupidity, the Canadian Army was heroic,
>>>>>> professional, punched well above it’s weight, and the PPCLI Battle
>>>>>> Group, is credited with “saving Afghanistan” during the Panjway
>>>>>> campaign of 2006.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> What Justin Trudeau and the Liberals don’t tell you now, is that then
>>>>>> Liberal Prime Minister Jean Chretien committed, and deployed the
>>>>>> Canadian army to Canada’s longest “war” without the advice, consent,
>>>>>> support, or vote of the Canadian Parliament.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> What David Amos and the rest of the ignorant, uneducated, and
>>>>>> babbling
>>>>>> chattering classes are too addled to understand is the deployment of
>>>>>> less than 75 special operations troops, and what is known by planners
>>>>>> as a “six pac cell” of fighter aircraft is NOT the same as a
>>>>>> deployment of a Battle Group, nor a “war” make.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> The Canadian Government or The Crown unlike our amerkan cousins have
>>>>>> the “constitutional authority” to commit the Canadian nation to war.
>>>>>> That has been recently clearly articulated to the Canadian public by
>>>>>> constitutional scholar Phillippe Legasse. What Parliament can do is
>>>>>> remove “confidence” in The Crown’s Government in a “vote of
>>>>>> non-confidence.” That could not happen to the Chretien Government
>>>>>> regarding deployment to Afghanistan, and it won’t happen in this
>>>>>> instance with the conservative majority in The Commons regarding a
>>>>>> limited Canadian deployment to the Middle East.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> President George Bush was quite correct after 911 and the terror
>>>>>> attacks in New York; that the Taliban “occupied” and “failed state”
>>>>>> Afghanistan was the source of logistical support, command and
>>>>>> control,
>>>>>> and training for the Al Quaeda war of terror against the world. The
>>>>>> initial defeat, and removal from control of Afghanistan was vital and
>>>>>>
>>>>>> P.S. Whereas this CBC article is about your opinion of the actions of
>>>>>> the latest Minister Of Health trust that Mr Boudreau and the CBC have
>>>>>> had my files for many years and the last thing they are is ethical.
>>>>>> Ask his friends Mr Murphy and the RCMP if you don't believe me.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Subject:
>>>>>> Date: Tue, 30 Jan 2007 12:02:35 -0400
>>>>>> From: "Murphy, Michael B. \(DH/MS\)" MichaelB.Murphy@gnb.ca
>>>>>> To: motomaniac_02186@yahoo.com
>>>>>>
>>>>>> January 30, 2007
>>>>>>
>>>>>> WITHOUT PREJUDICE
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Mr. David Amos
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Dear Mr. Amos:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> This will acknowledge receipt of a copy of your e-mail of December
>>>>>> 29,
>>>>>> 2006 to Corporal Warren McBeath of the RCMP.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Because of the nature of the allegations made in your message, I have
>>>>>> taken the measure of forwarding a copy to Assistant Commissioner
>>>>>> Steve
>>>>>> Graham of the RCMP “J” Division in Fredericton.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Sincerely,
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Honourable Michael B. Murphy
>>>>>> Minister of Health
>>>>>>
>>>>>> CM/cb
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Warren McBeath warren.mcbeath@rcmp-grc.gc.ca wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Date: Fri, 29 Dec 2006 17:34:53 -0500
>>>>>> From: "Warren McBeath" warren.mcbeath@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
>>>>>> To: kilgoursite@ca.inter.net, MichaelB.Murphy@gnb.ca,
>>>>>> nada.sarkis@gnb.ca, wally.stiles@gnb.ca, dwatch@web.net,
>>>>>> motomaniac_02186@yahoo.com
>>>>>> CC: ottawa@chuckstrahl.com, riding@chuckstrahl.com,John.
>>>>>> Oda.B@parl.gc.ca,"Bev BUSSON" bev.busson@rcmp-grc.gc.ca,
>>>>>> "Paul Dube" PAUL.DUBE@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
>>>>>> Subject: Re: Remember me Kilgour? Landslide Annie McLellan has
>>>>>> forgotten me but the crooks within the RCMP have not
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Dear Mr. Amos,
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Thank you for your follow up e-mail to me today. I was on days off
>>>>>> over the holidays and returned to work this evening. Rest assured I
>>>>>> was not ignoring or procrastinating to respond to your concerns.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> As your attachment sent today refers from Premier Graham, our
>>>>>> position
>>>>>> is clear on your dead calf issue: Our forensic labs do not process
>>>>>> testing on animals in cases such as yours, they are referred to the
>>>>>> Atlantic Veterinary College in Charlottetown who can provide these
>>>>>> services. If you do not choose to utilize their expertise in this
>>>>>> instance, then that is your decision and nothing more can be done.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> As for your other concerns regarding the US Government, false
>>>>>> imprisonment and Federal Court Dates in the US, etc... it is clear
>>>>>> that Federal authorities are aware of your concerns both in Canada
>>>>>> the US. These issues do not fall into the purvue of Detachment
>>>>>> and policing in Petitcodiac, NB.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> It was indeed an interesting and informative conversation we had on
>>>>>> December 23rd, and I wish you well in all of your future endeavors.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Sincerely,
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Warren McBeath, Cpl.
>>>>>> GRC Caledonia RCMP
>>>>>> Traffic Services NCO
>>>>>> Ph: (506) 387-2222
>>>>>> Fax: (506) 387-4622
>>>>>> E-mail warren.mcbeath@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Alexandre Deschênes, Q.C.,
>>>>>> Office of the Integrity Commissioner
>>>>>> Edgecombe House, 736 King Street
>>>>>> Fredericton, N.B. CANADA E3B 5H1
>>>>>> tel.: 506-457-7890
>>>>>> fax: 506-444-5224
>>>>>> e-mail:coi@gnb.ca
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>>>>>
>>>>> http://davidraymondamos3.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Sunday, 19 November 2017
>>>>> Federal Court of Appeal Finally Makes The BIG Decision And Publishes
>>>>> It Now The Crooks Cannot Take Back Ticket To Try Put My Matter Before
>>>>> The Supreme Court
>>>>>
>>>>> https://decisions.fct-cf.gc.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Federal Court of Appeal Decisions
>>>>>
>>>>> Amos v. Canada
>>>>> Court (s) Database
>>>>>
>>>>> Federal Court of Appeal Decisions
>>>>> Date
>>>>>
>>>>> 2017-10-30
>>>>> Neutral citation
>>>>>
>>>>> 2017 FCA 213
>>>>> File numbers
>>>>>
>>>>> A-48-16
>>>>> Date: 20171030
>>>>>
>>>>> Docket: A-48-16
>>>>> Citation: 2017 FCA 213
>>>>> CORAM:
>>>>>
>>>>> WEBB J.A.
>>>>> NEAR J.A.
>>>>> GLEASON J.A.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> BETWEEN:
>>>>> DAVID RAYMOND AMOS
>>>>> Respondent on the cross-appeal
>>>>> (and formally Appellant)
>>>>> and
>>>>> HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN
>>>>> Appellant on the cross-appeal
>>>>> (and formerly Respondent)
>>>>> Heard at Fredericton, New Brunswick, on May 24, 2017.
>>>>> Judgment delivered at Ottawa, Ontario, on October 30, 2017.
>>>>> REASONS FOR JUDGMENT BY:
>>>>>
>>>>> THE COURT
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Date: 20171030
>>>>>
>>>>> Docket: A-48-16
>>>>> Citation: 2017 FCA 213
>>>>> CORAM:
>>>>>
>>>>> WEBB J.A.
>>>>> NEAR J.A.
>>>>> GLEASON J.A.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> BETWEEN:
>>>>> DAVID RAYMOND AMOS
>>>>> Respondent on the cross-appeal
>>>>> (and formally Appellant)
>>>>> and
>>>>> HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN
>>>>> Appellant on the cross-appeal
>>>>> (and formerly Respondent)
>>>>> REASONS FOR JUDGMENT BY THE COURT
>>>>>
>>>>> I. Introduction
>>>>>
>>>>> [1] On September 16, 2015, David Raymond Amos (Mr. Amos)
>>>>> filed a 53-page Statement of Claim (the Claim) in Federal Court
>>>>> against Her Majesty the Queen (the Crown). Mr. Amos claims $11 million
>>>>> in damages and a public apology from the Prime Minister and Provincial
>>>>> Premiers for being illegally barred from accessing parliamentary
>>>>> properties and seeks a declaration from the Minister of Public Safety
>>>>> that the Canadian Government will no longer allow the Royal Canadian
>>>>> Mounted Police (RCMP) and Canadian Forces to harass him and his clan
>>>>> (Claim at para. 96).
>>>>>
>>>>> [2] On November 12, 2015 (Docket T-1557-15), by way of a
>>>>> motion brought by the Crown, a prothonotary of the Federal Court (the
>>>>> Prothonotary) struck the Claim in its entirety, without leave to
>>>>> amend, on the basis that it was plain and obvious that the Claim
>>>>> disclosed no reasonable claim, the Claim was fundamentally vexatious,
>>>>> and the Claim could not be salvaged by way of further amendment (the
>>>>> Prothontary’s Order).
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> [3] On January 25, 2016 (2016 FC 93), by way of Mr.
>>>>> Amos’ appeal from the Prothonotary’s Order, a judge of the Federal
>>>>> Court (the Judge), reviewing the matter de novo, struck all of Mr.
>>>>> Amos’ claims for relief with the exception of the claim for damages
>>>>> for being barred by the RCMP from the New Brunswick legislature in
>>>>> 2004 (the Federal Court Judgment).
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> [4] Mr. Amos appealed and the Crown cross-appealed the
>>>>> Federal Court Judgment. Further to the issuance of a Notice of Status
>>>>> Review, Mr. Amos’ appeal was dismissed for delay on December 19, 2016.
>>>>> As such, the only matter before this Court is the Crown’s
>>>>> cross-appeal.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> II. Preliminary Matter
>>>>>
>>>>> [5] Mr. Amos, in his memorandum of fact and law in
>>>>> relation to the cross-appeal that was filed with this Court on March
>>>>> 6, 2017, indicated that several judges of this Court, including two of
>>>>> the judges of this panel, had a conflict of interest in this appeal.
>>>>> This was the first time that he identified the judges whom he believed
>>>>> had a conflict of interest in a document that was filed with this
>>>>> Court. In his notice of appeal he had alluded to a conflict with
>>>>> several judges but did not name those judges.
>>>>>
>>>>> [6] Mr. Amos was of the view that he did not have to
>>>>> identify the judges in any document filed with this Court because he
>>>>> had identified the judges in various documents that had been filed
>>>>> with the Federal Court. In his view the Federal Court and the Federal
>>>>> Court of Appeal are the same court and therefore any document filed in
>>>>> the Federal Court would be filed in this Court. This view is based on
>>>>> subsections 5(4) and 5.1(4) of the Federal Courts Act, R.S.C., 1985,
>>>>> c. F-7:
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> 5(4) Every judge of the Federal Court is, by virtue of his or her
>>>>> office, a judge of the Federal Court of Appeal and has all the
>>>>> jurisdiction, power and authority of a judge of the Federal Court of
>>>>> Appeal.
>>>>> […]
>>>>>
>>>>> 5(4) Les juges de la Cour fédérale sont d’office juges de la Cour
>>>>> d’appel fédérale et ont la même compétence et les mêmes pouvoirs que
>>>>> les juges de la Cour d’appel fédérale.
>>>>> […]
>>>>> 5.1(4) Every judge of the Federal Court of Appeal is, by virtue of
>>>>> that office, a judge of the Federal Court and has all the
>>>>> jurisdiction, power and authority of a judge of the Federal Court.
>>>>>
>>>>> 5.1(4) Les juges de la Cour d’appel fédérale sont d’office juges de la
>>>>> Cour fédérale et ont la même compétence et les mêmes pouvoirs que les
>>>>> juges de la Cour fédérale.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> [7] However, these subsections only provide that the
>>>>> judges of the Federal Court are also judges of this Court (and vice
>>>>> versa). It does not mean that there is only one court. If the Federal
>>>>> Court and this Court were one Court, there would be no need for this
>>>>> section.
>>>>> [8] Sections 3 and 4 of the Federal Courts Act provide
>>>>> that:
>>>>> 3 The division of the Federal Court of Canada called the Federal Court
>>>>> — Appeal Division is continued under the name “Federal Court of
>>>>> Appeal” in English and “Cour d’appel fédérale” in French. It is
>>>>> continued as an additional court of law, equity and admiralty in and
>>>>> for Canada, for the better administration of the laws of Canada and as
>>>>> a superior court of record having civil and criminal jurisdiction.
>>>>>
>>>>> 3 La Section d’appel, aussi appelée la Cour d’appel ou la Cour d’appel
>>>>> fédérale, est maintenue et dénommée « Cour d’appel fédérale » en
>>>>> français et « Federal Court of Appeal » en anglais. Elle est maintenue
>>>>> à titre de tribunal additionnel de droit, d’equity et d’amirauté du
>>>>> Canada, propre à améliorer l’application du droit canadien, et
>>>>> continue d’être une cour supérieure d’archives ayant compétence en
>>>>> matière civile et pénale.
>>>>> 4 The division of the Federal Court of Canada called the Federal Court
>>>>> — Trial Division is continued under the name “Federal Court” in
>>>>> English and “Cour fédérale” in French. It is continued as an
>>>>> additional court of law, equity and admiralty in and for Canada, for
>>>>> the better administration of the laws of Canada and as a superior
>>>>> court of record having civil and criminal jurisdiction.
>>>>>
>>>>> 4 La section de la Cour fédérale du Canada, appelée la Section de
>>>>> première instance de la Cour fédérale, est maintenue et dénommée «
>>>>> Cour fédérale » en français et « Federal Court » en anglais. Elle est
>>>>> maintenue à titre de tribunal additionnel de droit, d’equity et
>>>>> d’amirauté du Canada, propre à améliorer l’application du droit
>>>>> canadien, et continue d’être une cour supérieure d’archives ayant
>>>>> compétence en matière civile et pénale.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> [9] Sections 3 and 4 of the Federal Courts Act create
>>>>> two separate courts – this Court (section 3) and the Federal Court
>>>>> (section 4). If, as Mr. Amos suggests, documents filed in the Federal
>>>>> Court were automatically also filed in this Court, then there would no
>>>>> need for the parties to prepare and file appeal books as required by
>>>>> Rules 343 to 345 of the Federal Courts Rules, SOR/98-106 in relation
>>>>> to any appeal from a decision of the Federal Court. The requirement to
>>>>> file an appeal book with this Court in relation to an appeal from a
>>>>> decision of the Federal Court makes it clear that the only documents
>>>>> that will be before this Court are the documents that are part of that
>>>>> appeal book.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> [10] Therefore, the memorandum of fact and law filed on
>>>>> March 6, 2017 is the first document, filed with this Court, in which
>>>>> Mr. Amos identified the particular judges that he submits have a
>>>>> conflict in any matter related to him.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> [11] On April 3, 2017, Mr. Amos attempted to bring a motion
>>>>> before the Federal Court seeking an order “affirming or denying the
>>>>> conflict of interest he has” with a number of judges of the Federal
>>>>> Court. A judge of the Federal Court issued a direction noting that if
>>>>> Mr. Amos was seeking this order in relation to judges of the Federal
>>>>> Court of Appeal, it was beyond the jurisdiction of the Federal Court.
>>>>> Mr. Amos raised the Federal Court motion at the hearing of this
>>>>> cross-appeal. The Federal Court motion is not a motion before this
>>>>> Court and, as such, the submissions filed before the Federal Court
>>>>> will not be entertained. As well, since this was a motion brought
>>>>> before the Federal Court (and not this Court), any documents filed in
>>>>> relation to that motion are not part of the record of this Court.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> [12] During the hearing of the appeal Mr. Amos alleged that
>>>>> the third member of this panel also had a conflict of interest and
>>>>> submitted some documents that, in his view, supported his claim of a
>>>>> conflict. Mr. Amos, following the hearing of his appeal, was also
>>>>> afforded the opportunity to provide a brief summary of the conflict
>>>>> that he was alleging and to file additional documents that, in his
>>>>> view, supported his allegations. Mr. Amos submitted several pages of
>>>>> documents in relation to the alleged conflicts. He organized the
>>>>> documents by submitting a copy of the biography of the particular
>>>>> judge and then, immediately following that biography, by including
>>>>> copies of the documents that, in his view, supported his claim that
>>>>> such judge had a conflict.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> [13] The nature of the alleged conflict of Justice Webb is
>>>>> that before he was appointed as a Judge of the Tax Court of Canada in
>>>>> 2006, he was a partner with the law firm Patterson Law, and before
>>>>> that with Patterson Palmer in Nova Scotia. Mr. Amos submitted that he
>>>>> had a number of disputes with Patterson Palmer and Patterson Law and
>>>>> therefore Justice Webb has a conflict simply because he was a partner
>>>>> of these firms. Mr. Amos is not alleging that Justice Webb was
>>>>> personally involved in or had any knowledge of any matter in which Mr.
>>>>> Amos was involved with Justice Webb’s former law firm – only that he
>>>>> was a member of such firm.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> [14] During his oral submissions at the hearing of his
>>>>> appeal Mr. Amos, in relation to the alleged conflict for Justice Webb,
>>>>> focused on dealings between himself and a particular lawyer at
>>>>> Patterson Law. However, none of the documents submitted by Mr. Amos at
>>>>> the hearing or subsequently related to any dealings with this
>>>>> particular lawyer nor is it clear when Mr. Amos was dealing with this
>>>>> lawyer. In particular, it is far from clear whether such dealings were
>>>>> after the time that Justice Webb was appointed as a Judge of the Tax
>>>>> Court of Canada over 10 years ago.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> [15] The documents that he submitted in relation to the
>>>>> alleged conflict for Justice Webb largely relate to dealings between
>>>>> Byron Prior and the St. John’s Newfoundland and Labrador office of
>>>>> Patterson Palmer, which is not in the same province where Justice Webb
>>>>> practiced law. The only document that indicates any dealing between
>>>>> Mr. Amos and Patterson Palmer is a copy of an affidavit of Stephen May
>>>>> who was a partner in the St. John’s NL office of Patterson Palmer. The
>>>>> affidavit is dated January 24, 2005 and refers to a number of e-mails
>>>>> that were sent by Mr. Amos to Stephen May. Mr. Amos also included a
>>>>> letter that is addressed to four individuals, one of whom is John
>>>>> Crosbie who was counsel to the St. John’s NL office of Patterson
>>>>> Palmer. The letter is dated September 2, 2004 and is addressed to
>>>>> “John Crosbie, c/o Greg G. Byrne, Suite 502, 570 Queen Street,
>>>>> Fredericton, NB E3B 5E3”. In this letter Mr. Amos alludes to a
>>>>> possible lawsuit against Patterson Palmer.
>>>>> [16] Mr. Amos’ position is that simply because Justice Webb
>>>>> was a lawyer with Patterson Palmer, he now has a conflict. In Wewaykum
>>>>> Indian Band v. Her Majesty the Queen, 2003 SCC 45, [2003] 2 S.C.R.
>>>>> 259, the Supreme Court of Canada noted that disqualification of a
>>>>> judge is to be determined based on whether there is a reasonable
>>>>> apprehension of bias:
>>>>> 60 In Canadian law, one standard has now emerged as the
>>>>> criterion for disqualification. The criterion, as expressed by de
>>>>> Grandpré J. in Committee for Justice and Liberty v. National Energy
>>>>> Board, …[[1978] 1 S.C.R. 369, 68 D.L.R. (3d) 716], at p. 394, is the
>>>>> reasonable apprehension of bias:
>>>>> … the apprehension of bias must be a reasonable one, held by
>>>>> reasonable and right minded persons, applying themselves to the
>>>>> question and obtaining thereon the required information. In the words
>>>>> of the Court of Appeal, that test is "what would an informed person,
>>>>> viewing the matter realistically and practically -- and having thought
>>>>> the matter through -- conclude. Would he think that it is more likely
>>>>> than not that [the decision-maker], whether consciously or
>>>>> unconsciously, would not decide fairly."
>>>>>
>>>>> [17] The issue to be determined is whether an informed
>>>>> person, viewing the matter realistically and practically, and having
>>>>> thought the matter through, would conclude that Mr. Amos’ allegations
>>>>> give rise to a reasonable apprehension of bias. As this Court has
>>>>> previously remarked, “there is a strong presumption that judges will
>>>>> administer justice impartially” and this presumption will not be
>>>>> rebutted in the absence of “convincing evidence” of bias (Collins v.
>>>>> Canada, 2011 FCA 140 at para. 7, [2011] 4 C.T.C. 157 [Collins]. See
>>>>> also R. v. S. (R.D.), [1997] 3 S.C.R. 484 at para. 32, 151 D.L.R.
>>>>> (4th) 193).
>>>>>
>>>>> [18] The Ontario Court of Appeal in Rando Drugs Ltd. v.
>>>>> Scott, 2007 ONCA 553, 86 O.R. (3d) 653 (leave to appeal to the Supreme
>>>>> Court of Canada refused, 32285 (August 1, 2007)), addressed the
>>>>> particular issue of whether a judge is disqualified from hearing a
>>>>> case simply because he had been a member of a law firm that was
>>>>> involved in the litigation that was now before that judge. The Ontario
>>>>> Court of Appeal determined that the judge was not disqualified if the
>>>>> judge had no involvement with the person or the matter when he was a
>>>>> lawyer. The Ontario Court of Appeal also explained that the rules for
>>>>> determining whether a judge is disqualified are different from the
>>>>> rules to determine whether a lawyer has a conflict:
>>>>> 27 Thus, disqualification is not the natural corollary to a
>>>>> finding that a trial judge has had some involvement in a case over
>>>>> which he or she is now presiding. Where the judge had no involvement,
>>>>> as here, it cannot be said that the judge is disqualified.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> 28 The point can rightly be made that had Mr. Patterson been
>>>>> asked to represent the appellant as counsel before his appointment to
>>>>> the bench, the conflict rules would likely have prevented him from
>>>>> taking the case because his firm had formerly represented one of the
>>>>> defendants in the case. Thus, it is argued how is it that as a trial
>>>>> judge Patterson J. can hear the case? This issue was considered by the
>>>>> Court of Appeal (Civil Division) in Locabail (U.K.) Ltd. v. Bayfield
>>>>> Properties Ltd., [2000] Q.B. 451. The court held, at para. 58, that
>>>>> there is no inflexible rule governing the disqualification of a judge
>>>>> and that, "[e]verything depends on the circumstances."
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> 29 It seems to me that what appears at first sight to be an
>>>>> inconsistency in application of rules can be explained by the
>>>>> different contexts and in particular, the strong presumption of
>>>>> judicial impartiality that applies in the context of disqualification
>>>>> of a judge. There is no such presumption in cases of allegations of
>>>>> conflict of interest against a lawyer because of a firm's previous
>>>>> involvement in the case. To the contrary, as explained by Sopinka J.
>>>>> in MacDonald Estate v. Martin (1990), 77 D.L.R. (4th) 249 (S.C.C.),
>>>>> for sound policy reasons there is a presumption of a disqualifying
>>>>> interest that can rarely be overcome. In particular, a conclusory
>>>>> statement from the lawyer that he or she had no confidential
>>>>> information about the case will never be sufficient. The case is the
>>>>> opposite where the allegation of bias is made against a trial judge.
>>>>> His or her statement that he or she knew nothing about the case and
>>>>> had no involvement in it will ordinarily be accepted at face value
>>>>> unless there is good reason to doubt it: see Locabail, at para. 19.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> 30 That brings me then to consider the particular circumstances
>>>>> of this case and whether there are serious grounds to find a
>>>>> disqualifying conflict of interest in this case. In my view, there are
>>>>> two significant factors that justify the trial judge's decision not to
>>>>> recuse himself. The first is his statement, which all parties accept,
>>>>> that he knew nothing of the case when it was in his former firm and
>>>>> that he had nothing to do with it. The second is the long passage of
>>>>> time. As was said in Wewaykum, at para. 85:
>>>>> To us, one significant factor stands out, and must inform
>>>>> the perspective of the reasonable person assessing the impact of this
>>>>> involvement on Binnie J.'s impartiality in the appeals. That factor is
>>>>> the passage of time. Most arguments for disqualification rest on
>>>>> circumstances that are either contemporaneous to the decision-making,
>>>>> or that occurred within a short time prior to the decision-making.
>>>>> 31 There are other factors that inform the issue. The Wilson
>>>>> Walker firm no longer acted for any of the parties by the time of
>>>>> trial. More importantly, at the time of the motion, Patterson J. had
>>>>> been a judge for six years and thus had not had a relationship with
>>>>> his former firm for a considerable period of time.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> 32 In my view, a reasonable person, viewing the matter
>>>>> realistically would conclude that the trial judge could deal fairly
>>>>> and impartially with this case. I take this view principally because
>>>>> of the long passage of time and the trial judge's lack of involvement
>>>>> in or knowledge of the case when the Wilson Walker firm had carriage.
>>>>> In these circumstances it cannot be reasonably contended that the
>>>>> trial judge could not remain impartial in the case. The mere fact that
>>>>> his name appears on the letterhead of some correspondence from over a
>>>>> decade ago would not lead a reasonable person to believe that he would
>>>>> either consciously or unconsciously favour his former firm's former
>>>>> client. It is simply not realistic to think that a judge would throw
>>>>> off his mantle of impartiality, ignore his oath of office and favour a
>>>>> client - about whom he knew nothing - of a firm that he left six years
>>>>> earlier and that no longer acts for the client, in a case involving
>>>>> events from over a decade ago.
>>>>> (emphasis added)
>>>>>
>>>>> [19] Justice Webb had no involvement with any matter
>>>>> involving Mr. Amos while he was a member of Patterson Palmer or
>>>>> Patterson Law, nor does Mr. Amos suggest that he did. Mr. Amos made it
>>>>> clear during the hearing of this matter that the only reason for the
>>>>> alleged conflict for Justice Webb was that he was a member of
>>>>> Patterson Law and Patterson Palmer. This is simply not enough for
>>>>> Justice Webb to be disqualified. Any involvement of Mr. Amos with
>>>>> Patterson Law while Justice Webb was a member of that firm would have
>>>>> had to occur over 10 years ago and even longer for the time when he
>>>>> was a member of Patterson Palmer. In addition to the lack of any
>>>>> involvement on his part with any matter or dispute that Mr. Amos had
>>>>> with Patterson Law or Patterson Palmer (which in and of itself is
>>>>> sufficient to dispose of this matter), the length of time since
>>>>> Justice Webb was a member of Patterson Law or Patterson Palmer would
>>>>> also result in the same finding – that there is no conflict in Justice
>>>>> Webb hearing this appeal.
>>>>>
>>>>> [20] Similarly in R. v. Bagot, 2000 MBCA 30, 145 Man. R.
>>>>> (2d) 260, the Manitoba Court of Appeal found that there was no
>>>>> reasonable apprehension of bias when a judge, who had been a member of
>>>>> the law firm that had been retained by the accused, had no involvement
>>>>> with the accused while he was a lawyer with that firm.
>>>>>
>>>>> [21] In Del Zotto v. Minister of National Revenue, [2000] 4
>>>>> F.C. 321, 257 N.R. 96, this court did find that there would be a
>>>>> reasonable apprehension of bias where a judge, who while he was a
>>>>> lawyer, had recorded time on a matter involving the same person who
>>>>> was before that judge. However, this case can be distinguished as
>>>>> Justice Webb did not have any time recorded on any files involving Mr.
>>>>> Amos while he was a lawyer with Patterson Palmer or Patterson Law.
>>>>>
>>>>> [22] Mr. Amos also included with his submissions a CD. He
>>>>> stated in his affidavit dated June 26, 2017 that there is a “true copy
>>>>> of an American police surveillance wiretap entitled 139” on this CD.
>>>>> He has also indicated that he has “provided a true copy of the CD
>>>>> entitled 139 to many American and Canadian law enforcement authorities
>>>>> and not one of the police forces or officers of the court are willing
>>>>> to investigate it”. Since he has indicated that this is an “American
>>>>> police surveillance wiretap”, this is a matter for the American law
>>>>> enforcement authorities and cannot create, as Mr. Amos suggests, a
>>>>> conflict of interest for any judge to whom he provides a copy.
>>>>>
>>>>> [23] As a result, there is no conflict or reasonable
>>>>> apprehension of bias for Justice Webb and therefore, no reason for him
>>>>> to recuse himself.
>>>>>
>>>>> [24] Mr. Amos alleged that Justice Near’s past professional
>>>>> experience with the government created a “quasi-conflict” in deciding
>>>>> the cross-appeal. Mr. Amos provided no details and Justice Near
>>>>> confirmed that he had no prior knowledge of the matters alleged in the
>>>>> Claim. Justice Near sees no reason to recuse himself.
>>>>>
>>>>> [25] Insofar as it is possible to glean the basis for Mr.
>>>>> Amos’ allegations against Justice Gleason, it appears that he alleges
>>>>> that she is incapable of hearing this appeal because he says he wrote
>>>>> a letter to Brian Mulroney and Jean Chrétien in 2004. At that time,
>>>>> both Justice Gleason and Mr. Mulroney were partners in the law firm
>>>>> Ogilvy Renault, LLP. The letter in question, which is rude and angry,
>>>>> begins with “Hey you two Evil Old Smiling Bastards” and “Re: me suing
>>>>> you and your little dogs too”. There is no indication that the letter
>>>>> was ever responded to or that a law suit was ever commenced by Mr.
>>>>> Amos against Mr. Mulroney. In the circumstances, there is no reason
>>>>> for Justice Gleason to recuse herself as the letter in question does
>>>>> not give rise to a reasonable apprehension of bias.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> III. Issue
>>>>>
>>>>> [26] The issue on the cross-appeal is as follows: Did the
>>>>> Judge err in setting aside the Prothonotary’s Order striking the Claim
>>>>> in its entirety without leave to amend and in determining that Mr.
>>>>> Amos’ allegation that the RCMP barred him from the New Brunswick
>>>>> legislature in 2004 was capable of supporting a cause of action?
>>>>>
>>>>> IV. Analysis
>>>>>
>>>>> A. Standard of Review
>>>>>
>>>>> [27] Following the Judge’s decision to set aside the
>>>>> Prothonotary’s Order, this Court revisited the standard of review to
>>>>> be applied to discretionary decisions of prothonotaries and decisions
>>>>> made by judges on appeals of prothonotaries’ decisions in Hospira
>>>>> Healthcare Corp. v. Kennedy Institute of Rheumatology, 2016 FCA 215,
>>>>> 402 D.L.R. (4th) 497 [Hospira]. In Hospira, a five-member panel of
>>>>> this Court replaced the Aqua-Gem standard of review with that
>>>>> articulated in Housen v. Nikolaisen, 2002 SCC 33, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 235
>>>>> [Housen]. As a result, it is no longer appropriate for the Federal
>>>>> Court to conduct a de novo review of a discretionary order made by a
>>>>> prothonotary in regard to questions vital to the final issue of the
>>>>> case. Rather, a Federal Court judge can only intervene on appeal if
>>>>> the prothonotary made an error of law or a palpable and overriding
>>>>> error in determining a question of fact or question of mixed fact and
>>>>> law (Hospira at para. 79). Further, this Court can only interfere with
>>>>> a Federal Court judge’s review of a prothonotary’s discretionary order
>>>>> if the judge made an error of law or palpable and overriding error in
>>>>> determining a question of fact or question of mixed fact and law
>>>>> (Hospira at paras. 82-83).
>>>>>
>>>>> [28] In the case at bar, the Judge substituted his own
>>>>> assessment of Mr. Amos’ Claim for that of the Prothonotary. This Court
>>>>> must look to the Prothonotary’s Order to determine whether the Judge
>>>>> erred in law or made a palpable and overriding error in choosing to
>>>>> interfere.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> B. Did the Judge err in interfering with the
>>>>> Prothonotary’s Order?
>>>>>
>>>>> [29] The Prothontoary’s Order accepted the following
>>>>> paragraphs from the Crown’s submissions as the basis for striking the
>>>>> Claim in its entirety without leave to amend:
>>>>>
>>>>> 17. Within the 96 paragraph Statement of Claim, the Plaintiff
>>>>> addresses his complaint in paragraphs 14-24, inclusive. All but four
>>>>> of those paragraphs are dedicated to an incident that occurred in 2006
>>>>> in and around the legislature in New Brunswick. The jurisdiction of
>>>>> the Federal Court does not extend to Her Majesty the Queen in right of
>>>>> the Provinces. In any event, the Plaintiff hasn’t named the Province
>>>>> or provincial actors as parties to this action. The incident alleged
>>>>> does not give rise to a justiciable cause of action in this Court.
>>>>> (…)
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> 21. The few paragraphs that directly address the Defendant
>>>>> provide no details as to the individuals involved or the location of
>>>>> the alleged incidents or other details sufficient to allow the
>>>>> Defendant to respond. As a result, it is difficult or impossible to
>>>>> determine the causes of action the Plaintiff is attempting to advance.
>>>>> A generous reading of the Statement of Claim allows the Defendant to
>>>>> only speculate as to the true and/or intended cause of action. At
>>>>> best, the Plaintiff’s action may possibly be summarized as: he
>>>>> suspects he is barred from the House of Commons.
>>>>> [footnotes omitted].
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> [30] The Judge determined that he could not strike the Claim
>>>>> on the same jurisdictional basis as the Prothonotary. The Judge noted
>>>>> that the Federal Court has jurisdiction over claims based on the
>>>>> liability of Federal Crown servants like the RCMP and that the actors
>>>>> who barred Mr. Amos from the New Brunswick legislature in 2004
>>>>> included the RCMP (Federal Court Judgment at para. 23). In considering
>>>>> the viability of these allegations de novo, the Judge identified
>>>>> paragraph 14 of the Claim as containing “some precision” as it
>>>>> identifies the date of the event and a RCMP officer acting as
>>>>> Aide-de-Camp to the Lieutenant Governor (Federal Court Judgment at
>>>>> para. 27).
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> [31] The Judge noted that the 2004 event could support a
>>>>> cause of action in the tort of misfeasance in public office and
>>>>> identified the elements of the tort as excerpted from Meigs v. Canada,
>>>>> 2013 FC 389, 431 F.T.R. 111:
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> [13] As in both the cases of Odhavji Estate v Woodhouse, 2003 SCC
>>>>> 69 [Odhavji] and Lewis v Canada, 2012 FC 1514 [Lewis], I must
>>>>> determine whether the plaintiffs’ statement of claim pleads each
>>>>> element of the alleged tort of misfeasance in public office:
>>>>>
>>>>> a) The public officer must have engaged in deliberate and unlawful
>>>>> conduct in his or her capacity as public officer;
>>>>>
>>>>> b) The public officer must have been aware both that his or her
>>>>> conduct was unlawful and that it was likely to harm the plaintiff; and
>>>>>
>>>>> c) There must be an element of bad faith or dishonesty by the public
>>>>> officer and knowledge of harm alone is insufficient to conclude that a
>>>>> public officer acted in bad faith or dishonestly.
>>>>> Odhavji, above, at paras 23, 24 and 28
>>>>> (Federal Court Judgment at para. 28).
>>>>>
>>>>> [32] The Judge determined that Mr. Amos disclosed sufficient
>>>>> material facts to meet the elements of the tort of misfeasance in
>>>>> public office because the actors, who barred him from the New
>>>>> Brunswick legislature in 2004, including the RCMP, did so for
>>>>> “political reasons” (Federal Court Judgment at para. 29).
>>>>>
>>>>> [33] This Court’s discussion of the sufficiency of pleadings
>>>>> in Merchant Law Group v. Canada (Revenue Agency), 2010 FCA 184, 321
>>>>> D.L.R (4th) 301 is particularly apt:
>>>>>
>>>>> …When pleading bad faith or abuse of power, it is not enough to
>>>>> assert, baldly, conclusory phrases such as “deliberately or
>>>>> negligently,” “callous disregard,” or “by fraud and theft did steal”.
>>>>> “The bare assertion of a conclusion upon which the court is called
>>>>> upon to pronounce is not an allegation of material fact”. Making bald,
>>>>> conclusory allegations without any evidentiary foundation is an abuse
>>>>> of process…
>>>>>
>>>>> To this, I would add that the tort of misfeasance in public office
>>>>> requires a particular state of mind of a public officer in carrying
>>>>> out the impunged action, i.e., deliberate conduct which the public
>>>>> officer knows to be inconsistent with the obligations of his or her
>>>>> office. For this tort, particularization of the allegations is
>>>>> mandatory. Rule 181 specifically requires particularization of
>>>>> allegations of “breach of trust,” “wilful default,” “state of mind of
>>>>> a person,” “malice” or “fraudulent intention.”
>>>>> (at paras. 34-35, citations omitted).
>>>>>
>>>>> [34] Applying the Housen standard of review to the
>>>>> Prothonotary’s Order, we are of the view that the Judge interfered
>>>>> absent a legal or palpable and overriding error.
>>>>>
>>>>> [35] The Prothonotary determined that Mr. Amos’ Claim
>>>>> disclosed no reasonable claim and was fundamentally vexatious on the
>>>>> basis of jurisdictional concerns and the absence of material facts to
>>>>> ground a cause of action. Paragraph 14 of the Claim, which addresses
>>>>> the 2004 event, pleads no material facts as to how the RCMP officer
>>>>> engaged in deliberate and unlawful conduct, knew that his or her
>>>>> conduct was unlawful and likely to harm Mr. Amos, and acted in bad
>>>>> faith. While the Claim alleges elsewhere that Mr. Amos was barred from
>>>>> the New Brunswick legislature for political and/or malicious reasons,
>>>>> these allegations are not particularized and are directed against
>>>>> non-federal actors, such as the Sergeant-at-Arms of the Legislative
>>>>> Assembly of New Brunswick and the Fredericton Police Force. As such,
>>>>> the Judge erred in determining that Mr. Amos’ allegation that the RCMP
>>>>> barred him from the New Brunswick legislature in 2004 was capable of
>>>>> supporting a cause of action.
>>>>>
>>>>> [36] In our view, the Claim is made up entirely of bare
>>>>> allegations, devoid of any detail, such that it discloses no
>>>>> reasonable cause of action within the jurisdiction of the Federal
>>>>> Courts. Therefore, the Judge erred in interfering to set aside the
>>>>> Prothonotary’s Order striking the claim in its entirety. Further, we
>>>>> find that the Prothonotary made no error in denying leave to amend.
>>>>> The deficiencies in Mr. Amos’ pleadings are so extensive such that
>>>>> amendment could not cure them (see Collins at para. 26).
>>>>>
>>>>> V. Conclusion
>>>>> [37] For the foregoing reasons, we would allow the Crown’s
>>>>> cross-appeal, with costs, setting aside the Federal Court Judgment,
>>>>> dated January 25, 2016 and restoring the Prothonotary’s Order, dated
>>>>> November 12, 2015, which struck Mr. Amos’ Claim in its entirety
>>>>> without leave to amend.
>>>>> "Wyman W. Webb"
>>>>> J.A.
>>>>> "David G. Near"
>>>>> J.A.
>>>>> "Mary J.L. Gleason"
>>>>> J.A.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> FEDERAL COURT OF APPEAL
>>>>> NAMES OF COUNSEL AND SOLICITORS OF RECORD
>>>>>
>>>>> A CROSS-APPEAL FROM AN ORDER OF THE HONOURABLE JUSTICE SOUTHCOTT DATED
>>>>> JANUARY 25, 2016; DOCKET NUMBER T-1557-15.
>>>>> DOCKET:
>>>>>
>>>>> A-48-16
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> STYLE OF CAUSE:
>>>>>
>>>>> DAVID RAYMOND AMOS v. HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> PLACE OF HEARING:
>>>>>
>>>>> Fredericton,
>>>>> New Brunswick
>>>>>
>>>>> DATE OF HEARING:
>>>>>
>>>>> May 24, 2017
>>>>>
>>>>> REASONS FOR JUDGMENT OF THE COURT BY:
>>>>>
>>>>> WEBB J.A.
>>>>> NEAR J.A.
>>>>> GLEASON J.A.
>>>>>
>>>>> DATED:
>>>>>
>>>>> October 30, 2017
>>>>>
>>>>> APPEARANCES:
>>>>> David Raymond Amos
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> For The Appellant / respondent on cross-appeal
>>>>> (on his own behalf)
>>>>>
>>>>> Jan Jensen
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> For The Respondent / appELLANT ON CROSS-APPEAL
>>>>>
>>>>> SOLICITORS OF RECORD:
>>>>> Nathalie G. Drouin
>>>>> Deputy Attorney General of Canada
>>>>>
>>>>> For The Respondent / APPELLANT ON CROSS-APPEAL
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>
>>
>> ---------- Original message ----------
>> Date: Thu, 24 May 2007 19:01:11 -0700 (PDT)
>> From: "David Amos" motomaniac_02186@yahoo.com
>> Subject: Now everybody and his dog knows TJ Burke and his cop buddies
>> allegations against me are false and you had the proof all along EH
>> Chucky?
>> To: oldmaison@yahoo.com, nbombud@gnb.ca, dan.bussieres@gnb.ca,
>> jacques_poitras@cbc.ca, news@dailygleaner.com,
>> kcarmichael@bloomberg.net, advocacycollective@yahoo.com,
>> Easter.W@parl.gc.ca, Comartin.J@parl.gc.ca, cityadmin@fredericton.ca,
>> info@gg.ca, bmosher@mosherchedore.ca, rchedore@mosherchedore.ca,
>> police@fredericton.ca, chebert@thestar.ca, Stoffer.P@parl.gc.ca,
>> Stronach.B@parl.gc.ca, Matthews.B@parl.gc.ca, alltrue@nl.rogers.com,
>> Harper.S@parl.gc.ca, Layton.J@parl.gc.ca, Dryden.K@parl.gc.ca,
>> Duceppe.G@parl.gc.ca
>> CC: dgleg@nb.aibn.com, brad.woodside@fredericton.ca,
>> whalen@fredericton.ca, david.kelly@fredericton.ca,
>> cathy.maclaggan@fredericton.ca
>> tom.jellinek@fredericton.ca, scott.mcconaghy@fredericton.ca
>> marilyn.kerton@fredericton.ca, walter.brown@fredericton.ca,
>> norah.davidson@fredericton.ca, mike.obrien@fredericton.ca,
>> bruce.grandy@fredericton.ca, dan.keenan@fredericton.ca,
>> jeff.mockler@gnb.ca, mrichard@lawsociety-barreau.
>> cynthia.merlini@dfait-maeci.
>> scotta@parl.gc.ca, michael.bray@gnb.ca, jack.e.mackay@gnb.ca
>> http://www.cbc.ca/canada/new-
>>
>> http://www.canadaeast.com/ce2/
>>
>> http://oldmaison.blogspot.com/
>>
>> http://oldmaison.blogspot.com/
>>
>> http://oldmaison.blogspot.com/
>>
>> http://maritimes.indymedia.
>>
>> Methinks your liberal pals just made a major faux pas N'est Pas?
>> Scroll down Frenchie and go down?.
>>
>>
>> Threat against Burke taken seriously
>>
>> By STEPHEN LLEWELLYN
>> dgleg@nb.aibn.com
>> Published Thursday May 24th, 2007
>> Appeared on page A1
>> An RCMP security detail has been guarding Justice Minister and
>> Attorney General T.J. Burke because of threats made against him
>> recently.
>>
>> Burke, the Liberal MLA for Fredericton-Fort Nashwaaksis, wouldn't
>> explain the nature of the threats.
>>
>> "I have had a particular individual or individuals who have made
>> specific overtures about causing harm towards me," he told reporters
>> Wednesday.
>>
>> "The RCMP has provided security to me recently by accompanying me to a
>> couple of public functions where the individual is known to reside or
>> have family members in the area," said Burke. "It is nice to have some
>> added protection and that added comfort."
>>
>> The RCMP provides protection to the premier and MLAs with its VIP
>> security
>> unit.
>>
>> Burke didn't say when the threat was made but it's believed to have
>> been in recent weeks.
>>
>> "When a threat is posed to you and it is a credible threat, you have
>> to be cautious about where you go and who you are around," he said.
>> "But again, I am more concerned about my family as opposed to my own
>> personal safety."
>>
>> Burke said he doesn't feel any differently and he has not changed his
>> pattern of activity.
>>
>> "It doesn't bother me one bit," he said. "It makes my wife feel awful
>> nervous."
>>
>> Burke served in an elite American military unit before becoming a
>> lawyer and going into politics in New Brunswick.
>>
>> "(I) have taken my own precautions and what I have to do to ensure my
>> family's safety," he said. "I am a very cautious person in general due
>> to my background and training.
>>
>> "I am comfortable with defending myself or my family if it ever had to
>> happen."
>>
>> Burke said it is not uncommon for politicians to have security concerns.
>>
>> "We do live unfortunately in an age and in a society now where threats
>> have to be taken pretty seriously," he said.
>>
>> Since the terrorism attacks in the United States on Sept. 11, 2001,
>> security in New Brunswick has been
>> beefed up.
>>
>> Metal detectors were recently installed in the legislature and all
>> visitors are screened.
>>
>> The position of attorney general is often referred to as the
>> province's "top cop."
>>
>> Burke said sometimes people do not differentiate between his role as
>> the manager of the justice system and the individual who actually
>> prosecutes them.
>>
>> "With the job sometimes comes threats," he said. "I have had numerous
>> threats since Day 1 in office."
>>
>> Burke said he hopes his First Nations heritage has nothing to do with it.
>>
>> "I think it is more of an issue where people get fixated on a matter
>> and they believe you are personally responsible for assigning them
>> their punishment or their sanction," he said.
>>
>> Is the threat from someone who was recently incarcerated?
>>
>> "I probably shouldn't answer that," he replied.
>>
>> Reporters asked when the threat would be over.
>>
>> "I don't think a threat ever passes once it has been made," said
>> Burke. "You have to consider the credibility of the source."
>>
>> Bruce Fitch, former justice minister in the Conservative government,
>> said "every now and again there would be e-mails that were not
>> complimentary."
>>
>> "I did have a meeting with the RCMP who are in charge of the security
>> of the MLAs and ministers," said Fitch.
>>
>> "They look at each and every situation."
>>
>> Fitch said he never had bodyguards assigned to him although former
>> premier Bernard Lord and former health minister Elvy Robichaud did
>> have extra security staff assigned on occasion.
>>
>> He said if any MLA felt threatened, he or she would discuss it with the
>> RCMP.
>>
>>
>> http://www.archive.org/
>>
>> Small World EH Chucky Leblanc?
>>
>> "Lafleur, Lou" lou.lafleur@fredericton.ca wrote:
>>
>> From: "Lafleur, Lou" lou.lafleur@fredericton.ca
>> To: "'motomaniac_02186@yahoo.com'" motomaniac_02186@yahoo.com,
>> "Lafleur, Lou" lou.lafleur@fredericton.ca
>> Subject: Fredericton Police Force
>> Date: Mon, 11 Jun 2007 15:21:13 -0300
>>
>> Dear Mr. Amos
>>
>> My Name is Lou LaFleur and I am a Detective with the Fredericton
>> Police Major Crime Unit. I would like to talk to you regarding files
>> that I am investigating and that you are alleged to have involvement
>> in.
>>
>> Please call me at your earliest convenience and leave a message and a
>> phone number on my secure and confidential line if I am not in my
>> office.
>>
>> yours truly,
>> Cpl. Lou LaFleur
>> Fredericton Police Force
>> 311 Queen St.
>> Fredericton, NB
>> 506-460-2332
>> ______________________________
>> This electronic mail, including any attachments, is confidential and
>> is for the sole use of the intended recipient and may be privileged.
>> Any unauthorized distribution, copying, disclosure or review is
>> prohibited. Neither communication over the Internet nor disclosure to
>> anyone other than the intended recipient constitutes waiver of
>> privilege. If you are not the intended recipient, please immediately
>> notify the sender and then delete this communication and any
>> attachments from your computer system and records without saving or
>> forwarding it. Thank you.
>>
>
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