Thursday 3 August 2023

Environment Minister Kevin Klein's claim to be Métis denounced by brother, Manitoba Métis Federation

 
 

Environment Minister Kevin Klein's claim to be Métis denounced by brother, Manitoba Métis Federation

Premier Heather Stefanson said Klein is 1 of 2 Indigenous members of her caucus

The Manitoba government's website continues to identify Environment Minister Kevin Klein as Métis, even though the president of the Manitoba Métis Federation, a prominent Métis lawyer and Klein's own brother all dispute the claim.

"The basis for stating Mr. Klein as Indigenous is because he has publicly identified himself as a Canadian Métis," a spokesperson for Premier Heather Stefanson wrote in January.

Klein says he belongs to the Painted Feather Woodland Métis. The entity is not recognized by the Manitoba Métis Federation or the Métis Nation of Ontario. It's a for-profit company based out of a single-family residence near Bancroft, Ont., just over 250 kilometres northeast of Toronto. 

Klein says he claims to be Métis as a connection to his late mother, whom he has publicly identified as Indigenous. 

"I'm not self-identifying, nor am I using it, nor am I mentioning it every time I open my mouth. It is a family issue for me and a connection to my mother," Klein said in an interview during his run for mayor last fall.

Kevin Klein's Instagram post for Red Dress Day 2022

Duration 0:38
Kevin Klein said 'my mother was murdered by her partner and she was Indigenous' in front of an installation of red dresses at Winnipeg City Hall on May 5, 2022. Red Dress Day is also known as the National Day of Awareness for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls.

Contacted by CBC News, Klein's brother, Christopher Rout, said he does not consider himself, his brother or his mother Métis.

"I remember learning about Métis in school. I think I would have learned something then and been told something, but no. No, we're not Métis," Rout said in an interview with CBC News. He would seek Métis citizenship if he were eligible, he said.

Rout is Klein's younger brother and although they have the same parents, their surnames are different. Klein officially changed his name from Harold Kevin Rout Jr. to Kevin Elvis Klein sometime before his second marriage in 1994, according to the marriage certificate. 

Manitoba Métis Federation president David Chartrand told CBC after a request for comment that he disputes Klein's claim to be Métis.

"Kevin Klein simply does not meet our criteria. We do not recognize the Painted Feather Woodlands Métis or any other group that claims Métis identity outside our definition. This is no different than any of the other cases where groups or individuals are calling themselves Métis when they really mean mixed heritage," Chartrand wrote in an email to CBC News. 

Genealogical research done by CBC News did not find any evidence Klein's mother has a Métis or other Indigenous ancestor. The flags in this family tree denote the country of birth of Klein's ancestors. CBC used modern-day flags to represent birthplaces. (CBC )

Genealogical research done by CBC News — some going back five generations — did not find any evidence Klein's mother has a Métis or other Indigenous ancestor.

Census and other historical records say most of Klein's maternal ancestors came to Canada from England or Ireland.

His relative who most recently immigrated to Canada was his great-grandfather born in 1889, who came from Jersey, one of the British Islands. Two of his great-grandmother's grandparents were born in England, the other two in Ireland.

The only one of Klein's ancestors whose roots were not traced back overseas was his great-grandmother born in 1875, whose death certificate indicated her racial origin is English. Her grandparents, three of whom were born in the U.S. and the other in Canada, all said they were not "Indian" in the 1861 census.

This excerpt of the 1931 census shows Klein's great-grandparents Richard WInacott and Annie Winacott (nee Davis), and Klein's grandfather Melrose, a.k.a. Mike. The racial origin for all three is listed as English. This is one of dozens of records reviewed by CBC News. This excerpt of the 1931 census shows Klein's great-grandparents Richard Winacott and Annie Winacott (née Davis), and Klein's grandfather Melrose, a.k.a. Mike. The racial origin for all three is listed as English. This is one of dozens of historical records reviewed by CBC News. (Government of Canada)

Premier Stefanson said Klein is one of two Indigenous MLAs in the Progressive Conservative caucus in an interview in January. She also stressed the importance of having Indigenous representation in her party to more accurately reflect the population of the province. 

"We need to attract more Indigenous candidates and we are working towards that … more diversity within our candidate selection," Stefanson said.

When informed about the lack of proof of Klein's Métis ancestry and the statements by Chartrand and Klein's brother, a spokesperson who responded on behalf of Stefanson declined to say whether the premier still considers Klein to be an Indigenous PC caucus member.

"As we have worked hard to become Manitoba's most diverse party, we are proud to have the first ever Muslim minister of the Crown, first Black minister and first woman premier in our caucus. Minister Klein is on the record stating clearly he is on a personal journey, and his ancestry is not for political gain," the spokesperson wrote.

WATCH | Premier Heather Stefanson identifies Kevin Klein as Indigenous:

Premier Heather Stefanson identifies Kevin Klein as Indigenous

Duration 1:30
Premier Heather Stefanson says Kevin Klein is one of two Indigenous MLAs in the PC government, along with Selkirk MLA Alan Lagimodiere. She underlines the importance of attracting Indigenous candidates to accurately reflect the composition of Manitoba's population during an interview with Ian Froese in January.

The spokesperson said the premier is satisfied with the vetting of PC Party candidates, but questioned whether New Democrats are satisfied with their candidate vetting process in light of revelations in 2017 about NDP Leader Wab Kinew's criminal convictions and stayed domestic violence charges from about two decades ago.

Métis lawyer Jean Teillet, who is Louis Riel's great-grandniece, says universities, governments and other institutions are currently trying to recruit Indigenous people, which could give a candidate who claims to be Indigenous an advantage in an interview.

Teillet said it also benefits the PC party.

"They stand up and they say, 'We've got Indigenous people, see, we're not acting against Indigenous people because we've got Indigenous people in our party. Look, and they speak for their people.'"

'Métis' disappears

This past year, Klein ran back-to-back campaigns in Winnipeg, which 2021 Statistics Canada data says has Canada's highest population of Indigenous residents

His failed bid for mayor was followed by a victory in the Kirkfield Park provincial byelection. 

At different stages of the campaigns, Klein identified himself as a "proud Métis Canadian" on his X, formerly known as Twitter, account and his website.

Over the course of the past several months, the word Métis has been removed from Klein's personal accounts — first from his X biography, then from his personal website — but the government record hasn't changed.

A person in a suit stands in a group of people wearing sashes that say "Métis Pavilion." Kevin Klein posted this photo on his X, formerly known as Twitter, account on Aug. 2, 2022, with the caption: 'Being a proud Métis Canadian I wanted to make my first @Folklorama stop the Métis pavilion, and it was awesome. Good food, good people, good crafts, and a great show. Including the winners of @CanGotTalent from this year.' (KevinKleinwpg/X)

When Klein was named to cabinet at the end of January, the government issued a news release with background information that says, "Klein is a proud Métis Canadian and continues to explore, working with Elders in Manitoba to research his connections to Indigenous community." His bios on his official government web page and on the Progressive Conservative Party site also contain that exact phrase.

When CBC News asked Klein for an interview to elaborate on the biography in the province's news release, his press secretary said he is not available and that his "bio seems to be self-explanatory."

When asked by CBC News why the word Métis was removed from Klein's personal website, Klein's press secretary wrote, "As Minister Klein has stated before: 'As I have indicated on several occasions, this is a private and personal journey.'"

His personal website has since changed again: "Connecting with my Indigenous heritage helps put life into context," it now says, along with a "Re-elect Kevin Klein" banner at the top. 

Screenshots show Kevin Klein's personal website during his mayoral run, during his run for MLA of Kirkfield Park and after he won his seat in the legislature. The word Métis was removed from that version of his website. Screenshots show Kevin Klein's personal website during his mayoral run, during his run for MLA of Kirkfield Park and after he won his seat in the legislature. The word Métis was removed from his website sometime after he was elected. (Kevinklein.ca)

Klein, 58, has talked with media in the past about his membership card from the Painted Feather Woodland Métis, a group not recognized by the Manitoba Métis Federation or the Métis Nation of Ontario. 

According to the Government of Canada, the only groups allowed to determine who is Métis with rights under the Constitution are the Métis Nation of Alberta, the Manitoba Métis Federation, the Métis Nation of Saskatchewan, the Métis Nation British Columbia and the Métis Nation of Ontario.

Under a 2003 Supreme Court of Canada decision won by Teillet, a process called the Powley test determines whether an individual can be considered Métis with rights under Section 35 of the Constitution. Section 35 recognizes existing "aboriginal and treaty rights of the Aboriginal people of Canada," without going into specifics of what those rights entail.

Part of the Powley test spells out the criteria for eligibility: a person must identify as Métis, must be an accepted member of a present-day Métis community and must have ties to a historic Métis community.

Environment Minister Kevin Klein's official biography in the cabinet ministers' section of the government of Manitoba's website says he is a 'proud Métis Canadian.'  On his current personal site, he recently added 'connecting with my Indigenous heritage helps put life into context.' Environment Minister Kevin Klein's official biography in the cabinet ministers' section of the government of Manitoba website says he is a 'proud Métis Canadian.' On his current personal site, he recently added 'connecting with my Indigenous heritage helps put life into context.' (Government of Manitoba/kevinklein.ca)

Painted Feather Woodland Métis rejects what it calls "unduly restrictive and unfair" definitions of who is Métis and states its definition is "simple — anyone with an aboriginal ancestor," says the company's website, which lists fees ranging from $57 to $320, plus provincial sales tax, for membership for adults.

Painted Feather declined an interview in the past, sending CBC News to its website for information.

Klein has said he did not claim to be Métis for political reasons, and he got his membership card before he entered politics.

Understanding that the issue of Indigenous ancestry is complex, CBC News undertook its research in consultation with Indigenous experts and journalists. 

As an elected minister of the Manitoba government, Klein's claims are subject to the same type of scrutiny routinely applied to high-ranking elected officials by journalists.

Klein's lawyer says issue 'personal'

Since becoming a cabinet minister, Klein has declined to be interviewed about new information CBC News has obtained about his claim of Métis heritage.

Klein's counsel, Thompson Dorfman Sweatman lawyer Sacha Paul, sent a letter in April asking CBC News to stop asking about his heritage and to cease contacting Klein's relatives about this topic.

Manitoba lawyer Sacha Paul is a member of the English River First Nation, a Dene community in Northern Saskatchewan. Klein's lawyer Sacha Paul is a partner with Thompson Dorfman Sweatman and the past president of the Manitoba Law Society. He's a member of the English River First Nation, a Dene community in Saskatchewan, his firm's web page says. (tdslaw.com)

"I am advised by Mr. Klein that the matter of his Indigenous heritage is indeed personal and that Mr. Klein's campaign material is not highlighting his connection to his Indigenous ancestry," Paul wrote.

Environment Minister Kevin Klein's claim to be Métis denounced by brother, Manitoba Métis Federation

Duration 3:48
The Manitoba government's website continues to identify Environment Minister Kevin Klein as Métis, even though the president of the Manitoba Métis Federation, a prominent Métis lawyer and Klein's own brother all dispute the claim.

Red flags

Jean Teillet said "once all of us can claim to be Indigenous for whatever reason, then there will be no more Indigenous people, because we will all be Indigenous." 

She says it's harmful because it's another step in eradicating Indigenous people, a process she calls "reverse assimilation."

Teillet was appointed as an independent investigator by the University of Saskatchewan to figure out how to prevent illegitimate claims to Indigeneity in the wake of professor Carrie Bourassa being put on leave and eventually resigning from her positions after a CBC investigation found no evidence that she had Indigenous ancestry.

Canada Life announced a $500,000 investment for a new Indigenous-led student mentorship program at RRC Polytech at the end of June. Environment Minister Kevin Klein is pictured second from the left. Canada Life announced a $500,000 investment for a new Indigenous-led student mentorship program at Red River College Polytechnic at the end of June. Environment Minister Kevin Klein is pictured second from the left. (CNW Group/Canada Life)

The Painted Feather Woodland Métis is one of many organizations that have "sprung up" since 2002 that "have a very, very loose definition of what they call Métis, which is basically anyone who has any tiny amount of Indigenous ancestry," Teillet said.

Teillet's report for the University of Saskatchewan, titled Indigenous Identity Fraud, found similarities between multiple cases of illegitimate claims of Indigeneity, which she calls "red flags."

During his mayoral run, Klein told Dorothy Dobbie in an article for What's Up Winnipeg that he took a University of Alberta Indigenous course "to learn more about his Métis and Cree background."

"Blond and blue-eyed Indigenous people were not uncommon among certain groups in middle America. His family says his roots are evident in his cheekbones which Kevin says he could never produce a proper beard!" wrote Dobbie, a former Progressive Conservative MP who wrote the profile about Klein before the civic election.

Shifting Indigenous identities raise red flags, Teillet wrote in her report for the University of Saskatchewan. 

"They shift their stories because people challenged them. Joseph Boyden was a perfect example. I think he had, like, 10 different identities over the years," Teillet said in an interview.

An APTN investigation found no evidence Boyden, who has written books that centre on Indigenous characters and culture, has any Indigenous ancestors.

"If [Klein] follows the pattern that all the others have followed, he'll keep shifting his stories again and again and again," Teillet said.

When people who self-proclaim as Indigenous without verification speak for Indigenous people, it results in Indigenous people not being heard, Teillet said. 

"Every time that someone like that speaks on behalf of Indigenous people, they take the microphone away from real Indigenous people," she said.

'It's about my mom and my family'

When Klein sat down for an interview with CBC News last year to talk about his claim to Métis heritage when he was running for mayor, he said it was a way to connect to his late mother, Joanne Winacott.

She was killed in her Oshawa home by her second husband in 1991 at age 45.

Klein was 26 at the time. 

"This isn't about claiming any rights or trying to think that it benefits me in any way. It's about my mom and my family," Klein said in an interview in September.

A combination of two portraits showing a woman, and a woman with a child. Kevin Klein's mother, Joanne Winacott, was killed by her partner when Klein was 26. This photo collage from Klein's website includes an undated picture of Winacott with Klein when he was a boy. (kevinklein.ca)

Klein has been vocal about his mother's murder. To this day, he devotes a section of his personal website — which he used for his campaigns — to his mother.

On April 5, he talked about his mother's murder and domestic violence in the legislature on the anniversary of her birthday.

When Klein was the city councillor for Charleswood-Tuxedo-Westwood, he spoke of his mother's killing during a debate about the Winnipeg Police Service budget:

"I want to speak from a place that no one else on council can speak from. My Indigenous mother was murdered," Klein said in Winnipeg city council chambers in December 2021.

On May 5, 2022, Red Dress Day, the National Day of Awareness for Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls, Klein posted an Instagram video saying, "My mother was murdered by her partner and she was Indigenous," in front of the red dresses on display for the event at Winnipeg City Hall.

In an April letter, Klein's lawyer said the media, including CBC, may inquire into Klein's record and the actions he has taken on behalf of constituents but not into "personal matters."

"In our client's view, his heritage is one of the few connections he has to his late mother, who was taken from our client when he was quite young," wrote Paul.

In a subsequent email sent in mid-July, Paul wrote that Klein is "a firm believer in the freedom of the press and responsible journalism."

"However, continuing to raise a personal matter that is connected to the tragic death of my client's mother is not responsible journalism," Paul wrote.

The lawyer asked for confirmation that CBC News "will not run this story now or in the future."

Joanne Winacott graduated with a nursing degree in 1985. Rout was in attendance for the ceremony at the Oshawa Auditorium. Joanne Winacott graduated with a nursing degree in 1985. Klein's brother, Christopher Rout, attended the ceremony at the Oshawa Auditorium. (Submitted by Christopher Rout)

Repeated references in public settings to life experiences of Indigenous trauma are also a red flag, Teillet's report says.

"His mother was murdered. That's real trauma, but it has nothing to do with Indigenous identity," Teillet said in an interview. "It's a tragic story about his mother being murdered."

Teillet does not understand why Klein links his Métis heritage claim to the death of his mother.

"Is he saying, 'Oh, she was murdered, you know, she's part of that murdered and missing Indigenous women and girls story,' and so then there's this idea that if you can show somehow trauma in life, that's a legitimate reason to identify as Indigenous?"

Teillet points to a trend among the cases she examined in her report for the University of Saskatchewan.

"Indigenous identity fraudsters often play heavily on stereotypes of alienation from their culture and heritage, intergenerational trauma, family violence, addictions, racism and poverty. The fraudsters doing this are 'marketing trauma' using 'stolen trauma and stolen valour,'" Teillet wrote in her report, citing research by Sherry Farrell Racette.

Rout is the youngest Kevin Klein's two brothers. He does not not like the way Klein uses his mother's memory in his social network posts. Christopher Rout is the youngest of Kevin Klein's two brothers. He says he does not like the way Klein uses their mother's memory on his website and in his social network posts. (Submitted by Christopher Rout)

Rout says he's upset about how Klein portrays their mother's death in public.

Klein's Instagram account — which he started shortly before his run for city council in 2018 — contains at least 15 posts related to his mother's killing, in addition to campaign ads for city councillor and his 2022 mayoral and MLA runs.

He also talks about his mother's murder on his personal site, which he also uses for campaign purposes.

Rout said he dislikes the way Klein uses his mother's memory in his public posts.

"To me, a son's job is to defend their mom, defend their mom's story, not exploit it for any gain. So I will stand and defend it all day long," Rout, a paramedic with Alberta Health Services, said in an interview with CBC News.

Indigenous identity requires connection

Klein completed the University of Alberta's Indigenous Canada course in 2020 and posted the certificate on his website. The free online instruction program covers the histories and current perspectives of Indigenous Peoples in Canada.

Early in the course, University of Alberta professor Kim TallBear says having an Indigenous relative does not make you Indigenous.

"You don't just have the right as an individual to go claim to be a member of a community that does not know you, within which you have not been socialized and that does not claim you," TallBear said in a module of the course.

A lawyer speaks outside a courtrom. Jean Teillet says you can't just claim that you are Indigenous. You have to have some blood ties, some relationships to communities that are alive today that acknowledge you. (Brian Morris/CBC)

Klein is adamant that his Métis heritage is a private and personal journey, but Teillet says that's not how it works.

"This idea that it's a personal journey and no one can question it … it's BS, right? We shouldn't give it credit. And so if he's on a personal journey for six to eight years, trying to find an Indigenous identity somewhere, then personally, I think he should shut up about it until he figures it out," Teillet said.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Joanne Levasseur

Producer, CBC News I-Team

Joanne Levasseur is a producer for the CBC News I-Team based in Winnipeg. She has worked at CBC for more than two decades. Twitter: @joannehlev

 
 

Sacha Paul

Sacha Paul
LawyerSacha practices primarily in two areas of law - Aboriginal law and Public/Administrative law. Pronouns are he/himim.

(204) 934-2571
srp@tdslaw.com

 

 

Attn Jeff Pniowsky I was readig about you in CBC today perhaps we should talk ASAP?

Heather Martinez

<hmartinez@tdslaw.com>
Tue, Oct 11, 2022 at 10:47 AM
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
Cc: motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>, Colleen Da Costa <cdacosta@tdslaw.com>, Danielle Delorme <ddelorme@tdslaw.com>

Hello David,

 

Regarding your email, would you like for me to arrange a call time with Mr. Pniowsky to discuss your matter?

 

Thank you,

 

 

Thompson Dorfman Sweatman LLP
1700 – 242 Hargrave Street

Winnipeg MB  R3C 0V1

Heather Martinez | she/her

Legal Assistant to Jeff Pniowsky, Matthew Dalloo & Sasha Mostafavi

 

P: 204-934-2379

F: 204-934-0570

E: hmartinez@tdslaw.com

TDS LinkedIn | Parking | Payment Online | Newsletter Sign Up

http://www.tdslaw.com/images/sigimg/image-1b1933a8d3564d608b23c15b6986b9f1.png

Thompson Dorfman Sweatman LLP is the exclusive member firm in Manitoba, Canada for Lex Mundi - the world’s leading network of independent law firms with in-depth experience in 100+ countries worldwide.

The contents of this e-mail message and all attachments are intended for the confidential use of the addressee and where addressed to our client are the subject of solicitor and client privilege. Any retention, review, reproduction, distribution, or disclosure other than by the addressee is prohibited. Please notify us immediately if we have transmitted this message to you in error.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
Sent: Friday, October 7, 2022 12:47 PM
To: Heather Martinez <hmartinez@tdslaw.com>; Colleen Da Costa <cdacosta@tdslaw.com>
Cc: motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
Subject: Fwd: Attn Jeff Pniowsky I was readig about you in CBC today perhaps we should talk ASAP?

 

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Danielle Delorme <ddelorme@tdslaw.com>
Date: Fri, 7 Oct 2022 17:40:00 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: Réponse automatique : Attn Jeff Pniowsky I
was readig about you in CBC today perhaps we should talk ASAP?
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>

I will be out of the office Friday, September 30th and returning
Tuesday, October 11th.

I will not be checking emails during this time.


If you requrie assistance before October 11th, please contact either:

Colleen Da Costa 204-934-2340 cdacosta@tdslaw.com

Heather Martinez 204-934-2379 hmartinez@tdslaw.com


Thank you,

Danielle Delorme

Click the following link to unsubscribe or subscribe to TDS e-communications:

Unsubscribe at https://tdslaw.us3.list-manage.com/unsubscribe?u=980f278fbc816ab0f18183e01&id=cc57ea514c

Subscribe at https://www.tdslaw.com/subscribe/


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 7 Oct 2022 14:32:11 -0300
Subject: Attn Jeff Pniowsky I was readig about you in CBC today
perhaps we should talk ASAP?
To: jdp@tdslaw.com, mcu <mcu@justice.gc.ca>
Cc: motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>, "Jason.Proctor"
<Jason.Proctor@cbc.ca>, "blaine.higgs" <blaine.higgs@gnb.ca>,
Diane.Lebouthillier@cra-arc.gc.ca, Andrew.LeFrank@cbsa-asfc.gc.ca,
Andrew.Baumberg@cas-satj.gc.ca, "Ellen.Desmond"
<Ellen.Desmond@crtc.gc.ca>, Christian.Lorenz@cbsa-asfc.gc.ca,
Allison.St-Jean@tc.gc.ca, media@tc.gc.ca, hc.media.sc@canada.ca,
mary-liz.power@canada.ca, media@cbsa-asfc.gc.ca,
Chris.Lorenz@cbsa-asfc.gc.ca, "christopher.rupar"
<christopher.rupar@justice.gc.ca>

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/duty-to-document-nb-1.6608066

New Brunswick·CBC Investigates
How to keep secrets from the public: Don't write anything down


https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/demara-tax-court-appeals-abuse-1.6608659

Judge slams CRA and Justice Department for 'egregious' conduct in epic
Tax Court battle


Decision likely to affect dozens of Canadians appealing gross
negligence penalties from tax agency

Jason Proctor · CBC News · Posted: Oct 07, 2022 4:00 AM PT |


A tax Court judge has slammed the Canada Revenue Agency for failing to
comply with pre-trial court rules and orders. (Chris Wattie/Reuters)

A Tax Court judge has slammed the Canada Revenue Agency and the
Justice Department for "egregious" conduct that threatened to deny
three taxpayers the right to a fair trial in an epic battle over
millions of dollars worth of tax penalties.

In a scathing decision that could have widespread implications, Judge
Patrick Boyle found the CRA committed an "intentional and deliberate"
pattern of ignoring court rules to "frustrate" the right that all
Canadians have to get a full picture of an opponent's case before
heading to court.

The three taxpayers — a Manitoba psychiatrist, an Ontario nurse and a
B.C. Air Canada pilot — were appealing three million dollars' worth of
gross negligence penalties levelled against them, for rejected returns
filed through a pair of disgraced tax consultancy firms.

But after years of pre-trial delays resulting from the CRA's repeated
failure to comply with his orders, Boyle took the extraordinary
measure of allowing the appeals without having a trial on the merits
of the case this week, to "protect the integrity of the judicial
process."

Canada Revenue Agency accused of blaming victims as 'gross
negligence' cases drag on

"I find the [CRA's] egregious approach to pre-trial discovery in these
appeals to prejudice all three appellants who have been denied," Boyle
wrote in his ruling.

"These abuses of the discovery process ... have caused considerable
delay and expense to three Appellants in respect of their appeals.
They have also led to an inefficient use of public resources financed
by all Canadians."
'With great power comes great responsibility'

Boyle's decision is the latest chapter in a saga that has seen
hundreds of Canadians slapped with gross negligence penalties after
filing returns through DeMara Consulting and Fiscal Arbitrators.

The principals of both companies were jailed for tax fraud for
promoting schemes Boyle says "resemble in many respects the
de-taxation practices of sovereign citizens, though with less of the
non-fiscal cultish aspects."
Hundreds of Canadians filed appeals in Tax Court after the CRA
levelled gross negligence penalties against them in association with
returns filed through a pair of disgraced tax consultancies. (Minichka
/ Shutterstock)

According to court records, B.C.-based DeMara's scheme was called "the
remedy" and essentially involved claiming personal expenditures and
debts as expenses and capital losses for a non-existent business.

Canada's Income Tax Act gives CRA the ability to levy penalties
against Canadians who make false statements and omissions on their tax
returns, either knowingly or under circumstances that amount to gross
negligence.

The penalties in the DeMara and Fiscal Arbitrators case have reached
into the millions, leading to a huge backlog of appeals that have been
making their way through tax court since 2013.

Tax agency obtains 'jeopardy order' for debt from Downton
Abbey-loving billionaire

Jeff Pniowsky, the Winnipeg-based lawyer who represented all three
plaintiffs, said fighting a decade-long court battle with the threat
of financial ruin hanging over their heads has cost his clients "years
of happiness."

"This was fundamentally a case about justice. Justice for the
taxpayers who had to endure years of gamesmanship and chicanery by one
of Canada's most powerful institutions: the CRA," Pniowsky told the
CBC.

Pniowsky, who has four children, said Boyle's ruling reminded him of a
line from one of his family's favourite superhero movies: Spiderman.

"With great power comes great responsibility," he said.

"It's clear from this case that the CRA and the Justice Department
have lost sight of that common-sense principle."
'Unprepared, unco-operative or untruthful'

Boyle's detailed 53-page ruling goes through the history of the case,
and the circumstances that led to each of the orders he found the CRA
later ignored.

The fight centred on pre-trial discovery, and the rights of the
taxpayers to examine a CRA representative or "nominee" who was
"knowledgeable" about their case.
The CRA has the ability to levy gross negligence penalties against
taxpayers who lie on their income tax forms. The penalties have been
devastating for some. (Graeme Roy/The Canadian Press)

The first person the agency put forward was "unaware of any criminal
investigation and had not informed himself" about any involvement of
the CRA's criminal investigators in the case.

The second nominee was a lead criminal investigator who "did not even
inform himself ... whether any investigation was undertaken of any of
these three appellants."

At one point, Boyle called the investigator "thoroughly unprepared,
unco-operative or untruthful."

The judge said the CRA and its lawyers twisted the words of an order
that boiled down to a demand for the agency to hand over any documents
relating to any investigations that touched on the three appellants.

"I variously described this as 'outrageously misleading and
inappropriate,' 'this might be contemptuous,' ... 'deeply, deeply
disturbed,' 'highly inappropriate' and 'I don't think you were
reasonably mistaken,'" Boyle wrote.

It is an ex-reference: B.C. judge removes 'dead parrot' joke from
class-action ruling

The judge also zeroed in on the CRA's failure to tell the defence that
the second page of a three-page "Investigation Abort Report" against
one of the plaintiffs had gone missing. The report was handed over in
the middle of hundreds of documents. The missing page explained why a
criminal investigation was dropped.

The CRA claimed it had no "specific obligation" to point out missing
pages — a position Boyle found "shocking."

"Courts do not consider discovery to be a game, and it is particularly
disappointing when the Crown is the offending party," the judge said.

He said the omission gave credence to the idea the CRA "is hiding
something from them, from the Court and from Canadians about how these
investigations have been conducted.
'Stop, or I'll yell stop again!'

The judge pointed out that the CRA is "represented by the Department
of Justice which is essentially Canada's largest national law firm and
employs a large number of tax litigation lawyers who are wholly
familiar" with the court's rules.

Boyle said making yet another order for compliance would be pointless.
The judge compared his battle to get the CRA to comply with his orders
to a skit by Monty Python, whose troupe members are seen here from
left to right: John Cleese, Terry Gilliam, Terry Jones, Graham
Chapman, Michael Palin and Eric Idle. (PBS/Python (Monty) Pictures
Ltd./The Associated Press)

He was reminded of a skit by legendary English comedy troupe Monty Python.

"To make such an order would conjure up memories of the Pythonesque
skit of the British bobby of another era yelling at a scofflaw: 'Stop!
Stop!—Stop, or I'll yell 'stop' again!'" the judge wrote.

The three appeals were supposed to be the lead plaintiffs for a much
larger group of appeals. The judge said those people will have to
speak with their lawyers to determine how the ruling applies to them.

Pniowsky says he believes the decision is the first of its kind
against the CRA. He predicted fallout both in other DeMara and Fiscal
Arbitrators cases and in the wider world of tax litigation.

"Intoxicated with a sense of moral righteousness, the government
apparently determined or acted like these Canadians were not worthy of
basic procedural rights, thereby committing the same wrongs they
accused the taxpayers of: gross neglect, wilful blindness and at times
deceptive conduct," he said.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Jason Proctor

@proctor_jason

Jason Proctor is a reporter in British Columbia for CBC News and has
covered the B.C. courts and the justice system extensively.

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices


https://www.tdslaw.com/lawyers/jeff-pniowsky/

Jeff Pniowsky

Jeff focuses his practice in the areas of tax litigation and dispute
resolution in the tax audit and appeals process, tax advisory
services, and complex commercial litigation.

(204) 934-2586
jdp@tdslaw.com

Winnipeg
(204) 934-0586


Profile

Jeff is a partner with TDS who focuses his practice in the areas of
tax litigation and dispute resolution in the tax audit and appeals
process, tax advisory services, as well as complex commercial
litigation. Formerly a senior Tax Litigator with the Federal
Department of Justice acting on behalf of the Canada Revenue Agency
(CRA) for almost 10 years, Jeff now serves local and national clients
with a wealth of experience in litigating at all levels of both the
Provincial and Federal courts, including the Supreme Court of Canada.

His work has included challenges to complex tax avoidance techniques
involving large corporate transactions, international taxation and
interpretation of tax treaties. Jeff has advised the Aggressive Tax
Planning Division of CRA involving some of the most significant tax
matters in the Prairie region. He also sat on the National Tax
Avoidance committee for Justice Canada.

In addition, Jeff has extensive experience dealing with tax
enforcement and other regulatory compliance issues including
disclosure requirements and was a member of national Documentary
Requirements Committee. He is also considered an authority on
solicitor and client privilege issues relating to documentary
disclosure, having litigated several matters in this area as well as
being called upon to act as an adjudicator in a privilege
determination.



Jeff Pniowsky

<JDP@tdslaw.com>
Mon, Oct 24, 2022 at 1:55 PM
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
Cc: "Jacqueline.Maarse@ca.gt.com" <Jacqueline.Maarse@ca.gt.com>, "pierre.poilievre" <pierre.poilievre@parl.gc.ca>, premier <premier@ontario.ca>, Newsroom <Newsroom@globeandmail.com>, nsinvestigators <nsinvestigators@gmail.com>, NightTimePodcast <NightTimePodcast@gmail.com>, "Nathalie.Drouin" <Nathalie.Drouin@pco-bcp.gc.ca>, paulpalango <paulpalango@protonmail.com>, Norman Traversy <traversy.n@gmail.com>, "Mark.Blakely" <Mark.Blakely@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, "fin.minfinance-financemin.fin" <fin.minfinance-financemin.fin@canada.ca>, "Wayne.Long" <Wayne.Long@parl.gc.ca>, motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>, "Jason.Proctor" <Jason.Proctor@cbc.ca>, mcu <mcu@justice.gc.ca>, "blaine.higgs" <blaine.higgs@gnb.ca>, "Diane.Lebouthillier@cra-arc.gc.ca" <Diane.Lebouthillier@cra-arc.gc.ca>, "Andrew.LeFrank@cbsa-asfc.gc.ca" <Andrew.LeFrank@cbsa-asfc.gc.ca>, "Andrew.Baumberg@cas-satj.gc.ca" <Andrew.Baumberg@cas-satj.gc.ca>, "Ellen.Desmond" <Ellen.Desmond@crtc.gc.ca>, "Christian.Lorenz@cbsa-asfc.gc.ca" <Christian.Lorenz@cbsa-asfc.gc.ca>, "Allison.St-Jean@tc.gc.ca" <Allison.St-Jean@tc.gc.ca>, "media@tc.gc.ca" <media@tc.gc.ca>, "hc.media.sc@canada.ca" <hc.media.sc@canada.ca>, "mary-liz.power@canada.ca" <mary-liz.power@canada.ca>, "media@cbsa-asfc.gc.ca" <media@cbsa-asfc.gc.ca>, "Chris.Lorenz@cbsa-asfc.gc.ca" <Chris.Lorenz@cbsa-asfc.gc.ca>, "christopher.rupar" <christopher.rupar@justice.gc.ca>

David,

Further to our conversation, and to be clear I have not agreed to act as your counsel.  Please address all such correspondence to your counsel/advisors and not to our firm.

Jeff

Sent from my iPhone

On Oct 24, 2022, at 9:45 AM, David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com> wrote:

 Jacqueline C. Maarse
Called to the bar: 1990 (ON)
Grant Thornton LLP
General Counsel:
2000-200 King St. W.
Toronto, Ontario M5H 3T4
Phone: 416-369-7013
Fax: 416-360-4944
Email: jacqueline.maarse@ca.gt.com

The pdf files hereto attached forever prove that the RCMP, the US
Treasury Dept, the latest NB AG Teddy Feming and Jacqueline Maarse
know that Grant Thornton and KPMG were the auditors of the Brookline
Savings Bank were I reported the fraud in 2003 Inbox


Add star David Amos<motomaniac333@gmail.com> AttachmentSat, Jun 28,
2014 at 12:14 AM
To: "hugh.flemming" <hugh.flemming@gnb.ca>,
Jacqueline.Maarse@ca.gt.com, bdysart <bdysart@smss.com>, Brian Gallant
<briangallant@nbliberal.ca>, "Davidc.Coon" <Davidc.Coon@gmail.com>,
nraynard@grantthornton.ca, "john.logan" <john.logan@gnb.ca>,
marie-claude.blais@gnb.ca, premier <premier@gnb.ca>, "Jacques.Poitras"
<Jacques.Poitras@cbc.ca>, acampbell <acampbell@ctv.ca>,
"mclaughlin.heather" <mclaeptughlin.heather@dailygleaner.com>,
"Wayne.Gallant" <Wayne.Gallant@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>,
benjamin.bertrand@rcmp-grc.gc.ca, "roger.l.brown"
<roger.l.brown@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, "matt.hayes"
<matt.hayes@mcinnescooper.com>, "leanne.murray"
<leanne.murray@mcinnescooper.com>
Cc: "brad.anderson" <brad.anderson@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, mnielsen
<mnielsen@pgcitizen.ca>, justmin <justmin@gov.ns.ca>,
Wayne.Clary@rcmp-grc.gc.ca, "Gilles.Moreau"
<Gilles.Moreau@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, Eric.Stubbs@rcmp-grc.gc.ca, David Amos
<david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>, pm <pm@pm.gc.ca>, "dean.buzza"
<dean.buzza@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, frankffrost <frankffrost@hotmail.com>,
radical <radical@radicalpress.com>, merv <merv@northwebpress.com>,
Mackap <Mackap@parl.gc.ca>, "mark.vespucci"
<mark.vespucci@ci.irs.gov>, oig <oig@sec.gov>, "rick.hancox"
<rick.hancox@nbsc-cvmnb.ca>, "steven.blaney"
<steven.blaney@parl.gc.ca>, "Gilles.Blinn"
<Gilles.Blinn@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, "david.barry"
<david.barry@nbsc-cvmnb.ca>, "Darren.Woroshelo"
<Darren.Woroshelo@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, "Geoffrey.McDonald"
<Geoffrey.McDonald@gov.bc.ca>
Bcc: David Amos <myson333@yahoo.com>, wmjervis <wmjervis@hotmail.com>

Reply | Reply to all | Forward | Print | Delete | Show original


http://thedavidamosrant.blogspot.ca/2014/06/in-2012-it-looks-like-i-was-right-and.html

http://thedavidamosrant.blogspot.ca/2014/02/re-very-ethical-lonnie-landrud-and-what.html

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Maarse, Jacqueline" <Jacqueline.Maarse@ca.gt.com>
Date: Wed, 25 Jun 2014 21:54:05 +0000
Subject: Your call today with Grant Thornton
To: "motomaniac333@gmail.com" <motomaniac333@gmail.com>

Dear Mr. Amos,

Further to your call with the 2 gentlemen in our Moncton office today,
we appreciate your interest in Grant Thornton. We ask that you direct
any correspondence you may wish to send to my attention at the address
indicated below. We will not be in a position to copy documents from
your computer and we ask that you do not attend at our offices for
that purpose. As indicated in the call, communications relating to
ongoing litigation are dealt with by our General Counsel's Office and
our partners and staff are not able to engage with you on these
matters.

Regards,
Jacqueline Maarse

Jacqueline Maarse | General Counsel
Grant Thornton LLP
12th Floor | 50 Bay Street | Toronto | ON | M5J 2Z8

E Jacqueline.Maarse@ca.gt.com<mailto:Jacqueline.Maarse@ca.gt.com> | W
http://www.grantthornton.ca/

[cid:image001.jpg@01CF909B.B187EE80]
<http://www.grantthornton.ca/>
[cid:image002.jpg@01CF909B.B187EE80]<http://www.greatplacetowork.ca/best-workplaces/best-workplaces-in-canada>


Grant Thornton LLP is proud to be
recognized as one of Canada's best
workplaces for our sixth consecutive year!

________________________________
Disclaimer: This email is intended solely for the person or entity to
which it is addressed and may contain confidential and/or privileged
information. Any review, dissemination, copying, printing or other use
of this email by persons or entities other than the addressee is
prohibited. If you have received this email in error, please contact
the sender immediately and delete the material from any computer.

http://www.princegeorgecitizen.com/news/national/new-brunswick-government-seeks-to-recoup-50-million-lost-in-atcon-collapse-1.1155837

FREDERICTON - The New Brunswick government has launched a lawsuit
against an accounting firm in an effort to recover $50 million
provided as loan guarantees to the Miramichi-based Atcon group of
companies.

The lawsuit filed with the Court of Queen's Bench in Saint John
alleges that Grant Thornton was in breach of its duties to the
province in an inspection of the financial books of the Atcon group of
companies.

The former Liberal government of then premier Shawn Graham provided
the loan guarantees to the companies in 2009.

The statement of claim alleges the government approved the loan
guarantees as a result of financial reports from Grant Thornton.

"But for the Grant Thornton opinions and representations, the province
would not have sustained a loss in excess of $50 million," the
document asserts.

It says the accounting firm "failed to exercise the care, diligence,
and skill of an auditor of reasonable competence and prudence."

None of the allegations contained in the statement of claim have been
proven in court.

Atcon, based in Miramichi, went bankrupt in April 2010.

Grant Thornton LLP, Grant Thornton International and a chartered
accountant who works for the company are named as the defendants. They
have not filed a statement of defence and the accountant named in the
statement of claim could not be reached for comment.

Norm Raynard, managing partner in New Brunswick for Grant Thornton,
said in an emailed statement that the company would not offer specific
comments on the lawsuit because they are still reviewing the court
documents.

"We will vigorously defend ourselves against this action," he wrote.

"Our initial reaction is that this timing has much to do with the
political calendar in the province."

The next provincial election is set for Sept. 22.

Attorney General Hugh Flemming said the timing is not political.

"This is not a time schedule which in any way was influenced by the
government and it is not a political issue," he said Tuesday.

He said the government had no choice but to take the matter to court
because of the $50 million that was spent.

"The government owes a duty to the people of New Brunswick to do what
they can to recover this," Flemming said.

© Copyright 2014

http://thedavidamosrant.blogspot.ca/2014/02/re-very-ethical-lonnie-landrud-and-what.html

http://www.missingwomeninquiry.ca/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/Exhibit-130.pdf

http://www.princegeorgecitizen.com/news/national/strong-suspects-but-no-charges-in-highway-of-tears-cases-rcmp-1.1173928

'Strong suspects' but no charges in Highway of Tears cases: RCMP

VANCOUVER - The Mountie overseeing the investigation into the murders
and disappearances of women and girls along British Columbia's
so-called Highway of Tears says his officers have a number of "strong
suspects," but they have yet to uncover enough evidence to lay charges
nearly two years after the last major break in the case.

Staff-Sgt. Wayne Clary leads project E-PANA, which has spent years
investigating the deaths and disappearances of 18 women and girls
along three highways in the province's north.

Roughly 60 officers were assigned to the case at the height of the
investigation, though Clary said that number has dropped to between 12
and 15, who spend most of their time on the project. Still, he said
E-PANA is very much an active investigation.

"It has scaled down, because we've pounded through a lot of work, but
there's still enough work in front of us to keep going," Clary told
The Canadian Press.

"There's more than one investigation where we have strong suspects or
persons of interest, and we're clearly focusing on those. ... I'd like
nothing more than to sit down with the families and say, 'We've got
the guy."'

Clary declined to offer details about how many suspects the RCMP have
identified or in which specific cases, though he said the suspects
they have in mind are located in Canada.

The last significant development came in September 2012, when
investigators said they believed a dead American convict named Bobby
Jack Fowler was responsible for killing as many as three of the women.

The RCMP said investigators had uncovered DNA evidence linking Fowler,
who died in an Oregon prison in 2006, to Colleen MacMillen, who was
murdered in 1974. They also said they believed Fowler may have been
involved in the deaths of Gale Weys and Pamela Darlington, both 19,
who were killed in the mid-1970s.

Clary said the force doesn't have the same kind of direct evidence
tying Fowler to Weys and Darlington, but he added: "Personally, I
think it's him in the other two."

Clary said E-PANA hasn't come up with evidence to suggest any of the
other women and girls were linked together, meaning there could be 15
different suspects for the 15 remaining cases.

"If we have a strong suspect, absolutely we're looking for crossed
lines, but right now we're not seeing that," he said.

E-PANA was launched in 2005 amid growing concern about the number of
women and girls who vanished or were found dead along highways in the
province's north. It also came several years after serial killer
Robert Pickton was arrested in the Vancouver area - a case that Clary
worked on as part of Project Evenhanded.

The Highway of Tears often refers to a remote stretch of Highway 16
between Prince Rupert and Prince George, but E-PANA also includes
cases along the adjacent Highways 97 and 5.

Investigators identified 18 women and girls who were involved in
hitchhiking or other high-risk behaviour and were last seen within a
couple of kilometres of those highways. The final list included cases
between 1969 and 2006.

Investigators once held annual group meetings, but Clary said they now
contact each family individually, either in person or by telephone.



http://www.pgfreepress.com/city-bids-adieu-to-rcmp-supt-eric-stubbs/

City bids adieu to RCMP Supt. Eric Stubbs
Posted On 26 Jun 2014By : Staff ReporterComment: 0Tag: RCMP
Firepit manager Robert Ryan, left, elders Violet Bozoki and Tom Reece
and executive director Vanessa West presemted RCMP Supt. Eric Stubbs
with some gifts before he leaves for a new posting in Ottawa at the
end of the month. Stubbs and Ryan both spoke of the steps which have
been taken to bring the First Nations community and the RCMP in Prince
George closer. The gifts were made by patrons of the Firepit, and Ryan
told Stubbs, “You’re taking a part of us with you.” Allan WISHART/Free
Press
After three years as the top cop in Prince George and a combined 14
years in Northern BC, Superintendent Eric Stubbs is leaving Prince
George and province.

Friday June 27, marks the final day Superintendent Stubbs will be in
charge of the RCMP’s Municipal Detachment in Prince George, a position
he held since arriving in June 2011. During his time here,
Superintendent Stubbs has reduced crime in nearly every category,
created a unit dedicated to combating domestic violence, and was a
catalyst in the transformation of the Community Policing Section to a
new model with focuses on youth and enforcement. Of course, he was
also the detachment commander leading up to, during and following the
move to the new City of Prince George Municipal Detachment.

“I would like to thank Superintendent Stubbs for his excellent service
to Prince George and northern B.C.,” said Mayor Shari Green of Prince
George, in a press release. “Among the many achievements on his watch,
I’d like to point out his dedication to reducing domestic violence,
the continued support of the Downtown Enforcement Unit, and his
essential role in the Mayor’s Task Force on Crime. I wish
Superintendent Stubbs every success in this next exciting phase of his
service to Canadians.”

Stubbs will be taking on a new role as National Criminal Operations
Officer in Ottawa; a role that comes with a promotion to Chief
Superintendent.

Superintendent Stubbs has provided a tremendous service to the
citizens of northern BC through his work in four communities over 14
years said Supt. Lesley Bain, acting officer in charge of the RCMP in
northern B.C. He has had a significant impact in each community he has
policed, none more than Prince George. He will be greatly missed and
we wish him the best in his new role in Ottawa.

Inspector Brad Anderson, the Detachment’s Operations officer, will
take over command of the detachment until such time that a successor
is named.

On behalf of the members, staff and volunteers of the Prince George
RCMP, I want to extend a thank you to Eric for his leadership over the
past three years said Anderson. It has been a pleasure working for him
in such a positive environment.




------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 14 Dec 2012 23:43:38 -0400
Subject: Re: The politicians and cops etc cannot deny that I warned
New Brunswick not to trust Grant Thornton and KPMG many times
beginning in 2004
To: jacqueline.maarse@ca.gt.com, pnoble@grantthornton.ca,
paul.robichaud@gnb.ca, ggilbert@grantthornton.ca,
nraynard@grantthornton.ca, jdelaney@grantthornton.ca,
kferguson@grantthornton.ca, blewis@grantthornton.ca,
krieger@grantthornton.ca, hjaffer@grantthornton.ca,
rgodbold@grantthornton.ca, pmartin@grantthornton.ca,
gdent@grantthornton.ca, karrt <karrt@sec.gov>, oig <oig@sec.gov>, oig
<oig@ftc.gov>, whistleblower <whistleblower@finra.org>, whistle
<whistle@fsa.gov.uk>, Whistleblower <Whistleblower@ctv.ca>,
"dean.buzza" <dean.buzza@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, police
<police@fredericton.ca>, GillesLee <GillesLee@edmundston.ca>, andre
<andre@jafaust.com>, "peter.dauphinee" <peter.dauphinee@gmail.com>,
law <law@stevenfoulds.ca>, "rick.hancox" <rick.hancox@nbsc-cvmnb.ca>,
"marie-claude.blais" <marie-claude.blais@gnb.ca>, "jeff.mockler"
<jeff.mockler@gnb.ca>, "luc.labonte" <luc.labonte@gnb.ca>,
"lucie.dubois" <lucie.dubois@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, "bernadine.chapman"
<bernadine.chapman@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, pm <pm@pm.gc.ca>, cullen1
<cullen1@parl.gc.ca>, "bob.rae" <bob.rae@rogers.blackberry.net>,
rhouston <rhouston@burkerobertson.com>, richard.dearden@gowlings.com,
"allan.cutler" <allan.cutler@canadians4accountability.org>,
Stephane.vaillancourt@rcmp-grc.gc.ca, oldmaison <oldmaison@yahoo.com>,
"justin.trudeau.a1" <justin.trudeau.a1@parl.gc.ca>, "marc.garneau.a1"
<marc.garneau.a1@parl.gc.ca>, ottawairc@state.gov, bginsberg
<bginsberg@pattonboggs.com>
Cc: Minister.Industry@ic.gc.ca, David Amos
<david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>, warren.mcbeath@rcmp-grc.gc.ca,
amacbeath@grantthornton.ca, bmatthews@grantthornton.ca,
derrickrideout001@yahoo.ca

From: "Matthews, Bev" <Beverley.Matthews@ca.gt.com>
Date: Sat, 15 Dec 2012 03:36:55 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: The politicians and cops etc cannot deny
that I warned New Brunswick not to trust Grant Thornton and KPMG many
times beginning in 2004
To: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>

Hello,

I have stepped down from my position as General Counsel of Grant
Thornton as of July 31, 2012.

My successor, Jacqueline Maarse, can be reached at
jacqueline.maarse@ca.gt.com or at 416 369-7013.

I will respond directly to any e-mails associated with the limited
matters for which I have responsiblity as Special Counsel to the firm
or to any e-mails of a personal nature.

Bev Matthews

________________________________
Disclaimer: This email is intended solely for the person or entity to
which it is addressed and may contain confidential and/or privileged
information. Any review, dissemination, copying, printing or other use
of this email by persons or entities other than the addressee is
prohibited. If you have received this email in error, please contact
the sender immediately and delete the material from any computer.

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 14 Dec 2012 23:36:40 -0400
Subject: The politicians and cops etc cannot deny that I warned New
Brunswick not to trust Grant Thornton and KPMG many times beginning in
2004
To: pnoble@grantthornton.ca, paul.robichaud@gnb.ca,
ggilbert@grantthornton.ca, nraynard@grantthornton.ca,
jdelaney@grantthornton.ca, kferguson@grantthornton.ca,
blewis@grantthornton.ca, krieger@grantthornton.ca,
hjaffer@grantthornton.ca, rgodbold@grantthornton.ca,
pmartin@grantthornton.ca, gdent@grantthornton.ca, karrt
<karrt@sec.gov>, oig <oig@sec.gov>, oig <oig@ftc.gov>, whistleblower
<whistleblower@finra.org>, whistle <whistle@fsa.gov.uk>, Whistleblower
<Whistleblower@ctv.ca>, "dean.buzza" <dean.buzza@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>,
police <police@fredericton.ca>, GillesLee <GillesLee@edmundston.ca>,
andre <andre@jafaust.com>, "peter.dauphinee"
<peter.dauphinee@gmail.com>, law <law@stevenfoulds.ca>, "rick.hancox"
<rick.hancox@nbsc-cvmnb.ca>, "marie-claude.blais"
<marie-claude.blais@gnb.ca>, "jeff.mockler" <jeff.mockler@gnb.ca>,
"luc.labonte" <luc.labonte@gnb.ca>, "lucie.dubois"
<lucie.dubois@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, "bernadine.chapman"
<bernadine.chapman@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, pm <pm@pm.gc.ca>, cullen1
<cullen1@parl.gc.ca>, "bob.rae" <bob.rae@rogers.blackberry.net>,
rhouston <rhouston@burkerobertson.com>, richard.dearden@gowlings.com,
"allan.cutler" <allan.cutler@canadians4accountability.org>,
Stephane.vaillancourt@rcmp-grc.gc.ca, oldmaison <oldmaison@yahoo.com>,
"justin.trudeau.a1" <justin.trudeau.a1@parl.gc.ca>, "marc.garneau.a1"
<marc.garneau.a1@parl.gc.ca>, ottawairc@state.gov, bginsberg
<bginsberg@pattonboggs.com>
Cc: Minister.Industry@ic.gc.ca, David Amos
<david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>, warren.mcbeath@rcmp-grc.gc.ca,
amacbeath@grantthornton.ca, bmatthews@grantthornton.ca,
derrickrideout001@yahoo.ca

"Harper, Stephen - M.P." <Harper.S@parl.gc.ca> wrote:

Subject: RE: Re: Lets all go through the looking glass to check the
Integrity of the Talking Heads in BC tonight
Date: Fri, 16 Dec 2005 15:32:54 -0500
From: "Harper, Stephen - M.P." <Harper.S@parl.gc.ca>
To: <motomaniac_02186@yahoo.com>

Thank you for your e-mail message to Stephen Harper, Leader of the
Opposition. Your views and suggestions are important to us. Once they
have been carefully considered, you may receive a further reply.

*Remember to include your mailing address if you would like a response.

If you prefer to send your thoughts by regular mail, please address them to:

Stephen Harper, M.P.
Leader of the Opposition
House of Commons
Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0A6

maggie.trudel-maggiore@international.gc.ca wrote:

Mr. Amos,

thank you for your phone message and several email messages. As the
Director of Values and Ethics in the departments of Foreign Affairs
Canada and International Trade Canada, my current mandate applies only
to internal management issues. For example, establishing a code of
conduct for our employees as well as providing advice to staff on
conflict of interest and conflict resolution.

As such I don't think I could be in a position to assist you. Please
remove my name from your distribution list.

Thanks in advance

Maggie Trudel-Maggiore
A/Director, Values and Ethics

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/story/2012/12/14/nb-robichaud-atcon-audit-707.html

The crook Paul Robichaud spewed Pure Double talking Bullshit today

"Robichaud told reporters on Thursday that suing Grant Thornton, the
company that audited Atcon’s financial records, could be considered
but he said the province is unlikely to follow that specific option.

“[A lawsuit] is something that we could consider, but I already said
in the past it is not an option that we are going to look at this
point. But we are looking at every option at this point,” Robichaud
said."

http://www.grantthornton.ca/

http://www.nbica.org/english/members/advanced_search.asp?iPageCurrent=5&iPageSize=5&strSQL=select+*+from+members+where+city+like+'%25%25'+order+by+company&from=myself

The RCMP, Rick Hancox,Bruce Lewis of Fat Fred City and his bosses in
Upper Canada should at least recall what I explained to them on the
phone in 2006 before you nasty bastards sent all the cops against me.
CORRECT???

GO FIGURE

http://secfilings.nasdaq.com/filingFrameset.asp?FileName=0000943374%2D03%2D000023%2Etxt&FilePath=%5C2003%5C01%5C24%5C&CoName=BROOKLINE+BANCORP+INC&FormType=8%2DK&RcvdDate=1%2F24%2F2003&pdf=

http://qslspolitics.blogspot.ca/2008/06/5-years-waiting-on-bank-fraud-payout.html


My concerns about the severe lack of INTEGRITY of Grant Thornton and
KPMG obviously had to do with their fraudulent auditing of the
Brookline Bancorp etc (Putnam Investments is now owned by Power Corp
BTW) while many Yankees, the USDOJ and the US Treasury Dept attacked
my family and I in order to cover up their many wrongs. Meanwhile the
cops and politicians in my nativeland did everything in ther power to
assist in the many wrongs for nearly 11 years and counting. N'esy Pas?

http://www.powercorporation.com/en/companies-group/great-west-lifeco-inc/profile/



http://www.nbsc-cvmnb.ca/nbsc/nbsc_content.jsp?nbscid=1273&pid=4

13 December 2012

Canadian Securities Regulators Publish Discussion Paper on Mutual Fund Fees

Toronto – The Canadian Securities Administrators (CSA) today published
for comment CSA Discussion Paper 81-407 Mutual Fund Fees, which
examines the mutual fund fee structure in Canada and identifies
potential investor protection issues arising from that structure. The
Discussion Paper sets out various topics for discussion in order to
evaluate the appropriate structure for Canada.

Canada’s mutual fund fees have been the subject of much debate in
recent years. Some research studies examining Canada’s mutual fund
fees, along with international reforms, have prompted greater interest
in reviewing the issue of mutual fund fees in Canada.

“Mutual funds are a key investment in the portfolios of many
Canadians,” said Bill Rice, Chair of the CSA and Chair and CEO of the
Alberta Securities Commission. “It is important that we look at
Canada’s mutual fund fee structure carefully in determining what
changes could or should be considered to enhance investor protection
and foster confidence in our market.”

To date, the CSA has focused its efforts on enhancing the transparency
of mutual fund fees and commissions through initiatives such as the
Point of Sale, and Cost Disclosure and Performance Reporting projects.
While these initiatives remain a priority on behalf of investors, the
CSA has determined that it is also necessary to consult extensively
with investors and market participants to explore whether further
issues remain.

The CSA welcomes feedback on the Discussion Paper, which can be found
on CSA members’ websites. The comment period is open until April 12,
2013. All comments will be considered in the CSA’s decision and next
steps, and also assist in the development of a roundtable the CSA
plans to hold with investors and industry participants in 2013.

The CSA, the council of the securities regulators of Canada’s
provinces and territories, coordinates and harmonizes regulation for
the Canadian capital markets.

– 30 –

For more information:
Wendy Connors-Beckett
New Brunswick Securities Commission
506 643-7745

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.Foran@gnb.ca, 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 n

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 and
theUS. These issues do not fall into the purvue of Detachment 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


----- Original Message -----
From: David Raymond Amos
To: warren.mcbeath@rcmp-grc.gc.ca
Sent: Friday, December 22, 2006 2:59 PM
Subject: Fw: Please press print on this attachment and give it to MacKay

----- Original Message -----
From: David Raymond Amos
To: ottawairc@state.gov
Sent: Friday, December 22, 2006 10:28 AM
Subject: Fw: Please press print on this attachment and give it to MacKay


----- Original Message -----
From: David Raymond Amos
To: doralee.smith@pwgsc.gc.ca ; MacKay.P@parl.gc.ca
Sent: Friday, December 22, 2006 9:49 AM
Subject: Please press print on this attachment and give it to MacKay

----- Original Message -----
From: David Raymond Amos
To: eamacleod@cbrmps.cape-breton.ns.ca
Sent: Thursday, December 21, 2006 5:26 PM
Subject: Fw: Press print on this attachment and call me a liar now Ms. Matthews


----- Original Message -----
From: David Raymond Amos
To: comartin.j@parl.gc.ca ; Brown.G@parl.gc.ca ; cotler.i@parl.gc.ca ;
Hawn.L@parl.gc.ca ; Menard.S@parl.gc.ca ;
scarpinelli@publicintegrity.org ; Norlock.R@parl.gc.ca ;
MacKenzie.D@parl.gc.ca ; Chan.R@parl.gc.ca ; Bevilacqua.M@parl.gc.ca ;
Batters.D@parl.gc.ca ; Siksay.B@parl.gc.ca ; Anderson.Da@parl.gc.ca ;
Komarnicki.E@parl.gc.ca
Cc: SECU@parl.gc.ca ; Breitkreuz.G@parl.gc.ca ; hollam@parl.gc.ca ;
arnold.zeman@psepc-sppcc.gc.ca ; Duceppe.G@parl.gc.ca ;
Harper.S@parl.gc.ca ; Layton.J@parl.gc.ca ; Godin.Y@parl.gc.ca ;
McDonough.A@parl.gc.ca ; Stoffer.P@parl.gc.ca ;
gemerson@tor.fasken.com ; garth@garth.ca ; rmooremp@nb.sympatico.ca ;
Matthews.B@parl.gc.ca ; smay@pattersonpalmer.ca ;
news957@rci.rogers.com ; Scott.A@parl.gc.ca ; zedp@parl.gc.ca ;
leo@primetimecrime.com ; crilf@ucalgary.ca ;
giuliano.zaccardelli@rcmp-grc.gc.ca ; rod.smith@rcmp-grc.gc.ca ;
stephane.vaillancourt@rcmp-grc.gc.ca ; cnichols@norwellpolice.com ;
info@pco-bcp.gc.ca ; Daniel.Conley@state.ma.us ; kmearn@mpdmilton.org
; Freeman.C@parl.gc.ca
Sent: Wednesday, December 13, 2006 3:52 PM
Subject: Fw: Press print on this attachment and call me a liar now Ms. Matthews

----- Original Message -----
From: David Raymond Amos
To: chanr0@parl.gc.ca
Sent: Wednesday, December 13, 2006 3:00 PM
Subject: Fw: Press print on this attachment and call me a liar now Ms. Matthews

----- Original Message -----
From: David Raymond Amos
To: johnforan.mla@nb.aibn.com ; Chris.Baker@gnb.ca ;
yvon.leblanc3@gnb.ca ; rachel.bard@gnb.ca ; Louise.LEMON@gnb.ca
Sent: Wednesday, December 13, 2006 2:47 PM
Subject: Fw: Press print on this attachment and call me a liar now Ms. Matthews

----- Original Message -----
From: David Raymond Amos
To: amacbeath@grantthornton.ca
Sent: Tuesday, December 12, 2006 2:09 PM
Subject: Fw: Press print on this attachment and call me a liar now Ms. Matthews

----- Original Message -----
From: David Raymond Amos
To: bmatthews@grantthornton.ca
Sent: Tuesday, December 12, 2006 1:32 PM
Subject: Press print on this attachment and call me a liar now Ms. Matthews

----- Original Message -----
From: David Raymond Amos
To: freemc@parl.gc.ca
Sent: Tuesday, December 12, 2006 1:00 PM
Subject: Fw: Angie press print on this attachment I know for a fact it works

----- Original Message -----
From: David Raymond Amos
To: pmartin@GrantThornton.ca
Sent: Tuesday, December 12, 2006 12:07 PM
Subject: Fw: Angie press print on this attachment I know for a fact it works

----- Original Message -----
From: David Raymond Amos
To: nraynard@GrantThornton.ca ; jdelaney@GrantThornton.ca ;
kferguson@GrantThornton.ca ; blewis@GrantThornton.ca
Cc: krieger@GrantThornton.ca ; hjaffer@GrantThornton.ca ;
rgodbold@GrantThornton.ca
Sent: Tuesday, December 12, 2006 11:59 AM
Subject: Fw: Angie press print on this attachment I know for a fact it works

----- Original Message -----
From: David Raymond Amos
To: gdent@GrantThornton.ca
Sent: Tuesday, December 12, 2006 10:04 AM
Subject: Fw: Angie press print on this attachment I know for a fact it works

----- Original Message -----
From: David Raymond Amos
To: ckennedy@notes.tcs.treas.gov
Sent: Monday, December 11, 2006 5:32 PM
Subject: Fw: Angie press print on this attachment I know for a fact it works

----- Original Message -----
From: David Raymond Amos
To: Raf.Souccar@rcmp-grc.gc.ca ; tim.killam@rcmp-grc.gc.ca ;
martin.blais@rcmp-grc.gc.ca ; harrir1@parl.gc.ca ; harrir@parl.gc.ca ;
peterj@parl.gc.ca
Sent: Monday, December 11, 2006 2:44 PM
Subject: Fw: Angie press print on this attachment I know for a fact it works

----- Original Message -----
From: David Raymond Amos
To: leo@primetimecrime.com ; gary.bignell@peelpolice.on.ca ; crilf@ucalgary.ca
Sent: Monday, December 11, 2006 12:17 PM
Subject: Fw: Angie press print on this attachment I know for a fact it works

----- Original Message -----
From: David Raymond Amos
To: angie.coss@cjad.com
Sent: Sunday, December 10, 2006 8:03 PM
Subject: Angie press print on this attachment I know for a fact it works

Just Dave
By Location Visit Detail
Visit 15,578
Domain Name (Unknown)
IP Address 198.235.184.# (Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants)
ISP Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants
Location Continent : North America
Country : Canada (Facts)
State/Region : Ontario
City : Toronto
Lat/Long : 43.6667, -79.4167 (Map)
Language English (U.S.) en-us
Operating System Microsoft WinXP
Browser Internet Explorer 7.0
Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 7.0; Windows NT 5.1; .NET CLR 1.1.4322;
.NET CLR 2.0.50727; .NET CLR 3.0.4506.2152; .NET CLR 3.5.30729)
Javascript version 1.3
Monitor Resolution : 1280 x 800
Color Depth : 32 bits
Time of Visit Nov 25 2011 11:41:25 am
Last Page View Nov 25 2011 11:41:25 am
Visit Length 0 seconds
Page Views 1
Referring URL http://www.bing.com/...avid amos&FORM=LENIE
Search Engine bing.com
Search Words david amos
Visit Entry Page http://davidamos.blogspot.com/
Visit Exit Page http://davidamos.blogspot.com/
Out Click
Time Zone UTC-5:00
Visitor's Time Nov 25 2011 10:41:25 am
Visit Number 15,578

----- Original Message -----
From: "David Amos" <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
To: <derrickrideout001@yahoo.ca>; <thedderson@gov.nl.ca>; "pm"
<pm@pm.gc.ca>; <premier@gov.nl.ca>; <pnoble@grantthornton.ca>;
"ggilbert" <ggilbert@grantthornton.ca>; "Minister.Industry"
<Minister.Industry@ic.gc.ca>; <sheila.fraser@oag-bvg.gc.ca>
Cc: "IgnatM" <IgnatM@parl.gc.ca>; "maritime_malaise"
<maritime_malaise@yahoo.ca>; <ducepg@parl.gc.ca>
Sent: Wednesday, April 13, 2011 2:00 PM
Subject: Tell me another one Mr Rideout after you talk to Brian
Crawley perhaps you PCs should consider returning my calls EH?


Representative of the Leader’s Office
Mr. Derrick Rideout
Principal Assistant to the Premier
Email: derrickrideout001@yahoo.ca

From: Derrick Rideout <derrickrideout001@yahoo.ca>
Date: Wed, 13 Apr 2011 07:33:19 -0700 (PDT)
Subject: Re: Fwd: RE Financial oversight the media, the SEC, Madoff,
Putnam and the Whistleblower @ 1-866-96-FINRA etc etc
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>

Don't know why i was sent this.

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Auto-reply from csheahan@pa-law.ca" <csheahan@pa-law.ca>
Date: Wed, 13 Apr 2011 10:22:37 -0400
Subject: Re: Fwd: RE Financial oversight the media, the SEC, Madoff,
Putnam and the Whistleblower @ 1-866-96-FINRA etc etc
To: david.raymond.amos@gmail.com

Please be advised that I will be away from the office from April 1,
2011 to April 11, 2011 (inclusive). If you require immediate
assistance, please contact Debbie White at 709-634-3136. Thank you,

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Williams, Norm" <nwilliams@grantthornton.ca>
Date: Wed, 13 Apr 2011 10:23:15 -0400
Subject: Out of Office AutoReply: RE Financial oversight the media,
the SEC, Madoff, Putnam and the Whistleblower @ 1-866-96-FINRA etc etc
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>

Thank you for contacting Grant Thornton LLP. Norm Williams, CA has
withdrawn from the firm effective December 31, 2010 and will be
transitioning his files to other professionals within the firm over
the next few weeks. If you have immediate needs please contact Bill
Budgell at bbudgell@GrantThornton.ca or (709) 778-8802 and we will be
pleased to service your needs.
This email is intended solely for the person or entity to which it is
addressed and may contain confidential and/or
privileged information. Any review, dissemination, copying, printing
or other use of this email by persons or entities other
than the addressee is prohibited. If you have received this email in
error, please contact the sender immediately and
delete the material from any computer.

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 13 Apr 2011 11:56:23 -0300
Subject: Fwd: RE Financial oversight the media, the SEC, Madoff,
Putnam and the Whistleblower @ 1-866-96-FINRA etc etc
To: pnoble@grantthornton.ca, ggilbert@grantthornton.ca
Cc: "Minister.Industry" <Minister.Industry@ic.gc.ca>, "sheila. fraser"
<sheila.fraser@oag-bvg.gc.ca>, ducepg <ducepg@parl.gc.ca>

http://www.ic.gc.ca/app/ccc/srch/nvgt.do?lang=eng&prtl=1&sbPrtl=&estblmntNo=123456240927&profile=cmpltPrfl&profileId=501&app=sold

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
Date: Wed, 13 Apr 2011 11:22:34 -0300
Subject: Fwd: RE Financial oversight the media, the SEC, Madoff,
Putnam and the Whistleblower @ 1-866-96-FINRA etc etc
To: pcparty@nf.aibn.com, derrickrideout001@yahoo.ca, jbabb@babblaw.ca,
cynthia_downey@hotmail.com, "ddexter@ns.sympatico.ca"
<ddexter@ns.sympatico.ca>, "David.ALWARD@gnb.ca" <David.ALWARD@gnb.ca>
Cc: nwilliams@grantthornton.ca, csheahan@pa-law.ca, abugden@pa-law.ca,
maritime_malaise <maritime_malaise@yahoo.com>

I just called agsin. Heres why

http://www.dunderdale2011.ca/our-team/executive-board/

Just Dave
By Location Visit Detail
Visit 13,631
Domain Name shawcable.net ? (Network)
IP Address 24.85.83.# (Shaw Communications)
ISP Shaw Communications
Location Continent : North America
Country : Canada (Facts)
State/Region : British Columbia
City : Vancouver
Lat/Long : 49.25, -123.1333 (Map)
Language English (U.S.) en-us
Operating System Macintosh MacOSX
Browser Safari 1.3
Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; U; Intel Mac OS X 10_6_5; en-us)
AppleWebKit/533.19.4 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/5.0.3 Safari/533.19.4
Javascript version 1.5
Monitor Resolution : 1152 x 720
Color Depth : 24 bits
Time of Visit Apr 12 2011 10:27:57 pm
Last Page View Apr 12 2011 10:27:57 pm
Visit Length 0 seconds
Page Views 1
Referring URL http://www.google.ca...ukTbOgLoj6sAPqtqj6DA
Search Engine google.ca
Search Words babblaw.ca
Visit Entry Page http://davidamos.blo...06/04/just-dave.html
Visit Exit Page http://davidamos.blo...06/04/just-dave.html
Out Click
Time Zone UTC-8:00
Visitor's Time Apr 12 2011 6:27:57 pm
Visit Number 13,631


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 18 Mar 2011 16:46:59 -0300
Subject: Fwd: RE Financial oversight the media, the SEC, Madoff,
Putnam and the Whistleblower @ 1-866-96-FINRA etc etc
To: mark@snellingcenter.org
Cc: maritime_malaise <maritime_malaise@yahoo.ca>

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 18 Mar 2011 16:16:39 -0300
Subject: Fwd: RE Financial oversight the media, the SEC, Madoff,
Putnam and the Whistleblower @ 1-866-96-FINRA etc etc
To: Harriet.Johnson@state.vt.us, michael.clasen@state.vt.us,
Harold@haroldalbrechtmp.ca, colleen@snellingcenter.org
Cc: "PATRICK. MURPHY" <PATRICK.MURPHY@dhs.gov>, "jacques.boucher"
<jacques.boucher@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 18 Mar 2011 15:35:28 -0300
Subject: Fwd: RE Financial oversight the media, the SEC, Madoff,
Putnam and the Whistleblower @ 1-866-96-FINRA etc etc
To: GovernorVT@state.vt.us, jeb.spaulding@state.vt.us
Cc: cmain2@bloomberg.net

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-03-11/hedge-fund-survey-popcorn-disclosure-energy-bill-compliance.html

Whats this? A possibly ethical Governor in Vermont? I tried talking to
his people Heres hoping that he emails me back because his help
suddenly got busy didn't ask for my number.

"Vermont’s governor, Democrat Peter Shumlin, has said he seeks to use
an escape clause in the law to create a government- run health system
that would cover every resident and put private insurers, including
Cigna Corp. (CI), out of business in that state."



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 18 Mar 2011 11:15:49 -0300
Subject: RE Financial oversight the media, the SEC, Madoff, Putnam and
the Whistleblower @ 1-866-96-FINRA etc etc
To: whistleblower@finra.org, michael_copeland@fortunemail.com,
letters@fortune.com, susan.pulliam@wsj.com, Russ.Stanton@latimes.com,
meredith.goodman@latimes.com, ninkster@navigantconsulting.com,
dgolub@sgtlaw.com, firstselectmanffld@town.fairfield.ct.us,
editor@whatsupfairfield.com, info@csiworld.org, jacques_poitras@cbc.ca
Cc: oig <oig@sec.gov>, "Dean.Buzza" <Dean.Buzza@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>,
"Fred. Pretorius" <Fred.Pretorius@gov.yk.ca>, "rick.hancox"
<rick.hancox@nbsc-cvmnb.ca>

http://qslspolitics.blogspot.com/2009/03/david-amos-to-wendy-olsen-on.html

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Olsen, Wendy (USANYS)" Wendy.Olsen@usdoj.gov
Date: Tue, 31 Mar 2009 09:21:08 -0400
Subject: RE: USANYS-MADOFF AND IMPORTANT INFORMATION FROM US
ATTORNEY'S OFFICE SDNY
To: David Amos david.raymond.amos@gmail.com, USANYS-MADOFF
USANYS.MADOFF@usdoj.gov, "Litt, Marc (USANYS)" Marc.Litt@usdoj.gov Cc:
webo webo@xplornet.com, vasilescua@sec.gov, friedmani@sec.gov,
krishnamurthyp@sec.gov

Thank you for your response.

Wendy Olsen
Victim Witness Coordinator

-----Original Message-----
From: David Amos [mailto:david.raymond.amos@gmail.com]
Sent: Tuesday, March 31, 2009 8:48 AM
To: USANYS-MADOFF; Olsen, Wendy (USANYS); Litt, Marc (USANYS)
Cc: webo; vasilescua@sec.gov; friedmani@sec.gov; krishnamurthyp@sec.gov
Subject: RE: USANYS-MADOFF AND IMPORTANT INFORMATION FROM US
ATTORNEY'S OFFICE SDNY

Ms Olsen

Thank you for keeping me informed.

Yes unseal all my emails with all their attachments immediately and
make certain that the US Attorny's office finally practices full
disclosurement as to who I am and what my concerns are as per the Rule
of Law within a purported democracy.

As you folks all well know I am not a shy man and I have done nothing
wrong. It appears to me that bureacratic people only use the right to
privacy of others when it suits their malicious ends in order to
protect their butts from impreacment, litigation and prosecution.

The people in the US Attorney's Office and the SEC etc are very well
aware that I protested immediately to everyone I could think of when
the instant I knew that my correspondences went under seal and Madoff
pled guilty so quickly and yet another cover up involing my actions
was under full steam. Everybody knows that.the US Government has been
trying to keep my concerns about the rampant public corruption a
secret for well over seven long years. However now that a lot of
people and their countries in general are losing a lot of money people
are beginning to remember just exactly who I am and what i did
beginning over seven years ago..

Veritas Vincit
David Raymond Amos
506 756 8687 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 506 756 8687
end_of_the_skype_highlighting

P.S. For the record Obviously I pounced on these Yankee bastards as
soon as the newsrag in Boston published this article on the web last
night.

http://www.bostonherald.com/business/general/view.bg?articleid=1162354&format=&page=2&listingType=biz#articleFull

Notice that Nester just like everyone else would not say my name? It
is because my issues surrounding both Madoff and are NOT marketing
timing They are as you all well know money laundering, fraud, forgery,
perjury, securites fraud, tax fraud, Bank fraud, illegal wiretappping
and Murder amongst other very serious crimes.


"SEC spokesman John Nester dismissed similarities between Markopolos
and Scannell's cases as "not a valid comparison."

He said the SEC determined the market-timing by Putnam clients that
Scannell reported didn't violate federal law. Nester said the SEC only
acted after another tipster alleged undisclosed market-timing by some
Putnam insiders.

Scannell, now a crusader for SEC reforms, isn't surprised the agency
is in hot water again.

Noting that several top SEC officials have gone on to high-paying
private-sector jobs, he believes hopes for future employment impact
investigations. "It's a distinct disadvantage to make waves before you
enter the private sector," Scannell said."


--- On Mon, 3/30/09, David Amos david.raymond.amos@gmail.com wrote:

From: David Amos david.raymond.amos@gmail.com
Subject: Fwd: USANYS-MADOFF IMPORTANT INFORMATION FROM US ATTORNEY'S
OFFICE SDNY
To: NesterJ@sec.gov, letterstoeditor@bostonherald.com, "oig"
oig@sec.gov, Thunter@tribune.com, david@davidmyles.com,
ddexter@ns.sympatico.ca, "Dan Fitzgerald" danf@danf.net
Cc: dsheehan@bakerlaw.com, dspelfogel@bakerlaw.com,
mc@whistleblowers.org, gkachroo@mccarter.com,
david.straube@accenture.com, gurdip.s.sahota@accenture.com,
benjamin_mcmurray@ao.uscourts.gov, bob_burke@ao.uscourts.gov
Date: Monday, March 30, 2009, 10:00 PM

Need I say BULLSHIT?

http://www.bostonherald.com/business/general/view.bg?articleid=1162354&format=&page=2&listingType=biz#articleFull

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos david.raymond.amos@gmail.com
Date: Mon, 30 Mar 2009 00:03:13 -0300
Subject: RE: USANYS-MADOFF IMPORTANT INFORMATION FROM US ATTORNEY'S OFFICE SDNY
To: Russ.Stanton@latimes.com, meredith.goodman@latimes.com,
ninkster@navigantconsulting.com, dgolub@sgtlaw.com
Cc: firstselectmanffld@town.fairfield.ct.us,
editor@whatsupfairfield.com, info@csiworld.org, jacques_poitras
jacques_poitras@cbc.ca

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
Date: Sun, 13 Mar 2011 16:45:07 -0300
Subject: RE Bradley Manning, Julian Assange, Wikileaks and Daniel Ellsberg etc
To: ellsbergpress@gmail.com, info@armycourtmartialdefense.com,
"birgittaj@althingi.is" <birgittaj@althingi.is>, "Julian Assange)"
<editor@wikileaks.org>, julian@sunshinepress.org,
julian@wikileaks.org, smari <smari@immi.is>
Cc: cindy@eff.org, clg_news@legitgov.org, maritime_malaise
<maritime_malaise@yahoo.ca>, Wayne_Boone@carleton.ca

From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 13 Jan 2011 23:33:32 -0400
Subject: Notice that I knew Assange before he got World Famous?
To: CLG_News <clg_news@legitgov.org>

From: "Julian Assange)" <editor@wikileaks.org>
Date: Sun, 7 Mar 2010 18:15:46 +0000 (GMT)
Subject: Al Jazeera on Iceland's plan for a press safe haven
To: david.raymond.amos@gmail.com

FYI: Al-Jazeera's take on Iceland's proposed media safe haven

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZbGiPjIE1pE

More info http://immi.is/

Julian Assange
Editor
WikiLeaks
http://wikileaks.org/




On 10/7/22, David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com> wrote:
> https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/duty-to-document-nb-1.6608066
>
> New Brunswick·CBC Investigates
> How to keep secrets from the public: Don't write anything down
>
>
> https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/demara-tax-court-appeals-abuse-1.6608659
>
> Judge slams CRA and Justice Department for 'egregious' conduct in epic
> Tax Court battle
>
>
> Decision likely to affect dozens of Canadians appealing gross
> negligence penalties from tax agency
>
> Jason Proctor · CBC News · Posted: Oct 07, 2022 4:00 AM PT |
>
>
> A tax Court judge has slammed the Canada Revenue Agency for failing to
> comply with pre-trial court rules and orders. (Chris Wattie/Reuters)
>
> A Tax Court judge has slammed the Canada Revenue Agency and the
> Justice Department for "egregious" conduct that threatened to deny
> three taxpayers the right to a fair trial in an epic battle over
> millions of dollars worth of tax penalties.
>
> In a scathing decision that could have widespread implications, Judge
> Patrick Boyle found the CRA committed an "intentional and deliberate"
> pattern of ignoring court rules to "frustrate" the right that all
> Canadians have to get a full picture of an opponent's case before
> heading to court.
>
> The three taxpayers — a Manitoba psychiatrist, an Ontario nurse and a
> B.C. Air Canada pilot — were appealing three million dollars' worth of
> gross negligence penalties levelled against them, for rejected returns
> filed through a pair of disgraced tax consultancy firms.
>
> But after years of pre-trial delays resulting from the CRA's repeated
> failure to comply with his orders, Boyle took the extraordinary
> measure of allowing the appeals without having a trial on the merits
> of the case this week, to "protect the integrity of the judicial
> process."
>
> Canada Revenue Agency accused of blaming victims as 'gross
> negligence' cases drag on
>
> "I find the [CRA's] egregious approach to pre-trial discovery in these
> appeals to prejudice all three appellants who have been denied," Boyle
> wrote in his ruling.
>
> "These abuses of the discovery process ... have caused considerable
> delay and expense to three Appellants in respect of their appeals.
> They have also led to an inefficient use of public resources financed
> by all Canadians."
> 'With great power comes great responsibility'
>
> Boyle's decision is the latest chapter in a saga that has seen
> hundreds of Canadians slapped with gross negligence penalties after
> filing returns through DeMara Consulting and Fiscal Arbitrators.
>
> The principals of both companies were jailed for tax fraud for
> promoting schemes Boyle says "resemble in many respects the
> de-taxation practices of sovereign citizens, though with less of the
> non-fiscal cultish aspects."
> Hundreds of Canadians filed appeals in Tax Court after the CRA
> levelled gross negligence penalties against them in association with
> returns filed through a pair of disgraced tax consultancies. (Minichka
> / Shutterstock)
>
> According to court records, B.C.-based DeMara's scheme was called "the
> remedy" and essentially involved claiming personal expenditures and
> debts as expenses and capital losses for a non-existent business.
>
> Canada's Income Tax Act gives CRA the ability to levy penalties
> against Canadians who make false statements and omissions on their tax
> returns, either knowingly or under circumstances that amount to gross
> negligence.
>
> The penalties in the DeMara and Fiscal Arbitrators case have reached
> into the millions, leading to a huge backlog of appeals that have been
> making their way through tax court since 2013.
>
> Tax agency obtains 'jeopardy order' for debt from Downton
> Abbey-loving billionaire
>
> Jeff Pniowsky, the Winnipeg-based lawyer who represented all three
> plaintiffs, said fighting a decade-long court battle with the threat
> of financial ruin hanging over their heads has cost his clients "years
> of happiness."
>
> "This was fundamentally a case about justice. Justice for the
> taxpayers who had to endure years of gamesmanship and chicanery by one
> of Canada's most powerful institutions: the CRA," Pniowsky told the
> CBC.
>
> Pniowsky, who has four children, said Boyle's ruling reminded him of a
> line from one of his family's favourite superhero movies: Spiderman.
>
> "With great power comes great responsibility," he said.
>
> "It's clear from this case that the CRA and the Justice Department
> have lost sight of that common-sense principle."
> 'Unprepared, unco-operative or untruthful'
>
> Boyle's detailed 53-page ruling goes through the history of the case,
> and the circumstances that led to each of the orders he found the CRA
> later ignored.
>
> The fight centred on pre-trial discovery, and the rights of the
> taxpayers to examine a CRA representative or "nominee" who was
> "knowledgeable" about their case.
> The CRA has the ability to levy gross negligence penalties against
> taxpayers who lie on their income tax forms. The penalties have been
> devastating for some. (Graeme Roy/The Canadian Press)
>
> The first person the agency put forward was "unaware of any criminal
> investigation and had not informed himself" about any involvement of
> the CRA's criminal investigators in the case.
>
> The second nominee was a lead criminal investigator who "did not even
> inform himself ... whether any investigation was undertaken of any of
> these three appellants."
>
> At one point, Boyle called the investigator "thoroughly unprepared,
> unco-operative or untruthful."
>
> The judge said the CRA and its lawyers twisted the words of an order
> that boiled down to a demand for the agency to hand over any documents
> relating to any investigations that touched on the three appellants.
>
> "I variously described this as 'outrageously misleading and
> inappropriate,' 'this might be contemptuous,' ... 'deeply, deeply
> disturbed,' 'highly inappropriate' and 'I don't think you were
> reasonably mistaken,'" Boyle wrote.
>
> It is an ex-reference: B.C. judge removes 'dead parrot' joke from
> class-action ruling
>
> The judge also zeroed in on the CRA's failure to tell the defence that
> the second page of a three-page "Investigation Abort Report" against
> one of the plaintiffs had gone missing. The report was handed over in
> the middle of hundreds of documents. The missing page explained why a
> criminal investigation was dropped.
>
> The CRA claimed it had no "specific obligation" to point out missing
> pages — a position Boyle found "shocking."
>
> "Courts do not consider discovery to be a game, and it is particularly
> disappointing when the Crown is the offending party," the judge said.
>
> He said the omission gave credence to the idea the CRA "is hiding
> something from them, from the Court and from Canadians about how these
> investigations have been conducted.
> 'Stop, or I'll yell stop again!'
>
> The judge pointed out that the CRA is "represented by the Department
> of Justice which is essentially Canada's largest national law firm and
> employs a large number of tax litigation lawyers who are wholly
> familiar" with the court's rules.
>
> Boyle said making yet another order for compliance would be pointless.
> The judge compared his battle to get the CRA to comply with his orders
> to a skit by Monty Python, whose troupe members are seen here from
> left to right: John Cleese, Terry Gilliam, Terry Jones, Graham
> Chapman, Michael Palin and Eric Idle. (PBS/Python (Monty) Pictures
> Ltd./The Associated Press)
>
> He was reminded of a skit by legendary English comedy troupe Monty Python.
>
> "To make such an order would conjure up memories of the Pythonesque
> skit of the British bobby of another era yelling at a scofflaw: 'Stop!
> Stop!—Stop, or I'll yell 'stop' again!'" the judge wrote.
>
> The three appeals were supposed to be the lead plaintiffs for a much
> larger group of appeals. The judge said those people will have to
> speak with their lawyers to determine how the ruling applies to them.
>
> Pniowsky says he believes the decision is the first of its kind
> against the CRA. He predicted fallout both in other DeMara and Fiscal
> Arbitrators cases and in the wider world of tax litigation.
>
> "Intoxicated with a sense of moral righteousness, the government
> apparently determined or acted like these Canadians were not worthy of
> basic procedural rights, thereby committing the same wrongs they
> accused the taxpayers of: gross neglect, wilful blindness and at times
> deceptive conduct," he said.
> ABOUT THE AUTHOR
> Jason Proctor
>
> @proctor_jason
>
> Jason Proctor is a reporter in British Columbia for CBC News and has
> covered the B.C. courts and the justice system extensively.
>
> CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices
>
>
> https://www.tdslaw.com/lawyers/jeff-pniowsky/
>
> Jeff Pniowsky
>
> Jeff focuses his practice in the areas of tax litigation and dispute
> resolution in the tax audit and appeals process, tax advisory
> services, and complex commercial litigation.
>
> (204) 934-2586
> jdp@tdslaw.com
>
> Winnipeg
> (204) 934-0586
>
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
> Date: Sun, 7 Feb 2021 23:52:35 -0400
> Subject: Diane.Lebouthillier and her old buddy John Ossowski should
> remember my email and a couple of their own documents EH Madame
> Desmond and Christian Lorenz ?
> To: "Diane.Lebouthillier" <Diane.Lebouthillier@cra-arc.gc.ca>,
> John.Ossowski@cbsa-asfc.gc.ca, megan.maloney@crtc.gc.ca,
> bell.regulatory@bell.ca, martine.turcotte@bell.ca, Newsroom
> <Newsroom@globeandmail.com>, Nathalie Sturgeon
> <sturgeon.nathalie@brunswicknews.com>, "Nathalie.Drouin"
> <Nathalie.Drouin@justice.gc.ca>, Norman Traversy
> <traversy.n@gmail.com>, jswaisland@landingslaw.com,
> Andrew.LeFrank@cbsa-asfc.gc.ca, Andrew.Baumberg@cas-satj.gc.ca
> Cc: motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>, "Ellen.Desmond"
> <Ellen.Desmond@crtc.gc.ca>, Christian.Lorenz@cbsa-asfc.gc.ca,
> Allison.St-Jean@tc.gc.ca, media@tc.gc.ca, hc.media.sc@canada.ca,
> mary-liz.power@canada.ca, media@cbsa-asfc.gc.ca,
> Chris.Lorenz@cbsa-asfc.gc.ca, "christopher.rupar"
> <christopher.rupar@justice.gc.ca>
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: martine.turcotte@bell.ca
> To: motomaniac_02186@hotmail.com
> Cc: bcecomms@bce.ca ; W-Five@ctv.ca
> Sent: Thursday, August 19, 2004 9:28 AM
> Subject: RE: I am curious
>
> Mr. Amos, I confirm that I have received your documentation. There is
> no need to send us a hard copy. As you have said yourself, the
> documentation is very voluminous and after 3 days, we are still in the
> process of printing it. I have asked one of my lawyers to review it
> in my absence and report back to me upon my return in the office. We
> will then provide you with a reply.
>
> Martine Turcotte
> Chief Legal Officer / Chef principal du service juridique
> BCE Inc. / Bell Canada
> 1000 de La Gauchetière ouest, bureau 3700
> Montréal (Qc) H3B 4Y7
>
> Tel: (514) 870-4637
> Fax: (514) 870-4877
> email: martine.turcotte@bell.ca
>
> Executive Assistant / Assistante à la haute direction: Diane Valade
> Tel: (514) 870-4638
> email: diane.valade@bell.ca
>
>
>
> A copy of this letter and all related correspondence will be added to
> the public record of the proceeding.
>
> If you have any questions or concerns, please feel free to contact me
> at (613) 697-4027 or megan.maloney@crtc.gc.ca.
>
> In the meantime, the Commission is currently continuing its review of
> this costs application.
>
> Yours Sincerely,
>
> originally signed by
>
> Megan Maloney
> Legal Counsel
>
> PIAC Welcomes New Board Members
>
> Adds Expertise in Telecommunications, Broadcasting and Class Actions
>
> OTTAWA – The Public Interest Advocacy Centre (PIAC), today announced
> the recent election of four new directors to its Board, all experts in
> either telecommunications, broadcasting or class actions:
>
> Konrad von Finckenstein is a lawyer and consultant based in
> Ottawa. He was previously Chair of the Canadian Radio-television and
> Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), an Honourable Justice of the
> Federal Court of Canada and the Commissioner of Competition at the
> Competition Bureau of Canada. In addition, he has held senior posts in
> the Government of Canada in positions related to international trade,
> telecommunications, competition and electronic commerce. Mr. von
> Finckenstein has been elected as PIAC’s Chair of the Board.
> Suzanne Lamarre is a lawyer and engineer with the firm of
> Therrien, Couture and is a former Commissioner of the CRTC. Maitre
> Lamarre works in the areas of telecommunications, radiocommunications
> and broadcasting law as a strategic advisor on regulatory and
> governmental matters at both the national and international level.
> Monica Auer is a lawyer and the Executive Director of Canada’s
> Forum for Research & Policy in Communications (FRPC), a non-partisan
> organization focused on Canada’s communications system. She previously
> worked at the CRTC and the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC).
> Ms. Auer has been elected as PIAC’s Vice-Chair.
> Jonathan Schachter is a Toronto based lawyer with Sotos LLP, with
> his practice areas including class actions, consumer protection
> litigation, competition and price fixing, privacy litigation,
> professional liability litigation, and trademarks and intellectual
> property litigation and arbitration.
>
> “PIAC’s extensive work on behalf of consumers before the CRTC requires
> the utmost guidance and insight,” said John Lawford, Executive
> Director and General Counsel of PIAC. “We are therefore thrilled to
> add to our Board persons with unparalleled experience to guide our
> communications advocacy, as well as an expert in consumer class
> actions as this sector becomes more litigious,” he added.
>
> PIAC is a federally incorporated not-for-profit and registered charity
> that advocates for consumer interests, and in particular vulnerable
> consumer interests, in the provision of important public services.
> PIAC is known for its representation of consumer, low-income and
> seniors groups before the CRTC, arguing for better services, more
> choice and consumer protection for customers of Internet, wireless,
> telephone and broadcasting services.
>
> For more information, please contact:
>
> John Lawford
> Executive Director and General Counsel
> Public Interest Advocacy Centre (PIAC)
> (613) 562-4002 ×25
>
>> http://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2017/02/re-fatca-nafta-tpp-etc-attn-president.html
>>
>> Tuesday, 14 February 2017
>>
>> RE FATCA, NAFTA & TPP etc ATTN President Donald J. Trump I just got
>> off the phone with your lawyer Mr Cohen (646-853-0114) Why does he lie
>> to me after all this time???
>>
>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>> From: Michael Cohen <mcohen@trumporg.com>
>> Date: Tue, 14 Feb 2017 14:15:14 +0000
>> Subject: Automatic reply: RE FATCA ATTN Pierre-Luc.Dusseault I just
>> called and left a message for you
>> To: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
>>
>> Effective January 20, 2017, I have accepted the role as personal
>> counsel to President Donald J. Trump. All future emails should be
>> directed to mdcohen212@gmail.com and all future calls should be
>> directed to 646-853-0114.
>> ________________________________
>> This communication is from The Trump Organization or an affiliate
>> thereof and is not sent on behalf of any other individual or entity.
>> This email may contain information that is confidential and/or
>> proprietary. Such information may not be read, disclosed, used,
>> copied, distributed or disseminated except (1) for use by the intended
>> recipient or (2) as expressly authorized by the sender. If you have
>> received this communication in error, please immediately delete it and
>> promptly notify the sender. E-mail transmission cannot be guaranteed
>> to be received, secure or error-free as emails could be intercepted,
>> corrupted, lost, destroyed, arrive late, incomplete, contain viruses
>> or otherwise. The Trump Organization and its affiliates do not
>> guarantee that all emails will be read and do not accept liability for
>> any errors or omissions in emails. Any views or opinions presented in
>> any email are solely those of the author and do not necessarily
>> represent those of The Trump Organization or any of its
>> affiliates.Nothing in this communication is intended to operate as an
>> electronic signature under applicable law.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>> From: "Min.Mail / Courrier.Min (CRA/ARC)" <PABMINMAILG@cra-arc.gc.ca>
>> Date: Wed, 24 May 2017 13:10:52 +0000
>> Subject: Your various correspondence about abusive tax schemes -
>> 2017-02631
>> To: "motomaniac333@gmail.com" <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
>>
>> Mr. David Raymond Amos
>> motomaniac333@gmail.com
>>
>>
>> Dear Mr. Amos:
>>
>> Thank you for your various correspondence about abusive tax schemes,
>> and for your understanding regarding the delay of this response.
>>
>> This is an opportunity for me to address your concerns about the way
>> the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) deals with aggressive tax planning,
>> tax avoidance, and tax evasion by targeting individuals and groups
>> that promote schemes intended to avoid payment of tax. It is also an
>> opportunity for me to present the Government of Canada’s main
>> strategies for ensuring fairness for all taxpayers.
>>
>> The CRA’s mission is to preserve the integrity of Canada’s tax system,
>> and it is taking concrete and effective action to deal with abusive
>> tax schemes. Through federal budget funding in 2016 and 2017, the
>> government has committed close to $1 billion in cracking down on tax
>> evasion and combatting tax avoidance at home and through the use of
>> offshore transactions. This additional funding is expected to generate
>> federal revenues of $2.6 billion over five years for Budget 2016, and
>> $2.5 billion over five years for Budget 2017.
>>
>> More precisely, the CRA is cracking down on tax cheats by hiring more
>> auditors, maintaining its underground economy specialist teams,
>> increasing coverage of aggressive goods and service tax/harmonized
>> sales tax planning, increasing coverage of multinational corporations
>> and wealthy individuals, and taking targeted actions aimed at
>> promoters of abusive tax schemes.
>>
>> On the offshore front, the CRA continues to develop tools to improve
>> its focus on high‑risk taxpayers. It is also considering changes to
>> its Voluntary Disclosures Program following the first set of program
>> recommendations received from an independent Offshore Compliance
>> Advisory Committee. In addition, the CRA is leading international
>> projects to address the base erosion and profit shifting initiative of
>> the G20 and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
>> Development, and is collaborating with treaty partners to address the
>> Panama Papers leaks.
>>
>> These actions are evidence of the government’s commitment to
>> protecting tax fairness. The CRA has strengthened its intelligence and
>> technical capacities for the early detection of abusive tax
>> arrangements and deterrence of those who participate in them. To
>> ensure compliance, it has increased the number of actions aimed at
>> promoters who use illegal schemes. These measures include increased
>> audits of such promoters, improved information gathering, criminal
>> investigations where warranted, and better communication with
>> taxpayers.
>>
>> To deter potential taxpayer involvement in these schemes, the CRA is
>> increasing notifications and warnings through its communications
>> products. It also seeks partnerships with tax preparers, accountants,
>> and community groups so that they can become informed observers who
>> can educate their clients.
>>
>> The CRA will assess penalties against promoters and other
>> representatives who make false statements involving illegal tax
>> schemes. The promotion of tax schemes to defraud the government can
>> lead to criminal investigations, fingerprinting, criminal prosecution,
>> court fines, and jail time.
>>
>> Between April 1, 2011, and March 31, 2016, the CRA’s criminal
>> investigations resulted in the conviction of 42 Canadian taxpayers for
>> tax evasion with links to money and assets held offshore. In total,
>> the $34 million in evaded taxes resulted in court fines of $12 million
>> and 734 months of jail time.
>>
>> When deciding to pursue compliance actions through the courts, the CRA
>> consults the Department of Justice Canada to choose an appropriate
>> solution. Complex tax-related litigation is costly and time consuming,
>> and the outcome may be unsuccessful. All options to recover amounts
>> owed are considered.
>>
>> More specifically, in relation to the KPMG Isle of Man tax avoidance
>> scheme, publicly available court records show that it is through the
>> CRA’s efforts that the scheme was discovered. The CRA identified many
>> of the participants and continues to actively pursue the matter. The
>> CRA has also identified at least 10 additional tax structures on the
>> Isle of Man, and is auditing taxpayers in relation to these
>> structures.
>>
>> To ensure tax fairness, the CRA commissioned an independent review in
>> March 2016 to determine if it had acted appropriately concerning KPMG
>> and its clients. In her review, Ms. Kimberley Brooks, Associate
>> Professor and former Dean of the Schulich School of Law at Dalhousie
>> University, examined the CRA’s operational processes and decisions in
>> relation to the KPMG offshore tax structure and its efforts to obtain
>> the names of all taxpayers participating in the scheme. Following this
>> review, the report, released on May 5, 2016, concluded that the CRA
>> had acted appropriately in its management of the KPMG Isle of Man
>> file. The report found that the series of compliance measures the CRA
>> took were in accordance with its policies and procedures. It was
>> concluded that the procedural actions taken on the KPMG file were
>> appropriate given the facts of this particular case and were
>> consistent with the treatment of taxpayers in similar situations. The
>> report concluded that actions by CRA employees were in accordance with
>> the CRA’s Code of Integrity and Professional Conduct. There was no
>> evidence of inappropriate interaction between KPMG and the CRA
>> employees involved in the case.
>>
>> Under the CRA’s Code of Integrity and Professional Conduct, all CRA
>> employees are responsible for real, apparent, or potential conflicts
>> of interests between their current duties and any subsequent
>> employment outside of the CRA or the Public Service of Canada.
>> Consequences and corrective measures play an important role in
>> protecting the CRA’s integrity.
>>
>> The CRA takes misconduct very seriously. The consequences of
>> misconduct depend on the gravity of the incident and its repercussions
>> on trust both within and outside of the CRA. Misconduct can result in
>> disciplinary measures up to dismissal.
>>
>> All forms of tax evasion are illegal. The CRA manages the Informant
>> Leads Program, which handles leads received from the public regarding
>> cases of tax evasion across the country. This program, which
>> coordinates all the leads the CRA receives from informants, determines
>> whether there has been any non-compliance with tax law and ensures
>> that the information is examined and conveyed, if applicable, so that
>> compliance measures are taken. This program does not offer any reward
>> for tips received.
>>
>> The new Offshore Tax Informant Program (OTIP) has also been put in
>> place. The OTIP offers financial compensation to individuals who
>> provide information related to major cases of offshore tax evasion
>> that lead to the collection of tax owing. As of December 31, 2016, the
>> OTIP had received 963 calls and 407 written submissions from possible
>> informants. Over 218 taxpayers are currently under audit based on
>> information the CRA received through the OTIP.
>>
>> With a focus on the highest-risk sectors nationally and
>> internationally and an increased ability to gather information, the
>> CRA has the means to target taxpayers who try to hide their income.
>> For example, since January 2015, the CRA has been collecting
>> information on all international electronic funds transfers (EFTs) of
>> $10,000 or more ending or originating in Canada. It is also adopting a
>> proactive approach by focusing each year on four jurisdictions that
>> raise suspicion. For the Isle of Man, the CRA audited 3,000 EFTs
>> totalling $860 million over 12 months and involving approximately 800
>> taxpayers. Based on these audits, the CRA communicated with
>> approximately 350 individuals and 400 corporations and performed 60
>> audits.
>>
>> In January 2017, I reaffirmed Canada’s important role as a leader for
>> tax authorities around the world in detecting the structures used for
>> aggressive tax planning and tax evasion. This is why Canada works
>> daily with the Joint International Tax Shelter Information Centre
>> (JITSIC), a network of tax administrations in over 35 countries. The
>> CRA participates in two expert groups within the JITSIC and leads the
>> working group on intermediaries and proponents. This ongoing
>> collaboration is a key component of the CRA’s work to develop strong
>> relationships with the international community, which will help it
>> refine the world-class tax system that benefits all Canadians.
>>
>> The CRA is increasing its efforts and is seeing early signs of
>> success. Last year, the CRA recovered just under $13 billion as a
>> result of its audit activities on the domestic and offshore fronts.
>> Two-thirds of these recoveries are the result of its audit efforts
>> relating to large businesses and multinational companies.
>>
>> But there is still much to do, and additional improvements and
>> investments are underway.
>>
>> Tax cheats are having a harder and harder time hiding. Taxpayers who
>> choose to promote or participate in malicious and illegal tax
>> strategies must face the consequences of their actions. Canadians
>> expect nothing less. I invite you to read my most recent statement on
>> this matter at canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/news/2017/03/
>> statement_from_thehonourabledianelebouthillierministerofnational.
>>
>> Thank you for taking the time to write. I hope the information I have
>> provided is helpful.
>>
>> Sincerely,
>>
>>
>> The Honourable Diane Lebouthillier
>> Minister of National Revenue
>>
>>
>

 

 

Methinks Tamara Lich's lawyers are still playing games as they beg for more money N'esy Pas Frank Au?

David Amos

<david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
Tue, Jul 25, 2023 at 3:53 PM
To: lawrence@gghlawyers.ca, ahelmer@postmedia.com, dan@ottawalife.com, "david.fraser" <david.fraser@mcinnescooper.com>, David.Fraser@cbc.ca, premier@ontario.ca, stefanos.karatopis@gmail.com, sheilagunnreid@gmail.com, eric@gghlawyers.ca, "natasha.calvinho@gmail.com, Moiz.Karimjee@ontario.ca, \"Bill.Hogan\" <Bill.Hogan@gnb.ca>, \"Mark.Blakely\" <Mark.Blakely@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, \"Mike.Comeau\" <Mike.Comeau@gnb.ca>, Norman Traversy <traversy.n@gmail.com>, Newsroom <Newsroom@globeandmail.com>, livefromtheshed2022@gmail.com, meghan.grant@cbc.ca, lexharvey@thestar.ca, darren.major@cbc.ca, blilley@postmedia.com, brigitte.bureau@radio-canada.ca, kingpatrick278 <kingpatrick278@gmail.com>, \"freedomreport.ca\" <freedomreport.ca@gmail.com>, media <media@veterans4freedom.ca>, pm <pm@pm.gc.ca>, \"Katie.Telford\" <Katie.Telford@pmo-cpm.gc.ca>, rob.stewart@ps-sp.gc.ca, \"Nathalie.G.Drouin\" <Nathalie.G.Drouin@pco-bcp.gc.ca>, marcel.beaudin@opp.ca, jeffery.hutchinson@pco-bcp.gc.ca, Thomas.Carrique@opp.ca, pat.morris@opp.ca, \"Brenda.Lucki\" <Brenda.Lucki@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, jdp@tdslaw.com, joel@joelharden.ca, \"pierre.poilievre\" <pierre.poilievre@parl.gc.ca>, shantona@papechaudhury.com, leonj@bennettjones.com, edann@edlaw.ca, gpoliquin@ovcounsel.com, pierrette.ringuette@sen.parl.gc.ca, Patrick.Brazeau@sen.parl.gc.ca, george.furey@sen.parl.gc.ca, larry.campbell@sen.parl.gc.ca, Bev.Busson@sen.parl.gc.ca, nrodriguez@conwaylitigation.ca, mduckett@dsscrimlaw.com, srp@tdslaw.com, mtsurumi@legalanalysis.ca, tcurry <tcurry@litigate.com>, kris.austin@gnb.ca, rokaku8@gmail.com, patrickking <patrickking@canada-unity.com>, jcarpay@jccf.ca, traversy.n@gmail.com, kingpatrick278 <kingpatrick278@gmail.com>, nsinvestigators <nsinvestigators@gmail.com>, \"rob.moore" <rob.moore@parl.gc.ca>, cvangeyn@theccf.ca, christopher.rupar@justice.gc.ca, dominic.cardy@gnb.ca, rick <rick@petersoncapital.ca>
Cc: Frank.Au@ontario.ca, "Marco.Mendicino" <Marco.Mendicino@parl.gc.ca>, mcu <mcu@justice.gc.ca>, motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>, Rolanda.Ahadjitse@ontario.ca, olivia.khalil@ontario.ca, premier <premier@gov.ab.ca>, Office of the Premier <scott.moe@gov.sk.ca>, PREMIER <PREMIER@gov.ns.ca>, premier <premier@gov.pe.ca>, premier <premier@gov.bc.ca>, premier <premier@gov.nl.ca>, "blaine.higgs" <blaine.higgs@gnb.ca>, "fin.minfinance-financemin.fin" <fin.minfinance-financemin.fin@canada.ca>


I see Patty Baby King is still having fun too

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FwqQz0DV_tE&ab_channel=TheRealPatKing-TruthSeeker

 Pat King - Discussion (please share this video)
The Real Pat King - Truth Seeker
1.38K subscribers
1,472 views  Jul 8, 2023
Pat King discussion
The Real Pat King - Truth Seeker
1.38K subscribers

30 Comments

@davidamos7114
HMMM


https://www.thedemocracyfund.ca/lawyer_tamara_lich_secures_victory_ontario_court_justice


Lawyer for Tamara Lich secures procedural victory in Ontario Court of Justice
TDF’s Legal Team

Written by TDF’s Legal Team
July 21, 2023
Tamara Ontario win

The prosecution agrees to provide evidence and a witness list after
Lich brings a motion for particulars.

TORONTO: Tamara Lich's lawyer appeared before the Ontario Court of
Justice Tuesday seeking particulars of the alleged crimes committed by
his client during the Freedom Convoy protests. The motion concluded
with the prosecution agreeing to provide a full list of witnesses and
evidence by August 1, 2023.

The concept of particulars is similar to but distinct from disclosure.
TDF's litigation director, Alan Honner, explains: "The prosecution has
a duty to fully disclose all relevant evidence to the accused, but
particulars need only be disclosed if a judge is satisfied that it is
necessary for a fair trial." According to Honner, particulars might be
ordered where a crime can be committed in different ways, where
disclosure is broad, or where there are multiple co-accused.

Tamara's defence is being crowd-funded by The Democracy Fund. She has
retained Lawrence Greenspon, who is one of the best-respected lawyers
in Ottawa. Her trial is expected to last three weeks and is scheduled
to begin in Ottawa on September 5, 2023.

To assist with Tamara's case, please make a donation on this page.
Donations are eligible to receive a charitable tax receipt.

About The Democracy Fund:

Founded in 2021, The Democracy Fund (TDF) is a Canadian charity
dedicated to constitutional rights, advancing education and relieving
poverty. TDF promotes constitutional rights through litigation and
public education. TDF supports an access to justice initiative for
Canadians whose civil liberties have been infringed by government
lockdowns and other public policy responses to the pandemic.


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 17 Feb 2023 11:22:44 -0400
Subject: Frank Au can never deny that I gave Commissioner Paul Rouleau
the benefit of my doubt before his report goes public
To: Frank.Au@ontario.ca, "Marco.Mendicino"
<Marco.Mendicino@parl.gc.ca>, mcu <mcu@justice.gc.ca>, pm
<pm@pm.gc.ca>, "Katie.Telford" <Katie.Telford@pmo-cpm.gc.ca>,
rob.stewart@ps-sp.gc.ca, "Nathalie.G.Drouin"
<Nathalie.G.Drouin@pco-bcp.gc.ca>, marcel.beaudin@opp.ca,
jeffery.hutchinson@pco-bcp.gc.ca, Thomas.Carrique@opp.ca,
pat.morris@opp.ca, "Brenda.Lucki" <Brenda.Lucki@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>,
jdp@tdslaw.com, joel@joelharden.ca, premier <premier@ontario.ca>,
"pierre.poilievre" <pierre.poilievre@parl.gc.ca>,
shantona@papechaudhury.com, leonj@bennettjones.com, edann@edlaw.ca,
gpoliquin@ovcounsel.com, pierrette.ringuette@sen.parl.gc.ca,
Patrick.Brazeau@sen.parl.gc.ca, george.furey@sen.parl.gc.ca,
larry.campbell@sen.parl.gc.ca, Bev.Busson@sen.parl.gc.ca,
nrodriguez@conwaylitigation.ca, mduckett@dsscrimlaw.com,
srp@tdslaw.com, mtsurumi@legalanalysis.ca, tcurry
<tcurry@litigate.com>, kris.austin@gnb.ca, rokaku8@gmail.com,
patrickking <patrickking@canada-unity.com>, jcarpay@jccf.ca,
traversy.n@gmail.com, kingpatrick278 <kingpatrick278@gmail.com>,
nsinvestigators <nsinvestigators@gmail.com>, "rob.moore"
<rob.moore@parl.gc.ca>, cvangeyn@theccf.ca,
christopher.rupar@justice.gc.ca
Cc: motomaniac333 <motomaniac333@gmail.com>, dominic.cardy@gnb.ca,
rick <rick@petersoncapital.ca>

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Au, Frank (MAG)" <Frank.Au@ontario.ca>
Date: Tue, 25 Oct 2022 20:27:39 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: Re Urgent Consultation
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>

I am away on a secondment until Spring 2023, and do not have access to
emails. If you require assistance, please call 416.326.4600 and ask
for the Duty Crown. Thank you.


https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/public-order-emergency-commission-players-awol-1.6750507

As Emergencies Act report tabled, key witnesses have moved on

Public Order Emergency Commission to release findings later today
Alistair Steele · CBC News · Posted: Feb 17, 2023 5:00 AM AST |

Commissioner Paul Rouleau listens to counsel question a witness during
hearings in Ottawa on Nov. 4, 2022. The commission will table its
final report in Parliament later today. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian
Press)

As the Public Order Emergency Commission (POEC) prepares to release
its highly anticipated report into last winter's convoy protests, many
of the witnesses from the City of Ottawa and the Ottawa Police Service
who testified last fall have either left or moved to new roles.

On Thursday, the commission announced it would make its final report
public later today after tabling it in Parliament.

The Canadian Press reported the commission had requested, and been
granted, an extension to the original Feb. 6 deadline for submitting
its final report to the government.

The deadline for tabling the report in Parliament — Feb. 20 — remained
intact, however. That meant the commission's findings and
recommendations had to be made public no later than Monday, the Family
Day statutory holiday in Ontario.

(The timeline set out by the Emergencies Act requires that the report
be submitted to Parliament and released to the public within 360 days
of the emergency declaration being revoked, which occurred on Feb. 23,
2022.)
A politician at a desk, as seen from the middle of the audience.
Former Ottawa Mayor Jim Watson testifies before the Public Order
Emergency Commission on Oct. 18, 2022. Watson did not run for
re-election. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)
Mayor, councillors gone

The commission heard from 76 witnesses over six weeks of public
testimony, from Oct. 14 until the prime minister's appearance on Nov.
25. Of those, seven were either elected officials or senior
bureaucrats with the City of Ottawa, and five more were senior members
of the Ottawa Police Service (OPS).

None of the elected officials from the city who testified — former
mayor Jim Watson, former councillor and police services board chair
Diane Deans, and former councillors Mathieu Fleury and Catherine
McKenney — remains in office. Of those, only McKenney ran for
re-election last fall, but failed in their bid to become mayor.

Of the other city officials who testified, only Kim Ayotte, Ottawa's
general manager of emergency and protective services, remains in the
same job.

Former city manager Steve Kanellakos, who testified about his efforts
to broker a deal between police and the protesters, resigned amid
controversy on Nov. 28, just two days before the release of a damning
report on Ottawa's troubled LRT project.

Watson's former chief of staff Serge Arpin left with his boss,
customary practice among political staffers.
A police officer sits on a row of chairs.
Deputy Chief Steve Bell, now chief administrative officer of the
Ottawa Police Service, waits to appear before the Public Order
Emergency Commission on Oct. 24, 2022. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian
Press)
All 5 OPS witnesses remain

All five senior members of the Ottawa Police Service who testified
before the commission last fall remain, though most have changed jobs.
(This doesn't include former chief Peter Sloly, who resigned during
the occupation of Ottawa by convoy protesters, and who had been out of
policing for more than eight months by the time he testified before
the commission in late October.)

Steve Bell, who was named interim chief after Sloly's resignation, and
who oversaw the eventual dispersal of the protest in Ottawa, is now a
deputy chief and chief administrative officer of the OPS. At the time
of the convoy's arrival in Ottawa, Bell was in charge of intelligence,
information and investigation for the force.

Patricia Ferguson, who testified to the deep "dysfunction" at the top
of the OPS, and said the force was left "floundering" when protesters
failed to leave the capital after the first weekend, remains acting
deputy chief.

Russell Lucas, an inspector with the police service's special events
section during the protests, is currently an acting superintendent,
according to an update provided by the OPS on Thursday.

Supt. Robert Bernier, an inspector within the force's communications
branch who was appointed event commander during the occupation, is
also listed by the OPS as an acting superintendent.

Supt. Robert Drummond, who was tasked with overseeing the police
liaison team that negotiated with protest leaders and the public order
unit that eventually helped end the occupation, also maintains that
rank. (Drummond was in an acting role at the time of his testimony
last fall.)
Police clear an area of protesters near Parliament Hill.
Police and protesters square off in front of Parliament Hill on Feb.
19, 2022. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)
'Multiple points of failure'

In an email to CBC, Paul Champ, a lawyer who represented downtown
residents and businesses during the Emergencies Act inquiry, noted the
commission heard "extensive evidence of multiple points of failure" by
both government officials and police.

"Even though many of those responsible have left the stage, the POEC
report will memorialize those mistakes and serve as a guide for public
officials going forward. I would also like to see some apologies by
the police, the city and the province, but that's probably asking too
much," Champ wrote.

He said he also hopes to see the report provide some guidance "about
the oversight and direction the Ottawa Police Services Board can have
over the Ottawa Police Service."

Journalists covering the inquiry will be allowed to peruse an
embargoed version of the report starting at 10 a.m. ET. The embargo
will be lifted once the report is tabled in Parliament.

Commissioner Paul Rouleau will also read a prepared statement, which
will be streamed live on the commission's website, where the full
report will be made available to the public.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Alistair Steele

Writer and editor

After spending more than a decade covering Ottawa city hall for CBC,
Alistair Steele is now a feature writer and digital copy editor at
cbc.ca/ottawa.

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices
 
 
 
 

Jean Teillet IPC (BFA, LL.B, LL.M)

Senior Counsel

604.629.0319
jteillet@pstlaw.ca

Jean Teillet is Senior Counsel with Pape Salter Teillet LLP and specializes in Indigenous rights law.

Jean has long been engaged in negotiations and litigation with provincial and federal governments concerning Métis and First Nation land rights, harvesting rights and self-government. She served as counsel before all levels of court, including lead counsel for the landmark case R. v. Powley in which the Supreme Court of Canada affirmed constitutional protection of Métis harvesting rights. Among other significant Indigenous rights cases, she was co-counsel with Arthur Pape in Taku River Tlingit First Nation v. B.C., the companion case to Haida Nation v. B.C., in which the Supreme Court of Canada established consultation requirements. She is currently a negotiation advisor for the Sto:lo Xwexwilmexw in the BC treaty process and was part of the Pape Salter Teillet LLP legal team on the Tlicho Land Claims and Self-Government Agreement negotiations.

Jean was a founder of the Métis Nation of Ontario and the National Aboriginal Moot. She sits on the MMIWG Federal Sub-Working group. Jean is past Vice President and Treasurer of the Indigenous Bar Association of Canada and a former member of the Canadian Judicial Council Chairperson’s Advisory Group, the National Research Advisory Committee (Métis National Council) and the Equity Committee of the Law Society of Upper Canada.

In 2020 Jean’s popular history The North-West is Our Mother won the Carol Shields History Award and was shortlisted for the Canadian Law and Society Association W. Wesley Pue Book Prize. She was awarded the Governor General’s Meritorious Service Cross for service to Canada. She has been made an honorary lifetime member of the Association of Ontario Midwives for her contributions to Ontario midwifery. Jean was awarded the Indigenous Peoples’ Council award by the Indigenous Bar Association and she received a Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal and the Law Society of Upper Canada’s first ever Lincoln Alexander Award for community service. Jean has three honorary doctorates from the University of Guelph, the Law Society of Ontario and Windsor University.

Jean is a frequent author and lecturer on issues surrounding access to justice, Indigenous rights, identity and history. Her annual publication, Métis Law in Canada is the principle resource on Métis rights and case law. She has presented internationally in Russia, Poland, Israel, Japan, United States and China. In Canada, she has spoken at conferences for the National Judicial Institute, Association for Canadian Studies, the Law Society of Ontario, the Ontario Native Justices of the Peace, the Universities of Alberta, Ottawa, Saskatoon and Toronto, among others. She has been on faculty at the Banff Centre and the Allard School of Law where she taught self-government negotiation, methodologies for understanding traditional Indigenous law, constitutional law and Métis law. She frequently lectures at the faculties of law across the country.

In 2019 Jean wrote a popular history, The North-West is Our Mother: The Story of Louis Riel’s People, the Métis Nation, which was published by HarperCollins and was listed as one of the Globe & Mail’s top 100 books of 2019. She created all four of the replica wampum belts in the collection at the Law School of the University of Toronto. One belt, the Two-Row Wampum Belt, hangs in Flavelle Hall at the Law School. Jean also created another belt for the Stó:lō Xwexwilmexw called the S’ólh Lets’emót Swṓqw’elh. Both the Swṓqw’elh and the Two-Row Wampum Belt are symbols of two different peoples living together with different laws and customs within a relationship built on respect and truth.

Jean received her LL.B and LL.M from the University of Toronto Faculty of Law. She is called to the bar in British Columbia.

Jean has been recognized as a “best lawyer” in Vancouver by Best Lawyers in Canada and as a “leading lawyer” nationally by Chambers & Partners. She is ranked as one of the “most frequently recommended” leading practitioners in the field of Indigenous law in the peer rankings published by Lexpert Magazine.

 
 
 
https://www.cbc.ca/news/indigenous/first-nations-on-reserve-school-funding-1.4987134

New Minister of Indigenous Services Seamus O'Regan takes part in a
meeting with Assembly of First Nations leaders in Ottawa on Jan. 14.
O'Regan and AFN National Chief Perry Bellegarde announced the new
policy Monday. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Jody.Wilson-Raybould@parl.gc.ca
Date: Tue, 5 Mar 2019 16:58:02 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: RE Federal Court Court File No. T-1557-15 I
feel compelled to ask does Andy Scheer or Seamus O'Regan or the rest
you recall this email?
To: motomaniac333@gmail.com

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.



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.



Merci



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Catherine.McKenna@parl.gc.ca
Date: Tue, 5 Mar 2019 16:58:02 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: RE Federal Court Court File No. T-1557-15 I
feel compelled to ask does Andy Scheer or Seamus O'Regan or the rest
you recall this email?
To: motomaniac333@gmail.com

Thank you for contacting my office. This automated response is to
assure you that your message has been received by my office and will
be reviewed as soon as possible.

Due to the high volume of correspondence received, I am not able to
respond personally to every inquiry. Please do not hesitate to contact
my office at the coordinates below should you have any questions
regarding the status of your query.

Please note that your message will be forwarded to the Department of
Environment and Climate Change if it concerns topics pertaining to the
Minister of Environment and Climate Changes' role. For all future
correspondence addressed to the Minister of Environment and Climate
Change, I ask that you please write directly to
ec.ministre-minister.ec@canada.ca<mailto:ec.ministre-minister.ec@canada.ca>

Best,

Catherine McKenna, Member of Parliament, Ottawa Centre

* * *

Je vous remercie d'avoir communiqu? avec mon bureau. La pr?sente
r?ponse automatique vous est envoy?e pour vous informer que votre
message a ?t? re?u et qu'il sera examin? le plus rapidement possible.

En raison du volume ?lev? de correspondance re?ue, je ne peux r?pondre
personnellement ? chaque demande. N'h?sitez pas ? contacter mon bureau
aux coordonn?es ci-dessous pour vous renseigner sur le statut de votre
demande.

Veuillez noter que votre message sera transmis au minist?re de
l'Environnement et du Changement climatique s'il concerne des
questions qui ont trait au r?le de la ministre de l'Environnement et
du Changement climatique. Nous vous prions d'envoyer directement toute
correspondance future adress?e ? la ministre de l'Environnement et du
Changement climatique ?
ec.ministre-minister.ec@canada.ca<mailto:ec.ministre-minister.ec@canada.ca>

Cordialement,

Catherine McKenna, d?put?e, Ottawa Centre


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Sean.Fraser@parl.gc.ca
Date: Tue, 5 Mar 2019 16:58:02 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: RE Federal Court Court File No. T-1557-15 I
feel compelled to ask does Andy Scheer or Seamus O'Regan or the rest
you recall this email?
To: motomaniac333@gmail.com

Thank you for contacting the office of Sean Fraser, Member of
Parliament for Central Nova.

This is to assure you that your email has arrived, and that we
appreciate hearing from you.

If your matter is urgent, please contact our New Glasgow constituency
office toll-free at 1-844-641-5886 between the hours of 8:30-4:30pm,
and we will do our best to resolve your issue, or otherwise assist
you.

Thank you and have a great day!

New Glasgow
2A-115 MacLean Street B2H 4M5
Toll-free 1-844-641-5886
902-752-0226

Antigonish
200-155 Main Street B2G 2B6
902-867-2919

Ottawa
110 Confederation Building K1A 0A6
613-992-6022

Facebook: facebook.com/SeanFraserMP<https://www.facebook.com/SeanFraserMP/photos/a.1628138987467042.1073741829.1627521694195438/2066666113614325/?type=3&theater>
Twitter: @SeanFraserMP<https://twitter.com/SeanFraserMP>
Instagram: SeanFraserMP<https://www.instagram.com/seanfrasermp/?hl=en>
www.seanfrasermp.ca

Toll free: 1-844-641-5886



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Newsroom <newsroom@globeandmail.com>
Date: Tue, 5 Mar 2019 16:59:16 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: RE Federal Court Court File No. T-1557-15 I
feel compelled to ask does Andy Scheer or Seamus O'Regan or the rest
you recall this email?
To: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>

Thank you for contacting The Globe and Mail.

If your matter pertains to newspaper delivery or you require technical
support, please contact our Customer Service department at
1-800-387-5400 or send an email to customerservice@globeandmail.com

If you are reporting a factual error please forward your email to
publiceditor@globeandmail.com<
mailto:publiceditor@globeandmail.com>

Letters to the Editor can be sent to letters@globeandmail.com

This is the correct email address for requests for news coverage and
press releases.




---------- Original message ----------
From: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>
Date: Sun, 3 Mar 2019 23:11:39 -0400
Subject: YO Katie Telford do ya think your buddy Gerry Butts or anyone
else will recall this email by Wednesday?
To: "Katie.Telford" <Katie.Telford@pmo-cpm.gc.ca>, "Paul.Shuttle"
<Paul.Shuttle@pco-bcp.gc.ca>, "jan.jensen" <jan.jensen@justice.gc.ca>,
"Michael.Wernick" <Michael.Wernick@pco-bcp.gc.ca>, mcu
<mcu@justice.gc.ca>, TCromwell@blg.com, catharine.tunney@cbc.ca,
"Jody.Wilson-Raybould" <Jody.Wilson-Raybould@parl.gc.ca>,
"Brenda.Lucki" <Brenda.Lucki@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, "Gerald.Butts"
<Gerald.Butts@pmo-cpm.gc.ca>, "andrew.scheer"
<andrew.scheer@parl.gc.ca>, JagmeetForBurnaby
<JagmeetForBurnaby@ndp.ca>, "maxime.bernier"
<maxime.bernier@parl.gc.ca>, "charlie.angus"
<charlie.angus@parl.gc.ca>, "elizabeth.may"
<elizabeth.may@parl.gc.ca>, "Hunter.Tootoo"
<Hunter.Tootoo@parl.gc.ca>, "tony.clement.a1"
<tony.clement.a1@parl.gc.ca>, "hon.ralph.goodale"
<hon.ralph.goodale@canada.ca>, "Hon.Dominic.LeBlanc"
<Hon.Dominic.LeBlanc@canada.ca>, "Larry.Tremblay"
<Larry.Tremblay@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, "Gilles.Blinn"
<Gilles.Blinn@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, "Mark.Blakely"
<Mark.Blakely@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, "martin.gaudet"
<martin.gaudet@fredericton.ca>, "Michael.Duheme"
<Michael.Duheme@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, sfine <sfine@globeandmail.com>
Cc: David Amos <david.raymond.amos@gmail.com>, "David.Lametti"
<David.Lametti@parl.gc.ca>, "darrow.macintyre"
<darrow.macintyre@cbc.ca>, "jp.lewis" <jp.lewis@unb.ca>,
"Jacques.Poitras" <Jacques.Poitras@cbc.ca>, "David.Akin"
<David.Akin@globalnews.ca>, "steve.murphy" <steve.murphy@ctv.ca>,
Newsroom <Newsroom@globeandmail.com>, news <news@kingscorecord.com>

https://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2019/02/jody-wilson-raybould-resigns-from.html


Tuesday, 12 February 2019

Jody Wilson-Raybould resigns from cabinet in wake of SNC-Lavalin allegations



---------- Original message ----------
From: Jody.Wilson-Raybould@parl.gc.ca
Date: Tue, 12 Feb 2019 17:50:40 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: The Honourable Thomas Albert Cromwell can
never deny that I tried to inform him of what the RCMP, the CBC and
his latest client Jody Wilson-Raybould knows Correct Me Butts?
To: motomaniac333@gmail.com

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.


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.



Merci


https://twitter.com/DavidRayAmos/with_replies

David Raymond Amos‏ @DavidRayAmos
Replying to @DavidRayAmos @Kathryn98967631 and 49 others
Methinks truth is stranger than fiction and anyone can easily Google
"David Amos Federal Court file No. T-1557-15" in order to sort out the
truth from fiction for themselves N'esy Pas?


https://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2019/02/jody-wilson-raybould-resigns-from.html


#nbpoli #cdnpoli


https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/wilson-rayboul-snc-lavalin-1.5015755


Jody Wilson-Raybould resigns from cabinet in wake of SNC-Lavalin allegations


236 Comments

David Amos
Surprise Surprise Surprise


David Amos
And now the lady quits? Yea Right

Trust that Mr Scheer and everyone else who sits in opposition know
that Jody Wilson-Raybould may have lost her mandate as Justice
Minister because of her failings in Federal Court and the Federal
Court of Appeal within my lawsuit against the Crown that was filed
when Harper was the Prime Minister and Mr Scheer was the Speaker. Need
I say that it irritated me bigtime when Jody appointed her Deputy
Minister to the bench of Federal Court not long after I argued their
minions in the Federal Court of Appeal?

Methinks anyone can check my work by simply Googling two names "Jody
Wilson-Raybould David Raymond Amos" N'esy Pas?


David Amos
Methinks truth is stranger than fiction and anyone can easily Google
"David Amos Federal Court file No." in order to sort out the truth
from fiction for themselves. Its blatantly obvious that Mr Trudeau had
a duty to talk to Harper's Minister of justice and Peter MacKay and
had them pay particular attention to info found within statement 83 of
my lawsuit long before the election in October of 2015

Everybody knows why I am about to put the aforementioned matter before
the Supreme Court and file several more lawsuits in the Federal Court
against the RCMP and the CRA etc and also run for a seat in Parliament
again N'esy Pas?


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Randy.Boissonnault@parl.gc.ca
Date: Tue, 24 Jul 2018 15:57:12 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: Yo Minister Qualtrough RE "Litigation Lmbo"
Please enjoy an email that you and your fellow members of the PCO
ignored for way past too long
To: motomaniac333@gmail.com

Hello,

Thank you for writing to my office.  I value hearing from Edmonton
Centre constituents and stakeholders. Your email will be read. My team
and I will be happy to respond.

This email is an automatic response to let you know that your
correspondence has been received. Please do not reply.

As we prioritize responding first to residents of Edmonton Centre,
please provide your postal code, if you have not done so already.

Should you need it, this link will help you confirm who your Member of
Parliament is: https://bit.ly/1BgbGyd.

I will reply as soon as possible whether your issue pertains to you
personally or if you have written to me on a matter related to my
LGBTQ2 responsibilities or other legislative duties.

If another government department or Member of Parliament can better
address your inquiry, we will forward your email to the appropriate
office and invite them to respond to you.

Thank you again for writing to me.

Kind regards,

Randy Boissonnault
Member of Parliament for Edmonton Centre
Special Advisor to the Prime Minister on LGBTQ2 Issues

E-mail: randy.boissonnault@parl.gc.ca<mailto:randy.boissonnault@parl.gc.ca>
Website: http://rboissonnault.liberal.ca/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/R.Boissonnault
Twitter and Instagram: @R_Boissonnault

  ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Bonjour,

Merci d'avoir ?crit ? mon bureau. J'appr?cie lire les ?lecteurs et les
intervenants d'Edmonton-Centre. Votre courriel sera lu et mon ?quipe
et moi serons heureux d'y r?pondre.

Ce courriel est une r?ponse automatique pour vous faire savoir que
votre correspondance a bien ?t? re?ue. S'il vous pla?t ne r?pondez
pas.

?tant donn? que nous donnons priorit? aux r?sidents d'Edmonton-Centre,
s'il-vous-pla?t veuillez nous fournir votre code postal si vous ne
l'avez pas d?j? fait.

Au besoin, le lien suivant vous aidera ? confirmer qui est votre
d?put?: https://bit.ly/1CyAl50 .

Je vous r?pondrai d?s que possible si votre enjeux vous concerne
personnellement ou si vous m'avez ?crit sur une question li?e ? mes
responsabilit?s sur les enjeux LGBTQ2 ou ? d'autres t?ches
l?gislatives.

Si un autre service gouvernemental ou un autre membre du Parlement est
dans une meilleure position pour r?pondre ? votre demande, nous
transmettrons votre courriel au bureau appropri? et  les inviterons ?
vous r?pondre.

Merci encore de m'avoir ?crit.

Cordialement,

Randy Boissonnault
D?put? d'Edmonton-Centre
Conseiller sp?cial du premier ministre sur les enjeux LGBTQ2


E-mail: randy.boissonnault@parl.gc.ca<mailto:randy.boissonnault@parl.gc.ca>
Site internet: http://rboissonnault.liberal.ca/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/R.Boissonnault
Twitter et Instagram: @R_Boissonnault




Jody Wilson-Raybould resigns from cabinet in wake of SNC-Lavalin allegations
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau stressed Monday that he had 'full
confidence' in Wilson-Raybould​
Catharine Tunney · CBC News · Posted: Feb 12, 2019 11:39 AM ET

Jody Wilson-Raybould, the former Attorney General of Canada, has
resigned from cabinet. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)


Jody Wilson-Raybould — the former justice minister who has kept
largely silent since a news report claimed the Prime Minister's Office
pressured her to help Quebec-based engineering firm SNC-Lavalin avoid
criminal prosecution — has resigned from cabinet.

She tweeted a link to her resignation letter this morning.

"With a heavy heart I am writing to tender my resignation as the
Minister of Veterans Affairs and Associate Minister of National
Defence," she wrote.





    Jody Wilson-Raybould ✔ @Puglaas
    With a heavy heart I have submitted my letter of resignation to
the Prime Minister as a member of Cabinet...
https://jwilson-raybould.liberal.ca/news-nouvelles/statement-from-the-honourable-jody-wilson-raybould-member-of-parliament-for-vancouver-granville/


    1,873
    12:34 PM - Feb 12, 2019



    Statement from the Honourable Jody Wilson-Raybould, Member of
Parliament for Vancouver Granville |...
    jwilson-raybould.liberal.ca


"When I sought federal elected office, it was with the goal of
implementing a positive and progressive vision of change on behalf of
all Canadians and a different way of doing poltics."

Wilson-Raybould, who was shuffled to the Veterans Affairs portfolio in
January, has been under intense scrutiny since a Globe and Mail report
alleged last week that the PMO wanted her to direct federal
prosecutors to make a "deferred prosecution agreement" (DPA) to avoid
taking SNC-Lavalin to trial on bribery and fraud charges in relation
to contracts in Libya.

Wilson-Raybould, who plans to stay on as MP for Vancouver-Granville,
has been quiet since the story broke, saying she can't comment because
she's bound by solicitor-client privilege.

In her resignation letter, she said she has retained the services of
lawyer Thomas Cromwell, a former justice of the Supreme Court of
Canada, to advise her on "topics that I am legally permitted to
discuss on this matter."

In an email to CBC News, Cromwell said he would not be making any
statements or doing any interviews.

A spokesperson for MP Francis Scarpaleggia, chair of the national
Liberal caucus, said that as of Tuesday morning, Wilson-Raybould
hadn't left caucus.

Ethics investigation launched

Her resignation marks a significant turning point in the emerging
SNC-Lavalin affair.

Just a day earlier, Prime Minster Justin Trudeau told reporters he
continues "to have full confidence in Jody."

He also insisted that he did not direct Wilson-Raybould to come to any
specific conclusions on whether to direct the Public Prosecution
Service of Canada to reach an agreement with SNC-Lavalin.

"She confirmed for me a conversation we had this fall, where I told
her directly that any decisions on matters involving the director of
public prosecutions were hers alone," Trudeau said Monday.

"I respect her view that, due to privilege, she can't comment or add
on matters recently before the media. I also highlight that we're
bound by cabinet confidentiality. In our system of governance, her
presence in cabinet should speak for itself."

    Companies guilty of wrongdoing should be hit where it hurts — in
their pockets, says business prof

    Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs calls out 'racist and sexist'
treatment of Wilson-Raybould

    Trudeau says he has 'confidence' in Wilson-Raybould as ethics
commissioner probes PMO over SNC-Lavalin

    Jody Wilson-Raybould was involved in legal government talks about
fate of SNC-Lavalin, sources say

Wilson-Raybould's resignation likely will cast a shadow over the
upcoming election campaign. So will a recently-launched probe by the
federal ethics commissioner.

On Monday, Ethics Commissioner Mario Dion informed the NDP MPs who had
requested an investigation that there is sufficient cause to proceed
with an inquiry into Trudeau's actions in the case.

Responding to a letter from NDP MPs, Dion said he would investigate
the prime minister personally for a possible contravention of Section
9 of the Conflict of Interest Act, which prohibits any official
responsible for high-level decision-making in government from seeking
to influence the decision of another person so as to "improperly
further another person's private interests."

SNC-Lavalin faces charges of fraud and corruption in connection with
nearly $48 million in payments made to Libyan government officials
between 2001 and 2011.

The company has pleaded not guilty.

If convicted, the company could be blocked from competing for federal
government contracts for a decade.

The case is still at the preliminary hearing stage.

With files from the CBC's J.P. Tasker

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices




---------- Original message ----------
From: Newsroom <newsroom@globeandmail.com>
Date: Tue, 12 Feb 2019 17:50:24 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: The Honourable Thomas Albert Cromwell can
never deny that I tried to inform him of what the RCMP, the CBC and
his latest client Jody Wilson-Raybould knows Correct Me Butts?
To: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>

Thank you for contacting The Globe and Mail.

If your matter pertains to newspaper delivery or you require technical
support, please contact our Customer Service department at
1-800-387-5400 or send an email to customerservice@globeandmail.com

If you are reporting a factual error please forward your email to
publiceditor@globeandmail.com<mailto:publiceditor@globeandmail.com>

Letters to the Editor can be sent to letters@globeandmail.com

This is the correct email address for requests for news coverage and
press releases.





---------- Original message ----------
From: "Hon.Ralph.Goodale  (PS/SP)" <Hon.ralph.goodale@canada.ca>
Date: Tue, 12 Feb 2019 17:50:29 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: The Honourable Thomas Albert Cromwell can
never deny that I tried to inform him of what the RCMP, the CBC and
his latest client Jody Wilson-Raybould knows Correct Me Butts?
To: David Amos <motomaniac333@gmail.com>

Merci d'avoir ?crit ? l'honorable Ralph Goodale, ministre de la
S?curit? publique et de la Protection civile.
En raison d'une augmentation importante du volume de la correspondance
adress?e au ministre, veuillez prendre note qu'il pourrait y avoir un
retard dans le traitement de votre courriel. Soyez assur? que votre
message sera examin? avec attention.
Merci!
L'Unit? de la correspondance minist?rielle
S?curit? publique Canada
*********

Thank you for writing to the Honourable Ralph Goodale, Minister of
Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness.
Due to the significant increase in the volume of correspondence
addressed to the Minister, please note there could be a delay in
processing your email. Rest assured that your message will be
carefully reviewed.
Thank you!
Ministerial Correspondence Unit
Public Safety Canada


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Seamus.ORegan@parl.gc.ca
Date: Fri, 22 Dec 2017 02:43:11 +0000
Subject: Automatic reply: Methinks it was you who picked a fight with
me today EH Gregorios Tzemenakis?
To: motomaniac333@gmail.com

Thank you for your message.

Please note that this inbox is monitored by Minister O`Regan's staff.

If your message is an invitation, or related to the riding of St.
John's South?-?Mount Pearl, we will respond to your message as soon as
possible.

If your message is related to his role as Minister of Veterans Affairs
and Associate Minister of National Defence, please e-mail
minister-ministre@vac-acc.gc.ca<mailto:minister-ministre@vac-acc.gc.ca>
 or call 1-866-522-2122.


Most importantly, if you are a Veteran or a family member in crisis,
please dial 911. There is also a 24/7 mental health assistance line
that you can reach at 1-800-268-7708. Veterans Affairs Canada also
operates a network of mental health clinics and you can find the one
closest to you here:
http://www.veterans.gc.ca/eng/services/health/mental-health/understanding-mental-health/clinics.

Regards,

The Office of the Honourable Seamus O'Regan, P.C., M.P.

--/--

Merci pour votre message.


Veuillez noter que cette bo?te de r?ception est surveill?e par les
employ?s du bureau parlementaire du ministre O'Regan.

Si votre message est une invitation, ou en lien avec sa
circonscription de St. John's Sud?-?Mount Pearl, nous r?pondrons ?
votre message d?s que possible.

Si votre message lui est adress? ? titre de ministre des Anciens
Combattants et ministre associ? de la D?fense nationale, veuillez
?crire au minister-ministre@vac-acc.gc.ca<mailto:minister-ministre@vac-acc.gc.ca>
ou appeler le 1-866-522-2022.


Plus important encore, si vous ?tes in V?t?ran, ou un membre de la
famille d'un V?t?ran, en crise, composez le 911. Il y a aussi une
ligne t?l?phonique disponible 24/7 o? vous pouvez parler ? un
professionnel en sant? mentale. Cette ligne est le 1-800-268-7708.
Anciens Combattants Canada op?re aussi un r?seau de cliniques en sant?
mentale, et vous pouvez trouver une clinique pr?s de chez vous ici :
http://www.veterans.gc.ca/fra/services/health/mental-health/understanding-mental-health/clinics.

Salutations,

Le bureau de l`honorable Seamus O'Regan, P.C., M.P.





https://www.willgoodon.com/contact-us/



Will Goodon
Box 34 Site 145 RR1
Brandon, MB R7A 5Y1

Email:  wgoodon@me.com

Canadian Wilderness Inn
Box 1090 Boissevain R0K 0E0
(204) 534-7155
wgoodon@hotmail.com
Hotel full service
Description
Phone No
MB
Email:
Website: www.canwildernessinn.ca


Will Goodon
MMF Board of Directors - Southwest Region


Box 34 Site 145 RR1
Brandon, MB R7A 5Y1



Email:  wgoodon@mmf.mb.ca

Twitter: @willgoodon

Facebook: Will Goodon

Instagram: @willgoodon

wgoodon@mmf.mb.ca

http://www.mmf.mb.ca/regional_offices.php#mmf_7


President's Message
NCIFM

May 15, 2019 - The month of May has already seen many positive
developments along with a few challenges for our Citizens.

On Monday, May 13, we celebrated home ownership with one of the first
successful applicants of our First Time Home Buyers Purchase Program.
With the collective diligence of our Ministry of Housing and the Louis
Riel Capital Corporation, we are delivering the opportunity for Métis
families across Manitoba to experience the joy and security that comes
with home ownership.

Currently, approximately 150 Métis Citizens have applied to the First
Time Home Buyers Program. To date we have 138 successful applicants
who have been approved for home ownership. With our initial investment
of $5 million to the Program, we anticipate over $80 million in
mortgages in the Manitoba economy. We look forward to celebrating many
more success stories. Thanks to Prime Minister Trudeau and Minister
Duclos for renewing the partnership between Canada and the Métis
Nation. This Program is reconciliation in action. For more
information, please visit
www.lrcc.mb.ca/first-time-home-buyers-purchase-program.

On Thursday, May 9, I presented to the Federal Standing Committee in
Ottawa on Bill C-92, An Act respecting First Nations, Inuit and Métis
children, youth and families. Through this Act, the MMF could develop
our own legislation for Métis child and family services. This
legislation would focus on prevention and keep our children with our
families, in our Community, and at home in our Nation. This would be a
welcome change from the current provincial legislation that rewards
removal. On top of this legislation we are currently facing a
provincial government that, in order to balance their books, slashes
funding to our most vulnerable children and families. As President, I
endorse and support this important Act. I want to thank Prime Minister
Justin Trudeau and his Cabinet for introducing this critical piece of
legislation.

Brian Pallister continues his personal vendetta against the Métis to
the embarrassment of his government. The recent decision by Pallister
to cancel agreements with the MMF threatened the jobs of several of
our staff. These hardworking individuals have families to feed, bills
to pay, and homes to keep. The Manitoba Métis Government will ensure
that we find ways to keep these skilled staff.

The Pallister government also continues their siege on Métis rights,
claims, and interests. On top of the budget cuts to Métis children and
family services and on top of the cancelled agreements with the MMF,
the provincial government’s unilateral decision to implement a
commercial fishing license buy-back program is an attack on one of the
last remaining traditional economies in the province. The Pallister
government continues to use our tax dollars to undermine
reconciliation. But his attempts to silence us will not stop us from
fighting for your rights.

To address the attack on the livelihood of Métis and First Nations
fishers and to protect the sustainability of the fishery, the MMF
co-hosted an emergency fishers meeting with the Manitoba Keewatinowi
Okimakanak (MKO) and the Southern Chiefs’ Organization (SCO). With the
buy-back, two million pounds of fish have been taken off the market.
We have all witnessed that the buy-back is already devastating our
Métis villages, which rely on the Lake Winnipeg fishery. To add insult
to injury, Pallister’s government has not only taken millions of
pounds of fish out of the economy and hurt our fishers, his government
has forced a new net size. Now the fishers who were already struggling
will be forced to change their nets. This is like forcing farmers to
purchase new farm equipment. A similar scenario for fishers would
force them out of business. There is no logic to these arbitrary
decisions. This government is pitting commercial fishers against sport
fishers when it should be bringing them together. I can assure you
that I, as well as MKO’s Grand Chief Settee, and SCO’s Grand Chief
Daniels will take the necessary actions to protect the fishers and the
fishery.

I am proud of the staff and volunteers who helped make the Manitoba
Metis Heritage Fund’s (MMHF’s) Annual Métis Heritage Gala a success.
Close to 500 people gathered in the Grand Ballroom at the Fort Garry
Hotel. This year we anticipate meeting or exceeding the $65,000 raised
last year. This year the proceeds go to the St. Boniface Hospital
Foundation’s Youth BIOlab Jeunesse. The lab is a space created for
students and teachers to explore and experience real biomedical
science in a world-class research centre. By encouraging and educating
more youth as doctors, nurses and other healthcare professionals we
will be ensuring that you and your families have access to the
professionals they need. I would encourage you to view our various
social media streams to see beautiful pictures and videos from this
year’s gala.

I would like to welcome April Hourie, a twice-elected official for
Selkirk, to her role as MMF’s Senior Political Analyst. She will be
seeking parties and leaders on their strategies to address Métis
issues that you have stated are important to you and your family, for
example: housing, health and wellness, education and employment, land
use and Métis rights, youth, children, and seniors. She is dedicated
to encouraging the democratic rights of voting and to help understand
through a Métis-specific lens of how political decisions impact your
daily life and the lives of the future leaders of tomorrow. To learn
more about how you can contribute and to connect with her and share
political issues that matter the most to you, please contact April at
ahourie@mmf.mb.ca or 204-586-8474.

Meeqwetch,

President David Chartrand
dchartrand@mmf.mb.ca


https://www.linkedin.com/in/benjamin-mcdonald-7ab30a8a/detail/treasury/education:203259194/?entityUrn=urn%3Ali%3Afs_treasuryMedia%3A(ACoAABLpS_MBjtuR5LrvmjCoSS_AfU00PosRLto%2C51017458)&section=education%3A203259194&treasuryCount=5

benjamin.mcdonald@mmf.mb.ca

Manitoba Metis Federation Inc.
Winnipeg Metis Association Inc.
10-150 Henry Avenue
Winnipeg, Manitoba R3B 0J7

Telephone: 204-589-4327
Fax: 204-582-2711
E-Mail: wpgregion@mmf.mb.ca

Website: www.facebook.com/MMFWinnipegRegion/

Vice President: Andrew Carrier


Manitoba Metis Federation Inc.
Southwest Regional Office Inc.
656-6th Street
Brandon, Manitoba R7A 3P1

Telephone: 204-725-7520
Fax: 204-728-9085
E-Mail: info@southwestmmf.ca

Website: www.southwestmmf.ca

Vice President: Leah LaPlante

Back to top



http://www.pstlaw.ca/resources/MLIC-2012-ORIG.pdf

http://www.pstlaw.ca/our-people.html

Jean Teillet
Senior Counsel
604.629.0319
jteillet@pstlaw.ca


Richard Salter
Retired Partner
416.916.2989
 info@pstlaw.ca

http://www.pstlaw.ca/jean-teillet.html


Jean Teillet IPC (BFA, LL.B, LL.M)
Senior Counsel

Jean Teillet is Senior Counsel with Pape Salter Teillet LLP and
specializes in Indigenous rights law.

Jean has long been engaged in negotiations and litigation with
provincial and federal governments concerning Métis and First Nation
land rights, harvesting rights, commercial harvesting and
self-government. She has served as counsel before all levels of court,
including lead counsel for the landmark case R. v. Powley in which the
Supreme Court of Canada affirmed constitutional protection of Métis
harvesting rights. Among other significant Indigenous rights cases,
she was co-counsel with Arthur Pape in Taku River Tlingit First Nation
v. B.C., the companion case to Haida Nation v. B.C., in which the
Supreme Court of Canada established consultation requirements with
respect to Indigenous rights. She is currently the chief negotiator
for the Sto:lo Xwexwilmexw in the BC treaty process and was part of
the Pape Salter Teillet LLP legal team on the Tlicho Land Claims and
Self-Government Agreement negotiations.

Jean was a founder of the Métis Nation of Ontario and the National
Aboriginal Moot. She sits on the Canadian Judicial Council
Chairperson’s Advisory Group and the Indigenous Bar Association Ethics
Committee. She is Vice Chair of Indspire (formerly the National
Aboriginal Achievement Foundation) and is on advisory boards for The
Charter Project, Windsor Law School and Journal of Law & Equity,
University of Toronto.

Jean is past Vice President and Treasurer of the Indigenous Bar
Association of Canada and a former member of the National Research
Advisory Committee (Métis National Council), Equity Committee of the
Law Society of Upper Canada, and founding president of the Métis
Nation Lawyers Association.

In 2002, the Law Society of Upper Canada awarded Jean the first ever
Lincoln Alexander Award for community service. She was awarded the
Aboriginal Justice Award in 2005 by the Native Law Students of the
University of Alberta in recognition of her outstanding contributions
to Indigenous justice initiatives. In 2007, the University of Windsor
Faculty of Law established the Jean Teillet Access to Justice
Scholarship to honour her work as a human rights lawyer. In 2011 Jean
was awarded the Indigenous Peoples’ Council award by the Aboriginal
Bar Association and in 2012 she received a Queen Elizabeth II Diamond
Jubilee Medal. In 2014, Jean was awarded an honorary doctorate from
the University of Guelph for her impact on Indigenous rights law.

Jean is a frequent author and lecturer on issues surrounding access to
justice, Indigenous rights, identity and mobility. Her annual
publication, the Métis Law in Canada (formerly the Métis Law Summary),
is the principle resource with respect to Métis rights and case law.
She has presented internationally in Russia, Poland, Israel, Japan,
United States and China. In Canada, she has spoken at conferences for
the National Judicial Institute, Association of Canadian Studies, the
Law Society of Upper Canada, the Ontario Native Justices of the Peace,
the Universities of Alberta, Ottawa, Saskatoon and Toronto, among
others. She is on the faculty at the Banff Centre for Inherent Right
to Indigenous Governance and frequently lectures at the faculties of
law at the Universities of British Columbia, Windsor, Manitoba,
Saskatchewan, Alberta, Toronto, York, Ottawa and Victoria.

Jean created all four of the replica wampum belts in the collection at
the Law School of the University of Toronto. The Two Row Wampum Belt
that hangs in Flavelle Hall is a symbol that two different peoples can
live together with different laws and customs within a relationship
built on respect and truth.

Jean received her LL.B and LL.M from the University of Toronto Faculty
of Law. Jean is called to the bar in British Columbia.

Jean is recognized as a “consistently recommended” leading
practitioner in the field of Aboriginal law in the peer rankings
published by Lexpert Magazine.




Toronto Office

546 Euclid Avenue
Toronto, ON M6G 2T2 Canada

T 416.916.2989 F 416.916.3726

Vancouver Office


World Trade Centre | Canada Place
999 Canada Place, Suite 404
Vancouver, BC V6C 3E2 Canada

T 604.681.3002 F 604.681.3050



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NhUdHJaz06c


Kouchibouguac Acadian Legend Jackie Vautour's son Edmond will continue
the Battle!!
150 views
Charles Leblanc
Published on May 8, 2019



https://blg.com/en/News-And-Publications/Publication_4190


http://www.canlii.org/en/nb/nbqb/doc/2015/2015nbqb94/2015nbqb94.html
Author


Vautour v. Her Majesty the Queen, 2015 NBQB 94, New Brunswick Court of
Queen’s Bench (DeWare J.)
April 23, 2015

The New Brunswick Court of Queen’s Bench dismissed an appeal from
conviction brought by two men claiming to be members of a historic
Métis community in New Brunswick. The trial judge did not err in his
application of the Powley test for determining the existence of a
historic Métis community or in his treatment of the expert evidence.
The appellants failed to prove the existence of a Métis community in
the relevant area before the date of effective European control, and
therefore could not rely upon section 35 rights in defending the
illegal fishing charges.

The appellants Jackie and Roy Vautour were convicted under the Canada
Parks Act and the Canada National Parks Fishing Regulations for
unauthorized fishing for soft shelled clams within Kouchibouguac
National Park in New Brunswick. They defended the charges on the basis
that they were exercising an existing Métis right to fish for food.
The trial judge applied the Powley test in regards to determining the
existence of a historical distinctive Métis community. He did not
review all of the ten criteria set out in Powley, as he found that the
appellants had not proven the existence of a historical Métis
community prior to effective European control. The trial judge held
that the date of effective European control in the area was 1670. The
appellants had not proven the existence of a Métis community in the
Kouchibouguac area before 1670, or that there was a historic
rights-bearing community in the area at any time before or after 1670.

The Vautour appellants submitted that the trial judge erred in not
considering the factor of “self-identification”, and claimed that they
“entered the courtroom as Métis and left the courtroom as Acadians”.
They also argued that the trial judge failed to give proper weight to
the expert testimony of Chief Stephen Augustine, of the Mic Mac Grand
Council, that there existed a “shadow community” in Nova Scotia. They
also relied upon findings in the Daniels case that the Métis are the
most disadvantaged of all Canadians.

The Court of Queen’s Bench found that the trial judge did not err in
limiting his analysis to only the initial criteria from Powley. He
reviewed the historical evidence in detail and accepted the expert
evidence of Dr. Steven Patterson that 1670 was the date of effective
European control. This evidence was uncontradicted by the expert
evidence of the Vautour appellants. DeWare J. stated:

While the appellants dispute the trial judge’s finding of fact that
the date of effective European control was 1670, they do not suggest
an alternative date, nor based on my review of the record have they
provided evidence to the Court of the existence of a historic Métis
community as defined in Powley at any time. Certainly, the appellants
are correct to assert, as pointed out by the Supreme Court of Canada
in Tsilhqot’in and Delgamuukw v. British Columbia, [1997] 3 S.C.R.
1010, that in considering aboriginal rights claims the Court must
approach the question from both the common law perspective and the
aboriginal perspective. However, these guiding principles do not
relieve an aboriginal claimant from the burden of proof of
establishing their claims. Under the circumstances, once the trial
judge determined that there was not a historical Métis community in
the area prior to the date of effective European control, all the
other facts laid out in the ten part test of Powley become moot. In my
view, the trial judge appropriately focused his analysis on the
crucial question and once that was answered in the negative there was
no need to delve any further into the Powley criteria.

The trial judge determined, based upon the evidence before him, that
the date of effective European control was 1670 and that there was not
a historical Métis community in that area at that time. The trial
judge reviewed the evidence he relied upon and thoroughly explained
his reasoning in coming to these findings of fact. In my view, the
trial judge’s conclusions and determinations of facts with respect to
these issues were well reasoned and amply supported by the evidence
before him. Given the nature of the questions before the Court, the
trial judge relied extensively on the expert witnesses in arriving at
his findings of fact.

The Court of Queen’s Bench further held that the trial judge made no
error in his treatment of the expert evidence. Chief Augustine
testified at length in regards to the Mi’kmaq creation story, and it
could not be said that the trial judge prevented him from doing so.
Chief Augustine acknowledged that he could not define a historical
Métis community in the area, but took the view that it existed as a
“shadow community”. DeWare J. held that the trial judge did not
overlook this evidence. The Powley test allows for Métis communities
to be less visible at times due to historical circumstances, but there
must be visibility at some point in time. It was open to the trial
judge to accept the evidence of the Crown’s expert witnesses (Dr.
Patterson and Dr. Von Gernet) with respect to issues such as the date
of effective European control and the existence of a historical Métis
community in the area.

The Court of Queen’s Bench therefore held that the appellants failed
to establish their entitlement to the benefit of section 35 of the
Constitution Act, 1982 as Métis persons. The convictions were
confirmed and the appeals were dismissed.


Scott Kerwin
SKerwin@blg.com
604.640.4029
Expertise

Aboriginal Law
 
 

No comments:

Post a Comment