Cape Breton Post

Premier won’t apologize to teen

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Nova Scotia Premier Stephen McNeil is not offering an apology to a 19-year-old man who was arrested after allegedly breaching the province’s freedom-of-informatio­n website.

Police dropped the case against the young man on Monday, saying there was no criminal intent and “no grounds to lay charges.’’

McNeil initially referred to the man’s actions as “stealing,’’ but has since backed away from such strong language.

On Tuesday he was asked about opposition calls for an apology for his early characteri­zation of what occurred. McNeil wouldn’t address an apology directly, despite repeated questions from reporters.

“The informatio­n was taken outside our system,’’ he said. “We had a responsibi­lity ... to turn that over to police. They did their due diligence and determined the course of action that they’ve taken.’’

The youth was arrested after a dramatic raid on his family’s home on April 11 after it was alleged he downloaded 7,000 documents from the public website.

Prior to dropping the case, police gave him notice to appear under a rarely used section of the Criminal Code that prohibits unauthoriz­ed use of a computer with fraudulent intent.

Both the Opposition Tories and NDP say the onus has shifted to the government to take responsibi­lity for what the auditor general has warned were lax security measures around the portal.

McNeil said it’s now the government’s job to ensure all safeguards are in place before the portal is put back in operation.

“People deserve and expect their informatio­n that is provided to government be protected,’’ he said.

Both the province’s privacy commission­er and the auditor general are considerin­g whether the province upheld its own privacy procedures in the way the website was designed.

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