Edmonton Journal

Ex-Harper aide guilty of influence peddling

- Jordan Press

OTTAWA • Canada’s highest court has upheld an influence peddling conviction against a one-time senior aide to former prime minister Stephen Harper.

Bruce Carson’s case will now be sent back to the trial judge for sentencing after an 8-1 decision by the Supreme Court of Canada that rejects his interpreta­tion of the influence-peddling law.

He could face up to five years in prison.

The conviction is the second Carson has faced over improperly using his government connection­s built up during his time at the Prime Minister’s Office during Harper’s tenure.

Carson was a key adviser in Harper’s office between 2006 and 2008 and briefly in 2009, but a magnet for opposition criticism when it was revealed he had fraud conviction­s in 1990 and the 1980s.

After leaving the PMO, he tried to use his government connection­s at what was then called Indian and Northern Affairs Canada, as well as in cabinet, to push the sale of water-purificati­on systems for First Nations communitie­s made by a company known as H2O Pros and H2O Global.

In exchange, Carson had the company pay his thengirlfr­iend a commission on the sales.

After APTN first reported the allegation­s, Harper called in the RCMP and the federal lobbying watchdog. The Mounties charged Carson in 2012 with influence peddling.

Carson was acquitted at trial after his lawyers argued he couldn’t be guilty of influencin­g “any matter of business relating to the government” because it was the First Nations communitie­s, not the government, that purchased the water systems.

The Ontario Court of Appeal took a broader view of the wording and, in a split decision, overturned the acquittal. And because of that split, the case automatica­lly went to the Supreme Court.

The Supreme Court followed the same path as Ontario’s highest court. The majority took a broad view of the statement, saying the phrase should include anything that depends on or could be facilitate­d by the government.

Writing for the majority, Justice Andromache Karakatsan­is said federal officials could have made it easier for First Nations to purchase the systems by changing funding terms and conditions to the company’s benefit, or by funding pilot projects that used the company’s systems.

She said the Criminal Code provisions that deal with frauds on the government — including influence peddling — are designed to target behaviour that “risks depriving citizens of a true democracy.”

 ??  ?? Bruce Carson
Bruce Carson

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