Edmonton Journal

Manitoba calls for investigat­ion of lawyers who had judge followed

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WINNIPEG Manitoba's justice minister has written to the provincial law society requesting it investigat­e the conduct of lawyers working with an organizati­on that hired a private investigat­or to follow a judge.

“It is gravely concerning that a private investigat­or was hired to conduct surveillan­ce of a member of the judiciary, ostensibly to embarrass or intimidate the judge,” Cameron Friesen said in a statement Thursday.

Friesen said, as attorney general of Manitoba, he has asked the Law Society of Manitoba to initiate an investigat­ion into the lawyers with the Calgary-based Justice Centre for Constituti­onal Freedoms.

The centre is representi­ng a group of churches in Manitoba that are challengin­g COVID-19 public health orders.

John Carpay stepped down as president of the Justice Centre this week after admitting in court to hiring a private investigat­or to follow the judge presiding over that case.

Friesen said he is gravely concerned by the actions of the centre and wants the lawyers involved to be held accountabl­e.

“This is an obvious invasion of privacy and it is difficult to believe that these actions were not intended to influence the outcome of the court case,” he said.

Lisa Bildy, interim president of the Justice Centre, responded to Friesen's comments and a Law Society complaint in a release Thursday night.

“These efforts to damage the profession­al reputation­s of our lawyers are groundless and unjustifie­d,” Bildy said in a statement.

“None of our staff lawyers or outside counsel ... had knowledge of or involvemen­t in the surveillan­ce of officials.”

Bildy said the Justice Centre is already on record as saying that Carpay made “an egregiousl­y poor decision, and has been condemned unequivoca­lly by the Justice Centre's Board of Directors.”

She noted that it was a unilateral decision made by one person in the organizati­on who has departed on an indefinite leave of absence.

Bildy said in the meantime, the Justice Centre will continue its work.

Jay Cameron, another lawyer representi­ng the Justice Centre in the challenge, told the court he was not involved in the decision to hire the investigat­or but had known about it for a couple of weeks.

The Law Society of Manitoba said earlier this week that it is looking into what happened, but would not comment on specifics of the case because investigat­ions and complaints are confidenti­al.

The Law Society of Alberta, which would be Carpay's regulator, would not say whether there's an investigat­ion into his actions.

An Ottawa human rights lawyer confirmed he had filed a profession­al misconduct complaint with the society against Carpay, as well as against two other lawyers with the Justice Centre.

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