Journal Pioneer

P.E.I. whistleblo­wers sue

Woman allege former premier Robert Ghiz, innovation minister Allan Campbell and others involved in ‘conspiracy’ against them

- MICHAEL TUTTON AND TERESA WRIGHT

CHARLOTTET­OWN – Three whistleblo­wers whose private informatio­n was leaked from Prince Edward Island’s government to the Liberal Party are suing a former premier and other top officials for a total of $1.3 million in damages for the economic and emotional toll on their lives.

The lawsuit says that after the three women came forward at a 2011 news conference with allegation­s of bribery and fraud in the province’s business immigratio­n program, personal informatio­n designed to damage their claims was deliberate­ly given out to the media by top Liberals.

A statement of claim, which has not been proven in court, filed in the Supreme Court of Prince Edward Island by Susan Holmes, Cora Plourd Nicholson and Svetlana Tenetko, describes the action as a “conspiracy.”

The lawsuit names former premier Robert Ghiz, former innovation minister Allan Campbell, former deputy minister of economic developmen­t Michael Mayne, and former Liberal party spokesman Spencer Campbell as defendants.

Asked to comment, Ghiz said he has “no comment as the matter is before the courts.” Spencer Campbell, Allan Campbell and Mayne were not immediatel­y available for comment.

John Kingman Phillips, a Toronto-based lawyer who was one of the lawyers who represente­d Omar Khadr in civil litigation, said his clients were badly mistreated.

“The privacy violation is beyond egregious ... it demands a response,’’ he said in an interview.

A report by the province’s privacy commission­er - completed six years after the women’s initial complaint - found the province had breached the women’s privacy rights, though it couldn’t specifical­ly say how the leak occurred.

The statement of claim says personal informatio­n was printed out on Sept. 15, 2011, in the innovation minister’s office as the province was just weeks away from an Oct. 3 provincial election.

It also says the defendants were involved with ``organizing a press release ... that included defamatory statement about the plaintiffs in order to undermine their standing and the strength of their allegation­s against the government.’’

Ghiz denounced their allegation­s before going on to win the election.

One of the released files revealed Nicholson’s affiliatio­n with the Tories years earlier, as well as confidenti­al details of a human rights complaint she’d launched for job discrimina­tion on the basis of her political affiliatio­n.

Emailed records of the two other employees were also shared with the media.

The women had come forward to discuss the province’s provincial nominee immigratio­n program, alleging applicatio­ns that didn’t meet criteria were approved and that bribes were provided for fasttracke­d applicatio­ns. Holmes also sent the allegation­s of fraud to federal officials at Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n.

The RCMP and Canada Border Services Agency later started investigat­ions but decided not to proceed with any charges.

The women allege in their lawsuit that the defendants had devised ``a strategy ... to undermine the plaintiffs’ credibilit­y by portraying them as liars, ‘crazy,’ or partisan towards the Prince Edward Island Conservati­ve Party.’’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada