Medicine Hat News

Senate ethics body mulls Meredith sanctions

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OTTAWA The Senate’s ethics committee met behind closed doors Wednesday to consider what sanctions can or should be imposed on disgraced Sen. Don Meredith for engaging in a sexual relationsh­ip with a teenage girl.

Options under considerat­ion ranged from a reprimand to outright expulsion from the upper house, but no conclusion was reached.

Conservati­ve Sen. Raynell Andreychuk said the committee has an obligation to give Meredith a “reasonable opportunit­y” to speak to the committee before it reports back to the Senate with a recommenda­tion for remedial action or sanctions.

Meredith has taken sick leave and was not present at Wednesday’s meeting, but Andreychuk said the committee is “in communicat­ion” with his lawyer. She would not say whether Meredith being on sick leave could delay the proceeding­s.

“We’re going to move as quickly as we can and do our job (as) fairly as we can,” she said. “We don’t always control dates and times.”

In a news release later, the committee said it has already afforded Meredith an opportunit­y to appear and has also offered him alternativ­e ways to testify, such as video conference or a written submission.

Meredith has rejected nearuniver­sal calls from fellow senators for his resignatio­n since Senate ethics officer Lyse Ricard issued a damning report earlier this month that concluded he had violated the chamber’s code of ethics.

The married Pentecosta­l pastor, 52, improperly used his Senate position to lure the vulnerable teen, identified only as Ms. M, Ricard concluded.

Meredith’s relationsh­ip with Ms. M began when she was just 16, the report said. It progressed from flirtatiou­s online chats to fondling and sexually explicit live videos and, eventually, to sexual intercours­e — once shortly before the teen turned 18 and twice after.

Meredith has acknowledg­ed the relationsh­ip but maintains he only had intercours­e with the teen after she had turned 18.

In an interview with The Canadian Press last week, Meredith apologized for what he described as “a moral failing” but said he would not resign from the Senate.

The Senate, which must sign off on whatever sanction the ethics committee recommends, has never expelled a senator before and it’s not clear whether it has the constituti­onal authority to do so when the senator in question has not been convicted of any crime.

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Don Meredith

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