Medicine Hat News

I DIDN’T DO IT

Former UCP Prab Gill denies ballot box stuffing

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EDMONTON An Alberta legislatur­e member who quit the United Conservati­ve caucus five months ago in a scandal over ballot box stuffing now says he didn’t do it.

Prab Gill said he had barely read the party’s fivepage investigat­ion report when he accepted its findings of guilt in July and quit, suggesting he felt like it was a done deal.

“Based on the informatio­n provided to me ... (it was) leave it or take it. Based on that, I did what I did,” Gill said Wednesday.

The Independen­t member for Calgary-Greenway said he has since read the report more thoroughly and has concerns.

“I found out later on that key witnesses were not interviewe­d or their statements were not taken,” he said.

This past summer, the United Conservati­ves brought in retired judge Ted Carruthers to investigat­e Gill’s actions at a June 30 meeting of the Calgary-North East constituen­cy. Gill was running for the party’s nomination in that constituen­cy.

Carruthers’ report has not been made public, but a copy was obtained by The Canadian Press.

The report notes that on that day, the constituen­cy called a meeting to elect board members and executives for the newly redrawn riding.

Carruthers focused on one witness working the voter registrati­on table, but noted there was supporting evidence to back her version of events.

The woman at the table was in charge of a stack of voting ballots. She said Gill came over, casually took some ballots and walked away. When she confronted him, he returned some of the ballots but not all.

When the ballots were later counted, there were 124 in the box even though only 74 people had registered to vote.

Carruthers also noted that 14 of the ballots were not initialled by the registrars to guarantee their authentici­ty. Those 14 ballots endorsed a candidate for constituen­cy president known to be backed by Gill.

The party cancelled the vote and the investigat­ion was launched.

Carruthers said, on balance, he believed the woman at the registrati­on table over Gill, calling her evidence “clear, consistent and cogent” while Gill offered a blanket denial and little else.

Gill then resigned from caucus issuing a statement saying he didn’t agree with everything from Carruthers’ probe but that the investigat­ion was fair, adding “I accept the findings.”

There the matter rested until Gill stood in the house last week to criticize the government for what he called undemocrat­ic changes to election fundraisin­g rules. Municipal Affairs Minister Shaye Anderson and Government House Leader Brian Mason retorted that it was “rich” to be lectured on democratic ethics given Gill’s ballot stuffing controvers­y.

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Prab Gill

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