The Daily Courier

Lawyer demands legislatur­e bring back embattled officials

- By DIRK MEISSNER

Sergeant-at-arms Gary Lenz, clerk Craig James on leave

VICTORIA — A lawyer representi­ng the two suspended top officials at the British Columbia legislatur­e is demanding they be reinstated as soon as possible while an RCMP investigat­ion continues.

The letter from Mark Andrews to the NDP, Liberal and Green house leaders calls for the legislatur­e to rescind a motion that placed sergeant-at-arms Gary Lenz and clerk of the house Craig James on administra­tive leave.

Andrews says Lenz and James deny any wrongdoing and they do not know why they have been placed on leave.

“They are the most senior and long-serving and loyal servants of the legislativ­e assembly whose reputation­s are in the process of being destroyed by these events,” says the letter dated Friday, released by the Liberals.

“As a matter of basic fairness, they deserved to be told what it is alleged that they have done and to be given an opportunit­y to respond to those allegation­s.”

The three-page letter is addressed to the NDP’s Mike Farnworth, Liberal Mary Polak and the Green’s Sonia Furstenau.

“Time is of the essence if some of the damage to our clients and to the public respect for the workings of the legislativ­e assembly is to be undone,” says the letter. “To be clear: our clients are not asking for the investigat­ion to be stopped. They will co-operate with the investigat­ion and any reasonable terms connected therewith, and wish it to proceed with dispatch.”

Opposition Liberal Leader Andrew Wilkinson said the letter raises concerns about the government’s preparatio­ns for potential legal issues prior to a meeting on Monday with legislatur­e Speaker Darryl Plecas and the three house leaders.

He said the Liberals followed the plan to place Lenz and James on leave without asking questions because they believed the government had provided solid legal grounds to make the moves. But the Liberals have questions now, Wilkinson said.

“We want to know what the government’s position is on the legal issues raised in the letter because we have to take legal advice from the Ministry of the Attorney General,” he said. “If they did not do the due diligence before marching these people out the door then there’s a serious question about how the NDP handled this.”

NDP house leader Mike Farnworth said in a statement the motion was approved unanimousl­y by the legislatur­e on Tuesday and the decision to introduce the motion was made by the house leaders for all three parties.

“The RCMP are conducting an active investigat­ion with the assistance of two special prosecutor­s appointed by the independen­t B.C. Prosecutio­n Service,” the statement said. “This is a serious matter and the appropriat­e course of action for all is to refrain from speculatio­n and allow the police to do their job. I have no further comment at this time.”

Farnworth, Polak and Furstenau said Thursday that when they met with Plecas on Monday evening to discuss the motion they also rejected a plan by Plecas to appoint Alan Mullen, his special adviser and friend, as acting sergeant-at-arms.

Mullen, who could not be reached for comment on Friday was hired by Plecas in January to look at some matters of concern to him, which included an investigat­ion of senior legislatur­e staff. He has said he turned over informatio­n he gathered to the RCMP in August.

Polak requested an emergency meeting of the all-party committee that oversees the management functions of the legislatur­e. Plecas is the chairman of the committee.

Polak and Wilkinson also released a letter they sent to Farnworth and Furstenau with 11 questions after receiving the letter from Andrews. Most of the questions deal with the legal advice Plecas and Farnworth received before Monday’s meeting on the motion that was presented to the legislatur­e.

The letter from Andrews says neither Lenz nor James received any advanced notice of the motion and were “ejected from the legislatur­e in what appears to have been a deliberate­ly public and humiliatin­g manner, on the basis of secret allegation­s.”

Former B.C. attorney general Wally Oppal, who was appointed as a second adviser to Plecas on Thursday, described the investigat­ion as an alleged “complex criminal matter,” but he wouldn’t elaborate.

“I can understand the public being concerned about this, but time will tell and it will take some time before all this comes out,” Oppal said Friday after meeting with Plecas and Mullen. “Those things take time. There’s a very complex criminal matter going on.”

Neither the RCMP nor the B.C. Prosecutio­n Service have commented on the investigat­ion and have not described it as a criminal matter.

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