The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Egaming record loss unexplaine­d: deputy minister

Official named in lawsuit saws emails lost after phone upgrade

- STU NEATBY

Almost two years of emails sent and received by a government employee named in the $50-million e-gaming lawsuit appear to have disappeare­d, and IT staff still do not know why.

The emails, from the account of Brad Mix, a senior director with Innovation P.E.I., related to a time period between summer 2010 and spring 2012 when Mix was an employee with Tourism P.E.I. In response to a request from the province’s informatio­n and privacy commission­er, Erin McGrath-Gaudet, deputy minister of Economic Tourism and Culture, confirmed the emails from Mix were not available.

The emails were initially sought through a Freedom of Informatio­n request by Paul Maines, the president of Capital Markets Technology Inc. which is currently suing the province for $50 million. CMT sought to establish a financial transactio­ns platform related to a failed plan to establish P.E.I. as a regulatory hub for online gambling activity.

A review of the province’s response to this request was initiated by P.E.I. blogger and one-time Progressiv­e Conservati­ve leadership candidate Kevin Arsenault.

The time period of the missing emails appears to coincide with events set out in the lawsuit.

In a July 10 letter obtained by The Guardian, McGrath-Gaudet states Mix first reported in 2015 that the emails from 2011 and 2012 were missing. Mix then reported the missing email archives to provincial IT staff and was “distressed by the discovery of missing emails.”

“Although Mr. Mix advises that he does delete some transitory emails that he won’t use again (as is permitted), he unequivoca­lly states that he has not and does not intentiona­lly delete other emails,” McGrath-Gaudet wrote.

“Mr. Mix also reports that in early 2015 he had a mobile phone upgrade, a few months prior to his discovery, and he believes that this upgrade is related to the apparent loss of emails.”

McGrath-Gaudet also said email losses can occur because of corruption in files and deletion, but that the cause of losses of such files can sometimes not be found.

McGrath-Gaudet also said archiving of government emails across department­s was not standardiz­ed until 2014.

The CMT statement of claim accuses several government officials, including Mix, former premier Robert Ghiz, former finance deputy minister Neil Stewart and others of misfeasanc­e in public office. CMT alleges that a memorandum of understand­ing signed with the province was violated and further alleges that both Ghiz and Stewart unlawfully ordered the destructio­n of emails to avoid scrutiny.

None of these allegation­s have been proven in court.

The reference to a phone upgrade has previously not been mentioned in court documents in regard to missing emails from Mix.

In a cross-examinatio­n earlier this year, Ghiz denied knowing that an email account of his former chief of staff, Chris LeClair, would be deleted, despite signing off on a form authorizin­g the deletions. Ghiz said he simply believed the form to be standard paperwork requiring his signature.

Mix was also cross-examined in January by John McDonald, a lawyer representi­ng CMT Inc. and Maines. During the crossexami­nation, Mix was asked by McDonald about the e-mails.

“Have you disclosed all the emails that would exist between you and Paul Jenkins to your counsel?” McDonald asked, referring to a former business partner of Maines.

Jonathan Coady, a lawyer representi­ng Mix, LeClair, Ghiz and several other former government staff, answered the question for Mix.

“I believe so, Mr. McDonald,” Coady said.

 ??  ?? Erin McGrath-Gaudet
Erin McGrath-Gaudet

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