The Niagara Falls Review

SNC-Lavalin hustled to win over prosecutor­s

Firm’s lawyers knew of change to vital law on settlement deals before MPs, documents show

- ANDY BLATCHFORD

OTTAWA — SNC-Lavalin representa­tives hustled to connect with federal prosecutor­s after the Liberal government quietly introduced a proposal last year to allow corporatio­ns to strike settlement deals and avoid criminal prosecutio­n, court documents show.

The company’s lawyers acted so quickly that they contacted prosecutor­s weeks before lawmakers, even Liberals, were even aware the Trudeau government had tucked the legislatio­n into its 582-page omnibus budget bill.

The Montreal-based engineerin­g and constructi­on firm is at the centre of a controvers­y that has enveloped the Prime Minister’s Office.

The affair has led to the highprofil­e resignatio­ns of one cabinet member — former justice minister and attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould, who became the minister of veterans affairs in January — and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s principal secretary, Gerald Butts.

SNC-Lavalin worked hard to avoid criminal proceeding­s with the aim of negotiatin­g a so-called remediatio­n agreement.

But in September the prosecutor’s office declined to invite the company to negotiate.

A guilty verdict on bribery and corruption charges has been characteri­zed as an existentia­l threat for SNC-Lavalin because the company would be barred from bidding on government contracts in Canada for 10 years.

Much of its work is in designing, building and operating public infrastruc­ture.

The company lobbied federal officials, including in the PMO, to put remediatio­n agreements into the law in the first place.

The tools, known as deferred prosecutio­n agreements in other jurisdicti­ons, had already been enacted in the United States and the United Kingdom.

The Globe and Mail newspaper has reported that Wilson-Raybould came under pressure from staff in the PMO to step in and help SNC-Lavalin avoid criminal prosecutio­n related to contracts in Libya.

Early in 2018, SNC-Lavalin wasted little time making its case for a remediatio­n agreement with prosecutor­s.

Court documents filed last month by the firm’s lawyers say they contacted the Public Prosecutio­n Service of Canada “in or about the month of April 2018, shortly after the Government of Canada introduced the proposed legislativ­e changes to implement a remediatio­n agreement regime.”

This would have been weeks before many lawmakers — including at least one Liberal — tasked with studying the amendment were even aware of its existence.

Last May, members of the allparty parliament­ary committee examining the large budget bill said they only learned about the remediatio­n-regime proposal after it was brought to their attention during testimony of a Justice Department official.

Those included Greg Fergus, the Liberal MP for Hull-Aylmer in Quebec, who said at the time he hadn’t noticed the provision when trying to grasp the document.

While the company’s effort began months before the amendment came into force last September, the documents say federal prosecutor­s declined to “undertake formal steps toward a remediatio­n agreement regarding this matter (or any other) prior to the enactment of the legislatio­n.”

“The purpose of this contact, and of the discussion­s which followed, was to ensure that the (Director of Public Prosecutio­ns) possessed all relevant informatio­n the applicants could provide in relation to the eventual issuance of an invitation to negotiate a remediatio­n agreement, once the enabling legislatio­n was in force,” SNC-Lavalin’s legal team wrote in the court documents, which were obtained by the Canadian Press.

From there, over the next three months, the documents say federal prosecutor­s engaged with SNC-Lavalin’s lawyers and requested they provide detailed informatio­n.

The company’s legal team argued in the documents that it believed SNC-Lavalin easily met the criteria to receive an invitation to negotiate a remediatio­n agreement — and it made “repeated submission­s to this effect” to prosecutor­s.

A letter contained in the court filings shows Trudeau met with Wilson-Raybould almost two weeks after federal prosecutor­s informed SNC-Lavalin it would not be invited to negotiate a settlement.

The letter shows the director of public prosecutio­ns told SNC Lavalin last Sept. 4 about its decision.

Trudeau has said he spoke with Wilson-Raybould about the SNC-Lavalin case 13 days later, on Sept. 17.

The Sept. 4 decision date adds new informatio­n to the timeline of events.

Until now, it had appeared that Trudeau spoke with Wilson-Raybould before the prosecutor’s decision not to proceed with the settlement negotiatio­n. SNC Lavalin publicly announced it had been refused a negotiatio­n Oct. 10.

Wilson-Raybould resigned from cabinet last week and has sought legal advice from former Supreme Court justice Thomas Cromwell.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Liberal MP (and ex-justice minister) Jody Wilson-Raybould arrives at an Ottawa caucus meeting Wednesday.
SEAN KILPATRICK THE CANADIAN PRESS Liberal MP (and ex-justice minister) Jody Wilson-Raybould arrives at an Ottawa caucus meeting Wednesday.

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