The Telegram (St. John's)

Arrest could hurt allies, says RCMP head

- LAUREN FOSTER-MACLEOD via REUTERS DAVID LJUNGGREN

OTTAWA — The arrest of a top RCMP officer on charges of leaking secret informatio­n could hurt intelligen­ce operations by allied nations, the head of the RCMP said on Monday.

Cameron Ortis, a director general with the RCMP'S intelligen­ce unit, was charged on Friday under a 2012 security of informatio­n law used to prosecute spies.

“We are assessing the impacts of the alleged activities as informatio­n becomes available,” RCMP Commission­er Brenda Lucki said in a statement.

“We are aware of the potential risk to agency operations of our partners in Canada and abroad and we thank them for their continued collaborat­ion.”

Security experts say the case could damage Canada's standing inside the Five Eyes intelligen­ce-sharing network that also groups the United States, Australia, New Zealand and Britain.

“Mr. Ortis had access to informatio­n the Canadian intelligen­ce community possessed,” said Lucki. “He also had access to intelligen­ce coming from our allies both domestical­ly and internatio­nally.”

In an indication of how serious the case is, Lucki said the “extremely unsettling” allegation­s “have shaken many people throughout the RCMP.”

The 2012 law was used to prosecute a Canadian naval officer who handed over secrets to Russia for more than four years. Sub-lieutenant Jeffrey Delisle was jailed for 20 years in 2013 but released on parole in 2018. Officials told a sentencing hearing in 2013 that allies had threatened to withhold intelligen­ce from Canada unless it tightened security procedures.

Lucki said Ortis — who joined the RCMP in 2007 — had been director general of the RCMP'S National Intelligen­ce Coordinati­on Centre with broad access to informatio­n.

The RCMP did not say to whom the informatio­n was leaked.

“This is a obviously a situation that ... the authoritie­s take extremely seriously,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told reporters on Monday in Waterloo, Ont. “This is something the responsibl­e authoritie­s are engaged with at the highest level, including with our allies.”

Ortis has a doctorate in internatio­nal relations from the University of British Columbia, where he worked with professor Paul Evans.

“Nothing in my experience with Cameron would lead me to suspect he would be any way involved in activities that would lead to such charges,” Evans said in an email to Reuters.

“Like others who know him well, I was shocked by the news of the arrest of a very fine Canadian.”

Like others who know him well, I was shocked by the news of the arrest of a very fine Canadian. Paul Evans UBC professor

 ??  ?? Cameron Ortis, director general with the RCMP'S intelligen­ce unit, is shown in a sketch from his court hearing in Ottawa Sept.13. •
Cameron Ortis, director general with the RCMP'S intelligen­ce unit, is shown in a sketch from his court hearing in Ottawa Sept.13. •

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