Times Colonist

Top aides to ex-Ontario premier plead not guilty in gas-plant scandal

- COLIN PERKEL

TORONTO — Two top political aides to former Ontario premier Dalton McGuinty pleaded not guilty Monday to charges over the destructio­n of internal emails about the Liberal government’s costly cancellati­on of two gas plants.

Foreshadow­ing what is expected to be a bitterly fought case, the long-awaited trial of David Livingston and his deputy, Laura Miller, finally began with an attack on the prosecutio­n over the informatio­n it had provided the defence, leading to a weeklong delay in hearing evidence.

Livingston’s lawyer, Brian Gover, stopped short of alleging Crown misconduct, but slammed the quality and timeliness of the disclosed materials.

“The police notes are cryptic, unusually sketchy, as if by instructio­n,” Gover told Ontario court Judge Timothy Lipson. “The defence has no idea what facts the witnesses really conveyed.”

In asking for a delay in what was expected to be a six-week trial, Gover said the prosecutio­n had now cut its proposed witness list in half to 12 without explanatio­n. He complained the prosecutio­n was refusing to provide notes on recent interviews — some lasting several hours — with witnesses, who in several cases appeared to have provided new informatio­n and documents not shared with the defence.

“We should know what was discussed during these interviews,” Gover said. “Defendants have a constituti­onal right to know the case they have to meet; they simply want to know what facts the witnesses shared.”

Police allege Livingston, McGuinty’s chief of staff, and Miller hired her partner, a computer expert under contract to the Liberals, to wipe clean about 20 hard drives in the premier’s office in 2013.

The drives apparently contained emails about the Liberals’ decision to cancel the gas plants just before the 2011 provincial election. The decision set off a political firestorm given the estimated $1.1 billion the cancellati­on cost taxpayers and led to McGuinty’s later resigning under a cloud.

The ensuing police investigat­ion, Gover said, stemmed from a politicall­y motivated complaint by the opposition Conservati­ves.

“They were seeking to maximize the gas-plants scandal,” Gover said.

Investigat­ors charged Livingston and Miller in December 2015 with breach of trust, mischief and unlawful use of a computer.

Prosecutor Tom Lemon said he had no problem with an adjournmen­t, even as he suggested the defence was overreachi­ng with its disclosure complaints.

The prosecutio­n, he said, was prepared to provide a table to the defence that outlined what each new or different informatio­n witnesses had provided compared to what they had previously given.

He also undertook a “second look” at police notes to see what further informatio­n could be handed over. However, he balked at providing notes of discussion­s between the prosecutio­n and its witnesses, saying those were privileged.

The defence pressed for the judge to vet the prosecutio­n notes to make sure they should be kept secret, and asked that reasons for dropping witnesses be disclosed.

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