Times Colonist

Charge against ex-B.C. Liberal director fizzles

- COLIN PERKEL

TORONTO — One of three charges laid against two former senior Liberal aides in Ontario’s gas plants scandal — including a former executive director of the B.C. Liberal Party — fizzled Friday when the prosecutio­n asked it be dismissed.

The defence, meanwhile, urged acquittal on the other counts on the basis they failed to rise above the speculativ­e.

The evidence, prosecutor Tom Lemon said in a surprise change of course, did not support convicting David Livingston and his deputy, Laura Miller, of breach of trust over destructio­n of emails related to the cancellati­on of two gas plants near Toronto before the 2011 Ontario election. Miller, who announced in June she was “moving on” from her post as the B.C. Liberals’ executive director, was also the party’s campaign director for the May 9 election.

“There’s no longer a reasonable prospect of conviction,” Lemon told Ontario court Judge Timothy Lipson.

Lawyers for the two top aides to former Ontario Liberal premier Dalton McGuinty then argued for a directed verdict — an acquittal without any defence evidence — on the remaining two counts, mischief and unauthoriz­ed use of a computer, a call that Lemon opposed.

Brian Gover, who represents Livingston, said no evidence supports the accusation­s the duo illegally destroyed sensitive documents to hide them from public and legislatur­e committee scrutiny.

The prosecutio­n case is so weak, Gover told Lipson, that any inference the pair acted illegally amounts to “rank speculatio­n bordering on conspiracy theories.”

“The Crown has failed to put forward any evidence that a single document that was required to be kept was deleted,” Gover said. “There is no evidence they acted with intent to destroy any document that they were required by law to retain.”

While the accused did delete files to remove personal data from the hard drives of departing members of staff in the premier’s office, Gover said they acted in the “sincere belief” they were entitled to do what they did and without any criminal intent.

At several points, Lipson noted the accused appeared to have gone to “extraordin­ary lengths” to delete the computer files: Livingston requested special access to the computers and Miller’s IT-savvy spouse, Peter Faist, was hired to wipe the hard drives.

Gover, however, argued the computers contained personal informatio­n, were also used by the Liberal party, and that senior civil servants viewed Livingston’s plans as “entirely reasonable,” a theme picked up on by Miller’s lawyer, Scott Hutchison.

The accused, Hutchison said, went to Cabinet Office to request permission for what they wanted to do, and Faist wiped the drives in plain view during business hours.

Hutchison warned against allowing the “amorphous scandal” around the scrapping and relocation of the gas plants at a cost of more than $1 billion to provincial taxpayers to cloud the facts.

“A criminal prosecutio­n is … not about trying to write a salacious story for a newspaper,” Hutchison said.

The prosecutio­n, however, portrayed the accused as sophistica­ted individual­s who acted in early 2013 under false pretences and against the advice of appalled senior bureaucrat­s to have files indiscrimi­nately deleted from hard drives that were not theirs to wipe.

“The evidence clearly shows that the accused had a motive and a demonstrat­ed intent to destroy records captured by a [Freedom of Informatio­n] request or an order of the Legislativ­e Assembly,” the prosecutio­n said.

“Wiping the hard drives was part of a larger attempt to ensure there were no recoverabl­e records.”

Lemon said Livingston and Miller acted jointly — Livingston by obtaining a password allowing access to the computers and Miller by executing the deletion plan through Faist, who had no security clearance.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Laura Miller, seen testifying in 2013 before an Ontario legislativ­e committee.
THE CANADIAN PRESS Laura Miller, seen testifying in 2013 before an Ontario legislativ­e committee.

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