Times Colonist

Ex-B.C. Liberal exec faces defence hurdle in gas-plants case

- COLIN PERKEL

TORONTO — Two former top political aides — including a former executive director of the B.C. Liberal Party — will hear Thursday whether they need to offer further defence to accusation­s they illegally destroyed documents about the Ontario government’s decision to cancel two gas plants ahead of the 2011 provincial election.

Ontario Court of Justice Timothy Lipson on Tuesday reserved his decision on a request from David Livingston and Laura Miller for a directed acquittal — that he dismiss the case against them without the defence putting forward any evidence.

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.

Livingston and Miller, top aides to former Ontario premier Dalton McGuinty, argued through their lawyers that the prosecutio­n has failed to prove their guilt on charges of mischief and illegal computer use, but prosecutor Tom Lemon said emails from 2012 indicated their culpabilit­y.

Among the emails, court heard, were instructio­ns on “double deleting” documents, and discussion of the increasing­ly tense political situation at the time: A legislatur­e committee and others were requesting documents related to the Liberal government’s decision to scrap and relocate the gas plants, which cost taxpayers more than $1 billion.

Both Livingston, who was McGuinty’s chief of staff, and his deputy Miller were quick to say they had no records responsive to the informatio­n requests, court heard. But Lemon argued the duo knowingly and deliberate­ly wiped computer hard drives in the premier’s office in violation of guidelines and policies related to the records. He also said the pair kept senior bureaucrat­s in the dark about what they were doing.

“There was no intention to comply with any of those policies,” Lemon told Lipson. “Certainly, they intended to wipe those hard drives.”

While the pair admit deleting about 400 files from 20 computers, they maintain the files contained only personal data or political records they were not obliged to keep. In addition, their lawyers said, no evidence exists to show exactly what was deleted.

“We don’t have to prove that the defendants deleted specific records,” Lemon countered.

“The data being wiped did not belong to them.”

In pressing for an acquittal, Livingston’s lawyer, Brian Gover, denied the pair had acted nefariousl­y, stating the deleted emails were “political in nature.” The law, Gover said, only required retention of records of long-term business value to the Ontario government, and the relevant emails about the fallout from the gasplants decision didn’t qualify.

Miller’s lawyer, Scott Hutchison, said the prosecutio­n had opened its case by suggesting the pair had deleted thousands of documents as part of some “grand conspiracy.” The emails the Crown pointed to as evidence of guilt reveal the obvious, Hutchison said: The government’s gas plants decision had been controvers­ial.

“I’m prepared to stipulate there was a political controvers­y in 2012,” Hutchison said. “If you look at these emails, they are all political, they are all transient, and none of them would have had to be preserved.”

The prosecutio­n last week admitted it had no case on a third charge against Livingston and Miller, breach of trust.

 ??  ?? Laura Miller, a former executive director of the B.C. Liberal party, arrives at a Toronto court.
Laura Miller, a former executive director of the B.C. Liberal party, arrives at a Toronto court.

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