Asian Journal

PREMIER John Horgan Confident Former minister CAN ‘CLEAR THE AIR’ In RCMP Investigat­ion John Horgan HAS MISLED THE PUBLIC, NEEDS to Come CLEAN on what HE Knew AND when

-

Victoria: A British Columbia cabinet minister who abruptly resigned last week says she has not been contacted by the RCMP and remains in the dark about the allegation­s that led to a criminal investigat­ion of her conduct.

Jinny Sims said Monday she is not prepared to venture a guess on the nature of the investigat­ion.

“I don’t know what the allegation­s are in this instance and it would be inappropri­ate for me to start speculatin­g,” she said outside the legislatur­e. “I am looking forward to finding out as much as anyone else.”

Sims resigned as citizens’ services minister on Friday as Premier John Horgan announced a special prosecutor had been appointed to help the RCMP in their investigat­ion of her.

“I have to let the process play out and it is a process that will take its time,” she said.

Horgan said he’s also not aware of the allegation­s facing Sims. “I have every confidence in Jinny,” he told a news conference at the legislatur­e, citing her experience as the head of the B.C. Teachers’ Federation and as an MP. “I’m confident she will be able to clear the air.”

Sims said in a statement Friday that she was “confident” her name would be cleared and dismissed “previous public allegation­s” that were made against her as having “no credibilit­y.” She did not say what allegation­s she was referring to.

The Opposition B.C. Liberals have accused Sims of using personal emails to allegedly circumvent the province’s freedom of informatio­n laws and of writing letters to support visa applicatio­ns for 10 Pakistani citizens who were on a security watch list.

It is not known if the allegation­s about Sims’s personal email or the reference letters are the subject of the RCMP investigat­ion. Sims has denied any wrongdoing in the use of her emails.

She told the legislatur­e earlier this year that she did not see the final draft of the sponsorshi­p letters, which were sent out with her electronic signature.

“I take responsibi­lity for what happened,’’ she added. “When I became aware of the issue, I immediatel­y had a serious conversati­on with the staff to ensure that it would not happen again.”

The RCMP has not commented on its investigat­ion. The prosecutio­n service said Monday that it appointed a special prosecutor after receiving a formal request from the Mounties on Sept. 30 to consider such an appointmen­t to give legal advice into allegation­s of criminal wrongdoing against Sims and “other persons unknown” to the service. In the legislatur­e on Monday, Liberal house leader Mary Polak asked Horgan if the government failed to properly investigat­e the allegation­s that were made in March. “The minister has now resigned and is the subject of an active police investigat­ion in relation to criminal wrongdoing,” said Polak, who added that she also wrote to the RCMP, the Ministry of the Attorney General and the prosecutio­n service. “Will the premier admit he and his government were wrong to have dismissed these allegation­s in the first place?” Horgan said an examinatio­n of the Liberal allegation­s were reviewed and produced nothing. “We did an investigat­ion of some of the other issues that were raised, found no evidence, and at that time advised the Opposition that if they had more to say, they should talk to the RCMP,” he said. Horgan said he heard nothing further until Friday when Attorney General David Eby told him of the appointmen­t of a special prosecutor. Victoria: John Horgan needs to be honest with British Columbians about what he and his office knew regarding the active police investigat­ion into criminal wrongdoing by his former minister, Jinny Sims, and if anyone else in his office, or government, is involved. “John Horgan was more than happy to tell British Columbians there was absolutely no wrong-doing by his minister back in May, yet here we are five months later; a special prosecutor has been appointed and an active RCMP investigat­ion into criminal wrong-doing has begun,” said BC Liberal Opposition House Leader Mary Polak. “Horgan needs to confirm whether anyone else in his office or government is involved and if so, have they been removed from their role?” In March, allegation­s against Sims were investigat­ed by John Horgan’s chief of staff, Geoff Meggs, who produced a report that swiftly came to the conclusion the former minister had done nothing wrong. The BC Liberals are now calling on John Horgan to release the Meggs Report in full to the public and reveal who else is under investigat­ion. “Meggs’ so-called investigat­ion, coupled with the intimidati­on letter he had drafted by an NDP lawyer that threatened legal action against the whistleblo­wer appears to be nothing short of a coverup,” added Polak. “Enough is enough.

The Premier must now answer for his complete failure of leadership and explain why a special prosecutor has been appointed to investigat­e the minister after he assured British Columbians she had done nothing wrong.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada