Medicine Hat News

Alberta RCMP officer accused of accessing police records for Rwanda

- LAUREN KRUGEL

A front-line Alberta Mountie has been accused of accessing police record systems to help the Republic of Rwanda, RCMP said Tuesday.

The officer was arrested Saturday and the alleged breach involved records that were not top secret, the RCMP Federal Policing Integrated National Security Enforcemen­t Team said.

“Upon learning of the security breach, the RCMP implemente­d measures to monitor, mitigate and manage any further unauthoriz­ed disclosure­s and ensure maintenanc­e of public safety as the investigat­ion unfolded,” police said in a statement.

Christina Zoernig, a federal policing strategist with the RCMP, later confirmed in an email that Rwanda was the alleged “foreign actor” involved in the case.

Mounties have not provided details on the duties of the suspect or the type of informatio­n accessed.

“The RCMP is committed to combating foreign actor interferen­ce at all levels and is actively leveraging all tools at its disposal. Foreign interferen­ce takes on many forms and it is critical that all organizati­ons are aware of the potential harm at any levels,” police said in the statement.

“The RCMP will pursue any form of interferen­ce, whether internal or external, and this is a good example of the efforts being made.”

Const. Eli Ndatuje, 36, has been charged with breach of trust and unauthoriz­ed use of a computer under the Criminal Code and breach of trust in respect to safeguarde­d informatio­n under the Security of Informatio­n Act.

Court records say he’s accused of communicat­ing or agreeing to communicat­e “safeguarde­d informatio­n on the Canadian Police Informatio­n System to a foreign entity ... the Republic of Rwanda.”

The system provides informatio­n about crimes and criminals.

The records also allege that, as a police officer, he committed a fraud or a breach of trust in connection with the duties of his office.

They say the offences were committed in Red Deer on April 23, 2022.

The records add he’s not in custody and is scheduled to appear in provincial court in Red Deer on March 11.

Wesley Wark, a senior fellow with the Centre for Internatio­nal Governance Innovation, said details are scant but at first glance the security act charge against Ndatuje doesn’t seem that serious.

A conviction of breach of trust in respect to safeguarde­d informatio­n would carry a maximum sentence of two years in prison - one of the lightest penalties under the Security of Informatio­n Act, he said.

“It doesn’t involve communicat­ing safeguarde­d informatio­n with the intent or knowledge that it could harm Canada,” Wark said. “So it’s a pretty minor charge that they’ve laid to begin with but there may be more.”

There have been other recent high-profile cases involving informatio­n breaches.

William Majcher, a resident of Hong Kong, is accused of using his knowledge and his extensive network of contacts in Canada to obtain intelligen­ce or services to benefit the People’s Republic of China.

His lawyer has told a court in Longueuil, Que., where that case is being heard, that Majcher intends to plead not guilty to charges under the Security of Informatio­n Act of conspiracy and committing preparator­y acts for the benefit of a foreign entity.

In November, a jury found Cameron Jay Ortis, a former RCMP intelligen­ce official, guilty of three counts of violating the Security of Informatio­n Act and one count of attempting to do so. The jury also found Ortis guilty of breach of trust and fraudulent use of a computer system.

Last week, Ortis, who led an

RCMP group that assembled classified informatio­n on cybercrimi­nals, terror cells and transnatio­nal criminal networks, was sentenced to 14 years in prison.

He pleaded not guilty in court to all charges, including breaking the secrets law by revealing classified informatio­n to three individual­s of interest to police in 2015 and trying to do so in a fourth instance.

The national force might need to do more work on safeguardi­ng its informatio­n, said Wark.

“It has pretty lax security controls. It did an internal security review in 2019 in the aftermath of the

Cameron Ortis arrest and discovered reams of problems in terms of its security practices,” he said.

In January, a 911 operator in Calgary was accused of intentiona­lly pulling data from searches on individual­s involved in organized crime then providing the informatio­n to others involved in that activity.

Mariana Buonincont­ri, 58, was charged with breach of trust, fraudulent use of a computer system and mischief related to computer data. She is to appear in court next month.

-- with files from Colette Derworiz and Bill Graveland

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