Medicine Hat News

Interferen­ce inquiry head says feds have signalled need for closed-door hearings

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The head of a federal inquiry into foreign interferen­ce says the government has told her it will be necessary to hear some evidence behind closed doors.

In a notice issued late

Friday, commission­er MarieJosee Hogue said the government will have the burden of convincing her that disclosure of such evidence to inquiry participan­ts or the public could endanger national security.

If Hogue and her counsel are not persuaded by government arguments, she will require that the evidence be presented in public hearings.

On the other hand, if she agrees to a closed-door session, known as an in camera hearing, a summary of the evidence presented will be prepared for public release.

Hogue said that if the government and the commission disagree on the need to keep certain informatio­n under wraps, she will notify the government of her intention to disclose it.

In turn, the government will then have the option of bringing the dispute before the Federal Court.

“The Attorney General of Canada has already advised the Commission that it will be necessary to receive certain evidence in camera, for reasons of national security or other public interest,” the notice said.

The inquiry is delving into allegation­s of foreign interferen­ce by China, India, Russia or others in the 2019 and 2021 federal elections. Hearings on the substance of the accusation­s are expected to take place next month, with a report on the findings due May 3.

The Friday notice from Hogue followed an initial oneweek hearing, held in late January and early February, that explored ways to be transparen­t about the highly sensitive subject.

Federal lawyers advised the inquiry that the public release through the ongoing commission process - of detailed intelligen­ce about interferen­ce threats from China and others would risk exposing vital secrets.

That risk, they said, is compounded by the “mosaic effect” - where adversarie­s track and piece together small pieces of intelligen­ce over a long period to reveal a clearer picture.

The lawyers suggested options including the release of some material with redactions, publicatio­n of summaries of “a limited number of documents or topics” and closed-door hearings that would be followed by release of a public summary.

In the notice issued Friday, Hogue said the commission would require federal officials to justify any redactions when it believes the documents and informatio­n the government wishes to protect would be relevant and useful to inquiry participan­ts or the public.

That could prompt commission counsel to challenge blacked-out passages, or work toward the release of summaries of the sensitive informatio­n, the notice said.

If a person who fears for their safety - or that of family or associates - files an applicatio­n to testify behind closed doors, the commission­er will decide whether and how to grant such protection, the notice added.

“The Commission will prepare a summary of this testimony and, before making it public, will ascertain from the witness that nothing contained therein will put the witness or those close to them at risk.”

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