National Post

FALLOUT UPGRADED TO ‘SEVERE,’ DOCUMENTS REVEAL

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New documents show Canada’s cyberspy agency was so alarmed by the potential fallout from an alleged secrecy breach by a senior RCMP employee that it revised a damage assessment to “severe” from “high” in the days after his arrest. Cameron Jay Ortis was taken into custody in September 2019 for allegedly revealing secrets to an unnamed recipient and planning to give additional classified informatio­n to an unspecifie­d foreign entity. Ortis, who led the RCMP’S National Intelligen­ce Co-ordination Centre, is charged with Security of Informatio­n Act violations, breach of trust and a computer-related offence. The federal Communicat­ions Security establishm­ent initially judged potential damage from the incident as “high” given Ortis’ access to some of the most classified informatio­n in Canada. A CSE memo, newly obtained by The Canadian Press under the Access to Informatio­n Act, says the assessment was bumped up to “severe” after the cybersecur­ity agency conducted “a more in-depth analysis.” Ortis is being held in an Ottawa jail as his case proceeds.

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