Ottawa Citizen

RCMP didn’t ask for instant messages

Failure may leave ‘holes in investigat­ion’ into Duffy affair: ex-Mountie

- JASON FEKETE

The RCMP have not requested and do not appear to have received records of instant messaging between employees in the Prime Minister’s Office and senators as part of their investigat­ion into Mike Duffy’s improper Senate expenses.

The Mounties’ investigat­ion has so far focused on official government and parliament­ary emails, financial records and some other informatio­n requested from the PMO, Harper’s former chief of staff Nigel Wright, senators and others.

But the force’s request for PMO emails and a production order for Senate records do not specifical­ly ask for copies of instant messaging — such as BlackBerry PINto-PIN and SMS text messages, which are regularly used by politician­s and federal employees on sensitive matters.

“I am a little surprised they didn’t ask for it because normally when you ask for this stuff, you go for everything — any form of communicat­ion,” said Garry Clement, former director of the RCMP proceeds of crime branch, who now owns a company specializi­ng in financial investigat­ions for corporate clients.

“The bottom line is, without asking for all forms of communicat­ion, you obviously are leaving yourself some holes in your investigat­ion, there’s no doubt about that.”

Just last week, Canada’s informatio­n watchdog recommende­d federal institutio­ns disable instant messaging on government-issued wireless devices, because those messages, and often important informatio­n contained in them, are being quickly deleted by government and are often unrecovera­ble.

Treasury Board president Tony Clement called that recommenda­tion “nonsensica­l” and maintained federal policies are adequate, including the practice of not having to archive instant messages that do not directly deal with “the business of government.”

Yet, it’s well known around Parliament Hill that MPs, senators and political staffers within the PMO and other ministers’ offices regularly communicat­e by BlackBerry PIN-to-PIN messages, especially on politicall­y sensitive issues.

Court documents tabled last month by the RCMP said investigat­ors conducted a “consensual search” of PMO email items, which included “either emails, or attachment­s to emails,” but they make no mention of instant messages.

The RCMP request for a production order to obtain informatio­n from the Senate also specifical­ly requests “all emails and email attachment­s” from parliament­ary accounts of senators Duffy, David Tkachuk, Marjory LeBreton and Carolyn Stewart Olsen.

Postmedia News asked the RCMP whether they had asked or been provided with messaging such as BlackBerry PINs and SMS text messages in their investigat­ion, but the Mounties would not comment. The RCMP generally do not comment on ongoing investigat­ions.

The Prime Minister’s Office said it provided the Mounties with everything identified in the Informatio­n to Obtain Production Orders (ITO) filed in court, but the PMO did not specify whether it included instant messaging used by parliament­arians and their staff.

“PMO has provided all informatio­n deemed relevant by the RCMP, as the ITO states, and we will continue to actively assist them,” Jason MacDonald, the prime minister’s director of communicat­ions, said in an email.

“The ITO lays out what the RCMP wanted/was provided.”

RCMP court documents also don’t specify whether their examinatio­n of emails from PMO staffers or senators includes all of the personal email accounts of these people, even though documents tabled in the Senate show Wright and Duffy, for example, communicat­ed on their personal email accounts.

Wright has already handed over a number of emails to the RCMP, which are believed to include messages from his personal account and perhaps some from Duffy’s. The RCMP documents note, however, much of the communicat­ion between senators and the PMO was done on official Senate email.

Former Mountie Clement said it’s quite likely there would have been internal PIN-to-PIN communicat­ion among PMO officials as well as Conservati­ve senators during the months-long debate and fallout over Wright’s repayment of Duffy’s $90,000 in improper Senate expenses and his legal bills.

As a Mountie, Clement said he would almost always include a “basket clause” that asked for all forms of communicat­ion so nothing would be left out.

But many of those instant messages may not have been archived onto an internal server, meaning they may be unrecovera­ble even if the RCMP wanted to see them.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK /THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s communicat­ions director Jason MacDonald said Wednesday that the PMO ‘has provided all informatio­n deemed relevant by the RCMP.’
SEAN KILPATRICK /THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s communicat­ions director Jason MacDonald said Wednesday that the PMO ‘has provided all informatio­n deemed relevant by the RCMP.’

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