Times Colonist

Legislatur­e clerk Ryan-Lloyd testifies at former boss’s corruption trial

- GRAEME WOOD

VANCOUVER — Kate Ryan-Lloyd, the clerk of the Legislativ­e Assembly of B.C., took to the stand in B.C. Supreme Court Wednesday to testify for special Crown prosecutor­s in their case against her predecesso­r, Craig James, who faces fraud and breach of trust charges.

Prompted by prosecutor David Butcher, Ryan-Lloyd stated that at no point during her time as deputy clerk did she receive direction that chamber attire — her robe, jacket and white shirt — could be interchang­ed with business attire.

The seemingly mundane detail relates to allegation­s of improper spending by James, including business suits he expensed with public funds.

Ryan-Lloyd is among key figures in James’s time as clerk, from 2011 until November 2018, when police escorted him out of the building, leaving then deputy clerk Ryan-Lloyd as the acting clerk, until her official permanent appointmen­t in March 2020.

Ryan-Lloyd became deputy clerk in 2011 when James was appointed clerk, following the retirement of clerk George MacMinn. It was shortly after that, in February 2012, when James received a $257,988 retirement benefit — now the subject of a breach of trust allegation — whereas Ryan-Lloyd declined her own.

At issue is whether James skirted policies and/or improperly approved the benefit.

James is also accused of fraud in excess of $5,000 for personal expenditur­es billed to the legislatur­e.

Butcher spent much of the first part of his examinatio­n establishi­ng the roles and responsibi­lities of the Legislativ­e Assembly, the non-partisan, autonomous entity with 300 staff members, headed by the clerk.

The clerk has administra­tive, CEO-type duties and assists in legislativ­e procedures, RyanLloyd confirmed.

Butcher questioned RyanLloyd about how, in October 2019, the Legislativ­e Assembly Management Committee laid out the clerk’s responsibi­lities ahead of its search for a permanent replacemen­t. Ryan-Lloyd said it was a “wholesome” job descriptio­n, noting how the clerk is to oversee the provisions of services and financial management plus implementa­tion of internal controls.

James took notes during the testimony, but his criminal defence lawyers, Kevin Westell and James Cameron, have yet to cross-examine.

The court heard how RyanLloyd, whose appointmen­t as clerk was widely celebrated at the legislatur­e, worked her way up the ranks from a research librarian in 1992 to a permanent officer in 2002.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Craig James leaves B.C. Supreme Court in Vancouver during a break from his trial on Wednesday.
THE CANADIAN PRESS Craig James leaves B.C. Supreme Court in Vancouver during a break from his trial on Wednesday.

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