In an unexpected development yesterday, we learned that SNC-Lavalin took a plea deal from the courts – that one of their divisions would plead guilty for fraud over $5000 in connection to their dubious activities in Libya, pay a fairly hefty $280 million fine over five years, and all of the rest of the charges they were facing were withdrawn, and they wouldn’t face debarment from future contract work for governments. In other words, they largely got what they wanted with the Deferred Prosecution Agreement/Remediation Agreement that they had been agitating and lobbying for, and which spun off the whole Double-Hyphen Affair in the first place.
Could of things – first of all, DPAs are not “get out of jail free” cards like they have often been described as. Had SNC-Lavalin been granted the DPA, they would have had to agreed that they committed wrongdoing, paid a fine which would have included remediation for the wronged parties, and would have a structured monitoring regime put into place to ensure better governance going forward, and it wouldn’t have protected any of their executives from future prosecution. One particular law professor, Jennifer Quaid, noted that even though they weren’t a good candidate for a DPA, it would have actually been more transparent than the plea bargain that they wound up with, there is no guarantee of remediation to wronged parties, and it’s unlikely there will be the same structure imposed, so maybe, just maybe, the DPA was the better plan in the first place.
Jody Wilson-Raybould tweeted out in response that the system worked, while Justin Trudeau said in an interview that he may have acted differently had he known this would have been the outcome, but he was trying to do the best he could at the time. And there are certain people screaming about prosecutorial independence, but I keep going back to the conversation that Wilson-Raybould taped with Michael Wernick, and so much of it was them talking past one another – him looking for an explanation and her not providing one until the end of the conversation when she said that she gave a report to PMO months prior, to which Wernick said “That’s news to me.” This key exchange was completely glossed over in most of the reporting because they fell instead for the juicy quotes that Wilson-Raybould had set up in conducting the conversation the way she did. So much of the communications and relationship breakdown is on full display in that call. (That being said, I remain deeply troubled with how much SNC-Lavalin was stage-managing the legislative process around the DPAs, even if lawyers in the field had been demanding that legislation for a decade because we were behind our comparable Western allies in making these kinds of arrangements available).
Meanwhile, certain journalists want to insist that this doesn’t mean that the story is over because parliamentary committees. Erm, except they would need the support of the Bloc to push forward with them, and they have explicitly stated that they have no interest in doing so. (Also, I am a bit concerned that Elizabeth May was conspiracy theorizing over Twitter regarding who this plea deal is “protecting.”)
On a related note, Wilson-Raybould was chosen by The Canadian Press as their Newsmaker of the Year, and make news she certainly did (and still does).
Good reads:
- The Canadian Forces lacks proper anti-aircraft defences, and the need is growing more apparent with the rise of attacks by unmanned drones.
- There is a renewed round of accusations that the government voted for a supposedly “anti-Israel” motion at the UN.
- Liberal MP Majid Jowhari denies allegations he has ties to the Iranian regime.
- News leaking from Conservative Party headquarters is that Scheer’s expenses from party coffers were some $700,000 more than expected.
- Sources say that Jean Charest is contemplating a political comeback to run for Conservative leader (given that he once lead the Progressive Conservatives).
- Jody Wilson-Raybould has moved out of her old ministerial office and is headed for new digs.
- Chris Selley notes that Scheer’s expenses from the party are really funded by taxpayers given the generous tax credits, and that perhaps that should change.
- Chantal Hébert gives her list of political winners and losers in 2019.
- Colby Cosh offers a difficult read in a case where sentencing provisions were poorly followed by judges, proving a danger to the public.
Odds and ends:
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The government missed the boat again when it allowed Jody wilson Raybould to tell ‘her truth’. Not one committee member had her explain the differences between a DPA and a regular prosecution. This would have been of great benefit to Canadians who rarely get the whole “story” from politicians{revisit your blog of yesterday}. Raybould’s story would have been much shorter and perhaps she could have been rehabilitated but now she sits remarkable that she maintained her seat, in the basement where she belongs and resides in a seat on the fae left side of the chamber nearly across where Harper sat upon his defeat nearest to the exit door.
I don’t care about Veruca Salt Raybould. Let her speak… nothing and forever hold her peace. After the war she caused, it’s the least she could do. I only hope Justin Trudeau’s unfairly damaged public image and approval # can be rehabilitated in time to tackle a radicalized Con field that smells blood in the water and wants to implant one of their puppets in Harper’s “dream job.” She wants a bigger office, maybe the Fraser Institute princess will cross the floor and put her hat in the ring to replace Scheer. Why not? They’re looking for someone to make their nest of vipers more “palatable,” and it’s not like she has loyalty to any party except her own party of one.
Noisemaker of the year. Troublemaker of the year. This all started because daddy’s girl felt entitled to her entitlements and wanted revenge against Trudeau for her “dream job” that she shouldn’t have had in the first place. Judge Jody the Executioner. The only principle she represents is the Peter Principle. 2020 is hindsight and I’m sure hiring her is the biggest regret of Trudeau’s career and probably his life. What a sad, sordid waste.