Wednesday, August 17, 2022

EXPOSING THE CYA MANOEUVERS AT NS MASS SHOOTING INQUIRY

   The federal deputy justice minister has defended his department's lawyers after a former Supreme Court judge raised "serious concerns" about the advice they gave to a high-ranking RCMP officer in the Nova Scotia mass shooting inquiry, including not to talk about certain evidence unless specifically asked.
  Thomas Cromwell, the director of legal counsel for the public inquiry into the April 2020 massacre, wrote to Department of Justice lawyer Lori Ward two weeks ago about Chief Supt. Chris Leather's testimony last month.
   Leather, who was the head of criminal operations in Nova Scotia at the time of the shootings, has testified he received a call from RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki on the evening of April 22, 2020, shortly after the killings. He said Lucki asked him to send her details about the guns used by the shooter, and he did send her a list for internal purposes only.
   But Leather's call and email correspondence with Lucki didn't come up in a July 6 interview with inquiry lawyers. Leather testified on July 28 that lawyers with the federal Department of Justice, including Ward, told him to not "proactively disclose" his conversation and emails with Lucki.

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