Trial article. IMO, from reading the proceedings from various sources,it appears to stalling, covering up, etc. Who is ordering these Public Servants to do this do you think?
https://nationalpost.com/opinion/christie-blatchford-for-its-legion-of-prosecutors-mark-norman-case-has-gone-snafu?video_autoplay=true#comments-area
Christie Blatchford: For its legion of prosecutors, Mark Norman case has gone SNAFU - 29 Jan 19
In all the searches the various government departments conducted for records about the Norman case, there were no searches
done for 'Norman' or 'Mark Norman'
OTTAWA — Honest to Pete, it never changes here at the third-party records motion at the breach-of-trust trial of Vice-Admiral Mark Norman. The defence team arrives at the downtown Ottawa courthouse all bright-eyed and cheerful, hoping that finally, this will be the day the government lawyers (their number is legion, and growing) will co-operate or perhaps that the documents they have been seeking for months will fall from the sky. Every time, they are doomed to disappointment, and probably, internally, rage.
As a reminder, the two sides — the defence team is one, with federal prosecutors and the Justice Department lawyers forming the impenetrable wall of government on the other — are fighting over documents the defence wants. These are records the defence believes will show that Norman did nothing more than follow the wishes of the former Stephen Harper government in obtaining an interim Auxillary OIL Replenishment (iAOR) ship, that certainly he did nothing wrong or, at worst, that he did nothing that virtually everyone in Ottawa doesn’t do all the time, which is to say, treat information as hard currency. And so it was Tuesday, when the motion hearing resumed.
Lead prosecutor Barbara Mercier said she wanted to put her position very clearly. “I fear we’re losing our way a little bit. My friend (by which she meant lead defence lawyer Marie Henein) is very good at taking us where she wants to go.” She suggested the court should narrow the focus. It is rarely wise to tell a judge she’s being led about by the nose (nor in this case is it accurate), and in short order Ontario Court Judge Heather Perkins-McVey pointed out that “the integrity of the process has been put at issue,” that no one has been “led astray,” and reminded Mercier that “things don’t always remain in tight little boxes.”
As a hint of how the records-gathering, records-disclosing process has been impugned, let me just say this: In all the searches the various government departments have conducted for responsive records about the Norman case, and among all the search terms they have used, there were no searches done for “Norman” or “Mark Norman.” By this impeccable reasoning, if you wanted to search your company’s files for documents, emails and other communications about one John Doe, there would be no need to search for “Doe” or “John Doe.”
The person who is in charge of this monumental effort is a Justice paralegal named Patsy Bradley. She appears to be a lovely, competent person, but, in the way that many of us become our names, she is also a bit of a Justice Department patsy. She can answer some questions about the searches that were done and the documents retrieved, but not others. In other words, she is at a sufficiently low level that she must defer to Justice lawyers about matters such as what constitutes privilege and cabinet confidence, and thus is a useful witness for the government. And she was looking to lead Justice lawyer Robert MacKinnon for clues as to what she couldn’t or shouldn’t say so obviously — he was like a coach giving hand signals from the stands — that the judge noticed her discomfort and took a break so Bradley could clarify her marching orders.
Among the things she disclosed Tuesday was that since October, when the defence filed their third-party records motion, is that there have been about six meetings with the various government departments that likely have records and justice lawyers. As Henein snapped at one point, “It’s not clear to me how Mr. MacKinnon can be giving legal advice to about seven government departments at the same time…” Here, the judge finished Henein’s sentence, saying, “Without a conflict.”
Another illustration.
After the hearing last sat in December, the judge was presented with a secure laptop containing the documents the government has agreed she should review, first for relevance and later to vet for solicitor-client privilege and the like. One of these documents were the notes of a witness named Melissa Burke, who was sufficiently concerned the defence might not get her notes of a key meeting (this was because no one from the government had showed the slightest interest in getting them for almost two years) that she contacted one of the defence lawyers, Christine Mainville.
At this, MacKinnon said the notes were on the secure laptop. “Not that I can find,” said the judge. “I spent a month trying to find these documents…” on the laptop. She ordered the government to produce a proper, readable list of witnesses and their documents, saying rather furiously, “That should have been done months ago!” And so it went, as they say in the military, SNAFU (Situation Normal All F—ed Up).
That said, there was one amusing frisson of excitement. The Chief of the Defence Staff, Jonathan Vance, has been summonsed to testify at the hearing. At the beginning of the day, MacKinnon stood up to ask Perkins-McVey for a “20-minute notice” so that the general could be brought from his secure location, which of course could not possibly be disclosed. Hours later, Vance having taken his leave from a side room adjacent to the court after his muscle and aides waited for reporters and lawyers to be called back into court and the corridor was thus empty, it was agreed he should return at 10 a.m. Wednesday. After all, the judge said, “We don’t want to take him from his secret location” until necessary. She was grinning. Sometimes, it’s all you can do.