crumb13 Feb 2019 5:39 AM
There is, to my mind, an even bigger issue of abuse of process by government. I hearken back the government's attempt to put a gag order on their whole investigation of the embarrassment that the ham-handed attempt to finagle the contract for the supply ship to the Irvings caused. Having spent weeks investigating in secret, when VAdm Norman was publicly identified and put on ice without charges the RCMP applied for a press gag on reporting any detail of their investigation.
The judge who heard this application rejected it, ruling that the RCMP's affidavit failed to convince him that one was justified. He went on to opine that it also left him unconvinced that there was legal justification for their investigation having been pursued to the length it had been already. And he published that affidavit, albeit heavily redacted.
A read through the RCMP affidavit, as heavily redacted as it was, shows that at several points the RCMP, having reported to (redacted) that they could find no evidence that VAdm Norman had committed any offense, were then directed to double down on their efforts and use increasingly intrusive and questionable surveillance tools.
When, at the final juncture, they again reported that they could find no evidence of an offense, the investigation culminating in the dawn raid on the Norman family home. Why this was necessary and done is an open question, although one can see the chilling effect of this drama on anyone else who might irritate or cause embarrassment to the government.
We can understand why the judge was querulous; given the amount of time and effort that went into determining that there was no evidence that VAdm Norman had committed any offense, the logic that uses this lack of evidence to justify raiding his home and suspending him from his position is indefensible. But this was done, at someone's direction.
Whose; one wonders?