November
14, 2013, One of Prime
Minister Stephen Harper‘s top advisers instructed a potential
key witness in the robocalls investigation to delay an interview with
an Elections
Canada investigator until she could obtain legal advice.
Jenni Byrne, who was the
Conservatives’ national campaign manager during the 2011 election,
emailed Guelph campaign worker Andrew
Prescott on Nov. 30, 2011, to ask him not to talk to an
investigator looking into the “Pierre Poutine” robocall until she
had a chance to talk to the party’s lawyer.
Prescott, whose computer was later
linked to the robocall through web data logs, consulted with party
lawyer Arthur Hamilton, as instructed by the party, in December, but
he didn’t speak with the investigator until more than two months
later – on Feb. 24, 2012, the day after the Ottawa
Citizen and Postmedia News reported that the fraudulent
election-day robocall had been sent through a Conservative
voter-contact firm.
Prescott was given immunity for his testimony which turned ot to be “unreliable” and “selfserving” and another key person Ken Morgan fled overseas never to be heard from. It seems that the new Commissioner of Canada Elections will not be perusing this any further in that he can find 'no evidence' that any such calls took place outside of Guelph.
Prescott, however, cannot be
charged because he was given an immunity agreement from the Crown in
exchange for testimony against Sona — testimony that,
ultimately, Hearn found unreliable.
Ken Morgan, the campaign manager,
has refused to speak to Elections Canada investigators and moved to
Kuwait during the nearly three-year investigation. He has not been
charged.
Unclear is whether Commissioner of
Canada Elections Yves Côté, who investigates alleged violations of
the elections law, will re-open his investigation of the Guelph
robocalls to find the other alleged collaborators or simply let the
matter drop.
Côté has already said he
could find no evidence to support allegations of misleading calls
reported in more than 200 ridings that Elections Canada during the
election.
Prescott involved more than he said
One person mentioned in the judge’s
ruling was Andrew Prescott – the deputy campaign manager and IT
professional who received immunity to testify against Sona.
Hearn threw out the majority of
Prescott’s evidence, calling it “self-serving.”
“There certainly is some basis
for the court being concerned Mr. Prescott was involved more so than
he indicated,” Hearn wrote.
Prescott declined to comment
Thursday. Throughout the trial, court heard that Prescott withheld
information from investigators, even after he struck his immunity
deal in December 2013.
In short can you say “successful coverup” and “fall guy convicted”
For more news articles and details of
this 3 year 'investigation' see my Electoral
Malfeasance page, my apologies if there are some articles that
have disappeared since being originally posted.
2 comments:
It's always been about keeping the lid on the garbage can, Rural. But the stench keeps getting stronger.
Indeed it does Owen, only so much manure can be stuffed in one can!
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