Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Duffy Contract Covered Cost Of Prime Minister's Makeup At G8/G10 Event

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Apr, 2015 12:04 PM
    OTTAWA — The cost of Stephen Harper's makeup for a public event in 2010 was covered by a fund at the heart of several criminal charges being faced by suspended senator Mike Duffy, court heard Thursday. 
     
    Duffy and the prime minister had their makeup done together ahead of a G8/G10 event on Parliament Hill and the $300 bill was paid by Maple Ridge Media, a company established by Duffy friend Gerald Donohue that the Crown alleges was given $65,000 worth of taxpayer money to help Duffy skirt Senate rules.
     
    Last week, a government source told The Canadian Press that the makeup services Harper received that day weren't paid for by taxpayers.
     
    On Thursday, Jacqueline Lambert — the makeup artist herself — contradicted that assertion on the witness stand.
     
    "On this occasion of the G8, did Prime Minister Harper pay you anything for the services he received, or did you take the $300 to be payment in respect to the services you provided the prime minister?" asked Duffy's lawyer Donald Bayne.
     
    "Yes, your latter," Lambert answered.
     
    Court has already been told the $300 was a flat-rate fee that would not have changed regardless of whether one or two people had their makeup done.
     
    A spokesman for the Prime Minister's Office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
     
    Lambert was on the stand to testify about doing Duffy's makeup on two occasions after he was appointed to the Senate. Payments she received for both are the basis for two of the fraud charges Duffy is facing.
     
    In March 2009, Lambert did Duffy's makeup for a formal photo shoot and sent him the bill. In a letter to Duffy the following month, the Senate informed him such expenses were not covered by their reimbursement policies. 
     
    When she was called by Duffy a second time in 2010 to do his make-up for the G8/G10 event, Duffy told her to send the invoice to Maple Ridge Media instead.
     
    A copy of the invoice Lambert sent wasn't submitted as evidence; her computer crashed and she no longer had a copy, court was told. She did say, however, that it would have referenced services provided to both Duffy and Harper.
     
    A copy of the cheque she received indicated that it came from Donohue's company. On the envelope, there was a notation that it was for "PM and Mike."
     
    The original contracts between Duffy and Donohue stated they were for editorial services, but the Crown has alleged those services were never delivered, with the money being funnelled elsewhere to cover costs Duffy couldn't expense to the Senate. 
     
    An intern in Duffy's office testified earlier Thursday that she was also paid by that same company, having received a $500 cheque after she'd been told she was doing good work in the senator's office and he'd find some money for her.
     
    Ashley Cain helped open mail, reply to correspondence and sort business cards, court heard, yet she worked in Duffy's office without having completed any of the paperwork the Senate requires of its employees, even those on short work terms. 
     
    The payment she received is the basis for two of the other fraud charges Duffy is facing.
     
    Bayne argued that paying Cain was a legitimate business expense, since the work she was doing for Duffy was similar to the work she is doing now in the Prime Minister's Office.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Coast Guard Defends Oil Spill Response As City Manager Questions Communication

    Coast Guard Defends Oil Spill Response As City Manager Questions Communication
    VANCOUVER — Depending on who you were listening to on Tuesday, the response to Vancouver's toxic fuel spill was either a fine example of speed and co-ordination or a chaotic event filled with miscommunication.

    Coast Guard Defends Oil Spill Response As City Manager Questions Communication

    US CDC starts trial testing efficacy of Canadian Ebola vaccine in Sierra Leone

    US CDC starts trial testing efficacy of Canadian Ebola vaccine in Sierra Leone
    The U.S. Centers for Disease Control says it has started a clinical trial in Sierra Leone that will eventually vaccinate 6,000 front-line workers in the fight against the disease.

    US CDC starts trial testing efficacy of Canadian Ebola vaccine in Sierra Leone

    Edmonton Police To Create Own Counter-terrorism Unit To Work With RCMP

    Edmonton police Chief Rod Knecht says he's going to bring in officers from other departments such as intelligence analysis and community outreach, but won't say how many officers the new group will include.

    Edmonton Police To Create Own Counter-terrorism Unit To Work With RCMP

    Prescribe Heroin To Addicts Who Can't Kick Habit Using Detox, Methadone: Expert

    Prescribe Heroin To Addicts Who Can't Kick Habit Using Detox, Methadone: Expert
    TORONTO — An addictions expert at the University of British Columbia is renewing the argument for prescribing heroin to addicts who have tried and failed to kick their habits.

    Prescribe Heroin To Addicts Who Can't Kick Habit Using Detox, Methadone: Expert

    Ottawa To Provide Money To First Nations For Prescription Drug Abuse Treatment

    Ottawa To Provide Money To First Nations For Prescription Drug Abuse Treatment
    Health Minister Rona Ambrose says Ottawa plans to spend $13.5 million over the next five years for on-reserve support programs.

    Ottawa To Provide Money To First Nations For Prescription Drug Abuse Treatment

    Nova Scotia Court Upholds Ruling Against Wrongfully Convicted Man

    Nova Scotia Court Upholds Ruling Against Wrongfully Convicted Man
    HALIFAX — A Nova Scotia court has rejected the appeal of man who argued unsuccessfully last year that RCMP negligence caused his wrongful conviction on a statutory rape charge 45 years ago.

    Nova Scotia Court Upholds Ruling Against Wrongfully Convicted Man