Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ex-Quebec lieutenant-governor Lise Thibault pleads guilty to fraud-related charges

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Dec, 2014 10:35 AM

    QUEBEC — Former Quebec lieutenant-governor Lise Thibault has pleaded guilty to charges of fraud and breach of trust.

    Thibault entered the pleas in a Quebec City courtroom this morning.

    The charges were laid after a joint report filed by former provincial auditor general Renaud Lachance and his federal counterpart at the time, Sheila Fraser.

    The document suggested more than $700,000 in alleged improper expenses had been claimed.

    Thibault held the provincial vice-regal post between 1997 and 2007.

    Her trial heard the money was allegedly spent on gifts, trips, parties, meals and skiing and golf lessons.

    Quebec court Judge Carol St-Cyr ruled last summer against a pair of motions filed by Thibault's lawyer, who argued the case should be dismissed because the accused benefited from royal immunity. Lawyer Marc Labelle contended that meant she was not a civil servant and therefore could not face criminal charges.

    The judge wrote that, according to constitutional law, the lieutenant-governor does not enjoy the same benefits as the Queen.

    St-Cyr also noted that under the Constitution, the lieutenant-governor is a civil servant, adding such an affirmation is even posted on the lieutenant-governor's website.

    Thibault took the stand after the rulings. Before she did, she vowed to defend herself "so the truth can be known.''

    "I am 75 years old and . . . I don't want to leave behind the image of a woman who, after having given everything, tainted an institution as important as that of the lieutenant-governor,'' she told reporters at the time.

    Thibault testified that her days were busy and sometimes she awoke at 2 a.m. to fulfil her duties as the Queen's representative in Quebec.

    "For me, everything was an official function,'' she said repeatedly throughout her testimony, adding her responsibilities went above the official agenda filed as a court exhibit.

    Thibault testified she had little to show financially for her time as vice-regal — a divorce ate into her savings and she now lives on a $30,000 pension.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Retired B.C. Teacher To Stand Trial On Child-porn Charges In Early 2015

    Retired B.C. Teacher To Stand Trial On Child-porn Charges In Early 2015
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — The trial of a retired teacher facing child-pornography charges will get underway in Kamloops, B.C., early in the new year.

    Retired B.C. Teacher To Stand Trial On Child-porn Charges In Early 2015

    Ontario man arrested in 1970s murders of two B.C. girls

    Ontario man arrested in 1970s murders of two B.C. girls
    VANCOUVER — Shari Greer made a promise to her 11-year-old daughter as she grieved over the girl's grave site that she would never give up the hunt for the killer.

    Ontario man arrested in 1970s murders of two B.C. girls

    Experts revise extinction theory as mastodon bones older than thought

    Experts revise extinction theory as mastodon bones older than thought
    VANCOUVER — Scientists who re-examined the fossils of mastodons that once roamed what is now the Yukon and Alaska have changed their thinking and now believe global cooling probably wiped out the ancient cousin of the elephant.

    Experts revise extinction theory as mastodon bones older than thought

    Digital divide: More doctors now keeping patient records electronically: survey

    Digital divide: More doctors now keeping patient records electronically: survey
    TORONTO — Long reliant on paper-based patient files, the majority of Canadian doctors have now moved firmly into the 21st century, using electronic medical records and other forms of information technology to run their practices, a survey has found.

    Digital divide: More doctors now keeping patient records electronically: survey

    Woman kept dead husband's body because she thought he would be resurrected: Crown

    Woman kept dead husband's body because she thought he would be resurrected: Crown
    HAMILTON — A devoutly religious Hamilton woman who kept her husband's decomposing corpse in a bedroom for six months because she was convinced he would come back to life has pleaded guilty to failing to notify authorities of his death from an illness he was not getting treatment for.

    Woman kept dead husband's body because she thought he would be resurrected: Crown

    Mall shooting trial hears jury choice is between mental disorder and revenge

    Mall shooting trial hears jury choice is between mental disorder and revenge
    TORONTO — A forensic psychiatrist has conceded under cross-examination by the Crown that the man who shot up Toronto's Eaton Centre may have been motivated by revenge.

    Mall shooting trial hears jury choice is between mental disorder and revenge