Close X
Thursday, January 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

Former B.C. Staffer Alleges Transportation Ministry Destroyed Emails

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 May, 2015 02:00 PM
    VICTORIA — A former executive assistant in the B.C. transportation minister's office says emails about government meetings over the Highway of Tears investigation into murdered and missing women were purposely deleted from his computer by a ministry official.
     
    Tim Duncan says a ministerial assistant in Todd Stone's Victoria office ordered him to trash the material last November, but when he hesitated the assistant deleted them himself, saying, "you don't have to worry about it anymore."
     
    Duncan says his concerns about the government deleting emails that had been requested in a freedom of information application were brushed aside by other officials.
     
    The Opposition New Democrats released a letter of concern Duncan sent to British Columbia's Information and Privacy Commissioner Elizabeth Denham.
     
    Stone says he is not aware of any practice in his office to delete emails that could become part of such requests, but he plans to advise his staff those actions are not permitted or tolerated.
     
    Duncan, who was reached by phone for an interview, says he returned to Alberta after working barely six months in what he called the "cesspool that is the B.C. government."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Trial Begins For Alberta Man Charged With Attempted Murder Of Two RCMP Officers

    Trial Begins For Alberta Man Charged With Attempted Murder Of Two RCMP Officers
    WESTASKIWIN, Alta. — The trial for a man charged with attempted murder in the shooting of two Mounties in rural Alberta has begun with him pleading not guilty.

    Trial Begins For Alberta Man Charged With Attempted Murder Of Two RCMP Officers

    Vancouver, Toronto Housing Prices Shoot Up, Other Major Cities See Mixed Results: Royal LePage

    Vancouver, Toronto Housing Prices Shoot Up, Other Major Cities See Mixed Results: Royal LePage
    TORONTO — House prices have jumped dramatically over the past year in Canada's two most expensive real estate markets, Vancouver and Toronto, but other major cities showed a mixed bag of results.

    Vancouver, Toronto Housing Prices Shoot Up, Other Major Cities See Mixed Results: Royal LePage

    Trudeau Rules Out Coalition With Ndp After Saying He May Be Open To It

    Trudeau Rules Out Coalition With Ndp After Saying He May Be Open To It
    HALIFAX — Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau says he doesn't see any possibility of a coalition with the NDP, a day after he said he would "maybe" be more open to the idea if Tom Mulcair wasn't running the party.

    Trudeau Rules Out Coalition With Ndp After Saying He May Be Open To It

    Supreme Court Rules Prayers Can't Continue At Quebec Council Meeting

    Supreme Court Rules Prayers Can't Continue At Quebec Council Meeting
    OTTAWA — In a decision that could reverberate in cities and towns across the country, the Supreme Court of Canada has ruled that prayers cannot be recited before municipal council meetings in the Quebec town of Saguenay.

    Supreme Court Rules Prayers Can't Continue At Quebec Council Meeting

    Canadian Diplomat's Teen Son Charged With Murder In Florida: Report

    MIAMI — U.S. media are reporting that a Canadian diplomat's teenage son accused of involvement in a drug-related shootout that killed his older brother in Florida has been charged with first-degree murder.

    Canadian Diplomat's Teen Son Charged With Murder In Florida: Report

    CREA: Canadian Home Sales Revive In March; Vancouver, Toronto The Only Hot Spots

    CREA: Canadian Home Sales Revive In March; Vancouver, Toronto The Only Hot Spots
    OTTAWA — Low mortgage rates helped boost the number of Canadian home sales in March by 4.1 per cent compared with February, according to the Canadian Real Estate Association.

    CREA: Canadian Home Sales Revive In March; Vancouver, Toronto The Only Hot Spots