Close X
Tuesday, January 14, 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

    Italian Police Foil Attack On Vatican, Arrest 18 Pakistanis And Afghans Terror Suspects

    Italian Police Foil Attack On Vatican, Arrest 18 Pakistanis And Afghans Terror Suspects
    Italian police on Friday arrested 18 people in what they called a "vast" operation against a group allegedly inspired by the Al Qaeda and foiled an attack on the Vatican.

    Italian Police Foil Attack On Vatican, Arrest 18 Pakistanis And Afghans Terror Suspects

    Holt Renfrew Makes Plans To Expand Its Downtown Vancouver Location

    Holt Renfrew Makes Plans To Expand Its Downtown Vancouver Location
    VANCOUVER — Holt Renfrew is stepping up its presence in Vancouver with plans to grow the size of its existing downtown store by 30 per cent.

    Holt Renfrew Makes Plans To Expand Its Downtown Vancouver Location

    Accused B.C. Terrorist Didn't Know Whose Plan He Was Following: Trial

    Accused B.C. Terrorist Didn't Know Whose Plan He Was Following: Trial
    VANCOUVER — A series of plans proposed by a British Columbia man on trial for plotting to blow up the provincial legislature was "hokey and harebrained," an undercover officer has told a Vancouver court.

    Accused B.C. Terrorist Didn't Know Whose Plan He Was Following: Trial

    Feds To Appeal After Omar Khadr Wins Bail While He Fights War Crimes Conviction

    Feds To Appeal After Omar Khadr Wins Bail While He Fights War Crimes Conviction
    Almost 13 years after American soldiers captured him as a grievously wounded 15-year-old boy in Afghanistan, Omar Khadr found himself on the verge of his first taste of freedom on Friday after a judge granted him bail.

    Feds To Appeal After Omar Khadr Wins Bail While He Fights War Crimes Conviction

    Case Postponed For Montreal Teens Facing Terrorism Charges

    Case Postponed For Montreal Teens Facing Terrorism Charges
    The case involving El Mahdi Jamali and Sabrine Djermane was postponed today to allow defence lawyers to consult evidence they received.

    Case Postponed For Montreal Teens Facing Terrorism Charges

    Harper Government Back In The Middle Of Historic Turk-Armenian Dispute

    Harper Government Back In The Middle Of Historic Turk-Armenian Dispute
    The Harper government is sending Immigration Minister Chris Alexander to Armenia to attend the commemoration of the 1915 massacre of Armenians at the hands of Ottoman Turks. It's a historic tragedy that Ottawa calls genocide, to the anger of Turkey.

    Harper Government Back In The Middle Of Historic Turk-Armenian Dispute