Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Lawyer For Ex-Quebec Lieutenant-governor Lise Thibault Argues For Right To Appeal

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Oct, 2015 11:24 AM
    QUEBEC — The lawyer for former Quebec lieutenant-governor Lise Thibault has appeared in court today seeking permission to appeal her 18-month jail term for fraud and breach of trust.
     
    Marc Labelle told Quebec Court of Appeal Justice Jacques J. Levesque that his client's case is unique, partly because she is 76, is confined to a wheelchair and has health problems, including anxiety attacks.
     
    Labelle says the Quebec court judge who imposed the sentence should have taken those factors into consideration.
     
    He also argues the judge should not have put the emphasis on making an example of Thibault just because of her position as the Queen's representative in Quebec.
     
    The Crown argues the case is not that unique because many high-placed officials have been sent to prison for fraud and breach of trust. Marcel Guimont also says the detention facilities have been adapted to accommodate Thibault's needs.
     
    Thibault, who has been incarcerated the last six nights, was charged two years after a 2007 report by the federal and provincial auditors general revealed she claimed more than $700,000 in improper expenses when she held the vice-regal post between 1997 and 2007.
     
    In sentencing Thibault last Wednesday, Quebec court Judge Carol St-Cyr called her behaviour "highly reprehensible'' and part of a "culture of deceit.''
     
    Her trial heard the money was spent on gifts, trips, parties, meals and skiing and golf lessons.
     
    St-Cyr also ordered Thibault to reimburse $200,000 to Ottawa and $100,000 to Quebec.
     
    Besides a four-year prison sentence for Thibault, the Crown was seeking the reimbursement of $430,000.
     
    Thibault originally pleaded not guilty but switched pleas last December because, according to Labelle, she came to a better understanding of the evidence and the law.
     
    She testified at the trial she had little to show financially for her time as vice-regal _ that a divorce ate into her savings and that she lived on a $30,000 pension.
     
    St-Cyr also ruled against a pair of motions filed by Labelle, who argued the case should be dismissed because the accused benefited from royal immunity.
     
    Labelle said that meant Thibault was not a civil servant and therefore could not face criminal charges.
     
    The judge said 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.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Calgary Bus Driver Jesse Rau Says He Wasn't Alone In His Opposition To Pride Bus

    Calgary Bus Driver Jesse Rau Says He Wasn't Alone In His Opposition To Pride Bus
    A transit driver who's been fired amid a controversy over Calgary's Pride bus says he wasn't alone in his reluctance to take the wheel of the rainbow-wrapped vehicle.

    Calgary Bus Driver Jesse Rau Says He Wasn't Alone In His Opposition To Pride Bus

    Hearing Delayed For High-Risk Designation Of Mentally Ill Dad Allan Schoenborn Who Killed 3 Kids

    Hearing Delayed For High-Risk Designation Of Mentally Ill Dad Allan Schoenborn Who Killed 3 Kids
    The province's Criminal Justice Branch announced last week it was initiating an application for the "high-risk" label for Schoenborn.

    Hearing Delayed For High-Risk Designation Of Mentally Ill Dad Allan Schoenborn Who Killed 3 Kids

    Quebec Will Send 5,000 Camp Beds And Blankets For Syrian Refugees In Germany

    Quebec Will Send 5,000 Camp Beds And Blankets For Syrian Refugees In Germany
    Public Security Minister Lise Theriault says the Red Cross requested the beds, which are left over from the ice storm that hit Eastern Canada in 1998.

    Quebec Will Send 5,000 Camp Beds And Blankets For Syrian Refugees In Germany

    No Choice, But Mai Eilia, Syrian Refugee, In Vancouver Considers Herself The 'Luckiest'

    No Choice, But Mai Eilia, Syrian Refugee, In Vancouver Considers Herself The 'Luckiest'
     Mai Eilia asks one question when she sends Facebook messages to friends in her war-ravaged homeland of Syria: "Are you still alive?"

    No Choice, But Mai Eilia, Syrian Refugee, In Vancouver Considers Herself The 'Luckiest'

    Refugee Crisis, Seniors' Health, Tax Issues Begin New Week Of Campaigning

    Refugee Crisis, Seniors' Health, Tax Issues Begin New Week Of Campaigning
    Party leaders are attempting to shift the public's focus to domestic issues including taxation and health care as another week of campaigning in the federal election begins.

    Refugee Crisis, Seniors' Health, Tax Issues Begin New Week Of Campaigning

    Long-Delayed Trial Of Bruce Carson On Influence Peddling Charge Begins Monday

    The federal Conservative election campaign will face yet another legal distraction Monday as the criminal trial of a former top aide to Prime Minister Stephen Harper begins.

    Long-Delayed Trial Of Bruce Carson On Influence Peddling Charge Begins Monday