Close X
Thursday, January 9, 2025
ADVT 
National

Lobbyist, Liberal Strategist Gets House Arrest, Fine For Tax Evasion

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Nov, 2015 11:34 AM
  • Lobbyist, Liberal Strategist Gets House Arrest, Fine For Tax Evasion
OTTAWA — A prominent Ottawa lobbyist and federal Liberal party strategist has been sentenced to house arrest and fined $396,259 for tax evasion, the Canada Revenue Agency says.
 
Herb Metcalfe was given a conditional sentence of two years less a day, including 12 months house arrest, plus the fine, which equalled the taxes evaded.
 
Metcalfe is a co-founder of Capital Hill Group, a well-known lobbying firm. The firm said he has left the company.
 
"Herb is no longer involved with the Capital Hill Group or its operations," account manager Joanna Carey said in an email. "We continue to move ahead with business as usual.
 
Metcalfe pleaded guilty in the Ontario Court of Justice to a single count of tax evasion after a revenue agency investigation.
 
The court was told that Metcalfe received payments and benefits from 2002 to 2006 totalling $1,366,411 that he did not report on his personal income tax returns.
 
The revenue agency said Metcalfe prepared his returns each year by hand, and knew — or was wilfully blind to the fact — that the income he received was required to be reported on his returns and was taxable.
 
Metcalfe has long been a senior Liberal strategist and adviser and was prominent in the party's inner circle.
 
He worked on Stephane Dion's successful leadership campaign in 2006. Earlier he was campaign chair for Liberal John Manley.
 
Metcalfe was also a senior adviser to Dion leading up to the disastrous 2008 federal election, which saw the Liberals reduced to third-party status.
 
In the 1970s and 1980s, he worked in the offices of several Liberal cabinet ministers before turning to lobbying.
 
"The Canada Revenue Agency pursues tax evaders to maintain public confidence in the integrity of the tax system," Vince Pranjivan, assistant commissioner of the Ontario region said in a news release.
 
"Canadians have to trust that our self-assessment system is working and that it is fair."

MORE National ARTICLES

As Alberta Shifts From Coal, Electricity Utility Warns Of Ontario-style Rate Hikes

As Alberta Shifts From Coal, Electricity Utility Warns Of Ontario-style Rate Hikes
In September, Premier Rachel Notley committed to phasing out coal use in the province as quickly as is reasonable "without imposing unnecessary price shocks on consumers."

As Alberta Shifts From Coal, Electricity Utility Warns Of Ontario-style Rate Hikes

Opposition Says Manitoba Government Breaking Promise Of Doctors For All

Opposition Says Manitoba Government Breaking Promise Of Doctors For All
Manitoba Health Minister Sharon Blady said Tuesday she is amending — not breaking — a long-standing promise to find a family doctor for every Manitoban by the end of this year.

Opposition Says Manitoba Government Breaking Promise Of Doctors For All

Ammo And Tools Found On Suspect During Vancouver Bait-Bike Sting: Police

Ammo And Tools Found On Suspect During Vancouver Bait-Bike Sting: Police
Vancouver police say officers seized 50 rounds of ammunition from a man during a recent sting using a bait bicycle.

Ammo And Tools Found On Suspect During Vancouver Bait-Bike Sting: Police

Saskatchewan Firefighters Want Workers' Compensation To Recognize PTSD

REGINA — Saskatchewan firefighters are asking the provincial government to make it easier for them to get treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder.

Saskatchewan Firefighters Want Workers' Compensation To Recognize PTSD

Coroner Links Missing Woman, Human Remains Through Dna In B.C. Cold Case

Coroner Links Missing Woman, Human Remains Through Dna In B.C. Cold Case
 Skeletal remains found nearly nine years ago on an island off British Columbia's Sunshine Coast have been identified through DNA analysis.

Coroner Links Missing Woman, Human Remains Through Dna In B.C. Cold Case

B.C. Legislature Breaks After Child-Welfare, Freedom-of-Information Debates

Fierce debates over child-welfare policies and the government's deletion of potentially sensitive emails dominated the fall legislative session in British Columbia.

B.C. Legislature Breaks After Child-Welfare, Freedom-of-Information Debates