Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Man Charged With Threats After Call To Alberta Environment Minister Shannon Phillips

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Apr, 2016 12:16 PM
    EDMONTON — A man has been charged after staff say someone phoned the legislature office of Alberta Environment Minister Shannon Phillips and threatened to shoot everyone over the carbon tax.
     
    Michael Enright, an oil products salesman from Camrose, says he didn't make any threats and was simply calling to voice his frustration over the hurt currently being experienced in his industry. 
     
    "This was nothing. This was me having a bad day," Enright said when contacted by The Canadian Press on Thursday.  "I'm a very calm person. Everybody knows me as a guy who never gets upset."
     
    Cheryl Sheppard of the Edmonton Police Service said Enright faces one Criminal Code charge of uttering threats.
     
    The call happened a week ago, on March 31, in the middle of the afternoon.
     
    "He was calling to express his anger over the carbon tax," a staffer in Phillips's office told police in a statement.
     
    The staffer told police the caller, who refused to identify himself, referred to the minister as a man. When he was reminded Phillips was female, "he told me the NDP only hire people with boobs, not qualified people."
     
    "He then said he was going to get his ammunition and gun and come here and shoot us all," the statement reads.
     
    Sheppard said Enright was charged later that day with assistance from police in Camrose.
     
    Enright said Thursday he has not been in court yet.
     
    He denied making any threats.
     
    "No, I didn't say that. I don't have a gun. I don't have ammunition. I didn't say that at all."
     
    Enright said he was driving and listening to talk radio host Danielle Smith, former Opposition Wildrose leader in the legislature, when he called Phillips's office.
     
    "I'm listening to Danielle Smith talking just one thing after another about — whatchamacallit — the economy and the coal. I've got friends who are losing their jobs, and I phoned in," he said.
     
    "I didn't mean to get upset and I did not threaten anybody at all. All I said was that if they (the NDP government) keep pushing people, people are going to get guns and they are going to revolt.
     
    "I was talking globally, not specifically. I would never, never, ever threaten anybody. I've never hurt anybody. I don't even have a speeding ticket."
     
    Enright said the whole thing has been blown out of proportion.
     
    "I feel terrible that the person on the other end actually felt threatened by me."
     
    He said if he thought it would make amends, he would write the office an apology letter and do even more for the female staff member with whom he spoke on the phone.
     
    "When this is all done, I'm going to send her flowers."
     
    The maximum penalty for uttering threats is five years in prison. None of the accusations has been proven in court.
     
    Premier Rachel Notley and other members of her cabinet have been the target of threats in recent months. Some people have posted messages on Facebook and other sites threatening to kill the premier.
     
    There have been no reports of any charges laid as a result.
     
    The threats spiked last December when Notley’s government passed legislation mandating safety rules on farms and making paid farm workers eligible for workers' compensation.
     
    Energy Minister Marg McCuaig-Boyd tearfully recounted in the legislature that she had been harassed and threatened over the farm bill.
     
    Phillips has said on Twitter she gets angry and abusive messages daily on social media.
     
    The carbon tax, set to begin on Jan. 1, is part of a climate-change plan introduced last November by Phillips and Notley.
     
    The tax, designed to give consumers an incentive to move toward greener energy alternatives, will increase the cost of everything from gas at the pumps to home heating and electricity.
     
    The province is also moving to shut down all coal-fired electricity plants by 2030. That has led to concerns about job losses and a harmful domino effect on communities.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Air India Perjurer Inderjit Singh Reyat Granted Release To Halfway House

    Air India Perjurer Inderjit Singh Reyat Granted Release To Halfway House
    Inderjit Singh Reyat was charged with perjury in 2006 for repeatedly lying during his testimony at the trial into the bombing deaths of 331 people, mostly Canadians

    Air India Perjurer Inderjit Singh Reyat Granted Release To Halfway House

    Canada Urged To Lead Fight Against United Nations Peacekeeper Sex Abuse

    Canada Urged To Lead Fight Against United Nations Peacekeeper Sex Abuse
    Developing countries such as Bangladesh, India and Pakistan have become the leading contributors of troops to peacekeeping missions since the passing of Canada's heyday in the 1990s.  

    Canada Urged To Lead Fight Against United Nations Peacekeeper Sex Abuse

    Turbulence Appears On The Rise, And Airlines Need Better Detection: Researcher

    Turbulence Appears On The Rise, And Airlines Need Better Detection: Researcher
    Extreme turbulence of the kind that injured seven people on a flight diverted to Newfoundland on Sunday appears on the rise, and airlines need improved technologies to detect it, according to a British researcher

    Turbulence Appears On The Rise, And Airlines Need Better Detection: Researcher

    James Forcillo Case Reveals Shifting Attitude Toward Cops' Dealing With Those In Crisis

    James Forcillo Case Reveals Shifting Attitude Toward Cops' Dealing With Those In Crisis
    A guilty finding against a Toronto police officer who gunned down a knife-wielding teen on an empty streetcar suggests the public has become more sensitive toward how police deal with those in crisis, some experts said Tuesday.

    James Forcillo Case Reveals Shifting Attitude Toward Cops' Dealing With Those In Crisis

    Murder Conviction Upheld For Former B.C. Mountie Keith Wiens In Shooting Of Common-Law Wife

    Murder Conviction Upheld For Former B.C. Mountie Keith Wiens In Shooting Of Common-Law Wife
    He was fighting both the conviction and a 13-year minimum sentence before parole eligibility for the August 2011 shooting of 55-year-old Lynn Kalmring in the couple's Penticton home.

    Murder Conviction Upheld For Former B.C. Mountie Keith Wiens In Shooting Of Common-Law Wife

    B.C. Man Charged With Animal Cruelty After Dog's Collar Embedded In Neck

    B.C. Man Charged With Animal Cruelty After Dog's Collar Embedded In Neck
    The SPCA responded to a call last February about a tethered young pit-bull cross in distress on Daniel Elliott's property near Ladysmith, B.C.

    B.C. Man Charged With Animal Cruelty After Dog's Collar Embedded In Neck