Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Quebec corruption inquiry ends after 30 months of public hearings

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Nov, 2014 11:12 AM
  • Quebec corruption inquiry ends after 30 months of public hearings

MONTREAL — The Quebec corruption probe that shed light on the province's construction industry and its ties to organized crime and political parties has come to an end.

Justice France Charbonneau gave her closing statement this morning and is expected to table her final report by April 2015.

The Charbonneau Commission was created in late 2011 by then-premier Jean Charest amid heavy public and political pressure.

Charbonneau's opening remarks in May 2012 were followed by startling testimony from bureaucrats, engineering executives and construction bosses about widespread collusion aimed at hiking the price of contracts.

Various witnesses revealed that companies, the Mafia, political parties and crooked bureaucrats all benefited from the proceeds.

Allegations at the commission would also claim the careers of many engineers and city employees and one major municipal figure — Montreal's mayor Gerald Tremblay.

Tremblay, who was faced with damning testimony from a party aide, resigned in November 2012. He later defended himself before the inquiry amid allegations he turned a blind eye to the financing of his municipal party.

The anti-corruption climate also killed the political career of Laval's mayor, Gilles Vaillancourt, who quit following corruption-related criminal allegations. His abrupt departure after more than two decades at the helm of Quebec's third largest city came just days after Tremblay's.

The first witness to drop a bombshell was Lino Zambito, an ex-construction boss who faces corruption-related charges.

He testified for days about his personal involvement with a bid-rigging cartel, a Mafia tax on projects and corrupt city officials who accepted kickbacks.

Another high point was the testimony of powerful former construction mogul Antonio Accurso. He insisted he didn't cater to organized crime figures or woo politicians for favours on "The Touch" — his now-famous luxury yacht.

At the provincial level, testimony revealed that engineering firms pumped cash into political parties through middlemen — despite laws banning corporate donations.

The highest-ranking former politician to appear was ex-deputy premier Nathalie Normandeau, whose name had been mentioned frequently during testimony.

She was accused of benefiting from illegal financing, accepting gifts and favouring funding for projects involving firms that donated heavily to the Quebec Liberal party.

Normandeau denied any wrongdoing before the commission and refuted allegations she received gifts like Celine Dion concert tickets and roses from Zambito.

The inquiry also looked into the Quebec Federation of Labour's construction wing, which had been infiltrated by organized crime.

Testimony surfaced about a wiretap where union bosses alleged they had a deal with the husband of then-Parti Quebecois leader Pauline Marois to stop the inquiry from taking place.

Marois and spouse Claude Blanchet denied the allegation but the question haunted her during this year's election campaign, which ended with the PQ getting hammered by the Liberals.

Hints of the influence of Vito Rizzuto, the reputed Mafia boss who died in December 2013, also emerged. The inquiry heard how Rizzuto once helped decide who should win a certain bid for a road project in Quebec.

Zambito testified he was once invited to a restaurant owned by his competitor and, sitting there as a mediator, was Rizzuto himself.

The Mafia kingpin suggested Zambito didn't have the expertise for the job, so he decided not to bid on the contract.

Police video of Mafia backroom dealings was played at the inquiry, including memorable footage of Nicolo Rizzuto Sr., Vito's father, at meetings with construction-industry players where he received wads of cash and stuffed them into his socks.

Even an FBI legend, the officer who famously passed himself off to mobsters as "Donnie Brasco," dropped by the inquiry.

Joseph Pistone's appearance, where he was hidden behind a screen, served as a primer on the Mafia's long-standing infiltration of the construction industry.

———

THE CHARBONNEAU COMMISSION BY THE NUMBERS:

Witnesses: 291

Days of testimony: 261

Documents tabled: 2,756

People met: 1,400

Transcript pages from testimony: 66,000

MORE National ARTICLES

Alberta, B.C. Premiers Meet, Set Tone For Warmer Relations Over Pipelines

Alberta, B.C. Premiers Meet, Set Tone For Warmer Relations Over Pipelines
VANCOUVER — Alberta Premier Jim Prentice says he and his B.C. counterpart Christy Clark have moved on from the tempestuous days of Alison Redford.

Alberta, B.C. Premiers Meet, Set Tone For Warmer Relations Over Pipelines

Canada Spending Another $30.5m On Ebola; Bulk Goes To Fund Vaccine, Drug Science

Canada Spending Another $30.5m On Ebola; Bulk Goes To Fund Vaccine, Drug Science
The federal government is spending an extra $30.5 million on programs to shore up Canada's readiness to deal with Ebola in this country, Health Minister Rona Ambrose said Monday.

Canada Spending Another $30.5m On Ebola; Bulk Goes To Fund Vaccine, Drug Science

B.C. To Launch Undercover Campaign To Police Uber Taxi Alternative

B.C. To Launch Undercover Campaign To Police Uber Taxi Alternative
VICTORIA — The British Columbia government is planning to launch an undercover assault on the alternative taxi service known as Uber.

B.C. To Launch Undercover Campaign To Police Uber Taxi Alternative

Three-year Prison Sentence For B.C. Driver Who Promised Not To Drink And Drive

Three-year Prison Sentence For B.C. Driver Who Promised Not To Drink And Drive
KAMLOOPS, B.C. — The night began with a promise not to drink and drive and ended with an impaired driver crashing his pickup and killing two passengers.

Three-year Prison Sentence For B.C. Driver Who Promised Not To Drink And Drive

Ice Dancers Gilles And Poirier Rebound After Heartbreaking Season

Ice Dancers Gilles And Poirier Rebound After Heartbreaking Season
KELOWNA, B.C. — When Piper Gilles and Paul Poirier didn't make Canada's team for the Sochi Olympics, the ice dancers put themselves on autopilot.

Ice Dancers Gilles And Poirier Rebound After Heartbreaking Season

Canadian hospital launching court challenge invalidate patents on human genes

Canadian hospital launching court challenge invalidate patents on human genes
TORONTO — A Canadian hospital is launching a court challenge with the ultimate goal of invalidating patents on human genes, saying such protection can adversely affect the health of patients and boost the country's health-care costs.

Canadian hospital launching court challenge invalidate patents on human genes