Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

RCMP secrets case inches along

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Sep, 2020 12:00 AM
  • RCMP secrets case inches along

Cameron Jay Ortis, a senior RCMP employee accused of divulging secret information, made his latest brief appearance in an Ontario court Friday.

All signs suggest his complex case will grind through the judicial process for some time, as deliberations continue over what portions of the thousands of pages of evidence can be disclosed.

Next week will mark one year since Ortis, director of an RCMP intelligence centre, was arrested, making international headlines.

Ortis is charged under the Security of Information Act for allegedly revealing secrets to an unnamed recipient and planning to give additional classified information to an unspecified foreign entity.

Officials decided early this year that the charges would proceed in Ontario Superior Court by way of direct indictment, meaning there will be no preliminary inquiry.

However, a parallel process is playing out in the Federal Court of Canada to determine whether certain information relevant to the case must be kept under wraps to avoid endangering national security.

MORE National ARTICLES

Feds allocate $540 million towards transit funding for BC

Feds allocate $540 million towards transit funding for BC
Huge transit funding announcement for BC today. Federal Environment Minister Jonathan Wilkinson made a $540 million dollar announcement  Thursday morning. 

Feds allocate $540 million towards transit funding for BC

Girl, 6, dies after Montreal stabbing

Girl, 6, dies after Montreal stabbing
A six-year-old girl was stabbed in an east-end Montreal residence early Thursday morning and died of her injuries hours later in hospital, police said.

Girl, 6, dies after Montreal stabbing

Papers show doubt about Alberta park closures

Papers show doubt about Alberta park closures
Top advisers to Alberta's environment minister were cautious about the government's plans to shrink the province's parks system and made recommendations he didn't follow.

Papers show doubt about Alberta park closures

Mass shooting review 'insufficient': families

Mass shooting review 'insufficient': families
Ottawa and Nova Scotia have announced a review of the April mass shooting that left 22 people and the gunman dead, but the process drew criticism from victims' relatives as being too secretive and lacking the necessary legal powers.

Mass shooting review 'insufficient': families

Let our students in, U.S. parents urge Canada

Let our students in, U.S. parents urge Canada
Parents of students in the United States who hoped to begin their university studies in Canada this fall are frantically trying to convince the federal government to relax rules that make it next to impossible for their kids to enter the country.

Let our students in, U.S. parents urge Canada

Health officials sorry over man's drowning death

Health officials sorry over man's drowning death
A young man pleaded for help as he was being led out of a hospital by security before taking his own life in a lake on the Saskatchewan legislature grounds.

Health officials sorry over man's drowning death