Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Senator Don Meredith's Alleged Relationship With Teen Back Under Ethics Office Review

The Canadian Press, 05 Feb, 2016 12:25 PM
    OTTAWA — The Senate's ethics officer has resumed an investigation into allegations that Sen. Don Meredith had a sexual relationship with a teenager.
     
    Lyse Ricard suspended her probe in October so as not to interfere with a police investigation.
     
    But her office says she's now resumed her investigation after being advised that the Ottawa police are no longer pursuing the matter.
     
    Ricard was asked to look into Meredith's conduct last June by Leo Housakos, then Speaker of the Senate, who believed the alleged relationship with a teen, if true, would constitute "conduct unbecoming of a senator" and would require disciplinary sanctions.
     
    She is also conducting a second investigation into allegations of workplace harassment against Meredith.
     
    That investigation was prompted by a workplace assessment by an outside investigator who, according to Senate sources, reported complaints from six former staffers about Meredith's allegedly rude and unprofessional behaviour.
     
    Meredith, 51, a married Pentecostal minister, quit the Conservative caucus last June after an 18-year-old woman told the Toronto Star she'd had an intimate relationship with the senator that began when she was 16.
     
    The woman alleged that the relationship involved kissing, touching and sexually explicit online chats until she turned 18, after which they had intercourse twice before Meredith broke off the relationship.
     
    Ricard's office issued a statement Friday confirming the resumption of the ethics officer's investigation into the matter.
     
    "The Senate ethics officer has resumed her review of the allegations published in the Toronto Star regarding the alleged relationship Sen. Meredith had with a young woman, since she was recently advised that the Ottawa police has ceased its own investigation into this matter," the statement said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Saskatoon Woman Who Slit 5-Year-Old Son's Throat, Told Nurse She Was Hallucinating

    Saskatoon Woman Who Slit 5-Year-Old Son's Throat, Told Nurse She Was Hallucinating
    Lawyer Leslie Sullivan is trying to prove that her 36-year-old client is not criminally responsible.

    Saskatoon Woman Who Slit 5-Year-Old Son's Throat, Told Nurse She Was Hallucinating

    Council approves city-wide upgrade to LED street lights

    Council approves city-wide upgrade to LED street lights
    Surrey is one of the first cities in Canada to embark on a full conversion of street lighting to LED. 

    Council approves city-wide upgrade to LED street lights

    Father In B.C. Child Abuse Case Says Judge Relied On Faulty Expert Evidence

    Father In B.C. Child Abuse Case Says Judge Relied On Faulty Expert Evidence
    Vancouver police investigation said sexual abuse allegations against the man were unfounded and no charges were laid in the case

    Father In B.C. Child Abuse Case Says Judge Relied On Faulty Expert Evidence

    B.C. Woman Sentenced To 2 Years In Prison For Death Of Man Thrown From Vehicle's Hood

    B.C. Woman Sentenced To 2 Years In Prison For Death Of Man Thrown From Vehicle's Hood
      Provincial court heard 48-year-old Christina Laforge was driving while impaired as a man rode on the hood of her vehicle after a party in August 2013.

    B.C. Woman Sentenced To 2 Years In Prison For Death Of Man Thrown From Vehicle's Hood

    January Home Sales, Prices, Set Searing Pace Across Metro Vancouver

    January Home Sales, Prices, Set Searing Pace Across Metro Vancouver
    The Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver says last month was the second busiest January on record as residential property sales in the region jumped nearly 32 per cent, compared to January of last year.

    January Home Sales, Prices, Set Searing Pace Across Metro Vancouver

    Defence's Focus On Details In Jian Ghomeshi Trial A Classic Strategy: Lawyer

    Hammering away at seemingly minor details in a woman's account of her interactions with Jian Ghomeshi may seem harsh to members of the public, but a former prosecutor says it's a classic defence strategy meant to erode the witness's credibility.

    Defence's Focus On Details In Jian Ghomeshi Trial A Classic Strategy: Lawyer