Close X
Sunday, January 12, 2025
ADVT 
National

Sponsorship Scandal: Jacques Corriveau's Defence Asks For No Jail Time

The Canadian Press, 29 Nov, 2016 12:44 PM
    MONTREAL — Ex-Liberal party organizer Jacques Corriveau should spend up to five years in prison following his conviction on fraud-related charges in connection with the sponsorship program, the Crown suggested on Monday.
     
     
    Corriveau deserves an exemplary sentence, not just for stealing, but for increasing the public's distrust in government, prosecutors Jacques Dagenais and Claude Girard told the court.
     
    A jury found Corriveau, 83, guilty of fraud against the government, forgery and laundering proceeds of crime between 1997 and 2003 during what became known as the sponsorship scandal that helped take down the Liberal government in 2006.
     
    "The damages aren't just about taking public money," Dagenais said during sentencing arguments. "The impact of the sponsorship scandal increased the cynicism and mistrust of the public towards elected officials."
     
    Dagenais, who prosecuted Corriveau on two of the three charges, suggested to Quebec Superior Court Justice Jean-Francois Buffoni that the ex-Liberal receive between three and five years in prison.
     
    Girard, who prosecuted the money laundering charge, said Corriveau should get five years, served concurrently.
     
    "We never heard of any remorse on the part of Mr. Corriveau," Girard said. "We're in total silence here. I come to the conclusion that if Mr. Corriveau had shown remorse, by this point it would have come to our attention."
     
    Dagenais accused Corriveau during the trial of facilitating sponsorship contracts to companies hired to help the federal government increase its profile in Quebec after the 1995 sovereignty referendum.
     
    Corriveau was charged and found guilty of taking millions of dollars worth of kickbacks tied to sponsorship contracts. Girard said the amount Corriveau stole is roughly $7 million.
     
    Girard told the court that Corriveau "enriched himself significantly from the money and we cannot trace where several million dollars went."
     
    The Gomery Commission, which looked into the sponsorship program, found that firms were winning contracts based on donations to the federal Liberals, with little work being done.
     
    Three other people convicted in the fall-out of the sponsorship scandal received sentences ranging from 18 months to three-and-a-half years in detention.
     
    "I conclude that Corriveau — while not the only one — was an important actor, and certainly ... put in place a system to misdirect public funds," Dagenais said.
     
    Corriveau's lawyer, Gerald Souliere, is expected to make his sentencing recommendation Tuesday.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Housing And Debt Risks Best Addressed By Government, Rates Blunt Tool: Poloz

    In a speech in Vancouver, the head of Canada's central bank says adjusting interest rates is a "very blunt tool" that has widespread effects.

    Housing And Debt Risks Best Addressed By Government, Rates Blunt Tool: Poloz

    Ontario Police Probe Several Incidents Involving Trick Or Treaters On Halloween

    Ontario Police Probe Several Incidents Involving Trick Or Treaters On Halloween
    A number of police forces across Ontario are investigating incidents which dampened the fun for certain trick or treaters on Halloween.

    Ontario Police Probe Several Incidents Involving Trick Or Treaters On Halloween

    PBO Says Tax Revenues On Legal Marijuana To Be Less Than $1 Billion At Outset

    PBO Says Tax Revenues On Legal Marijuana To Be Less Than $1 Billion At Outset
    OTTAWA — The parliamentary budget watchdog says that tax revenues arising from marijuana sales will be modest when legalization first takes hold — hundreds of millions of dollars, rather than billions.

    PBO Says Tax Revenues On Legal Marijuana To Be Less Than $1 Billion At Outset

    LGBTQ 'Purged' From Military, Public Service Jobs File Class-action Lawsuits

    LGBTQ 'Purged' From Military, Public Service Jobs File Class-action Lawsuits
    Doug Elliott, a Toronto-based lawyer, says the gay and lesbian former civil servants and military members have been waiting too long for a negotiated settlement and that it is time to move on from "kind words" to action.

    LGBTQ 'Purged' From Military, Public Service Jobs File Class-action Lawsuits

    A By-the-numbers Look At Federal Immigration Targets For 2017

    A By-the-numbers Look At Federal Immigration Targets For 2017
      Here are some numbers from the report released Monday, and the government's economic advisory council:

    A By-the-numbers Look At Federal Immigration Targets For 2017

    Kimberley B.C. Veterans Aim To Complete Cenotaph Renovation Despite Vandalism

    Vandals have damaged a cenotaph renovation project in Kimberley, B.C., that was due to be completed by Remembrance Day.

    Kimberley B.C. Veterans Aim To Complete Cenotaph Renovation Despite Vandalism