Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Trial Of Sen. Mike Duffy Moves Into Final Stages As Lawyers Sum Up The Case

The Canadian Press, 22 Feb, 2016 11:01 AM
    OTTAWA — Final submissions are underway at Sen. Mike Duffy's fraud, breach of trust and bribery trial.
     
    Crown prosecutor Mark Holmes is focusing on what he calls a slush fund, Senate money paid by Duffy to a friend's company that was then used to pay for all manner of the senator's expenses.
     
    Holmes alleges the fund was set up to deliberately skirt Senate expense rules.
     
    Duffy's defence has been that those rules were complex and Senate administration lax in its enforcement.
     
    But Holmes says the Senate did the best it could with the claims Duffy presented and the Crown noted it had rejected some of those claims.
     
    Those rejections, Holmes says, led Duffy to set up the fund.
     
    Duffy has pleaded not guilty to all 31 charges against him.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    PM Justin Trudeau 'Optimistic' About Ability To Diversify Economy

    PM Justin Trudeau 'Optimistic' About Ability To Diversify Economy
    Trudeau made his comments at a ceremony in Kitchener, Ont., where Google Canada opened a 17,000-square-metre facility that will house the company's national development team.

    PM Justin Trudeau 'Optimistic' About Ability To Diversify Economy

    Calgary's Bishop Lambastes 'Totalitarian' Plan For LGBTQ Rules In Schools

    Calgary's Bishop Lambastes 'Totalitarian' Plan For LGBTQ Rules In Schools
    In a public letter, Bishop Fred Henry says the plan is "totalitarian" and calls it a "forceful imposition of a particular narrow-minded anti-Catholic ideology."

    Calgary's Bishop Lambastes 'Totalitarian' Plan For LGBTQ Rules In Schools

    Bank Of Montreal Joins Chorus Of Economists Predicting Interest Rate Cut

    Bank Of Montreal Joins Chorus Of Economists Predicting Interest Rate Cut
     The odds that the Bank of Canada will lower its key interest rate next week are rising, with some of the country's big banks now predicting a rate cut.

    Bank Of Montreal Joins Chorus Of Economists Predicting Interest Rate Cut

    B.C. Teachers Delighted As Supreme Court To Hear Long-Running Dispute

    The teachers are appealing a decision by the province's court of appeal, which said the legislation did not violate their rights under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

    B.C. Teachers Delighted As Supreme Court To Hear Long-Running Dispute

    Because It's 2016? Women On Canadian Bank Notes May Make Comeback, Says Bill Morneau

    Finance Minister Bill Morneau said he would strongly support a Bank of Canada recommendation to feature more women on Canadian currency.

    Because It's 2016? Women On Canadian Bank Notes May Make Comeback, Says Bill Morneau

    Hydro One Can't Get Wi-Fi Signal From 36,000 Smart Meters; Will Read Manually

    Ontario's opposition parties say it's no surprise that Hydro One has to manually read thousands of electricity smart meters because the devices can't get a wireless signal.

    Hydro One Can't Get Wi-Fi Signal From 36,000 Smart Meters; Will Read Manually