Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Triple Delete: Charges Laid Against Former B.C. Employee George Gretes In Email Deletion Case

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Mar, 2016 01:05 PM
    VICTORIA — Charges of wilfully making false statements to mislead or attempting to mislead British Columbia's privacy commissioner have been laid against a former provincial government employee.
     
    A special prosecutor approved two charges against George Gretes, who worked as a ministerial assistant in the Transportation Ministry, under the province's Freedom of Information and Privacy Act.
     
    The charges follow a report by privacy commissioner Elizabeth Denham who examined a whistleblower's allegations that his supervisor deleted emails connected to a freedom-of-information request about the Highway of Tears investigation into missing and murdered women in northern B.C.
     
    Gretes was suspended with pay last May.
     
    Transportation Minister Todd Stone said at the time that the man's resignation was accepted when Denham released her report last October.
     
    The privacy commissioner referred her report to the RCMP and at the request of the Mounties a special prosecutor was appointed to give police legal advice and to conduct a charge assessment.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    New Brunswick Judge To Decide Today Whether To Grant Dennis Oland Bail

    New Brunswick Judge To Decide Today Whether To Grant Dennis Oland Bail
    Dennis Oland will learn today if he'll walk out of a Fredericton courthouse free on bail, or go to prison to await the appeal of his second-degree murder conviction.

    New Brunswick Judge To Decide Today Whether To Grant Dennis Oland Bail

    Second Foot Washed Up In B.C. Confirmed To Be Human

    Second Foot Washed Up In B.C. Confirmed To Be Human
    The first foot was found by a hiker on Feb. 7 and a second running shoe containing a foot was found last Friday.

    Second Foot Washed Up In B.C. Confirmed To Be Human

    Daughter Of B.C. Man Fatally Shot By Police Tells Inquest She Could Have Helped

    Daughter Of B.C. Man Fatally Shot By Police Tells Inquest She Could Have Helped
    Nousha Bayrami told a coroner's inquest on Tuesday her father, Mehrdad Bayrami, 48, had been on medication for severe depression prior to the armed standoff that led to his death in November 2012.

    Daughter Of B.C. Man Fatally Shot By Police Tells Inquest She Could Have Helped

    HIGHLIGHTS: B.C. Delivers 4th Balanced Budget, Drops Home Tax To Stimulate Building

    HIGHLIGHTS: B.C. Delivers 4th Balanced Budget, Drops Home Tax To Stimulate Building
    Finance Minister Mike de Jong tabled B.C.'s fourth consecutive balanced budget, posting a surplus of $264 million.

    HIGHLIGHTS: B.C. Delivers 4th Balanced Budget, Drops Home Tax To Stimulate Building

    TD Bank Standoff Ends As Surrey Police Arrest A Male Suspect Without Incident

    TD Bank Standoff Ends As Surrey Police Arrest A Male Suspect Without Incident
    The man appeared to be in his 20s or 30s, was wearing a blue plaid shirt and came out with his head down. A crowd gathered at a nearby intersection applauded.

    TD Bank Standoff Ends As Surrey Police Arrest A Male Suspect Without Incident

    New Brunswick Judge To Decide On Rare Request By Convicted Murderer For Bail

    New Brunswick Judge To Decide On Rare Request By Convicted Murderer For Bail
    It's rare for a defence lawyer to seek bail for a convicted murderer pending appeal - and even more rare for a judge to grant it - but lawyers for Dennis Oland are hoping their application will beat the odds on Wednesday.

    New Brunswick Judge To Decide On Rare Request By Convicted Murderer For Bail