Sunday, December 13, 2009

Mountie probe of alleged leak on income trust tax hits almost $500,000


Today we have a story (below) that reveals the RCMP spent $500,000 in pursuit of the “alleged leak” concerning income trusts. Once again, the RCMP (aka Keystone Cops) are in pursuit of the wrong suspect and the wrong allegation.

That’s because the Mounties went after the wrong “leak”. They should have spent $500,000 looking for Flaherty’s leak......you know, the tax leakage BS on which Flaherty’s bogus hoax of a policy was based.

No, taxpayers did not lose $500,000 needlessly in pursuit of an alleged leak that was non-existent. Taxpayers lost $35,000,000,000 of their life savings in pursuit of an alleged leak that was non-existent. NEEDLESSLY!!!!!

Flaherty’s argument that income trusts cause tax leakage is completely false and can easily be proven as such. Meanwhile Flaherty’s hides like a corrupt coward behind 18 pages of blacked out documents. He is the original Peter Mackay. Non transparent. Non accountable.

Worse, is that ALL taxpayers will continue to lose $7 billion more in foregone tax revenue for every year that this absurd policy is allowed to continue which favours foreigners in owning these companies and pay zero taxes, and penalizes Canadians from owning these companies and paying taxes at the rate of 38%. Does that make any sense whatsoever to anybody who can think straight?

What is the Liberal Party’s view on such an absurd situation? What about the NDP? Does the NDP believe that billion dollar tax subsidies should be given to foreigners in order to displace Canadians from owning Canadian companies? These subsidies take the form of the billions in lost annula tax revenues that result from the income trust tax policy and the shift of ownership of these businesses from Canadians to foegners. The most recent example being the purchase of Harvest Energy Trust for $4 billion by STATE OWNED Korean National Oil Company.

Way to go Michael Ignatieff, and Jack Layton! You are totally asleep at the switch while this tax loss pandemic rages on and Harper is being allowed to lie to all Canadian taxpayers with impunity. Some opposition you represent? Not. Gilles Duceppe doesn’t count, because his goal is to rip this country apart any way. The Liberals and the NDP are his unwitting allies.

Smart, like a bag of hammers.

Meanwhile, these people in the Canadians media and the Canadian Press can’t see the forest for the trees. They have completely MISSED the real story, to wit:

Mountie probe of alleged leak on income trust tax hits almost $500,000

Dec 5 12:17 PM US/Eastern
Dean Beeby,
THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA - The meter is still running on the RCMP's four-year-old probe into the alleged leak of an income-trust taxation measure, with costs about to hit a half million dollars.

The investigation - a political bombshell during the 2005-2006 election campaign - eventually fizzled: no one was fingered for any leak, though a civil servant was charged for allegedly profiting from inside information.


As of last month, the Mounties had spent $445,000 on their probe, including almost $60,000 on travel and related expenses, the force said in response to an Access to Information Act request from The Canadian Press.


More than 8,700 hours of staff time has been logged on the case so far, with more to come as the RCMP helps prepare the Crown's case against Serge Nadeau.


Nadeau, a senior official with the Finance Department, was dismissed without pay from his position after he was charged in February 2007 with criminal breach of trust, which carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison.


The RCMP allege the Orleans, Ont., resident used inside information about a Liberal government decision not to tax income trusts to make between $6,368 and $7,378 on the stock market.


Nadeau pleaded not guilty and has a trial date set for April 6 next year in Ottawa. None of the accusations against him have been proven in court.


Ralph Goodale, then the Liberal finance minister, announced on Nov. 23, 2005, a plan not to tax income trusts but to cut corporate dividend taxes instead.


The news caused an immediate rise in the stock value of income trusts as investors were caught off guard by the move, which was intended to help level the playing field between income trusts and traditional corporations.


Stock-market watchers, however, noticed unusual buy-sell spikes in the hours before the announcement, suggesting the move had been leaked to some players.


The episode quickly morphed into a political scandal when the RCMP released word on Dec. 28, 2005 - in the midst of a federal election campaign - that they were investigating a potential leak of insider information. The release included Goodale's name.


The damning news tarred the incumbent Liberals with suspicions of impropriety, even as they were fending off critics of the sponsorship scandal, and helped cost them the election in January 2006.


But after a laborious 14-month probe, the Mounties produced but a single charge, against a bureaucrat, with no evidence pointing to any leak outside the Finance Department.


Senior RCMP officers, including then commissioner Giuliano Zaccardelli, refused to speak to staff from the Commission for Public Complaints Against the RCMP, which investigated whether the Mounties acted inappropriately in releasing word of the income-trust probe during the election campaign.


Even so, the commission concluded there was no evidence Zaccardelli deliberately meddled in the campaign.


The RCMP has since developed a draft policy responding to the commission's recommendations to strictly limit public information about sensitive investigations, particularly during election campaigns.


"The draft is currently under review and once approved, it will be incorporated in the RCMP's overall communication policy," said spokeswoman Sgt. Julie Gagnon.


The case against Nadeau, in the meantime, continues.


"It's a complicated case with lots of material, voluminous material, to go over," said Raphael Schachter, Nadeau's Montreal-based lawyer.


The prosecution has turned over 18 full boxes of material, he said, adding that the case has been extremely difficult for his client.


"This has had a profound affect on his personal and professional life," Schachter said. "It's been devastating to him professionally and personally."


Nadeau declined an interview, referring all questions to his lawyer.


Under the Access to Information Act, The Canadian Press in May 2007 asked the RCMP for the cost of the income-trust probe. The Mounties responded a month later they were "unable to locate any information."


But the force relented more than two years later after a complaint to the Information Commissioner of Canada, releasing limited financial information.

5 comments:

Dr Mike said...

$500,000 eh.

That is the amount some folks lost with Flaherty`s trust tax announcement as they bought trusts based on the Harper promise.

Well done Jim , well done Steve.

You people boggle my mind.

Dr Mike

Anonymous said...

Too bad the RCMP did not spend 8,700 hours ( 4 man years) showing how the "tax-loss" data was fudged. $35 billion lost by Canadians versus $7,378 gained for Nadeau? Well let's focus on Nadeau.

Les

Kephalos said...

There is no curiosity in the Canadian news reporter. Or may be they don't know how to break-down a press release into follow-up questions.

How many officers do you need to feed a file for 8700 hours?

How many trades did Nadeau do around the time of the 'posed leak?

How many accounts did he have?

So how pieces of paper is that? Say two months of his trading activity.

Now, of course, more paperwork might be needed if someone in the brokerage knew someone higher up in the Dept who knew the Minister who was a friend with the Commiss...

Fillibluster said...

"Keystone Cops"...very appropriate!

Will E.

Anonymous said...

2005-2006. Put the bait out (rcmp) and then the harper promise.

So, how could anyone even THINK (God forbid) that the RCMP and the Reform(ed) New Conservative Party were in bed together?

LOL in disgust with it all.