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Corruption in Government - Lot's of explaining to do on this selective application of Canadian laws

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.@.4world.political.trash.net.97UOP Chaos in the Cosmos

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Apr 6, 2009, 2:40:00 PM4/6/09
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Ministry of Attorney General in Newfoundland and Labrador seem to have very
strange priorities. They are throwing in jail Ed Byrne, a former leader of
the Progressive Conservative party and a senior government minister, who
has admitted to defrauding taxpayers but at the same time they find it
perfectly OK that former Justice Minister, in Newfoundland government and
former Chief Justice of Supreme Court of Newfoundland T. Alex Hickman raped
and impregnated 12 years old girl Susan Prior.

It is not only that Newfoundland Crown refuses to prosecute Hickman for his
crimes but they also went out of their way to prosecute Byron Prior, older
brother of Susan Prior, who for last 40 years was trying to alert RCMP and
the public about abuse he and siblings suffered at the hands of Hickman and
his friends. Justice David Orr who presides over Byron Prior's trial on
accusation of defamatory libel finds perfectly OK to force Mr. Prior into
psychiatric evaluation but at the same time denies Mr. Prior's simple
request that Alex Hickman submits himself to DNA testing to determine who is
the father of his sister's daughter??
More on that subject at:

http://maxpages.com/sexualabuse

Danny Williams has lot of explaining to do on this selective application of
Canadian laws.

http://www.cbc.ca/canada/newfoundland-labrador/story/2009/04/06/byrne-sentencing.html

Former N.L. minister Byrne should go to jail: Crown
'A pretty dramatic, pretty devastating, pretty catastrophic fall from grace'
Last Updated: Monday, April 6, 2009 | 2:25 PM NT Comments124Recommend65
CBC News
Ed Byrne, a former leader of the Progressive Conservative party and a senior
government minister, resigned from cabinet in June 2006. He left politics
later that year. (CBC)
A former Newfoundland and Labrador cabinet minister who has admitted to
defrauding taxpayers should go to jail, a Crown prosecutor told a St. John's
courtroom on Monday.

Ed Byrne, who pleaded guilty in January to two fraud-related charges, should
serve a term in jail of less than two years, Frances Knickle said during a
sentencing hearing in provincial court in St. John's. Judge Mark Pike is
scheduled to bring down his sentence on April 17.

Knickle described the case of Byrne - who resigned in disgrace in June 2006
as the minister of natural resources, and who had been government house
leader in the legislature - as a tragedy.

"Mr. Byrne is a bright individual who contributed to the betterment of
Newfoundland," said Knickle, who also told Pike, "the public are victims."

Knickle said Byrne's case "undermines confidence in [a] democratic system."

Knickle said the Crown opposes a conditional sentence, which would give
Byrne house arrest.

"Given the amounts [of money] and the amount of time over which this
occurred, this is just too serious for a conditional sentence," Knickle told
the court. She added that the Crown would like to see Byrne receive a jail
sentence at "the higher end" of a range that could reach just under two
years.

Bob Simmonds told the court that Byrne did not act alone in the legislative
spending scandal. (CBC)
In a sweeping investigation, Auditor General John Noseworthy found that
Byrne had received payments of $467,653 beyond his entitlements. However,
Byrne pleaded guilty to fraud involving about $117,000.

Defence lawyer Robert Simmonds said that while "Mr. Byrne made some very
egregious errors," he added that the court should consider other factors. He
laid out examples that showed how house arrest had been applied in other
cases.

"This was not solely Mr. Byrne," Simmonds told the court. He cited lax rules
and bookkeeping at the house of assembly.

But Simmonds, who is arguing that Byrne should be allowed to service his
sentence outside of a jail cell while also performing community service,
said the case is nonetheless grave.

"I acknowledge that the breach of trust ... is amongst the highest that
society recognizes," he said.

"There is nothing you can sentence this man to that the hell of his own
personal situation hasn't already visited upon him," Simmonds said.

Prosecutor Frances Knickle described Ed Byrne's case as a tragedy that
'undermines confidence in [a] democratic system.' (CBC)
"That's a pretty dramatic, pretty devastating, pretty catastrophic fall from
grace," Simmonds said of Byrne.

Byrne, who on Monday put forward a $70,000 cheque that will likely be used
to pay restitution at sentencing, may be prohibited from holding public
office and may no longer be able to do any business with the government.
Pike will make that determination during sentencing.

Byrne, a former leader of the provincial Progressive Conservative party, is
the first official charged in Newfoundland and Labrador's legislative
spending scandal to be convicted. Byrne resigned his St. John's-area seat of
Kilbride at the end of 2006, and has made few public appearances since.

The court was told Monday that Byrne had forged receipts as well as other
documents to obtain money through the house of assembly.

The court was told that Byrne faked receipts, signatures and documents,
including some related to John Joy, a former St. John's lawyer who is now a
provincial court judge in Labrador.

Byrne faked Joy's signature for alleged work done on behalf of the
Progressive Conservative party, court was told.

It was also told Byrne faked documents about payments supposedly made to his
own nephews, as well as to political staff, constituents and party workers.

Byrne used money for barbecue, bar tab, court told
Details were also given of how Byrne used some of the money.

Byrne bought a high-end barbecue as a gift, and also used about $1,000 to
cover a bar tab at a wedding.

Knickle told the court that instead of doing what he had been elected to do,
and improve controls at the house of assembly, Byrne took advantage of the
legislature's finances "with the help of a public official."

Byrne was charged following a lengthy police investigation that was called
after Auditor General John Noseworthy found that a handful of politicians
from all three parties had received far more than their entitlements in
tax-free constituency allowances.

Three other former politicians - Liberals Wally Andersen and Jim Walsh, and
New Democrat Randy Collins - were charged in the same investigation. Also
charged is Bill Murray, the former director of finance at the house of
assembly. Trials for those individuals have not begun.

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