
Published: August 17th 2009
Source: cbc.ca
Printer friendly version
The judge in charge of the BC
Rail corruption trial has stepped down to take a new job with the
B.C. Court of Appeal, but she says that does not mean the five
year-old case will be delayed.
Justice Elizabeth Bennett had been hearing pre-trial arguments in
the case against former ministerial aides Dave Basi and Bobby Virk
in B.C. Supreme Court for several years, when she was appointed to
the provincial Court of Appeal in May.
There was some speculation that she might decide to stay to oversee
the complex case. But on Monday, Bennett announced her decision to
step down, saying since the case was still tied up in pre-trial
arguments, she did not expect appointing a new justice would delay
any trial.
Missing emails sought
The announcement comes on the same
day the court was scheduled to hear what happened to thousands of
high-level government emails possibly related to the $1-billion sale
of the railway.
Bennett had ordered Premier Gordon Campbell, his senior staff and
several former cabinet ministers to forward emails linked to the
sale of the railway so she could review them before deciding if they
were relevant to the corruption and breach-of-trust trial of former
cabinet aides Basi and Virk.
A report concerning the fate of the electronic messages had been
expected Monday from government lawyer George Copley.
Government lawyers originally told the court all copies of the
emails had been destroyed several years ago.
But according to an unconfirmed Globe and Mail newspaper article
published in July, the government director in charge of managing the
email delivery service filed an affidavit stating that during the
May 2009 provincial election campaign, someone in authority asked
that backup tapes of emails created before May 2004 be destroyed.
The charges of corruption and fraud against Basi and Virk stem from
RCMP raids on the legislature in 2003. But the two aides have always
maintained that whatever they did during the sale of BC Rail to CN
Rail, it was on government orders.

