I do wonder why they are so secretive unless they have something to hide..........
The House of Commons paid a six-figure legal bill incurred by a group of Conservative MPs named in an unsuccessful legal challenge of the 2011 election results based on misleading robocalls.
Sources tell the Citizen that the House’s secretive Board of Internal Economy agreed to approve payments for fees incurred by at least six MPs who were named as respondents in the Federal Court challenge, which was backed by the Council of Canadians, an advocacy group.
The court in 2013 had ordered the council to pay the MPs a total of $13,206 – just a small share of the $355,907 their lawyer, Arthur Hamilton, had sought to recover.
At the time, it was thought the Conservative Party would pay for the remainder of MPs’ legal bills, but it now appears that the House stepped in and paid at least part of it with taxpayers’ money.
The exact amount the House paid to Hamilton’s firm, Cassels Brock, is not known.
In June 2013, Hamilton asked the court to order costs of $355,907, which included 577 billable hours of work performed by Hamilton and two of his colleagues. He told the court even that amount represented a fraction of the true costs. Hamilton charged $500 per hour, according to documents submitted in court.
Included in the costs was $166,363 to pay for expert witnesses brought in to provide evidence during the week-long hearing. It is unclear if the board agreed that the House should pay those costs, too.
During the trial, Mosley assailed the respondents’ legal tactics, accusing them of dragging out the litigation with legal “trench warfare.”
Hamilton could not be reached for comment this week.
The House of Commons would not confirm the payment and a spokesperson referred inquiries about it to the published minutes of the board meetings.
The minutes are too vague to determine how much taxpayers’ money was paid, to whom or for what reason. They cite at least one case involving a request to pay legal bills incurred by more than one MP but do not say which ones or the nature of the case. The amount paid is also not disclosed.
The Council of Canadians’ legal challenge argued that misleading live and prerecorded calls changed the election outcome in six closely fought ridings, represented by Conservative MPs Kelly Block, John Duncan, Jay Aspin, Joyce Bateman, Lawrence Toet
and Ryan Leef. Ontario MP Joe Daniel was initially named as a respondent but was later dropped from the proceedings.
Duncan, who, as Conservative whip, sits on the board, declined comment but Toet, a Manitoba MP, confirmed this week that the House has paid his legal fees.
more
Taxpayers paid legal bills for Tory MPs in robocalls case | Ottawa Citizen
The House of Commons paid a six-figure legal bill incurred by a group of Conservative MPs named in an unsuccessful legal challenge of the 2011 election results based on misleading robocalls.
Sources tell the Citizen that the House’s secretive Board of Internal Economy agreed to approve payments for fees incurred by at least six MPs who were named as respondents in the Federal Court challenge, which was backed by the Council of Canadians, an advocacy group.
The court in 2013 had ordered the council to pay the MPs a total of $13,206 – just a small share of the $355,907 their lawyer, Arthur Hamilton, had sought to recover.
At the time, it was thought the Conservative Party would pay for the remainder of MPs’ legal bills, but it now appears that the House stepped in and paid at least part of it with taxpayers’ money.
The exact amount the House paid to Hamilton’s firm, Cassels Brock, is not known.
In June 2013, Hamilton asked the court to order costs of $355,907, which included 577 billable hours of work performed by Hamilton and two of his colleagues. He told the court even that amount represented a fraction of the true costs. Hamilton charged $500 per hour, according to documents submitted in court.
Included in the costs was $166,363 to pay for expert witnesses brought in to provide evidence during the week-long hearing. It is unclear if the board agreed that the House should pay those costs, too.
During the trial, Mosley assailed the respondents’ legal tactics, accusing them of dragging out the litigation with legal “trench warfare.”
Hamilton could not be reached for comment this week.
The House of Commons would not confirm the payment and a spokesperson referred inquiries about it to the published minutes of the board meetings.
The minutes are too vague to determine how much taxpayers’ money was paid, to whom or for what reason. They cite at least one case involving a request to pay legal bills incurred by more than one MP but do not say which ones or the nature of the case. The amount paid is also not disclosed.
The Council of Canadians’ legal challenge argued that misleading live and prerecorded calls changed the election outcome in six closely fought ridings, represented by Conservative MPs Kelly Block, John Duncan, Jay Aspin, Joyce Bateman, Lawrence Toet
and Ryan Leef. Ontario MP Joe Daniel was initially named as a respondent but was later dropped from the proceedings.
Duncan, who, as Conservative whip, sits on the board, declined comment but Toet, a Manitoba MP, confirmed this week that the House has paid his legal fees.
more
Taxpayers paid legal bills for Tory MPs in robocalls case | Ottawa Citizen