Acquittals in Faubourg-Contrecoeur case don't mean corruption inquiry was pointless: law prof - Action News
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Acquittals in Faubourg-Contrecoeur case don't mean corruption inquiry was pointless: law prof

The acquittal of Frank Zampino and five of his co-accused in the Faubourg-Contrecoeur case wasn't the result Universit de Montral law Prof. Martine Valois was hoping for. Still, she's reassured by the ruling.

Corruption watchdog Prof. Martine Valois says people shouldn't conflate judicial process with inquiry's work

A man wears a suit.
Frank Zampino, a former chair of the Montreal executive committee, was acquitted of charges of fraud, conspiracy and breach of trust in relation to the Faubourg-Contrecoeur affair on May 2, 2018. (Paul Chiasson/Canadian Press)

The acquittal of Frank Zampino and five of his co-accused in the Faubourg-Contrecoeurcasewasn't the result Universitde MontralProf. Martine Valois was hoping for.

The law professor, who monitors what's happening to the recommendations from the Charbonneau commission into corruption in the construction industry, said just the same, she's reassured by the ruling.

Valois cautionsobserversnot to conflate the two-year-long criminal trial with the corruption inquiry.

"These are two completely different things," she said. " We can't even compare them."

Criminal trial: proof beyond a reasonable doubt

Zampino, a former chair of Montreal's executive committee,was arrested in 2012 and accused of using his political influence to help construction magnatePaoloCataniain abid to secure the contract to build a housing development on city-owned landin east-end Montreal in 2007.

He,Cataniaand several co-accusedfaced charges of fraud, conspiracy and, in the case of Zampino and Catania, breach of trust.

Quebec Court JudgeYvanPoulinacquitted them all in a ruling handed down Wednesday.

"It's clear that a number of assertions by the prosecution are not supported by the evidence," Poulinsaid, in his ruling saying at times the Crown's argumentsamounted to "speculation" and "conjecture."

Valoissaid it wasprosecution's job to prove its case.

"The burden is to bring evidence beyond a reasonable doubt on all the elements of the crime so, the actions and the criminal intent," she said.

Inquiry: Lots of finger-pointing, but no formal blame

Zampinowas among nearly 300 witnesseswho testified at the Charbonneaucommission, at itspublic hearings spread out overthree-and-a-half years.

The Faubourg-Contrecoeurland deal came up in those hearings.

At times, the testimony was explosive. The inquiry heard from industry insiders-turned-whistleblowers, other politicians, and businessmen with nicknames such as"Mr. Sidewalk."

Despite the high drama, the mandate of the commissionwas to examine schemes,systems and practices, not what people did or failed to do.

"It's like a coroner's inquest, know what happened, who did what," said Valois.

"The objective is to file a report and make recommendations, so that the problems that were identified in the report can be prevented from happening again."

Valoissaid the conclusionsof the Charbonneau commission don't single out anyone, nor should they.

More than 20 years ago, the Supreme Court of Canada suggested in a decision that commissions of inquiry preface their reports with a warning to readers that their conclusions shouldn't be taken as findings of criminal or civil liability.

The final report from the Charbonneau commission did not contain that disclaimer.

Where from here?

Provincial politicians have had nothing to say so far about the Zampinoverdict, except to say they respect the judicial process.

Montreal MayorValriePlantesaidThursday the city is studying theverdict and continuing to lookat ways to prevent collusion and corruption in the municipal government.

Valoissuggested that is where attention should turn.

"If the population cares about the fight against corruption and collusion, that fight takes place by establishing controls which prevents anyone from committing reprehensible acts to limit competition," she said.