The evidence was 'destroyed,' say investigators involved in MNA Guy Ouellette's arrest - Action News
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The evidence was 'destroyed,' say investigators involved in MNA Guy Ouellette's arrest

A 192-page declaration from two suspended police officers includes a claim that evidence regarding a leak of sensitive information to media has been destroyed. It also contains serious allegations about a prosecutor and casts doubt on the integrity of other officers.

'The truth can never be known,' say investigators in 192-page declaration

Guy Ouellette, MNA for the Chomedey riding in Laval, Que., was a target of the UPAC's Project A investigation. (Sylvain Roy Roussel/Radio-Canada)

The chances of finding out who is responsible for leaking sensitive information to the media about an investigation from the province's anti-corruption unit (UPAC)and what led to the arrest of MNA Guy Ouellettefour years agoappear to be murky.

That's because evidence has been destroyed, according to the peoplein charge of UPAC's Project A investigation.

In a 192-page joint declaration, Lt. Caroline Grenier-Lafontaine and Insp. Andr Boulanger who were suspended following the arrest of the MNA for the Chomedey riding in Laval, Que. defended their work and their integrity.

They make seriousclaims pertaining to a prosecutor with theQuebec's Director of Criminal and Penal Prosecutions (DCPC), saying she had an inappropriate fixation on the former director of theSret du Qubec (SQ), Martin Prud'homme.

Grenier-Lafontaine and Boulanger also questioned the honesty of other police officers.

Their allegations were communicated to Quebec's bureau of independent investigations (BEI) in 2019, whichisattempting to shed light on their behaviour, the manner in which the investigation was carried out as well as the transmission of sensitive documents that occurred during theMchurerinvestigation.

TheMchurerprobe was regarding thefinancing of the Liberal Party of Quebec.

According to Grenier-Lafontaine and Boulanger, BEI investigators never met with them to get their version of events.

It's why they decided to write a declaration that was filed in Superior Court and mostly made public on Friday.

'The truth can never be known'

In June 2017, Grenier-Lafontaine and Boulanger, two high-ranking officers, put together a small team of investigators for Project A, which was meant to shed light on the information leakto the media.

The investigation led to Ouellette's arrest on Oct. 25, 2017. He was never charged, and In June of this year, UPAC apologized for his arrest and described as "unjustified."

In their joint declaration, Grenier-Lafontaine and Boulanger defendedtheir investigation.

"The courts were never able to hear the truth about Project A. All the evidence that could have validated or invalidated the theories has been destroyed," said the two investigators.

"Now, the truth can never be known about it. Neither by you nor by anybody else [] And we will never shoulder the burden that you want us to bear for having knowingly botched, directed or hindered it."

The two investigators areasking the DCPCto lift their commitment to confidentiality "that prevents them from telling the truth regarding the information"they have.

Prosecutor was fixated on head of SQ, investigators say

The two investigatorssaid theyhad a difficult relationship with Betty Laurent, the DCPC'sdeputy chief prosecutor, due to what they described as an inappropriate fixation on Prud'homme, the former head of the SQ.

They claimed Laurent said that she considered Prud'homme a suspect in the investigation regarding leaks to media due to several phone interactions with Ouellette.

The investigatorsclaimed Laurent said that there was surely a rule that had beenbroken given Prud'hommeand Ouellette's interactions with each other.

According to Grenier-Lafontaine and Boulanger, Laurent wanted Prud'homme to be put under wiretap surveillance, which the two investigators say they refused due to a lack of evidence to justify such anoperation.

They saidLaurent told them the SQ interfered several times with theMchurerinvestigation in 2016, and she heldPrud'hommeresponsible for that.

As far asGrenier-Lafontaine and Boulangerwere concerned, Laurent's focus on Prud'homme was so exaggerated, Boulangeradvised the prosecutor's superior and a new advisor was appointed to help them.

On Friday, the DCPC issued a statement reiterating their "full confidence" in Laurent, while specifying that allegations from the suspended officers "were never challenged in court, and therefore, only represent theclaims of Mr. Boulanger and Ms. Grenier-Lafontaine."

According to the DCPC, Laurent made a statement to the BEIwhich "refutes, clarifies or puts these allegations in context."

Grenier-Lafontaine and Boulanger'sjoint declaration also implicated colleagues who worked with them during Project A, whom they were wary of.

According to Grenier-Lafontaineand Boulanger, two sergeantsmay have shared sensitive information to former police officers whowere suspected of being in cahoots with Ouellette.

They also question the integrity of another officer, a lieutenant-detective who, according to them, may have revealed details regarding Project A to some of their peers.

Based on a report by Radio-Canada's Genevive Garon