Ray Novak, PM's top aide, told twice that Wright would cover Duffy's expenses, court hears - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 01:28 AM | Calgary | -11.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Politics

Ray Novak, PM's top aide, told twice that Wright would cover Duffy's expenses, court hears

Ray Novak, Stephen Harper's chief of staff, was told before and during a conference call that Nigel Wright would personally repay Mike Duffy's expenses, a former lawyer for the Prime Minister's Office told court, contradicting claims by the Conservative campaign.

Testimony at Mike Duffy trial contradicts claims by Conservatives that Novak didn't know about $90K repayment

Ray Novak, PM's top aide, told that Wright would cover Duffy's expenses

9 years ago
Duration 2:19
Testimony at Mike Duffy trial contradicts claims by Conservatives that Novak didn't know about $90K repayment

Ray Novak, Stephen Harper's chief of staff, was told before and duringa 2013conference call thatNigel Wright wouldpersonallyrepayMike Duffy's expenses, a former lawyer for the Prime Minister's Office told court,contradicting claims by the Conservative campaign.

BenjaminPerrin, testifying at theDuffy trial in Ottawa, saidhe, Wright (then Harper's chief of staff)andNovak were all in Wright'soffice on March22, 2013, as Wright was about to make a call with Duffy's then-lawyerabout the issueofthe senator'sexpenses.

Perrin went so far as to describe the scene in Wright's office, saying that Novak, who was Harper's deputy chief of staff at the time,took a seat at the head of the table, and that Novak was seated to Perrin'sright.

Perrin said he was discussing with Wright the issuessurrounding anaudit into Duffy's expenses when Wright said he would bepersonally repaying them.

"And that was the first time I ever heard that so I was quite surprised by that statementfrom him," Perrin said."He hadnever discussedit with me or consulted with me in any way.

"Because it was so surprising to me I immediately looked to my right to see Mr. Novak's reaction and he didn't have any reaction to that information. And the call proceeded literally within a minute of that."

He also said that Novak was present for the entire call when Wright told Payne he would be paying for Duffy's expenses.

Perrin's testimonycontradicts comments from the Conservative campaign which hasdenied thatNovakhad any knowledge of Wright's $90,000repayment of Duffy's expenses. They said he was initially part of the conference call but left before the cheque was discussed.

Wright also testified that Novak was not there for the entire call and "popped in and out."

At a campaign event in Newmarket, Ont. Thursday, Harper saidNovakstill had his confidence as his chief of staff.

RAW: Benjamin Perrin and Donald Bayne leave court

9 years ago
Duration 2:09
Former PMO lawyer Benjamin Perrin and Mike Duffy's lawyer Donald Bayne leave the Ottawa Courthouse after Perrin's first day of testimony.

"I've been very clear, when people are working for me, they have my confidence. If they didn't have my confidence they wouldn't be working for me," Harper said.

Novak is travelling with the Conservative campaign tour, although he is keeping a low profile. Reporters travelling on the Conservative plane in B.C. Thursday caught only the briefest of glimpses of Novak as he stepped off and onto the party's bus.

Stephen Harper on Ray Novak

9 years ago
Duration 2:14
Stephen Harper answers questions on his current chief of staff Ray Novak at an event in Newmarket, Ontario.

'Taken aback' by PM's takeon residency

Earlier, Perrinsaid he was "taken aback" by Stephen Harper's position that an individual only needed to own $4,000 of property in a province to be constitutionally qualified to represent the region.

"I was immediately taken aback by the prime minister'sdecision that if you simply owned $4,000 of real property, that made you a resident," said Benjamin Perrin, testifying at the Mike Duffy trial in Ottawa.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper talks to his chief of staff Ray Novak last week. What Novak knew about Nigel Wright's plan to cover Mike Duffy's expenses and when has become an issue at Duffy's trial. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

The trial, which began April 7 in the Ontario Court of Justice,resumed last Wednesday after breaking on June 18,the second hiatus of the high-profile trial. This third phase will continue until Aug. 28, and, with more time assuredly needed, break until it would resume again in mid-November.

Duffyhas pleaded not guilty to 31 charges of fraud, breach of trust and bribery related toexpenses he claimed in 2013 as a senator and later repaid with money from Wright.

Perrin, whoworked as a legal affairs and policy adviser toHarper from2012-13, testified he had researched the requirements for residency eligibility andthought Harper's position,both legally and practically,seemed untenable.

Perrintestified he wouldn't consider himself a resident ofNunavutsimply because he owned property there.

He said he communicated with the PMO as "diplomatically" as he could that the"view taken by the prime minister was not consistent with basic legalinterpretationprinciplesand that I didn't agree with it."

But he said the PMO stood firm on its definition.

At the time, there had been questions about whethersome senators, including Duffy, met theconstitutional residency requirements.

TheConstitution statesa senator "shall be resident in the province for which he is appointed" and must own property worth at least $4,000 in that province.

RAW: Ray Novak first off Conservative campaign plane

9 years ago
Duration 0:10
Stephen Harper's current chief of staff, Ray Novak, who has been the subject of much of the testimony at the trial of Mike Duffy, moves briskly from the Conservative campaign plane to the party's bus.

Crown prosecutor Jason Neubauer spent Thursdaymorning going over emails related to discussions Perrin had with Duffy's lawyer at the time,Janice Payne, in 2013. Members of the PMOincluding Wrightwanted Duffy to agree to a deal in which he wouldadmit he had made an unintentional mistake and saythat he would repay theexpenses, at the time thought to be $32,000.

In turn, Senator IrvingGerstein, who was chair of a Conservative Party fund, had arranged with Wright that the fund would be used to secretly cover Duffy's expenses.

But Perrin testified that whilehe was negotiating with Payne, henever knew about that deal and that he believed Duffy would bepaying most of those expenses out if his own pocket. He said he thought the only expenses the party would cover, along with legal costs, were claims Duffy made related to party business.

With files from CBC's Laura Payton and The Canadian Press