Former colleague of ex-intelligence official on trial says RCMP unit was kept separate from criminal probes - Action News
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Former colleague of ex-intelligence official on trial says RCMP unit was kept separate from criminal probes

An RCMP employee who worked under Cameron Ortis the former high-ranking intelligence official accused of leaking information to police targetssays their unit was purposelyseparated from those investigating criminal activity, according to a transcript of his testimony.

Media was excluded from courtroom when Dan Morris testified in Cameron Ortis's trial

Cameron Jay Ortis, a former RCMP intelligence director accused of disclosing classified information, returns to the Ottawa Courthouse during a break in proceedings in Ottawa, on Tuesday, Oct. 3, 2023.
Cameron Jay Ortis, a former RCMP intelligence director accused of disclosing classified information, returns to the Ottawa Courthouse during a break in proceedings in Ottawa, on Tuesday, Oct. 3, 2023. (Spencer Colby/The Canadian Press)

An RCMP employee who worked under Cameron Ortis the former high-ranking intelligence official accused of leaking information to police targetssays their unit was purposelyseparated from those investigating criminal activity, according to a transcript of his testimony.

DanielMorris worked as Ortis'ssecond in commandwhen the RCMP's national security operations research (OR) unit was in its infancy. Morris eventually succeeded Ortis as director of the OR in 2015.

His former boss has pleaded not guilty to multiple counts of sharing operational information with people on the RCMP's radar. Ortis's lawyers say they'll argue he had the authority to do what he did.

Morris said members of the team weren't supposed tocontact targets of a criminal investigation.

"Operations Research was set up to be completely separate from criminal investigations," said Morris, according to a transcript provided by the court.

"It wasn't for OR to be even close to a criminal investigation and there were various reasons for that."

The civilian member of the RCMP testified before the jury Monday but members of the public, including the media, were locked out of the courtroom.

A consortium of media organizations thatincludesCBC Newsfought the move to keep Morris's testimony confidential, calling it an egregious restriction on open courts. The consortiumlost.Other details of the secrecy measure are covered by a publication ban.

Instead, the Crown sent a transcript of Morris's Monday morningtestimony to reporters Tuesday. The transcript of his afternoon testimonyhas not yet arrived.

RCMP may be sitting onpuzzle piece: Morris

Morris said one of the goals of the OR was to brief senior decision makers within the RCMP on threats and opportunities inways that wouldn't expose top-secret information in open court.

"Keeping that material protected throughout the course of the investigationis extremely difficult and extremely high-risk. Sowe do not touch,we do not go near the criminal investigation," he said.

Much of Morris's testimony touched on what's known as the "intelligence-to-evidence" problem the conflictbetween protecting secret information from open court andpursuing prosecutions related to terrorism and national security.

The problem lies in striking a balancebetweenprotecting sensitive information coming from Canada's intelligence agencies things liketactics, methods and where spies are located andthe RCMP's need to lay out their evidence and casework in court to secure prosecutions.

Morris suggested throughout his testimony that the OR was set up to bridgethat gap.

He offered a hypotheticalexample classified intelligence indicating that a person may beplanning to conduct a terrorist attack in Canada.

An RCMP tactical vehicle drives past the Parliament buildings, Sunday, Feb. 20, 2022 in Ottawa.
An RCMP tactical vehicle drives past the Parliament buildings, Sunday, Feb. 20, 2022 in Ottawa. RCMP employee Dan Morris says the force's operations research unit was was set up to be completely separate from criminal investigations. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

"If the information is restricted so that we can't actually launch a criminal investigation, that's obviously a real problem for the RCMP," he said.

Morris told the jury the OR unit wouldlook for other, unclassifiedinformation already in the hands oflaw enforcement.

"Sometimes, the RCMP may be sitting on a piece of the puzzle and doesn't even know it," he said.

"So, let's say this particular subject had been contacted before by police or had surfaced on the police attention or radar at some point in the past. There may be ways for us to find opportunities for the RCMP to take another look at this person without using the classified information."

Witnesssays OR could point bosses in right direction

Morris told Crown prosecutor John MacFarlane the OR largely worked in secret, separated from those working in criminal investigations. The intelligence they looked at was housed on separate drives on the Canadian Top Secret Network, a computer network operated by the Communications Security Establishment (CSE).

The OR would briefthe assistant commissioner and other senior officials, and sometimes the commissioner, he said.

"We could essentially point them in the right direction," he said.

But Morris said they would never brief what's called the "command triangle" the key Mounties investigating a case.

"We would hope that they wouldn't even know we exist," he said. "The material we worked with, what we were working on, needed to stay within essentially a bubble."

Ortis isaccused ofsharing special operational information "intentionally and without authority" with Salim Henareh and Muhammad Ashraf. He also faces one count of attempting to share special operational information with Farzam Mehdizadeh.

RCMP intelligence reports entered into evidence during the trial show the RCMP was investigating those three men and their money services businesses for potential links to Altaf Khanani, an internationally-wanted man suspected of laundering money for terrorists.

Ortis is also accused of leaking special operational information to Vincent Ramos, the head of a company that was accused of selling encrypted phones to criminals, including the Khanani network and drug cartels.

Cameron Jay Ortis, right, a former RCMP intelligence director accused of disclosing classified information, returns to the Ottawa Courthouse during a break in proceedings in Ottawa, on Tuesday, Oct. 3, 2023.
Cameron Jay Ortis, right, a former RCMP intelligence director accused of disclosing classified information, returns to the Ottawa Courthouse during a break in proceedings in Ottawa, on Tuesday, Oct. 3, 2023. (Spencer Colby/The Canadian Press)

Ortis is expected to testify during the trial.

His lawyer Mark Ertelsuggested the defence's case will look at the pressures the OR was under.

"The case is all about authority, who was in charge, who was in a position to give authority," he told reporters earlier this month.

When asked ifthe case will hear from someone who will vouch that Ortis had authority, Ertelsaid, "Stay tuned."

Undercover operations needed approval, Morris says

Morris said that during his eight years with OR,he has never heard of someone reaching out to targets.

"OR didn't develop evidence," he said. "Contacting a target, if there was any sort of deception involved, that makes it an undercover operation by RCMP definition under undercover policy.

"There's very clear rules on how undercover operations can be performed within the RCMP and who can perform those operations."

Morris said multiple decision makerswould need to be briefed on any such operation andwould need to approve it.

The transcript of his testimonynotes in spotsthat the audio was "indiscernible."

At one point, Morris was describingthe priorities of the OR when he first joined in 2010.

"Indiscernible ... coughing in background; poor audio set up; channel recording levels not functional unable to isolate speakers," saysthe transcript.

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