Killer officer’s lawyer owes Ont. thousands

Published in the Windsor Star – for the website, click HERE
The Canadian Press| Apr 04, 2013 | Last Updated: Apr 04, 2013 – 7:10 UTCThe Canadian Press| Apr 04, 2013 | Last Updated: Apr 04, 2013 – 7:10 UTC

An assessment of the taxpayer-funded legal bills of a former Toronto police officer who killed his lover has found that one of his lawyers overbilled the province by nearly $200,000.

Richard Wills was convicted of first-degree murder in 2007 for killing Linda Mariani then stuffing her body in a garbage can and sealing it behind a wall in his basement. Wills was once a millionaire, but he systematically divested himself of his assets, then ran up a $1.2-million legal bill to Legal Aid Ontario and the Ministry of the Attorney General.

The ministry asked the court to assess the legal bills of two of the several lawyers Wills went through and the court found Wednesday that of the approximately $770,000 that Munyonzwe Hamalengwa billed, about $178,000 was “excessive.”

The government did not pay Hamalengwa, who represented Wills on many pre-trial motions, for the last bill he submitted, so that leaves Hamalengwa owing the province $86,000.

The bills for the other lawyer, Raj Napal, have not yet been assessed and a lawsuit launched by the government to recover money spent on Wills’ defence was put on hold until both assessment proceedings are finished.

The Federation of Law Societies of Canada v Attorney General of Canada 2013 BCCA 147

http://www.courts.gov.bc.ca/jdb-txt/CA/13/01/2013BCCA0147.htm

Appeal dismissed. Reasons by Hinkson JA. concurred in by Finch CJBC and Neilson JA. Concurring reasons by Frankel JA concurred in by Garson JA

Introduction

[1] Money laundering and terrorist financing involve the process of disguising activities in order to make them appear legal. The objective of these activities is to mask financial resources and criminal conduct from the scrutiny of state authorities.

[2] Beginning in 1989, the federal government introduced legislation aimed at combating these activities. The application of the various forms of legislation to lawyers and notaries proposed by the Attorney General of Canada (“Canada”) has been the subject of disagreement between Canada, and the members of the Federation of Law Societies of Canada (“FLSC”) and its member societies. Continue reading

S Pitel discusses “Solicitor-Client Privilege for Ethics Counsel: Lessons for Canada from the United States”

On Friday 15th March, the Schulich School of Law hosted a CALE sponsored Faculty Seminar delivered by Stephen Pitel on his forthcoming paper “Solicitor-Client Privilege for Ethics Counsel: Lessons for Canada from the United States”.

To watch the Faculty Seminar on YouTube, click HERE.

Support for the seminar was provided by Goodmans LLP, the Schulich School of Law and CALE.

22nd Annual F.B. Wickwire Memorial Lecture in Professional Responsibility and Legal Ethics

On Friday 15th March, the Schulich School of Law hosted  the Twenty-Second annual F.B. Wickwire Memorial Lecture in
Professional Responsibility and Legal Ethics.

This year, they ran a panel discussion entitled “Contextualizing Legal Ethics” in which members of the faculty discussed, in 12-minute pitches, legal ethics in their fields of substantive interest.

The presenters were:

Philip Girard: the historical context

Sarah Bradley: Corporate Law

Brent Cotter: Government Lawyer

Meinhard Doelle: Environmental Law

Geoff Loomer: Tax Law

Rollie Thompson: Family Law

The rapporteur for the session was the indefatigable Stephen Pitel!

To watch the Wickwire panel discussion on YouTube, click HERE.

A Dodek: Ronald Dworkin and Canadian Legal Ethics

Written by Adam Dodek, and originally posted at SLAW (Canada’s online legal magazine)- click HERE

Legal philosopher and Oxford and NYU Law Professor Ronald Dworkin died last month. Dworkin was arguably the most influential legal mind of his generation. Throughout his many writings, Dworkin argued that there was a moral content to law and to many of the phrases contained in the American Constitution. He strongly influenced legal scholarship and teaching in the United States and around the world, including Canada. Dworkin’s fingerprints can be seen in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, its interpretation by the Supreme Court of Canada and in much academic writing in this country. Continue reading

Conference Season in Canada

Thanks to Noah Semple and Jasminka Kalajdzic for alerting the CALE listserv to the following conferences:

  1. March 19 (next Tuesday):  Panel on Access to Justice and Early Childhood Education (Canadian Forum on Civil Justice, Costs of Justice Project).  Osgoode Hall Law School, Toronto. Link: http://issuesofcostandaccess.eventbrite.com
  2. April 25-27: CBA Envisioning Equal Justice Summit. Vancouver. Links: Website.  Program.
  3. May 30 – June 2: Law and Society Assoc. Annual Meeting. Boston. Links: WebsiteProgram.
  4. June 4-5:  Canadian Association of Law Teachers Conference.  University of Victoria. Links: Preliminary Program
  5. July 1-4: Canadian Law and Society Association Annual Meeting. University of British Columbia. Link: Website.
  6. July 2-3 Windsor Law is hosting a conference on Commercial Litigation Funding: Comparative, Ethical and Regulatory Perspectives. There are panels on access to justice, ethics and other themes. For further info: www.uwindsor.ca/law/fundingconference.
  7. Aug 5-7: International Conference of Legal Regulators Meeting. San Francisco.  Link: website.  I am told that this conference is open to researchers. If you contact them via their form they will put you on the mailing list.

A Wherry, “Pat Martin vs. The Justice Minister”

Written by by Aaron Wherry and published on MacLean’s website on Thursday, March 7, 2013 11:32am

For the original article and comments on the Maclean’s website, click HERE

Ed Schmidt, a lawyer with the Department of Justice, is currently challenging the department in Federal Court—seehere and here—over the department’s obligation to inform Parliament if a piece of legislation violates the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

The NDP’s Pat Martin has now taken this issue to the House, raising it as a matter of privilege.

Mr. Schmidt alleges the Department of Justice counsel have adopted a policy of interpreting the constitutional duty as meaning “no advice is given to the minister that he or she…has a duty to report to the House” so long as “some argument can reasonable be made in favour of its consistency with the charter, even if all the arguments in favour of consistency have a combined likelihood of success of 5% or less”. If these allegations are in fact true, my privilege as a member of Parliament, indeed the privileges of each member of Parliament, have been breached.

Supposedly, when a bill is placed before the House as government bill, every member can be reassured by law that the bill is not in violation of either the Bill of Rights or the Charter of Rights and Freedoms by the fact that the Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada has examined the bill and finds it to be compliant with these fundamental Canadian laws. If the allegations of Edgar Schmidt are true, we members cannot rely on the performance of these statutory and constitutional duties to know that a bill is consistent with the Bill of Rights and charter in deciding our vote as the bill proceeds through the committees and the House. Based on these allegations, the Department of Justice is approving proposed legislation that has only a mere remote possibility of being consistent with the charter or the Bill of Rights. In contrast, Schmidt argues that the statutory examination provisions require the Department of Justice to determine whether the proposed legislation is actually consistent with the charter or the Bill of Rights, not on the possibility of whether or not the legislation could be consistent.

This hinders us as members of Parliament in the performance of our parliamentary duties. It constitutes an interference in the performance of our duties to exercise due diligence of the bills before us. I believe every member of the House would agree that if these allegations are proven to be true, they show contempt for the authority and dignity of Parliament.

Liberal MP Irwin Cotler is due to add his concerns and there will no doubt be a response from Justice Minister Rob Nicholson before the Speaker makes a ruling.

 

J Gray: Ethics, conflicts of interest focal point for think tank

Published in The Globe and Mail Thursday, Feb. 28 2013, 5:00 AM EST and last updated Thursday, Feb. 28 2013, 7:02 AM EST

 

Jeff Gray

A new think tank being announced next week by the University of Toronto’s law school will take on the ethical issues lawyers faced on Bay Street, where they increasingly struggle with conflict-of-interest rules and other dilemmas. Continue reading

B Hutchinson: Calgary oil company turned to Chrétien-tied law firm for help before bribing Chadian ambassador

Written by Brian Hutchinson

Posted to the National Post, Jan 28, 2013 2:05 AM ET | Last Updated: Jan 28, 2013 11:10 AM ET

For the original article and related links click HERE

There was nothing subtle about Brad Griffiths, the legendary investment banker who died 18 months ago. He offended people and he drank too much. “He had demons, but he was the smartest guy on Bay Street,” says a former associate in Toronto. “Everyone wanted him for his brain.”

Mr. Griffiths tumbled out of a boat near his Muskoka cottage and drowned, just as a new management team was taking charge of a private oil and gas company he had built. It made discoveries that led to a corruption charge against the company, a guilty plea, and a record $10.3-million fine imposed in a Calgary courtroom Friday. Continue reading

A Woolley: The Legality of Legal Advising

Posted to ABLawg  on January 25, 2013 by Alice Woolley

For the webpage and PDF of the post, click HERE

Matter considered: Edgar Schmidt v Canada (Attorney General) Federal Court File #T-2225-12

Introduction

On December 13, 2012 Edgar Schmidt, a Department of Justice lawyer, filed a Statement of Claim in Federal Court naming the federal Attorney General as Defendant. The Statement of Claim alleges that the Minister of Justice and the Deputy Minister of Justice have violated their obligations under various pieces of legislation that impose duties on the Minister of Justice to examine proposed legislation to determine if it is “inconsistent with the purposes and provisions” of the Canadian Bill of Rights or the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and to advise the House of Commons if it is so (see in particular: section 3 of the Canadian Bill of Rights, SC 1960, c 44; section 4.1 of theDepartment of Justice Act, RSC 1985 c J-2; section 3(2) and (3) of the Statutory Instruments Act, RSC 1985 c S-22). Continue reading