Report says why PMO wanted former Supreme Court judges to advise on SNC-Lavalin
OTTAWA — After months of unrelenting news coverage, hours of oral testimony and reams of written submissions to a House of Commons committee on the SNC-Lavalin affair, the federal ethics watchdog has still managed to unearth some details that give new life to the controversy on the eve of an election campaign.
Ethics commissioner Mario Dion’s report released Wednesday concludes that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau violated ethics law by improperly pressuring former attorney general Jody-Wilson Raybould to halt criminal prosecution of the Montreal engineering giant.
Much of the report goes over well-tilled ground about who said what to whom.
But there are nuggets that provide some additional detail, in particular about the involvement of former Supreme Court justices and why the Prime Minister’s Office didn’t trust Wilson-Raybould’s judgment — insisting that she get a second opinion about intervening in the SNC matter.