By Alexander Panetta – CBC New
To understand Canada’s failure to criminally prosecute foreign collusion, an old news report from Washington offers a useful starting point.
In 1981, a Canadian correspondent made an observation: when it came to using security intelligence in policing, Canada and the U.S. were diverging onto opposite paths.
The Americans were ramping up, while Canadians were dialling down. The legacy of that era lingers to this day in an ongoing Ottawa scandal. And it’s unclear how much will change under a soon-to-be-enacted law.