| Comité de surveillance des activités de renseignement de sécurité | |
| Committee overview | |
|---|---|
| Formed | July 16, 1984 |
| Dissolved | July 12, 2019 |
| Superseding Committee | |
| Jurisdiction | Government of Canada |
| Headquarters | Ottawa, Ontario, Canada |
| Parent department | Queen's Privy Council for Canada |
| Website | www |
TheSecurity Intelligence Review Committee (SIRC;French:Comité de surveillance des activités de renseignement de sécurité) was a committee ofPrivy Councillors that was empowered to serve as an independent oversight and review body for the operations of theCanadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS). The SIRC was established in 1984 as a result of the reorganization of Canadianintelligence agencies recommended by theMcDonald Commission investigating the illegal activities of the formerRCMP Security Service.
SIRC's role was to review the activities of CSIS to ensure that the extraordinary powers granted to the security service are "used legally and appropriately, in order to protect Canadians’ rights and freedoms."[1] SIRC did not report to a minister but rather reported directly to theParliament of Canada.
In 2012, the government of Canada abolished the role of CSIS inspector-general and gave its responsibilities to the SIRC, saying it would save money and prevent duplication, to the dismay of the last inspector-generalEva Plunkett.[2]
On July 19, 2019, SIRC was superseded by theNational Security and Intelligence Review Agency (NSIRA), a super-agency mandated to review all Government of Canada national security and intelligence activities.[3]
In January 2014,Chuck Strahl resigned his position as chair of the Security Intelligence Review Committee, the watchdog of Canada's spy agency, after it was revealed by the press that he is also registered as a lobbyist over theEnbridge Northern Gateway Pipelines.[4][5][6][7]
Arthur Porter and his wife, Pamela Mattock Porter were detained byInterpol agents in Panama on May 27, 2013, after an investigation by theSureté du Québec, theRoyal Canadian Mounted Police and the International Criminal Police Organization (Interpol). He faced charges in Canada of fraud, conspiracy to commit government fraud, abuse of trust, secret commissions and laundering the proceeds of a crime.[8][9][10]
The fraud against the Quebec government is related to his alleged role in the handling of a $1.3-billion Montreal hospital construction and maintenance contract.[11][12]At the time of the alleged fraud, from 2008 to 2011, Porter director general of theMcGill University Health Centre in Montreal,Quebec, being in charge of one of Canada's largest health-care providers. He was appointed to the position in 2004.[13] He was also a member ofAir Canada’s board of directors.[12]
Porter claimeddiplomatic immunity on the basis that he was travelling via Panama on a diplomatic mission toAntigua and Barbuda, on behalf of the government of Sierra Leone, according to his lawyer Ricardo Bilonick Paredes (formerly known as Ricardo Bilonick), a convicted cocaine smuggler with ties to Panama's former dictator,Manuel Noriega and Colombian drug cartels. However, theSierra Leone government stated that he was agoodwill ambassador and thus has no diplomatic immunity.[14]
In 2005, SIRC came under criticism for allegedly not giving close enough scrutiny to the activities of CSIS regarding theAir India bombing, where crucial wiretap evidence was destroyed putting the legal case against the alleged Air India bombers into jeopardy. The Security Intelligence Review Committee cleared CSIS of any wrongdoing. The report remains secret to this day.[15]
Source:SIRC
Chair:
Hon.Ronald G. Atkey, PC, QC (five years)
Members:
Hon.Frank Charles McGee, PC(five years)
Hon.Jean Jacques Blais, PC, QC (five years)
Hon.Saul M. Cherniack, PC, QC(five years)
Hon.Paule Gauthier, PC, OC, OQ, QC(five years)
Chair:
Hon.John W.H. Bassett, PC, OC (three years)
Members:
Hon.Stewart D. McInnes, PC, QC (three years)
Hon.Jean Jacques Blais, PC, QC(two years)
Hon.Saul M. Cherniack, PC, QC (two years)
Hon.Paule Gauthier, PC, OC, OQ, QC (two years)
Member:
Hon.Saul M. Cherniack, PC, QC (one year)
Members:
Hon.Michel Robert, PC, QC (five years)* *Appointed to the Bench, May 1995
Hon.Jacques Courtois, PC, QC (five years)
Member:
Hon.Edwin A. Goodman, PC, OC, QC (five years)
Chair:
Hon.Jacques Courtois, PC, QC (five years)
Member:
Hon.George Vari, PC, OC (five years)
Member:
Hon.Rosemary Brown, PC, OC (five years)
Member:
Hon.Paule Gauthier, PC, OC, OQ, QC (five years)
Chair:
Hon.Paule Gauthier, PC, OC, OQ, QC (to June 7, 2000)
Member:
Hon.James Andrews Grant, PC, QC(five years)
Member:
Hon.Bob Rae, PC, OC, O.Ont, QC(five years)
Members:
Hon.Raymond Speaker, PC, OC (five years)
Hon.Frank McKenna, PC, OC, QC, ONB(five years)
Chair:
Hon.Paule Gauthier, PC, OC, OQ, QC (five years)
Member:
Hon.Gary Filmon, PC, OM (five years)
Member:
Hon.Baljit S. Chadha, PC (five years)
Member:
Hon.Roy Romanow, PC, OC, SOM, QC(five years)
Member:
Hon.Raymond Speaker, PC, OC (five years)
Chair:
Gary Filmon, PC, OM (five years)
Member:
Aldea Landry, PC, CM, QC (five years)
Members:
Hon.Denis Losier, PC
Hon.Arthur Porter, PC (five years), (resigned November 10, 2011)[19]
It is noteworthy[why?] to remark[further explanation needed] that 8 months after the appointment of Arthur Porter, the CSIS DirectorJim Judd announced his early resignation from his post.
Member:
Hon.Frances Lankin, PC
Chair:
Hon.Arthur Porter, PC (resigned November 10, 2011)[19]
Members:
Hon.Philippe Couillard, PC
Hon.Carol Skelton, PC
Chair:
Hon.Chuck Strahl, PC (resigned January 2014)[5][20][21][7]
Member:
Hon.Deborah Grey, PC, OC (resigned May 2, 2015)
Member:
Hon.Yves Fortier, PC, CC, OQ, QC
Member:
Hon. Gene McLean, PC
Member:
Hon. Ian Carl Holloway, PC, CD, QC
Chair:
Hon.Pierre Blais, PC
Member:
Hon. Marie-Lucie Morin, PC