Feds to let court decide on releasing cabinet secrets to Norman lawyers
OTTAWA — The federal government says it will let a judge decide whether to release thousands of pages of cabinet secrets to Vice-Admiral Mark Norman’s lawyers, who have argued the records are needed to ensure their client gets a fair trial.
The Crown’s plan is contained in new filings in an Ontario court in Ottawa and appears to put to rest questions over whether Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his predecessor, Stephen Harper, would agree to release the secrets.
Most of the documents relate to a $700-million contract to refit a civilian vessel into a temporary support ship for the navy. The deal was negotiated by the Harper Conservatives and finalized by the Trudeau Liberals.
Norman, the former commander of the Canadian navy and vice-chief of the defence staff, is charged with breach of trust over allegations he leaked documents to the shipbuilding company involved in the deal as well as the media.