National Post (National Edition)

Harb now part of RCMP probe

- By Steve Rennie and Joan BRyden

OT TAWA • The police investigat­ion into the Senate expenses scandal grew wider Thursday with the release of court documents that indicate the Mounties are now looking into a second senator.

Documents filed at the Ott awa courthouse show the RCMP’s Sensitive and Internatio­nal Investigat­ions unit has obtained property records for a house in Cobden, Ont., once owned by Senator Mac Harb.

Property records show Mr. Harb sold the house at 62 Durack Line Rd. in Cobden, about 120 kilometres west of Ottawa, two years ago.

The court documents mark the first acknowledg­ment that the RCMP is investigat­ing Mr. Harb.

Cpl. Lucy Shorey, a spokeswoma­n for the RCMP, declined further comment.

The name “Project Amble” is written under the heading “Nature of Event” on the exhibit report. It’s unclear if the name refers only to the Harb investigat­ion or to the Senate probe more broadly.

Mr. Harb, a Liberal who now sits as an independen­t, is among the senators in trouble for improperly claimed living expenses.

Following an external audit, he was ordered to repay $51,500 in housing and living expenses claimed over the twoyear period of the audit. But the Senate has since demanded that he repay $231,649, covering eight years.

Mr. Harb filed a court applicatio­n Monday to have the Senate’s repayment order quashed.

He was an Ottawa city councillor from 1985-88 and represente­d the riding of Ottawa Centre as a Liberal MP from 1988-2003, when he was appointed to the Senate.

In his applicatio­n, Mr. Harb says he lived in a rented apartment in central Ottawa when he was an MP. However, shortly after his appointmen­t to the Senate, he purchased a house in the Pembroke area and consulted with Paul Belisle, then Senate clerk, about whether he was entitled to declare his new house as his primary residence.

Since it was more than 100 kilometres outside the national capital region, Mr. Belisle informed Mr. Harb he could declare it as his primary residence and claim a housing allowance and living expenses for a secondary residence in Ottawa.

Mr. Harb says he followed all the rules and that Senate administra­tion and finance officials approved his residency declaratio­ns and his expense claims.

Although the external auditors concluded the rules were not clear, Mr. Harb says the Senate’s internal economy committee disregarde­d that conclusion, imposed stiffer criteria for declaring primary residency and then applied it retroactiv­ely to him.

Mr. Harb also argues that the internal economy committee was not impartial, that the Prime Minister’s Office interfered in its decisions and that he was denied his right to legal counsel and a fair hearing.

Senator Patrick Brazeau, a former Conservati­ve who now also sits as an independen­t, is also vowing to go to court to fight the Senate’s order that he repay $48,745 in improperly claimed living expenses.

Mr. Harb’s lawyer said Thursday the senator was unaware the RCMP was looking into his expenses.

“The RCMP has not been in touch with us or Mr. Harb,” said lawyer Simon Ruel.

The RCMP is also combing through the campaign returns of 11 Conservati­ve candidates for whom Senator Mike Duffy campaigned during the last federal election, the court documents show.The court documents indicate the Duffy investigat­ion is being handled as an alleged breach of trust case.

The RCMP asked Elections Canada for candidate files on Natural Resources Minister Joe Oliver and current Conservati­ve MPs Gerald Keddy, Greg Kerr, John Carmichael and Wladyslaw Lizon, among others.

Those returns are presumably related to expense claims Mr. Duffy submitted while Parliament was dissolved during the last federal election, reporting he was on Senate business on days he appeared to be campaignin­g for the party.

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