I joined the RCMP in 1967. I retired in 2001. I have been working in various capacities since then.
I worked with Commissioner Roy Romanow on the health care commission.
I did an operational review of the RCMP international liaison and training program in 2002-03.
From 2003 to 2007, I was one of two investigators for the tribunal of inquiry into the An Garda Síochána with respect to certain misdeeds of the Gardai in the County of Donegal in the Republic of Ireland. My role was to conduct the interviews, do research, establish international best practices, advise the tribunal with respect to what these best practices were and where to find the subject matter, identify subject matter experts and where to get these subject matter experts, and arrange for them to attend in the Republic of Ireland. Among other things, the subject matter expertise was with respect to ballistics, handwriting, document examination, and, more importantly, interview techniques and interview questions as best practices from around the world. I arranged to have people from Canada, the United Kingdom, and New Zealand attend as expert witnesses before the tribunal.
In the RCMP, I had considerable experience as a detective inspector on a number of high-profile document leaks, including the constitutional document, and some of you might remember the more recent alleged budget leak, otherwise known as the Doug Small affair. I was an investigator on the constitutional document leak. At the point of the Small affair, I was the director of national security investigations responsible for those kinds of investigations that potentially involve the Official Secrets Act.
I've done a number of other politically sensitive investigations on behalf of the Speaker of the House of Commons and others.
So my expertise in many cases was essentially in breach of trust, the former section 118 of the Canadian Criminal Code. There's not much more I can tell you.