Thank you, Chair.
Staff Sergeant Frizzell testified, and I quote:
They have the meeting, and Great-West Life is told by NCPC, “Keep it quiet that you're not going to do the administration. You guys should go see Morneau Sobeco. You just got them as a pension outsourcer. They're going to do the pension administration, and I'm sure they can do your insurance administration at the same time.” Then there is an e-mail from Great-West Life to NCPC stating: “Following the meeting in Ottawa that our members attended, it was our understanding that your investigation into an alternate service provider was to be treated as confidential and not to be shared with our resources.” They decided to cancel the next meeting because they didn't have an outsourcer, and they had to look for one. An e-mail is sent out to let everybody know the meeting is cancelled, but they're not told why. The e-mail reads that some of the members of the project team couldn't be there, so they were going to cancel the January 7 meeting “due to the scheduling conflicts of some team members”. This is from one of the people who knows Great-West Life isn't doing the outsourcing any more, or doing the administration. One of his co-conspirators—for lack of a better term—writes back to him giving some feedback on the e-mail, just one word: “Smooth”.
Staff Sergeant Frizzell said further:
It was a pretty good deal they had going. Great-West Life was going to be administrator; nobody was going to ask any questions. Mr. Crupi had already committed to that insurance outsourcing happening. He was going to bring in both insurance and pension outsourcing. When some hiccups came in along the way, they found ways around them. How this happened in our organization is beyond me. I've asked that question very many times. I have a very hard time believing that Mr. Crupi would have been so bold as to do all that on his own.
And then you've already raised the discussion you had with Mr. Gork.
Now, Mr. Roy, you sent an e-mail to Mr. Casey. In it, you responded that you thought his dealings in cancelling the meeting were--and I quote--“smooth”.
Staff Sergeant Frizzell again:
Mr. Casey sent the e-mail around saying that this meeting was rescheduled. It was Mr. Roy who replied, “Smooth”. My interpretation of that was everyone had bought the reasoning, even though it was untrue.
He further said:
Later that month Mr. Roy and Mr. Casey had another e-mail exchange in which Mr. Roy stated, “Uh-oh, the foxes have the scent”. Mr. Casey's reply seemed to indicate that someone was asking questions about the insurance outsourcing, and he was devising answers that would put her off the scent. Mr. Roy replied, “Sounds good, and we should be able to come out of the closet soon as well”. This would seem to indicate that again they were keeping it well hidden that they were having these negotiations with Morneau Sobeco.
Mr. Roy, what do you have to say about those e-mails? They look very incriminating, sir, in light of the allegations of Staff Sergeant Frizzell and Chief Superintendent Macaulay.