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Senior Mountie said official charged with leaking secrets was given ‘carte blanche,’ jury hears

One of Cameron Ortis’s former colleagues once said he was “pretty well given carte blanche” as head of a national security unit within the RCMP, the jury in his trial heard Friday morning.

Ortis, a former high-ranking intelligence official, is accused of violating the Security of Information Act by sharing special operational information.

Ortis has pleaded not guilty. His lawyers have yet to make a formal statement in court but have told reporters he had the authority to do everything he did.

On Friday morning, defence lawyer Mark Ertel cross-examined retired RCMP chief superintendent Warren Coons, who once ran the National Intelligence Coordination Centre (NICC). The centre was set up to stay on top of emerging intelligence of interest to the force, said Coons.

At the time, Ortis was director of operations research (OR) within RCMP National Security, which was tasked with “developing high risk operational intelligence,” according to evidence entered as part of the agreed statement of fact.

Under cross-examination, Coons said there was not always a “robust” relationship between the two units.

“I guess there were times when there was tension between us, but in a professional working environment and a high-stress working environment that’s not uncommon, ” he said.

He also said the use of high-level intelligence in criminal investigations “was all new.”

Former RCMP commissioner Bob Paulson. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)

Ertel said a colleague at the NICC, intelligence analyst Michael Vladars, suggested in a statement there was an adversarial relationship at times between the two branches in their dealings with then-commissioner Bob Paulson.

“Whose information was better, who gave him more value,” said Ertel, citing Vladars’ comments. “Some type of competition where the commissioner was assessing whose information was better.”

Coons said he wouldn’t characterize the relationship that way.

“To be quite frank with you, I was obviously familiar with the commissioner and what have you. But you know, the commissioner was not a big part of our thought process,” he said.

Ortis described as ‘very secretive,’ lawyers says 

Coons and Ertel had a testy exchange when the lawyer read out in court a statement given by a senior RCMP officer, Marie-Claude Arsenault.  She served as superintent, below Coons, at the NICC.

Ertel said Arsenault described Ortis as “very secretive in what he was doing.”

“Even from senior management, like, I would venture to say, they didn’t know everything that was being done in OR, like he was pretty well given carte blanche,” says the statement Ertel read into the court record.

Coons pushed back.

“You’re parsing words,” he said.

“I don’t agree that anybody in the RCMP was given carte blanche to do anything related to criminal investigations. That’s not how we operate. That’s not the culture of the RCMP.”

Arsenault and Vladars have not testified inthe Ontario Superior Court trial.  Their statements were not entered as exhibits. 

Unit had to operate in ‘a no-fail’ environment

According to a job description shared as part of an agreed statement of fact, as director, Ortis was expected to provide “situational awareness intelligence” to “support a strategic or tactical response by the RCMP.”

“Given the perspective of imminent national security threats, the unit must evolve in a no-fail operational environment that demands that its outputs lead to significant outcomes,” says the description.

Ortis was appointed director of operations research within RCMP National Security in 2013. He was later promoted to director general of the National Intelligence Coordination Centre in 2016, a position he held until his arrest in 2019. 

The court also heard Friday from Nisrine Slaymane, director of information and communication technology security at the RCMP.

She described the security measures in place on the use of technology. She said it would not be RCMP policy for someone to bring foreign signals intelligence home with them.

According to the agreed statement of facts, investigators seized numerous devices from Ortis’s home after his arrest. They also found a Tails (The Amnesic Incognito Live System) — essentially an encrypted USB key — and officers were able to partially decrypt it. On the key was a folder called “The Project,” which contained much of the evidence being presented in court.

Ortis, 51, is accused of sharing special operational information “intentionally and without authority” with three people: Vincent Ramos, Salim Henareh and Muhammad Ashraf. He also faces one count of attempting to share special operational information with Farzam Mehdizadeh.

RCMP intelligence reports entered into evidence during the trial show the RCMP was investigating those three men and their money services businesses for potential links to Altaf Khanani, who was suspected of laundering money for terrorists.

Ramos was the head of a British Columbia-based company that was accused of selling encrypted phones to criminals, including the Khanani network and drug cartels.

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