ie, deny … then act surprised if you get caught. Translate that into Latin and you’d have a pretty good unofficial motto for the Canadian Security Intelligence Service.
I learned that lesson from John Farrell — a former Toronto gang leader turned postal inspector, turned CSIS dirty-tricks operative — while writing a book about his long, eventful career inside the spy service.
Farrell (whose pardon was fast-tracked by Ottawa so he could get top-secret security clearance) was a loyal, hardworking and well-paid CSIS agent for years.
No wannabe, Farrell worked directly for powerful people inside CSIS and was intimately involved in some of its most notorious and sensitive capers. Knowledge of who Farrell was and what he did for CSIS — including all the illegal stuff — reached high levels in the spy service’s HQ in Ottawa.
Indeed, former CSIS director Ward Elcock once wrote Farrell a letter offering him $6,000 in “humanitarian assistance” after Farrell complained that CSIS had stiffed him. Ultimately, Farrell sued CSIS to try to get his money. (I later discovered that CSIS promised — in writing — to pay Farrell even more money if he was prepared to disavow everything he told me for the book.)
While he worked side by side with senior CSIS officers in Toronto, Farrell was often ordered to lie, then deny, then act surprised. He wasn’t alone, of course. He saw CSIS officers doing the same thing all the time.
Remember this when the Bill C-51 apologists in the media and academia, or Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s blinkered minions, insist that since CSIS always plays by the rules, we don’t have to be alarmed by all those new powers they’re getting in Bill C-51 — powers that effectively make legal what under current law is very illegal.
Think the current checks and balances are enough to keep CSIS honest? Let’s get real. Farrell told me that many CSIS officers considered the spy service’s review agency, the Security Intelligence Review Committee, little more than a nuisance. He informed me that seasoned CSIS officers often colluded to mislead SIRC’s handful of raw, overworked and gullible “investigators.”
No one at CSIS worries that much about SIRC. They treat it like a visit to the dentist: a necessary nuisance, rarely painful.
Like Farrell, celebrated Toronto lawyer Rocco Galati knows all about CSIS’s in-house motto — and just how dangerously inept SIRC is.
Galati has been a persistent burr in the spy service’s hide, and Harper’s too. Recall that it was Galati who taught the prime minister and company a sharp lesson about the Constitution when he scuttled Harper’s plans to appoint Justice Marc Nadon to the Supreme Court. (For his lifelong commitment to the rule of law, the Ontario Bar Association will honour Galati with the President’s Award at its annual gala later this month.)
That’s Galati through and through — a brilliant, principled troublemaker armed with a deep knowledge of law. For the powers-that-be, that’s a dangerous combination.
In 1999, Galati was representing two men accused by Ottawa of being national security threats. Galati suspected that CSIS was snooping on his supposedly sacrosanct conversations with his clients. (He also suspected that he was being followed.)
I learned that lesson from John Farrell — a former Toronto gang leader turned postal inspector, turned CSIS dirty-tricks operative — while writing a book about his long, eventful career inside the spy service.
Farrell (whose pardon was fast-tracked by Ottawa so he could get top-secret security clearance) was a loyal, hardworking and well-paid CSIS agent for years.
No wannabe, Farrell worked directly for powerful people inside CSIS and was intimately involved in some of its most notorious and sensitive capers. Knowledge of who Farrell was and what he did for CSIS — including all the illegal stuff — reached high levels in the spy service’s HQ in Ottawa.
Indeed, former CSIS director Ward Elcock once wrote Farrell a letter offering him $6,000 in “humanitarian assistance” after Farrell complained that CSIS had stiffed him. Ultimately, Farrell sued CSIS to try to get his money. (I later discovered that CSIS promised — in writing — to pay Farrell even more money if he was prepared to disavow everything he told me for the book.)
While he worked side by side with senior CSIS officers in Toronto, Farrell was often ordered to lie, then deny, then act surprised. He wasn’t alone, of course. He saw CSIS officers doing the same thing all the time.
Remember this when the Bill C-51 apologists in the media and academia, or Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s blinkered minions, insist that since CSIS always plays by the rules, we don’t have to be alarmed by all those new powers they’re getting in Bill C-51 — powers that effectively make legal what under current law is very illegal.
Think the current checks and balances are enough to keep CSIS honest? Let’s get real. Farrell told me that many CSIS officers considered the spy service’s review agency, the Security Intelligence Review Committee, little more than a nuisance. He informed me that seasoned CSIS officers often colluded to mislead SIRC’s handful of raw, overworked and gullible “investigators.”
No one at CSIS worries that much about SIRC. They treat it like a visit to the dentist: a necessary nuisance, rarely painful.
Like Farrell, celebrated Toronto lawyer Rocco Galati knows all about CSIS’s in-house motto — and just how dangerously inept SIRC is.
Galati has been a persistent burr in the spy service’s hide, and Harper’s too. Recall that it was Galati who taught the prime minister and company a sharp lesson about the Constitution when he scuttled Harper’s plans to appoint Justice Marc Nadon to the Supreme Court. (For his lifelong commitment to the rule of law, the Ontario Bar Association will honour Galati with the President’s Award at its annual gala later this month.)
That’s Galati through and through — a brilliant, principled troublemaker armed with a deep knowledge of law. For the powers-that-be, that’s a dangerous combination.
In 1999, Galati was representing two men accused by Ottawa of being national security threats. Galati suspected that CSIS was snooping on his supposedly sacrosanct conversations with his clients. (He also suspected that he was being followed.)