The Water War Crime Case
Destroys
Deputy Minister of Justice/Deputy Attorney General -
John Sims, Q.C.
John Sims Quits
We think Canada's former Deputy Minister of Justice, John Sims, Q.C., was part of the "legal and judicial mafia" that has been secretly fixing the outcome of selected court cases in Canada for several decades.
John Sims suddenly decided to throw in the towel effective April 1, 2010.
The Canadian Government owned CBC reported that:
"According to the Department of Justice, earlier this week, Deputy Minister John H. Sims -- a three-plus-decade veteran of the civil service -- gave notice, via widely-distributed letter, that he would be leaving his post, effective April 1.
The news apparently provoked mild-to-middling surprise because, generally speaking, the imminent departure of such a senior official would have been telegraphed months in advance, and not announced in a brief note just two weeks before his last day on the job.
What the CBC and other Canadian media did not report was that John Sims had been accused of lying in documents he filed in Canada's Federal Court and he was due to appear in Court on April 20, 2010, to defend against the accusation that had lied in written submissions that were filed in that Court in June, 2008, and which were used to dupe a Federal Court Prothonotary, acting as case management judge, in the WaterWarCrimes lawsuit that was leading to exposure of Canada's Biggest Conspiracy including a conspiracy of Canada's leading jurists.
Chief Justice Alan Lutfy had ordered Sims and all opposing legal counsel to advise the Court by April 1, 2010, if they would be attending in person or by tele-conference at a hearing set in Vancovuer. Sims artfuly avoided the deadline by quitting.
There are now over forty (40) dead bodies linked to the WaterWarCrimes lawsuit. John Sims has, so far, escaped with his life but his tactics of stalling and delay, since January 2008, contributed to the deaths of BC Chief Judge Hugh Stansfield, BC Supreme Court Justice David Vickers, retired BC Supreme Court Justice John Bouck, BC politician, Stan Hagen and retired BC civil servant, Jack Ebbels.
These five people all died after the WaterWarCrimes lawsuit was filed in Janaury 2008. The Plaintiffs warned Deputy Minister John Sims and Justice Minister Rob Nicholson that there would be "death and destruction" but, their warning was ignored and, now, five more people have died.
The Web Site, Water Exports and the Water War Crimes, http://www.waterwarcrimes.com/ and correspondence with the Prime Minister Harper and Minister of Justice Nicholson, began targeting Mr. Sims for his corrupt activities in late December 2009 and Canada's Parliament was suspended a few days later. Another strange co-incidence.
Co-incidentally, in 2005, Mr. John Sims was awarded the John Tait Award for Excellence established in 1998 to honour, recognize and celebrate the accomplishments of Public Sector Lawyers in Canada. Originally named the Inukshuk Award of Excellence, it was renamed in August 1999 to honour John Tait an alleged outstanding lawyer and public servant who passed away suddenly in the summer of 1999.
Recent investigations have uncovered John Tait's links to the WaterWarCrimes when he was Deputy Minister of Justice for Canada from 1988 to 1994. John Tait's death occurred suddenly, in 1999, when the WaterWarCrimes first came to national attention in Canada, and raises to 12, a statistically impossible co-incidence, the number of sudden deaths associated with the conspiracy. Murder is suspected.
Click here for more Details at Department of Justice Page
John Sims suddenly decided to throw in the towel effective April 1, 2010.
The Canadian Government owned CBC reported that:
"According to the Department of Justice, earlier this week, Deputy Minister John H. Sims -- a three-plus-decade veteran of the civil service -- gave notice, via widely-distributed letter, that he would be leaving his post, effective April 1.
The news apparently provoked mild-to-middling surprise because, generally speaking, the imminent departure of such a senior official would have been telegraphed months in advance, and not announced in a brief note just two weeks before his last day on the job.
What the CBC and other Canadian media did not report was that John Sims had been accused of lying in documents he filed in Canada's Federal Court and he was due to appear in Court on April 20, 2010, to defend against the accusation that had lied in written submissions that were filed in that Court in June, 2008, and which were used to dupe a Federal Court Prothonotary, acting as case management judge, in the WaterWarCrimes lawsuit that was leading to exposure of Canada's Biggest Conspiracy including a conspiracy of Canada's leading jurists.
Chief Justice Alan Lutfy had ordered Sims and all opposing legal counsel to advise the Court by April 1, 2010, if they would be attending in person or by tele-conference at a hearing set in Vancovuer. Sims artfuly avoided the deadline by quitting.
There are now over forty (40) dead bodies linked to the WaterWarCrimes lawsuit. John Sims has, so far, escaped with his life but his tactics of stalling and delay, since January 2008, contributed to the deaths of BC Chief Judge Hugh Stansfield, BC Supreme Court Justice David Vickers, retired BC Supreme Court Justice John Bouck, BC politician, Stan Hagen and retired BC civil servant, Jack Ebbels.
These five people all died after the WaterWarCrimes lawsuit was filed in Janaury 2008. The Plaintiffs warned Deputy Minister John Sims and Justice Minister Rob Nicholson that there would be "death and destruction" but, their warning was ignored and, now, five more people have died.
The Web Site, Water Exports and the Water War Crimes, http://www.waterwarcrimes.com/ and correspondence with the Prime Minister Harper and Minister of Justice Nicholson, began targeting Mr. Sims for his corrupt activities in late December 2009 and Canada's Parliament was suspended a few days later. Another strange co-incidence.
Co-incidentally, in 2005, Mr. John Sims was awarded the John Tait Award for Excellence established in 1998 to honour, recognize and celebrate the accomplishments of Public Sector Lawyers in Canada. Originally named the Inukshuk Award of Excellence, it was renamed in August 1999 to honour John Tait an alleged outstanding lawyer and public servant who passed away suddenly in the summer of 1999.
Recent investigations have uncovered John Tait's links to the WaterWarCrimes when he was Deputy Minister of Justice for Canada from 1988 to 1994. John Tait's death occurred suddenly, in 1999, when the WaterWarCrimes first came to national attention in Canada, and raises to 12, a statistically impossible co-incidence, the number of sudden deaths associated with the conspiracy. Murder is suspected.
Click here for more Details at Department of Justice Page
Canadian Deputy Attorney General John Sims - suspected criminal - caught making false allegations of fact in Federal Court
When a person makes false allegations of fact to a hearing judge that person risks causing an obstruction or miscarriage of justice. The making of a false allegation of fact in a court proceedings is not uncommon because clients often lie to lawyers and lawyers end up making false statements to a judge based on what their clients have told them.
What is uncommon is when a lawyer knowingly makes false allegations of fact and this is exactly what John Sims, the Deputy Attorney General of Canada, did when he signed a legal argument dated _______________.
This is uncommon because lawyers generally know that if they do so they are committing a criminal offence. Nonetheless, a number of lawyers who work with the governments of Canada and British Columbia have made false allegations of fact against Mr. Carten in various court proceedings. When complaints are filed with the Law Society of British Columbia the Law Society scrambles around and does nothing because the people who work there don't want to offend their friends and cronies who work for the government. The Law Society that supposedly polices the conduct of lawyers never ever suspends reprimands or disbars a government lawyer. It is unheard of.
What is uncommon is when a lawyer knowingly makes false allegations of fact and this is exactly what John Sims, the Deputy Attorney General of Canada, did when he signed a legal argument dated _______________.
This is uncommon because lawyers generally know that if they do so they are committing a criminal offence. Nonetheless, a number of lawyers who work with the governments of Canada and British Columbia have made false allegations of fact against Mr. Carten in various court proceedings. When complaints are filed with the Law Society of British Columbia the Law Society scrambles around and does nothing because the people who work there don't want to offend their friends and cronies who work for the government. The Law Society that supposedly polices the conduct of lawyers never ever suspends reprimands or disbars a government lawyer. It is unheard of.