Prime Minister Jean Chretien & The WaterWarCrimes
'I don't know anything about water'
Was Prime Minister Jean Chretien a secret investor in W.C.W. Western Canada Water Enterprises Ltd?
What role did Mr. Chretien play in the cover up of the WaterWarCrimes?
Why did Jean Chretien recruit Stephen Owen, a key player in the WaterWarCrimes, to his cabinet?
Why did Jean Chretien appoint Kim Campbell, whose people were closely connected to the WaterWarCrimes, to be Canada's Consul General in Los Angeles shortly after he assumed office?
Why did Jean Chretien, allegedly, have such a hard time with the US Government under President George Bush?
Jean Chretien has been around Canadian politics for a very long time. But from 1986 to 1990, he left politics and to work in the private sector where he hung out his legal shingle at law firm Lang Michener, a Defendant in the WaterWarCrimes lawsuit. It has been alleged that Jean Chretien was an investor in W.C.W. Western Canada Water Enterprises Ltd. This allegation was put to the Deputy Minister of Justice and to Prime Minister Chretien's office, in 1999, and never denied. Investing is not a crime and there is no allegation that Mr. Chretien's alleged investment was a criminal act. There were certainly crimes committed and, if Mr. Chretien was an investor in that company, then, there would be a tendency by some members of the public and, certainly, by his political enemies, to rush to judgment based on co-incidental circumstances.
Nonetheless, Mr. Chretien's government took exceptional measures to cover up and avoid dealing, forthrightly, with the WaterWarCrimes. At this stage, it is difficult to ascertain what role Mr. Chretien and or his colleagues may have played in directing the "judicial mafia" that operates in Canada and that was actively attempting to block the WaterWarCrimes cases from moving forward in the courts.
If the Chief Justice of the Federal Court, Mr. Allan Lutfy, (who was so close an advisor to Mr. Chretien that he interviewed prospective cabinet ministers and was appointed to his position by Mr. Chretien) does his job properly he will permit the case to go forward so that Mr. Chretien can be examined in the usual manner at pre-trial examinations for discovery and the issues can be resolved in a civil manner.
When he took over as Canada's Prime Minister, in November, 1993, Mr. Chretien appointed his nephew, Raymond Chretien, to be Canada's Ambassador in Washington, D.C., and his rival, during the election campaign, Kim Campbell, to be Canada's Consul General in Los Angeles. The choice of Raymond Chretien, as Ambassador in Washington, raised some eyebrows because it was seen as nepotism, although, to be fair, Raymond Chretien had had a long and distinguished career with Canada's foreign service. By contrast, the appointment of his rival, who had no foreign service experience, to the post in Los Angeles greatly surprised many in Canada.
What the observers did not know, at the time, was that Raymond Chretien and Kim Campbell had one thing in common. They were both linked to W.C.W. Western Canada Water Enterprises Ltd. that was front and centre in the WaterWarCrimes.
When Prime Minister Chretien assumed office in 1993, he knew he had a problem because the Americans had negotiated the Canada US Free Trade Agreement, on the understanding that fresh water would be flowing across the border. Canada's first attempt to commercially develop its huge water resources had floundered with the collapse of W.C.W.Western Canada Water Enterprises Ltd. that resulted in the illegal moratorium on bulk water exports imposed by the British Columbia government in order to block commercial development of the water resources by persons who were not political insiders.
The Americans wanted the water and Prime Miniser Chretien needed reliable people in both Washington and Los Angeles to respond, appropriately and cautiously, so as not to provoke a trade war or an FBI investigation.
What role did Mr. Chretien play in the cover up of the WaterWarCrimes?
Why did Jean Chretien recruit Stephen Owen, a key player in the WaterWarCrimes, to his cabinet?
Why did Jean Chretien appoint Kim Campbell, whose people were closely connected to the WaterWarCrimes, to be Canada's Consul General in Los Angeles shortly after he assumed office?
Why did Jean Chretien, allegedly, have such a hard time with the US Government under President George Bush?
Jean Chretien has been around Canadian politics for a very long time. But from 1986 to 1990, he left politics and to work in the private sector where he hung out his legal shingle at law firm Lang Michener, a Defendant in the WaterWarCrimes lawsuit. It has been alleged that Jean Chretien was an investor in W.C.W. Western Canada Water Enterprises Ltd. This allegation was put to the Deputy Minister of Justice and to Prime Minister Chretien's office, in 1999, and never denied. Investing is not a crime and there is no allegation that Mr. Chretien's alleged investment was a criminal act. There were certainly crimes committed and, if Mr. Chretien was an investor in that company, then, there would be a tendency by some members of the public and, certainly, by his political enemies, to rush to judgment based on co-incidental circumstances.
Nonetheless, Mr. Chretien's government took exceptional measures to cover up and avoid dealing, forthrightly, with the WaterWarCrimes. At this stage, it is difficult to ascertain what role Mr. Chretien and or his colleagues may have played in directing the "judicial mafia" that operates in Canada and that was actively attempting to block the WaterWarCrimes cases from moving forward in the courts.
If the Chief Justice of the Federal Court, Mr. Allan Lutfy, (who was so close an advisor to Mr. Chretien that he interviewed prospective cabinet ministers and was appointed to his position by Mr. Chretien) does his job properly he will permit the case to go forward so that Mr. Chretien can be examined in the usual manner at pre-trial examinations for discovery and the issues can be resolved in a civil manner.
When he took over as Canada's Prime Minister, in November, 1993, Mr. Chretien appointed his nephew, Raymond Chretien, to be Canada's Ambassador in Washington, D.C., and his rival, during the election campaign, Kim Campbell, to be Canada's Consul General in Los Angeles. The choice of Raymond Chretien, as Ambassador in Washington, raised some eyebrows because it was seen as nepotism, although, to be fair, Raymond Chretien had had a long and distinguished career with Canada's foreign service. By contrast, the appointment of his rival, who had no foreign service experience, to the post in Los Angeles greatly surprised many in Canada.
What the observers did not know, at the time, was that Raymond Chretien and Kim Campbell had one thing in common. They were both linked to W.C.W. Western Canada Water Enterprises Ltd. that was front and centre in the WaterWarCrimes.
When Prime Minister Chretien assumed office in 1993, he knew he had a problem because the Americans had negotiated the Canada US Free Trade Agreement, on the understanding that fresh water would be flowing across the border. Canada's first attempt to commercially develop its huge water resources had floundered with the collapse of W.C.W.Western Canada Water Enterprises Ltd. that resulted in the illegal moratorium on bulk water exports imposed by the British Columbia government in order to block commercial development of the water resources by persons who were not political insiders.
The Americans wanted the water and Prime Miniser Chretien needed reliable people in both Washington and Los Angeles to respond, appropriately and cautiously, so as not to provoke a trade war or an FBI investigation.
Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien Snows US President George Bush who asked Canada for Water and the Prime Minister replied...
"Canada Has Snow Water For Sale"
'There is snow water for sale in Canada'
OTTAWA, July 18, 2001
Ottawa rejected Wednesday a suggestion by President George W. Bush that he would like to begin talks with Prime Minister Jean Chretien on bulk exports of Canadian fresh water to the parched southerwestern states.
A spokesman for Chretien's office rejected the idea a day after Bush told a select group of foreign reporters in the White House that he wanted to talk to Chretien about piping Canadian water to the American southwest.
The Globe and Mail newspaper quoted Bush as saying, "Our nation must develop a comprehensive water …
http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G1-76615113.html
Tim Harper
OTTAWA BUREAU CHIEF
OTTAWA - Prime Minister Jean Chrétien tried yesterday to allay fears he is prepared to export Canadian water, a reversal of long-standing Liberal policy. But opposition MPs say the government is sending out conflicting signals, and a proposal to set up a parliamentary committee to study the future of water has only sown more fear.
Chrétien told the Commons yesterday that water is exempt from the North American Free Trade Agreement. His foreign affairs minister, John Manley, also assured MPs there's no change in government policy. "Water should not be treated as a matter of trade" . "The position of the government of Canada is to oppose the bulk removal of water from any of our major drainage systems, period'', Manley said.
Environment Minister David Anderson added the government "certainly does not regard water as a commodity, like gasoline. We believe that water should not be treated as a matter of trade.'' But in the next breath, Anderson said he was interested by the proposal from Toronto-Greenwood MP Dennis Mills to strike a Commons committee on water issues that could include discussions on water exports. But Anderson said agreeing to committee discussions on water exports would not mean the government is preparing to change its opposition to such exports.
The contentious issue surfaced after sources reported that Chrétien mentioned water as a tradeable resource at Wednesday's closed-door Liberal caucus meeting. Water came up during discussions about Canadian resources coveted by U.S. President George Bush. Chrétien's comments were in the context of a discussion the Prime Minister had about coming trade battles with the new administration.
http://www.dawnone.com/water.htm
A snow job is a slang term used chiefly in Canada and the US to describe "an instance of deceiving someone with elaborate and insincere talk".
A person who carries out a "snow job" is often referred to as a "snowblower", a term that derives from the mechanical equipment developed to remove snow from public streets in Canadian and American cities during the winter months although the word "snowblower" is often applied to describe a person who uses cocaine by snorting the cocaine powder into his or her nose. Cocaine users are often snowblowers, in both senses of the word, because of the propensity of cocaine users to engage in deceit and other forms of insincere talk to conceal their addiction.
The imaginary conversation between US President George Bush and Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien is intended to highlight the fact that most of Canada's water resource comes from Canada's massive annual snowfall and to illustrate the duplicituous nature of much of the official Canadian policy pronouncements on water exports. This duplicity was necessary to bamboozle the Canadian public into supporting legislative and regulatory measures that would artfully create a bulk water export monopoly controlled by high level political insiders.
Ottawa rejected Wednesday a suggestion by President George W. Bush that he would like to begin talks with Prime Minister Jean Chretien on bulk exports of Canadian fresh water to the parched southerwestern states.
A spokesman for Chretien's office rejected the idea a day after Bush told a select group of foreign reporters in the White House that he wanted to talk to Chretien about piping Canadian water to the American southwest.
The Globe and Mail newspaper quoted Bush as saying, "Our nation must develop a comprehensive water …
http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G1-76615113.html
Tim Harper
OTTAWA BUREAU CHIEF
OTTAWA - Prime Minister Jean Chrétien tried yesterday to allay fears he is prepared to export Canadian water, a reversal of long-standing Liberal policy. But opposition MPs say the government is sending out conflicting signals, and a proposal to set up a parliamentary committee to study the future of water has only sown more fear.
Chrétien told the Commons yesterday that water is exempt from the North American Free Trade Agreement. His foreign affairs minister, John Manley, also assured MPs there's no change in government policy. "Water should not be treated as a matter of trade" . "The position of the government of Canada is to oppose the bulk removal of water from any of our major drainage systems, period'', Manley said.
Environment Minister David Anderson added the government "certainly does not regard water as a commodity, like gasoline. We believe that water should not be treated as a matter of trade.'' But in the next breath, Anderson said he was interested by the proposal from Toronto-Greenwood MP Dennis Mills to strike a Commons committee on water issues that could include discussions on water exports. But Anderson said agreeing to committee discussions on water exports would not mean the government is preparing to change its opposition to such exports.
The contentious issue surfaced after sources reported that Chrétien mentioned water as a tradeable resource at Wednesday's closed-door Liberal caucus meeting. Water came up during discussions about Canadian resources coveted by U.S. President George Bush. Chrétien's comments were in the context of a discussion the Prime Minister had about coming trade battles with the new administration.
http://www.dawnone.com/water.htm
A snow job is a slang term used chiefly in Canada and the US to describe "an instance of deceiving someone with elaborate and insincere talk".
A person who carries out a "snow job" is often referred to as a "snowblower", a term that derives from the mechanical equipment developed to remove snow from public streets in Canadian and American cities during the winter months although the word "snowblower" is often applied to describe a person who uses cocaine by snorting the cocaine powder into his or her nose. Cocaine users are often snowblowers, in both senses of the word, because of the propensity of cocaine users to engage in deceit and other forms of insincere talk to conceal their addiction.
The imaginary conversation between US President George Bush and Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien is intended to highlight the fact that most of Canada's water resource comes from Canada's massive annual snowfall and to illustrate the duplicituous nature of much of the official Canadian policy pronouncements on water exports. This duplicity was necessary to bamboozle the Canadian public into supporting legislative and regulatory measures that would artfully create a bulk water export monopoly controlled by high level political insiders.
PM Chretien appoints nephew Raymond to be Canadian (Snowblower) Ambassador to Washington, D.C.
According to documents found in the W.C.W. Western Canada Water Enterprises Ltd. corporate files during his tenure as Canada's Ambassador to Mexico, Raymond Chretien had assisted WCW in negotiations with the huge Mexican conglomerate, Televisa, concerning the export of fresh water from British Columbia to Mexico. In addition, a reliable source has advised that Mr. Chretien had reportedly also visited WCW offices in Vancouver, a company closely linked to John Reynolds and the Social Credit government of British Columbia under Bill Vander Zalm. We wish to make it clear that there was no evidence found in the files of Western Canada Water that Mr. Raymond Chretien did anything illegal or improper. Nor was there any evidence his uncle, Prime Minister Jean Chretien, did anything illegal although there is plenty of evidence others were involved in illegal activities that included the planned, secret, violation of the Water Act, the Free Trade Agreement and the GATT.
Raymond Chretien is not named as a Defendant in the Federal Court of Canada Action T-95-08.
Raymond Chretien is not named as a Defendant in the Federal Court of Canada Action T-95-08.
PM Chretien appoints rival Kim Campbell to be Canadian (Snowblower) Counsul in Los Angeles California
'I don't know anything about water'
Kim Campbell was close to W.C.W Western Canada Water Enterprises Ltd. and the water export issues because WCW lawyer, Lyall Knott, WCW director, Allan Gregg, and WCW lobbiest, Patrick Kinsella, had all worked on her election campaign. In Los Angeles, Kim Campbell would be useful to fend off American claims to water from Canada and she would, probably, have an interest in protecting her campaign workers should the FBI come calling in respect to the blatant attempt by WCW and the British Columbia Government to fix the outcome of a public contracting process that had taken place at Goleta, Calfornia, when the BC Government tried to force Goleta to purchase fresh water at inflated prices by artfully eliminating the competition through the illegal moratorium on water exports. As with Raymond Chretien and Jean Chretien, there is no evidence that Kim Campbell was directly involved in the WaterWarCrimes and she was not named as a Defendant in Federal Court of Canada Action T-95-08.
Stephen Owen - BC Ombudsman, Deputy Attorney General
and Federal Liberal Cabinet Minister - Another Snowblower
Stephen Owen
Stephen Owen has a long history of involvement in the WaterWarCrimes prior to his being recruited to join Jean Chretien's government in the 2000 election. He joined Mr. Chretien's cabinet in January 2002.
In 1991, Mr. Owen was the BC Ombdsman when Snowcap Waters Ltd. complained that the Government of British Columbia had favoured W.C.W. Western Canada Water Enterprises Ltd. According to his report, Mr. Owen, the Ombudsman, found no evidence of favouritism or wrongdoing.
Was Mr. Owen wilfully blind? How could Mr. Owen have missed the cabinet submission and other internal government documents that proved the British Columbia Government had favoured W.C.W. Western Canada Water Enterprises Ltd. Did he review the illegal Orders In Council, including those signed by the Chief Justice? Did Mr. Owen intentionally cover up?
When the New Democratic Party, under Premier Michael Harcourt, took power Mr. Owen was appointed Deputy Attorney General. During this period, the Ministry of the Attorney General continued its policy of fraud in relation to the issue of bulk water exports and engaged in the Criminal Offence of "obstruction of justice" by the concealment of documents in civil litigation in the British Columbia courts. It is presumed that the policy of obstruction of justice through the suppression of evidence and concealment of the documents was approved by Mr. Owen, as Deputy Minister Attorney General and for this reason he is named as a Defendant in Action T-95-08. Mr. Owen may have also palyed a role in the assignment of the crooked judges to various hearings in the WaterWarCrimes files.
In 1997, when things started to heat up in the Sun Belt Water Inc. litigation and the Ministry of the Attorney General moved from concealment to perjury, Mr. Owen resigned from government and a job was found for him at the University of Victoria - a haven for many of the WaterWarCriminals .
Mr. Owen served under Mr. Chretien and after Mr. Chretien retired from politcal life Mr. Owen served as a cabinet minister under Prime Minister Paul Martin.
Mr. Owen is now vice-president at the University of British Columbia - another haven for those involved in the WaterWarCrimes.
In 1991, Mr. Owen was the BC Ombdsman when Snowcap Waters Ltd. complained that the Government of British Columbia had favoured W.C.W. Western Canada Water Enterprises Ltd. According to his report, Mr. Owen, the Ombudsman, found no evidence of favouritism or wrongdoing.
Was Mr. Owen wilfully blind? How could Mr. Owen have missed the cabinet submission and other internal government documents that proved the British Columbia Government had favoured W.C.W. Western Canada Water Enterprises Ltd. Did he review the illegal Orders In Council, including those signed by the Chief Justice? Did Mr. Owen intentionally cover up?
When the New Democratic Party, under Premier Michael Harcourt, took power Mr. Owen was appointed Deputy Attorney General. During this period, the Ministry of the Attorney General continued its policy of fraud in relation to the issue of bulk water exports and engaged in the Criminal Offence of "obstruction of justice" by the concealment of documents in civil litigation in the British Columbia courts. It is presumed that the policy of obstruction of justice through the suppression of evidence and concealment of the documents was approved by Mr. Owen, as Deputy Minister Attorney General and for this reason he is named as a Defendant in Action T-95-08. Mr. Owen may have also palyed a role in the assignment of the crooked judges to various hearings in the WaterWarCrimes files.
In 1997, when things started to heat up in the Sun Belt Water Inc. litigation and the Ministry of the Attorney General moved from concealment to perjury, Mr. Owen resigned from government and a job was found for him at the University of Victoria - a haven for many of the WaterWarCriminals .
Mr. Owen served under Mr. Chretien and after Mr. Chretien retired from politcal life Mr. Owen served as a cabinet minister under Prime Minister Paul Martin.
Mr. Owen is now vice-president at the University of British Columbia - another haven for those involved in the WaterWarCrimes.
Members of Parliament Secretly Invest in W.C.W.
Western Canada Water Enterprises Ltd.
When things started to heat up in the WaterWarCrimes litigation, a reliable source in the United States stated:
"Eight or nine sitting members of Parliament had shares in W.C.W. Western Canada Water Enterprises Ltd."
and
"If this ever comes into the open it will blow the roof off of that house on the hill up there which may be the best thing that ever happened to that country."
(Or words of like effect)
Over the course of the next few months, a number of prominent members of the Liberal governnent of Jean Chretien quietly resigned citing personal reasons as the motivating factor. At this time, it would be speculation to suggest which, if any, of those resigning members owned shares in WCW. The RCMP were asked to investigate but refused.
"Eight or nine sitting members of Parliament had shares in W.C.W. Western Canada Water Enterprises Ltd."
and
"If this ever comes into the open it will blow the roof off of that house on the hill up there which may be the best thing that ever happened to that country."
(Or words of like effect)
Over the course of the next few months, a number of prominent members of the Liberal governnent of Jean Chretien quietly resigned citing personal reasons as the motivating factor. At this time, it would be speculation to suggest which, if any, of those resigning members owned shares in WCW. The RCMP were asked to investigate but refused.
President Bill Clinton, The White House and the WaterWarCrimes
Chretien's People and the Chief Justice Leave Town - Click Picture for More Information.
Chretien's People and the Chief Justice Leave Town - Click Picture for More Information
Romeo LeBlanc Sergio Marchi Antonio Lamer Lloyd Axworthy Marcell Massee
Jean Chretien and the Judicial Mafia
The evidence of a "judicial mafia" in Canada is overwhelming. An RCMP Inspector dislcosed that the RCMP have been aware of the "judicial mafia" for some time. A former Canadian Forces Intelligence Officer dislcosed they were aware of a group of judges who fix cases but could do nothing about it because the politicians and senior bureaucrats ran the show in Ottawa.
The Privy Council, maintains a secretariat that keeps a watchful eye on law cases where the Canadian Federal Governnent has an interest that needs to be protected which begs the question of what does the Privy Council do when such a case emerges. Do they send in a crooked judge?
The careful observer, who watches the courts, will quickly notice that on certain cases things do not follow the rules of court or the law. On these cases, one must be alert to the operation of the judical mafia. Because there are so few superior court judges in Canada, approximately 1,000, it is not terribly difficult, for an open minded, reasonably well educated, observant, lawyer, to figure out who the crooked judge are. Their names come up, time and time again, in cases that go sideways. The problem the lawyer faces is that, if the lawyer blows the whistle, these judges and their controllers will attack that lawyer. In British Columbia, this happened to lawyers, Renate Auger, Jack Cram, Karl Esibrenner, and John Carten, all of whom bumped into the problem and started to speak out about it.
It also happened to Bruce Clark who did not actively practice law in British Columbia but who represented one of the Defendants in the Gustafson Lake Stand Off case - a case that can be fairly described as a show trial held for political purposes.
Let us make it clear that there are some very good judgers in Canada but there has been and continues to be a group that fix cases although there is some evidence their influence has diminished under the leadership of Prime Minister Harper who is not a lawyer and who promised to "fix the justice system" when he ran for office.
If the RCMP and the Canadian Military Intelligence know about the judicial mafia then you can be sure CSIS also knows about it. If CSIS, the RCMP and Military Intelligence know about the judicial mafia you can bet the issue has been discussed in the office of the Privy Council and the Prime Minister's Office.
For these reasons, it is probable Prime Minister Jean Chretien was aware of the existence of the judicial mafia and he and his colleagues, in the Privy Council and the Prime Ministers Office may have used it in the WaterWarCrimes cases. Certainly, there is a lot of evidence of judicial misconduct in the WaterWarCrimes cases that took place when Mr. Chretien was Prime Minister that suggests the judicial mafia was at work and that it was under political direction.
The Privy Council, maintains a secretariat that keeps a watchful eye on law cases where the Canadian Federal Governnent has an interest that needs to be protected which begs the question of what does the Privy Council do when such a case emerges. Do they send in a crooked judge?
The careful observer, who watches the courts, will quickly notice that on certain cases things do not follow the rules of court or the law. On these cases, one must be alert to the operation of the judical mafia. Because there are so few superior court judges in Canada, approximately 1,000, it is not terribly difficult, for an open minded, reasonably well educated, observant, lawyer, to figure out who the crooked judge are. Their names come up, time and time again, in cases that go sideways. The problem the lawyer faces is that, if the lawyer blows the whistle, these judges and their controllers will attack that lawyer. In British Columbia, this happened to lawyers, Renate Auger, Jack Cram, Karl Esibrenner, and John Carten, all of whom bumped into the problem and started to speak out about it.
It also happened to Bruce Clark who did not actively practice law in British Columbia but who represented one of the Defendants in the Gustafson Lake Stand Off case - a case that can be fairly described as a show trial held for political purposes.
Let us make it clear that there are some very good judgers in Canada but there has been and continues to be a group that fix cases although there is some evidence their influence has diminished under the leadership of Prime Minister Harper who is not a lawyer and who promised to "fix the justice system" when he ran for office.
If the RCMP and the Canadian Military Intelligence know about the judicial mafia then you can be sure CSIS also knows about it. If CSIS, the RCMP and Military Intelligence know about the judicial mafia you can bet the issue has been discussed in the office of the Privy Council and the Prime Minister's Office.
For these reasons, it is probable Prime Minister Jean Chretien was aware of the existence of the judicial mafia and he and his colleagues, in the Privy Council and the Prime Ministers Office may have used it in the WaterWarCrimes cases. Certainly, there is a lot of evidence of judicial misconduct in the WaterWarCrimes cases that took place when Mr. Chretien was Prime Minister that suggests the judicial mafia was at work and that it was under political direction.
British Columbia Supreme Court Justice James Taylor
In September, 2001, unidentified insiders with the British Columbia Court system, inserted Mr. Justice Taylor, appointed to bench by Prime Minister Jean Chretien, in 1995, to continue the judiical attack on Canadian lawyer John Carten. Investigations reveal that Taylor was alleged to have connections to organized crime and he had been a long term employee of the Ministry of the Attorney General. Further investigations show Taylor has a history of some judicially corrupt activity. Taylor become deceased judge number (1) one. Click here for more details at the Graveyard of the Wicked