Jamie Lall asks judge to overturn ban on running for office, blames late filing on depression - Action News
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Jamie Lall asks judge to overturn ban on running for office, blames late filing on depression

Controversial want-to-be Alberta politician Jamie Lall was back in court on Wednesday, fighting to have a judge reconsider the decision to uphold a five-year ban from running for office. The ban was triggered when Lall was eight days late submitting his financial disclosure after the 2015 election.

Lall was 8 days late submitting financial disclosure after 2015 election, triggering automatic 5-year ban

Jamie Lall is asking a judge to reconsider the decision to uphold the five-year ban on the former PC party member from running for office. (CBC)

Controversial, want-to-be Alberta politician Jamie Lall was back in court on Wednesday, fighting to have a judge reconsider the decision to uphold a five-year ban from running for office.

Lall, who ran as an independent in the 2015 provincial election after being rejected as a Progressive Conservative candidate, argued he was suffering from depression when he filed his financial statements from that election eight days late. The late filingtriggered an automatic ban.

Though Lall did not seek treatment or a diagnosis, his lawyer Brad Findlater said Lall had become a recluse, distancing himself from friends and family, unable to focus or adhere to deadlines.

"Mr. Lall was in a state of depression," Findlater said.

The reason Lalldidn't seek professional help was because of the social stigma associated with mental illness and the sometimes-negative effects of prescription drugs, said the lawyer.

Lall had been approved as a nomination candidate in the March 2016 byelection for the Calgary-Greenway riding. Just days before the PCs made their selection, he sought an exemption through the court at an urgent hearing presided over by Court of Queen's Bench Justice William Tilleman.

Three days before Tilleman's decision to uphold the five-year ban was released, Lallstill ended up on the ballot, which Prabhdeep Gill ultimately won.

Tillemandenied Lall's application for relief from the ban because the late filingwas not the result of circumstances beyond the control of the candidate or his financial officer.

"It was their fault, and theirsalone," Tilleman said.

Lallworried about media attention

At that February2016 hearing, there was no mention of Lall's mental state.

Now, letters of support written by Lall's parents and business partner have been filed, confirming he was in a depressed state at the time.

Findlater said evidence of Lall's mental health wasn't brought up at the first hearing ahead of the byelection because he was worried about media attention.

Lall did not file any medical evidence at Wednesday's hearing.

Bill Shores, the lawyer for the chief electoral officer who imposed the ban on Lall, said when issues of health come up, "they are proven through experts."

Lall'schief financial officerwas also banned from running for office for five years, though Findlater told the judge thatShubkearn Sihota had simply volunteered his name as CFO but Lall was supposed to take care of his own financial records.

Lall's previous controversies

New legislation allows for a grace period of 10 days for those who file late, which would trigger a $500 fee but not an automatic prohibition on running. Though the legislation is not retroactive, the spirit of it could be considered by Tilleman.

Tilleman said he would issue his decision sometime before the end of October.

Lallhas been at the centre of several controversies, including being dumped as thePC candidate inChestermere-Rockyviewby late-night text message in 2015, and subsequently starting a war of words with the party.

After those texts were released, anold restraining orderagainst Lall surfaced. In that order, an ex-girlfriend of Lall'ssaid he was"extremely, verbally abusive towards me and my family," but told CBC in 2015 that the two were "diplomatically civil."