Tony Accurso bid dismissed by Supreme Court - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 02:38 PM | Calgary | -10.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

Tony Accurso bid dismissed by Supreme Court

Former Quebec construction mogul Tony Accurso will have to appear before the Quebec corruption inquiry next month, after the Supreme Court refused to hear his arguments against testifying.

Quebec former construction mogul will have to appear before corruption inquiry

Construction magnate Tony Accurso was arrested in April 2012 in a sweep by Quebec's anti-corruption unit (UPAC), and faces criminal charges. Canada's top court on Friday dismissed Accurso's bid to avoid testifying before the Charbonneau Commission. (Graham Hughes/CP)

Canada's top court has refused to hear arguments from former Quebec construction magnateTony Accurso, who was hoping to avoid testifying before the province's corruption inquiry.

Accursohas been battling the courts for the past year, to try to fight a subpoena to appear before theCharbonneauCommission.

The Supreme Court of Canada dismissed his latest request on Friday morning, with costs.

Thedecision means the former construction magnate will have to answer the Quebec corruption inquiry's questions.

Accurso is scheduled to appear before Justice France Charbonneauon Sept. 2.

Testimony could prejudice separate trial

Accurso had argued that if he is forced to testify before the CharbonneauCommission, he risksincriminating himself and prejudicing a separate criminal trial.

The former construction mogulfaces criminal charges in several municipal corruption cases. He's also charged with alleged tax fraud.

In a previous ruling,a Quebec Superior Court justice explained thereare already guarantees in place to avoid that from happening.

Commissioners have promised not to question Accurso about his pending criminal proceedings.

The commission is mandated with investigating alleged corruption in the Quebec construction industry.

With files from The Canadian Press