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Toronto

Trial of 2 Ontario Liberals must continue, judge rules

David Livingston, who was chief of staff during Dalton McGuinty's final months as premier of Ontario, and his deputy Laura Miller, face charges of attempting to commit mischief to data and illegal use of a computer.

Charges allege McGuinty aides wiped computers to hide information about cancelled gas plants

Laura Miller was deputy chief of staff to former Ontario premier Dalton McGuinty. She is now facing criminal charges. (CBC)

The criminal trial of two top aides of former Ontario premier DaltonMcGuintywill continue, after a judge in Toronto ruled Thursday the Crown has presented enough evidence of wrongdoing that the defence must respond.

However, a judge downgraded one of the charges againstDavid Livingston, who wasMcGuinty'schief of staff during his final months in power, and his deputy, Laura Miller.

Lawyers for the pair hadaskedJustice Timothy Lipson to dismiss all charges. They were seeking a directed verdict of acquittal, arguing no evidence of a crime had been presented in court during three weeks of testimony by Crown witnesses.

The judgereduced the charges of committing mischief to data, and said the pair will instead be tried on a charge attempting to commit mischief to data. They are also charged with unauthorized useof a computer.

The charges against Livingston and Miller were laid over allegations the two senior political advisers destroyed government documents by ordering the wiping of 20 computers in the premier's office, allegedly in an attempt to hide information about the cancellations of two gas-fired power plants.

The cancellations of the gas plants in Mississauga and Oakville cost the province some $1.1 billion, according to Ontario's auditor general. Opposition pressure for the government to release documents about the decisions were at their height in late 2012 when McGuinty announced his resignation.

David Livingston, who was chief of staff to former Ontario premier Dalton McGuinty in 2012 and 2013, is also facing charges. (CBC)

In his ruling Thursday, the judge saidthe evidence presented so far could allow for a conclusionthat Livingston "dishonestly obtained" special administrative access "under false pretences"to arrange for the computers to be wiped.

However, the judge stressed that his testing of the evidence at this stage did not involve weighingit to determine an actual verdict of guilty or not guilty.

Lipsonsaid that while there was evidence that the pair attempted to delete data from computers without the proper authority, the Crown failed to present evidence any relevant data was actually wiped. That's why he ordered the downgrade of the mischief charge.

Lipsonhas presidedalone overtheOntario Court of Justice trial at Toronto's Old City Hall courthouse. The case is to continue next Thursday when defence lawyers are to indicate how they will proceed. The defence could call witnesses or it could choose to proceed directly to final arguments.

In court earlier this week, Crown prosecutor Tom Lemon said he was aiming to prove that Livingston and Miller did not have theproper authority to erase data from the hard drives.

Prosecutors allege Peter Faist was hired to wipe clean about 20 hard drives in McGuinty's office in 2013. (Ved Lesik/CBC)

Previous testimonyindicated that Miller's spouse, Peter Faist, an IT consultant who did not work in the Ontario public service, was given a special administrative password and paid nearly $10,000 by the Liberal caucus to erase hard drives on thegovernment computers. That wasin early 2013, just before McGuintyhanded over power to Premier Kathleen Wynne.

The defence arguedthe hard drives were wiped to remove information that did not need to be retained from the computers of staff who were leaving the premier's office.

Last week, the Crown dropped breach of trust charges against the pair, admitting it had no reasonablechance of getting a conviction.

This is the second trial involving allegations of political corruption against Ontario Liberals to take place this fall.

Last month, a judge threw out all bribery charges against Wynne'sformer deputy chief of staff, Pat Sorbara, and a local party organizer, Gerry Lougheed Jr. The pair were declared not guilty before the defence had to present its case.