Wilson-Raybould may not have broken the law, but her Wernick tape crossed ethical lines, lawyers say
PM expelled Wilson-Raybould on Tuesday evening saying 'trust has been broken'
Lawyers say Jody Wilson-Raybouldmay not have broken the law but her decision to tape a conversation with the privy council clerk may have crossed ethical lines.
Wilson-Raybould has done a number of things in the past few weeks to upset her Liberal MP colleagues. But the 17-minute call she recorded with outgoingPrivy Council Clerk Michael Wernickultimatelyspelled the end of her time in the Liberal Party.
On Tuesday evening, Prime Minister Justin Trudeauexpelled Wilson-Raybould and Jane Philpott from the Liberal caucus, saying that trust with the two former cabinet ministers wasbroken.
"If a politician secretly records a conversation with anyone, it's wrong," Trudeau said ata news conference. "When a cabinet minister is secretly recording a public servant, it's wrong. And when that cabinet minister is the attorney general of Canada secretly recording the Clerk of the Privy Council, it's unconscionable."
The 'inappropriate conversation'
With debate swirling about what to do with SNC-Lavalin, Wilson-Raybould decided to record a December conversation she had with Wernick.
The crux of the SNC-Lavalin affair centres on allegations from Wilson-Raybould that she faced sustained and improper pressure from senior government officials to interfere in a criminal case against the Quebec engineering and construction giant.
Wilson-Raybould made the tape publiclastFridayand has been pilloried by her colleagues ever since.Shedefended it, sayingno staff member was present to take notes and that it was necessary to create a record of the conversation.
She called the taped conversation "extraordinary and [an]otherwise inappropriate step."She said it was necessaryto "ensure that I had an exact record of what was discussed as I had reason to believe that it was likely to be an inappropriate conversation."
I do not believe that Ishould be removed from caucus for doing my job and doing what Ibelieve is right. With respect to the recording, I've heard some caucus members make comments. It was a reasonable, rationalthing to do in an unreasonable and irrational situation.- Jody Wilson-Raybould
Wilson-Raybould maintainedshe did nothing wrong, lawyers say.
"I do not believe that I should be removed from caucus for doing my job and doing what Ibelieve is right. With respect to the recording, I've heard some caucus members make comments," Wilson-Raybould said. "It was a reasonable, rationalthing to do in anunreasonable and irrational situation."
Did nothing wrong, experts say
By the letter of the law, Wilson-Raybould did nothing wrong.
"It is legal to tape a conversation that you're part of even if it's two or three or four people. As long as you are part of that conversation, you are able to tape that even if the other parties do not know that they're being taped," says Toronto employment lawyer Lior Samfiru.
Samfiru says the law is different if the conversation takes place between a lawyer and client.
"If I have that recording for my own purposes that would be fine, but I would not be able to share that recording under any circumstances without my client's consent," Samfiru says.
Wilson-Raybould and her advisers, in releasing the tape, clearly feel Wernick was not Wilson-Raybould's client, and she was not his lawyer.
"The conversation I had with the Clerk, he's not a member of the Liberal caucus. He's not my client by his own admission," Wilson-Raybould said Monday.
Samfiru concurs. He says it's a fine line but one Wilson-Raybould didn't cross.
"He was not her client. He was not officially an MP. So because of that he wasn't a client. He wasn't someone that she was formally representing," Samfiru contends. "Obviously,shehas a relationship withhim, but he's not someonethat she was obliged to provide legal advice."
Samfiru says in the case of the prime minister or fellow MPs, privilege would apply and a taped conversation could only be released with consent.
'Ethics of collegiality'
Privacy lawyer David Fraser saysit's the ethical implications that many of Wilson-Raybould'scolleagues are focusing on.
Fraser says the person doing the surreptitious recording has an "unfair" advantage.
"The person who knows the recording is taking place is able to curate the conversation and formulate the conversation to create a record that might look particularly good on them,"Fraser says. "The other person is at a disadvantage because they don't know that this word-for-word verbatim record is being prepared. So I have concerns about it."
There is an ethics of collegiality versus the letter of the law. And, as a professional and as a lawyer, I expect you to abide by an ethics of collegiality.- Rebecca Bromwich, lawyer
Rebecca Bromwich,a lawyer and professor at Carleton University,says there is a certain expectation in any workplace that people will act ethically eveniftheir behaviour doesn't violate the law.
"Anytime a conversation is being recorded and then released publicly that becomes a really liveissue of trust," Bromwich says. "There is an ethics of collegiality versus the letter of the law. And, as a professional and as a lawyer, I expect you to abide by an ethics of collegiality."