The Libranos

No shit, Sherlock.

A federal department briefing note says that organized crime is suspected to be operating in the public sector, although the specific federal offices that are allegedly involved went unnamed.

“It is also suspected that organized crime groups are also involved in areas of the public sector,” said the memo from the Department of Public Safety, titled “Organized Crime” and obtained by Blacklock’s Reporter through Access to Information.

The note estimated about 26 criminal gangs to be active “within Canadian public sector agencies or departments.”

“According to the Criminal Intelligence Service of Canada [CISC] the principal motivating factors for corruption in the sector are familial connections, romantic relationships and monetary benefits,” it said.

Yes, and one of these shadowy organizations operates as the Liberal Party of Canada. Speaking of which, has Jerry Diaz been charged with anything yet?

29 Replies to “The Libranos”

  1. I wonder if that includes various companies that:

    – Get beneficial treatment for their crimes of bribery and corruption
    – Get no bid contracts that no one in the government is asking for
    – receive contracts that overpay at a rate of 200% or more for equipment that sits in warehouses
    – is paid to dispose of material that has a “expiry date” for things that don’t really expire
    and, of course, charities and foundations that function as money laundering organizations for the benefit of their principals

    1. and maybe the collection of “illegal” firearms for self use or sale in other jurisdictions? Would libscum envolve them selves with this tactic?

      1. Well, Trudeau does need a new source, since all of his were “lost” in a break in at some cottage he owns….

        funny that he was never investigated or charged for that

  2. Exactly this,,, ” Yes, and the most entrenched of these shadowy organizations operates as the Liberal Party of Canada. ”

    Now is there any question why there’s been such feeble attempts to reclaim the 10’s of millions in misappropriated Wuhan Covid funds.(which I’m sure is just a drop in the bucket when looking at the total Federal gov’t picture)

  3. HST scams must be on the rise again. Got a call from CRA for my accountant’s phone number regarding an invoice from my company that did not have the correct invoice number format. The last time that happened (2009) companies were scamming the government in HST claims. They make false HST refund claims based on fake invoices they never paid.

    It used to be you should never send an invoice in Excel or Word format because it could be edited. Now they edit pdf files.

    1. You can make secure pdf files, and as long as you have the original, you shouldn’t have anything to worry about.

  4. What government department? It doesn’t take a rocket surgeon to figure out it’s the Prime Minister’s office.

    1. Could be other departments like the Department of Justice, Immigration Canada, or other departments which void ease ip on organized crime engaged in smuggling, human trafficking, drug selling, etc.

      I am going to do an ATIP requesting the exact same documents Blacklocks got.

  5. It’s a pity that Blacklock’s Reporter is behind a paywall and so expensive ($314 per year). They really do a great job.

  6. Where it started:

    You cannot hope to bribe or twist
    (thank God!) the British journalist.
    But, seeing what the man will do
    unbribed, there’s no occasion to.

    Where its going:

    You cannot hope to bribe or twist
    (thank God!) the Canadian Liberalist.
    But, seeing what the man will do
    unbribed, there’s no occasion to.

  7. To add insult to injury has anyone tried to access their CRA account on line recently. I was notified by e-mail that I had a message from CRA and when I went to the CRA site I had to read through two pages of legalspeak that would have made a Philidelphia lawyer proud. It used to be that the average Canadian could fill out the tax form at the kitchen table and file by mail and everything worked tickety-boo, now you need and accountant and a lawyer and a secure site to file electronically, great progress. I remember when one of the promises issued by Paul Martin was that the Liberals would make it easier to file your tax form, another Liberal Lie that ended in the dustbin of liberal policies.

    On a sidenote does anyone know if the federal payroll scheme was ever completed?

  8. Government doesn’t pay casinos for people to go there, it does pay hospitals though.
    Not so much in Canada yet, but in the US medical system, it’s yuge.

  9. Government IS organized crime. Unions are also organized crime. Corporations in bed with the state are also organized crime. Political parties are organized crime. Organized (and disorganized) criminals independent of the state are simply freelance socialists (and therefore criminals).

  10. I have suspected this for years. That BIG organized crime has infiltrated government. How else is it possible that the State of CA loses something on the order of $25 Billion in COVID unemployment stimulus money to FRAUD. It has to be an “inside job”. There aren’t enough African Princes with keyboards to fabricate FRAUD on THAT level.

    1. Remember Donald Rumsfeld being unable to account for over $2 trillion the day before the 9-11 false flag? Government hasn’t been infiltrated by organized crime. The two were always related parties, and controlled by the same people.

  11. Would be interesting to see how many politicians in the U.S. are getting kickbacks from the human and drug smuggling cartels.

  12. I’ve known for decades that organized crime is solidly ensconced in public services. One example of this is the waste management business. A couple of decades ago, my father tried to launch a co-generation business in Montreal. The company was set up to collect old broken pallets and other wood waste from industrial businesses around the city, and then burn them in a 10MW clean energy power plant they set up to serve the region.

    They successfully got official approvals, the support of regional officials, buy-in from businesses, and a contract with Hydro Quebec. They set up a plant, and leased a fleet of nice, white-painted trucks; rented a nice office at the edge of the city, and started hiring staff.

    On his first day of work, their new plant manager was collected at the door of his office by a group of large men with lumps under their jackets, bundled into the back of a limousine, and taken for ride around the warehouse district. He was shown photos of his house, and his family, and told that continuing to work for the company might cause bad things to happen to them. He quit the next morning.

    The families that controlled waste management in Montreal were happily collecting an $85 a tonne tipping fee from the city for the garbage they collected, and they didn’t want any part of the city’s waste to be diverted from their landfills. They didn’t bother making any kind of official objection, because there was no legitimate or environmental justification to do so. Diverting waste from landfills is supposed to be good for the environment. So instead, they simply applied threats of violence and a little mob-style leverage after the investments had already been made. Wiping out competing businesses and their investors is much more effective than wasting money on lawyers.

    This was in the early 2000’s. There’s no indication that things have got any better.

    1. I forgot to mention: it was a “co-generation” facility, because waste heat and steam was provided from the process to a large sugar manufacturer on an adjacent property.

  13. How about this Blast from the scumbag,corrupt Liberal Party past!!
    Google:

    “Disgraced Gagliano recalled from Denmark”

    1. Please.

      You can go way up the ladder to the Big Guy:

      https://can.politics.narkive.com/Q9x5ztoC/jean-chretien-s-credibility-all-shot-to-hell-this-is-worth-reading

      Note: link is from an archived UseNet thread (remember those? Truly the Wild West), basically a CBC report, and with an unfortunate Liberal tweeb posting at the end. However, not a bad (but typical bland CBC) start.

      Better:

      http://www.ftlcomm.com/ensign/desantisArticles/2001_300/desantis347/papers.html

      “Now picture millionaire Jean Chrétien, a trained lawyer with honorary law doctorates from national and international universities, and picture real estate mogul Jonas Prince, a lawyer who attended Osgoode Hall Law School and the London School of Economics, concluding an agreement to sell and buy Jean Chrétien’s golf course share on November 1, 1993. The agreement is handwritten, it is not witnessed, it doesn’t include Prince’s signature but just his initials, and the agreement includes a purchase price of $300,000 to be paid in four equal installments with no payment schedule.”

  14. Read earlier and laughed out loud.

    One of my all time fave political cartoons is comprised of a traditional father reading the newspaper and smoking his pipe in his rocking chair and his little son on the carpet looking up and saying, When I grow up I want to be in organized crime, to which father replies, Private or Public sector?

  15. I wonder when the RCMP will investigate the 100’s of millions of taxpayer dollars stolen by the Liberal Party of Canada. Adscam.

    Just kidding.
    Its not the RCMP’s job to investigate their bosses in the Liberal Party.

    When will the Liberal Party of Canada pay back the 100’s of millions of taxpayer dollars that they stole from the treasury to bankroll their election campaigns in Quebek?

    Just kidding again.
    When you’re above the law you’re above the law and the Liberal Party are way above the law.
    Just ask jean Crouton and Juthtin Turdhole.

    Haiti North, but more corrupt.

Navigation