- Reaction score
- 19,855
- Points
- 1,280
For context, the CBC article I listed above also talks about why just releasing the names is a bad idea:
Poilievre and the Conservatives have been calling on Trudeau to release the names of allegedly compromised parliamentarians. They repeated that demand on Wednesday.
But law enforcement and national security agencies have been clear on this point: sharing any classified information is a crime.
"Anyone who reveals classified information is subject to the law equally and obviously, in this case, those names are classified at this time and to reveal them publicly would be a criminal offence," RCMP Deputy Commissioner Mark Flynn told MPs on the public accounts committee in June.
When CBC News later asked Flynn whether the names could be released in the House of Commons, where MPs enjoy certain legal protections, he suggested that could be a legal grey area.
"That's a question that should be asked, due to the complexities of parliamentary privilege, of a legal expert," Flynn said.
Stephanie Carvin, a former CSIS national security analyst, said there are several reasons why national security agencies wouldn't want the names made public — starting with the fact that it could compromise ongoing investigations.
"We don't want foreign governments knowing how we are collecting information. That's why we protect our sources and methods," she said.
Elcock echoed Carvin's point.
"If information is derived from a highly classified intercept, the instant you disclose that you have information, then it alerts the people who were communicating that their communications have been intercepted," he told CBC News.
"So you're actually revealing more than just the name. You're also revealing the sources and methods."
Elcock and Carvin also pointed out that intelligence doesn't always equal evidence that would hold up in a court of law.
"Intelligence can be hearsay. It can be rumours. It can be something someone overheard without context," Carvin said. She cautioned that simply releasing the names without context could trigger a "witch hunt."
"[The named parliamentarians would] not be able to defend themselves," she said. "They may not know the context in which they have been accused. They don't know who their accusers are. And that's really, really problematic under our system."