Photo: Colin Smith
Voici ma traduction (partielle pour le moment)d`un article paru aujourd`hui dans The Tyee, écrit par Andrew Nikiforuk:
Un autre contretemps pour le cas de jurisprudence impliquant la fracturation hydraulique: les avocats abandonnent
Après 12 ans, la bataille judiciaire de Jessica Ernst pour son cas d`eau contaminée n`est pas prêt d`être réglé.
Jessica Ernst a investi 12 ans de sa vie et $400,000 sur une poursuite contre l`industrie albertaine du fracking et son régulateur.
Son avocat ontarien a mis à pied la plupart de son personnel et a laissé tombé l`action en justice.
"J`étais choquée et je me sens terriblement trahie," dit Ernst. "Le système légal ne veut pas avoir affaire aux gens ordinaires. Ils ne veulent pas des citoyens qui ne veulent pas se taire et régler hors cours contre de l`argent, alors les corporations et le gouvernement peuvent continuer d`abuser de leur pouvoir."
(...)
Enst a appris que (son avovat) Klippenstein se retirait de la poursuite l`automne dernier, mais elle a dévoilé cette information que dernièrement. Elle attendait que sa firme d`avocats lui donne contrôle de son site Web, dit-elle. Son site Web est une archive de sa poursuite ainsi qu`un témoignage des impacts politiques, légaux et écologiques de la force brute de la technologie de la fracturation hydraulique.
(...)
(Son avocat) Klippenstein se bat contre une déclaration de principes adopté dernièrement par la Law Society of Ontario qui oblige les firmes d`avocats à "promouvoir l`égalité, la diversité et l`inclusion" et faire une "auto-évaluation d`inclusion annuelle".
Les avocats "seront de plus en plus jugés selon leur idéologie, la couleur de la peau et les chromosomes sexuels plutôt que par leur compétences, leur effort et contributions professionnelles" selon ce règlement, argumente-t-il.
Toutefois, les partisans pour ces nouveaux règlements disent que les critiques de Klippenstein et les autres démontrent comment ces règlements sont rudement nécessaires.
(...)
Klippenstein a aussi donné une autre raison pour avoir laissé tomber la poursuite, écrivant dans un courriel envoyé au Tyee qu`il "était de plus en plus préoccupé par l`opinion de Mme Ernst sur la viabilité de sa propre poursuite, en particulier à cause de ses opinions de plus en plus critiques envers le système judiciaire, et des avocats qui sont dans ce système, au point tel que j`ai pensé qu`il n`était plus viable pour nous de la représenter à l`avenir."
Ernst affirme qu`elle avait complètement expliqué ses opinions à Klippenstein en 2007 pendant qu`elle se cherchait des avocats potentiels (pour la représenter). Sa position à ce sujet n`a jamais changé, ajoute-t-elle.
(...)
Une chronologie de Jessica
La poursuite de Jessica Ernst contre l`industrie de la fracturation hydraulique en Alberta et ses régulateurs démontre brutalement comment le système judiciaire du Canada est devenue lent.
1er mai 1998: Jessica s`installe sur une petite propriété rurale à Rosebud, en Alberta. Son puits lui fournit une eau douce, de grande qualité. Les tests sur l`eau indique qu`il n`y a pas de gaz dedans.
2001: Encana commence un projet expérimental de fracturation hydraulique de faible profondeur pour extraire le gaz naturel autour de Rosebud, sans consulter la communauté ni les propriétaires terriens, violant ainsi les exigences du régulateur des sources énergétiques de l`Alberta.
14 février 2004: Encana fore et ensuite fracture hydrauliquement dans l`aquifère de l`eau potable qui alimente le puits de Jessica, ceux d`une douzaine de familles et le hameau de Rosebud.
Janvier 2005: Une explosion dans le château d`eau de Rosebud blesse sérieusement un employé de Wheatland County. On a rapporté qu`une enquête avait déterminé que l`explosion avait été apparemment causée par "une accumulation de gaz".
24 novembre 2005: Le régulateur de l`énergie (du nom d`alors de Energy Resources Conservation Board et maintenant Alberta Energy Regulator) envoie une lettre à Jessica. La lettre qualifie ses critiques du régulateur comme étant une "menace criminelle" et déclare qu`il cesse toute communication avec elle.
6 décembre 2005: Jessica envoie une lettre demandant des éclaircissements sur la décision du régulateur de couper toute communication (avec elle). Sa lettre lui revient non ouverte.
8 Juin 2006: L`avocat du régulateur Rick McKee questionne Jessica durant une conversation enregistrée avec témoin. McKee admet que le régulateur ne l`a jamais considérée comme une "menace criminelle" mais comme une critique indésirable. Il demande aussi à Jessica ce que çà prendrait pour qu`elle s`en aille de l`Alberta. Jessica répond qu`elle partira joyeusement de l`Alberta aussitôt que le régulateur fasse son travail (correctement).
Décembre 2007: Jessica engage l`avocat Murray Klippenstein et intente un procès de $33 million contre Encana, le ministère de l`environnement de l`Alberta et le Energy Resources Conservation Board (un peu comme notre Régie de l`Énergie au Québec), alléguant que la contamination de l`eau souterraine a été causée par les fracturations hydrauliques de faible profondeur dans les puits de méthane de houille au coeur de l`Alberta.
12 février 2009: Des agents de la GRC se montrent chez Jessica (sans prévenir) sans mandat pour lui poser des questions.
24 octobre 2009: Le Premier Ministre Stephen Harper annonce que Neil Wittman sera le nouveau juge en chef de la Cour du Banc de la Reine en Alberta.
19 juillet 2010: Le Congrès des É.-U. enquête sur les pratiques de la fracturation hydraulique, ainsi que sur les impacts sur l`eau potable. Encana est l`une des compagnies qui sont questionnées.
24 juin 2011: Le gouvernement Harper nomme Barbara Veldhuis à la Cour du Banc de la Reine.
1er octobre 2011: UNANIMA INTERNATIONAL, un ONG des É.-U., présente une distinction "Femme de Courage" à Jessica Ernst.
Décembre 2012: Dans un mémoire juridique déposé à la cour, le régulateur de l`énergie change son accusation de 2005 que Jessica était une "menace criminelle" et la décrit comme étant une "éco-terroriste".
18 janvier 2013: Une deuxième audience à la cour se déroule à Calgary, où la salle est comble. Jessica refuse d`accepter le changement du lieu et se présente à la cour de Drumheller avec un témoin. Encana n`argumente pas pour faire radier la cause, bien que sur le site de la compagnie indique que le cas n`a pas de bien-fondé.
8 Février 2013: Le gouvernement Harper donne une promotion au juge Veldhuis et la promue à la cour d`appel de l`Alberta. Elle prévient que statuer sur les arguments du cas juridique de Jessica "n`est pas une option".
15 février 2013: Pendant un appel téléphonique pour administrer l`action en justice, la juge Velhuis dit que le juge Wittmann s`est porté volontaire pour entendre la cause.
19 septembre 2013: Le juge Witmann, bien que n`ayant pas présidé la première audience du procès, statue que Jessica a une demande valide selon la Chartre des Droits et Libertés, mais que le régulateur est protégé par la loi qui lui donne immunité des litiges au civil. Il rejette l`affirmation du régulateur qui a qualifié Jessica d"éco-terroriste" à cause du "manque total de preuve." Il refuse les tentatives du gouvernement de l`Alberta de retirer le mot "contamination" de la réclamation de Jessica.
13 janvier 2014: Pendant un appel d`administration du dossier, le juge Wittmann donne une autre chance au gouvernement de l`Alberta d`essayer de faire rejeter le procès de Jessica (à grands coûts de temps et d`argent pour Jessica). La date de l`audience est fixée au 16 avril 2014, et le procès est redéménagé à Drumheller, là où elle doit l`être selon la loi.
18 février 2014: Le gouvernement de l`Alberta dépose un sommaire pour faire rejeter la cause de Jessica. L`argumentaire est que le gouvernement de l`Alberta n`a pas d`obligation de diligence envers les propriétaires terriens et profite d`immunité. La motion survient trois ans après le début du procès.
18 mars 2014: Jessica répond au gouvernement. Ses avocats argumentent que l`approche adoptée par Environnement Alberta est un abus de procédure.
16 avril 2014:La cour du Banc de la Reine de Drumheller entends l`application du gouvernement de l`Alberta pour être exempté du procès de Jessica. Le juge Wittmann ordonne un échange de documents entre Jessica et Encana.
15 septembre 2014: La cour d`appel de l`Alberta juge que le régulateur de l`énergie de l`Alberta ne peut pas être poursuivi par des citoyens, même s`il passe outre des droits constitutionnels.
10 novembre 2014: Le juge en chef Wittmann statue qu`Environnement Alberta peut être poursuivi. Il ordonne à Environnement Alberta de payer ses coûts en triple, quand même moins que le coût légal de protéger son procès d`être rejeté.
13 novembre 2014: Les avocats de Jessica portent en appel à Cour Suprême du Canada la décision de l`immunité du régulateur.
30 janvier 2015: Le gouvernement de l`Alberta présente enfin son mémoire en défense.
4 novembre 2015: Le hameau de Rosebud envoie une pétition à la Cour suprême du Canada, affirmant que le régulateur de l`énergie ne devrait pas être exempté des poursuites quand il s`agit de violations contre la Charte. Elle est rejetée et pas incluse dans le dossier. Par contre, une autre lettre, celle-là de l`Association des Producteurs Pétroliers du Canada, est acceptée.
12 janvier 2016: La Cour suprême du Canada entend la poursuite.
13 janvier 2017: Dans une décision partagée, la Cour suprême du Canada statue que Jessica ne peut pas poursuivre le régulateur.
17 janvier 2017: Le juge en chef Neil Wittmann annonce qu`il se retire et recommande que les parties choisissent un juge de remplacement pour le cas ensembles. Jessica avise ses avocats d`écrire "Notre cliente croit que la gestion du dossier n`est pas dans son meilleur intérêt et donc demande que la question ne soit plus soumise à la gestion de dossier.... Notre cliente croit aussi que c`est de mise pour les parties de jouer un rôle à choisir un juge de gestion de dossier."
27 janvier 2017: Encana et Alberta Environnment proposent leurs juges préférés pour remplacer juge Wittmann. Juge Eamon, l`un de leurs choix, devient le nouveau juge de gestion de cause.
29 mars 2017: la cour ordonne que la gestion de cause continue.
26 août 2018: Klippenstein et Wanless se retirent de la cause.
Juin 30 2019: Jessica annonce que ses avocats ont laissé tombé son cas de jurisprudence. À ce jour, Encana n`a toujours pas divulgué des documents clés à Jessica, selon les règles de cour de l`Alberta et ordonné par le juge Wittmann en juillet 2014.
********************************
Another Setback in Landmark Fracking Case as Lawyers Pull Out
Jessica Ernst’s 12-year legal battle over water contamination no nearer resolution.
By Andrew Nikiforuk published in The Tyee here: https://thetyee.ca/News/2019/08/08/Fracking-Case-Setback/
Jessica Ernst has spent 12 years and $400,000 pursuing a lawsuit against the Alberta fracking industry and its regulator.
Now her Ontario lawyer has let go most of his staff and given up the case.
“I was shocked and felt terribly betrayed,” said Ernst. “The legal system doesn’t want ordinary people in it. They don’t want citizens who will not gag and settle out of court for money so corporations and government can continue their abuse.”
In 2007, Ernst, then an oil patch consultant with her own thriving business, sued the Alberta government, Alberta’s energy regulator and Encana. She alleged her well water had been contaminated by Encana’s fracking and government agencies had failed to investigate the problems.
For more than a decade the case has been bogged down by legal wrangling, legal posturing and constant delays. Three different judges have been involved.
The process included a two-year detour to the Supreme Court of Canada, which ruled that Ernst could not sue the regulator because it is given immunity by provincial legislation. The lawsuits against the provincial government and Encana remain before the courts.
And still no evidence has been heard on the actual merits of the case.
Ernst was represented by high-profile lawyer Murray Klippenstein. He told The Tyee in an email that “major changes in the political climate of the legal profession in Ontario” made it “no longer feasible for me to continue my law firm. That was heartbreaking to me, for many reasons.”
Klippenstein is fighting against a recently adopted Law Society of Ontario statement of principles that obliges law firms to “promote equality, diversity and inclusion” and perform annual “inclusion self-assessments.”
Lawyers “will increasingly be judged more on the basis of ideology, skin colour and sex chromosomes than by their competence, skills, effort and professional contributions” under the rule, he argued.
However, advocates for the new rules say criticism from Klippenstein and others showed how badly they are needed.
Legal scholar Joshua Sealy-Harrington argued that the “forceful opposition” showed the insufficient awareness of systemic discrimination in Canadian legal practice, which has been detailed time and time and time and time again.
Klippenstein also offered another reason for quitting the case, saying in an email to The Tyee that he “had increasing concerns about Ms. Ernst’s views about the viability of her own lawsuit, in particular because of Ms. Ernst’s highly and increasingly critical views of the legal system, and of the lawyers that were a part of that system, to the point where I thought it was simply no longer viable for us to represent her going forward.”
Ernst said she fully explained her critical views to Klippenstein in 2007 as she vetted potential lawyers. Those views have never changed, she added.
“Murray warned me in 2007 that I would need to spend a million dollars and give up 10 to 12 years of my life, to maybe win a few thousand dollars,” said Ernst.
She said Klippenstein told her that lawsuits like hers were usually settled with a payment and a non-disclosure agreement that silences the person who had sued “because our legal system is set up to make that happen.”
Ernst said she had always been clear that she would not accept a non-disclosure agreement. The issue of contaminated water goes beyond one household or community and the public needs to be aware, she said.
Ernst said Klippenstein also warned her that the courts might order her to pay the legal costs of Encana and the other defendants even if she won the lawsuit.
“I would have to also pay the legal costs of the defendants even if I win but win less than what the defendants offer me to gag,” she said. “Who wouldn’t be bitter?”
Ernst’s lawsuit claims fracking contaminated the water supply at her homestead near Rosebud, about 110 kilometres east of Calgary. Research has shown fracking, in which companies blast water, chemicals and sand underground to crack rock formations and allow methane to flow, can result in groundwater contamination.
The suit alleges that Encana was negligent in the fracking of shallow coal seams; that the regulator breached Ernst’s freedoms under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and that Alberta Environment performed a problem-plagued investigation in bad faith.
Even before the lawsuit was launched, Ernst was locked in conflict with the Energy Resources Conservation Board, now the Alberta Energy Regulator. In November 2005, the regulator sent Ernst a letter saying it had told its staff to “avoid any further contact” with her on the grounds that she had criticized the board and made “criminal threats.”
But in June 2006 Rick McKee, then chief counsel for the regulator, admitted in a taped interview (Liberal MLA David Swann was a witness) that Ernst never presented a security threat to the organization.
She also sued the regulator for violating her charter rights by falsely branding her a “criminal threat” in 2005.
The Supreme Court of Canada split ruling on Ernst’s right to sue the energy regulator included a claim by Justice Rosalie Abella that the regulator found Ernst to be a “vexatious litigant,” though no regulator in Alberta has ever described Ernst as such. Four of the other justices commented on Abella’s claim, noting, “We see no basis for our colleague’s characterization.”
But Ernst has been unsuccessful in having the statement corrected in the judgment, noting it could be used against her in future hearings. The Canadian Judicial Council informed Ernst that it has no policy for correcting errors and that only the Supreme Court can amend or review reasons for its decisions.
Some legal scholars criticized the Supreme Court decision and said it weakened the Charter of Rights and Freedoms by allowing governments to place regulators above the law.
Ernst learned Klippenstein was withdrawing from the case last fall, but didn’t share the information until recently. She was waiting until the law firm surrendered control of her website, she said. The website is an archive of her lawsuit as well as a record of the political, legal and ecological impacts of the brute force technology of fracking.
The Tyee asked Klippenstein why the case has floundered in the justice system for nearly a dozen years.
“Ms. Ernst’s case was and is an enormously ambitious undertaking, involving numerous highly-complex scientific and legal issues, against a number of very powerful, very well-resourced, and very determined opponents,” he said. “We all knew that from the beginning, and we all knew that it would be an incredibly difficult and lengthy and time-consuming effort to undertake it, and a seriously uphill battle all the way.”
Klippenstein said he advised Ernst that she now has three options: she can transfer the case to another lawyer; continue with the lawsuit by representing herself; or let Klippenstein wind down the lawsuit “in a way that is most advantageous or least disadvantageous to you.”
Ernst said that she has rejected the third option.
“I have always been public and open about my case. But since I have no lawyers, I can’t disclose to The Tyee as much as I would like about my next steps,” she said. “I need to keep those options to myself.”
Ernst is philosophical about the latest setback.
“I am a lot less bitter now than I was when I started my lawsuit in 2007,” she said. “I have a wild sense of humour. What I have learned is that Canada’s legal system is a farce.”
“We don’t have a justice system, but a legal system designed to serve the interests of the powerful and to employ judges and lawyers.”
An Ernst chronology
Jessica’s Ernst’s lawsuit against Alberta’s fracking industry and its regulators provides a blunt view of how slow and protracted Canada’s legal system has become.
May 1, 1998: Ernst moves to a small rural property in Rosebud, Alberta. Her well produces soft, high-quality water. Water tests state “Gas Present: No.”
2001: Encana begins an experimental shallow fracturing natural gas project around Rosebud, without consulting with the community or landowners in violation of the Alberta energy regulator’s requirements.
Feb. 14, 2004: Encana drilled and later hydraulically fractured in the drinking water aquifers supplying Ernst, a dozen families and the Hamlet of Rosebud.
January 2005: An explosion at the Rosebud water tower seriously injured a Wheatland County worker. It was reported that an investigation determined the explosion was apparently caused by “an accumulation of gases.”
Nov. 24, 2005: The energy regulator (then the Energy Resources Conservation Board, now the Alberta Energy Regulator) sends a letter to Ernst. It brands her criticisms of the regulator as a “criminal threat” and says it ceases all communication with her.
Dec. 6, 2005: Ernst sends a letter seeking clarification on the regulator’s decision to cut off communication. It is returned unopened.
June 8, 2006: Regulator lawyer Rick McKee questions Ernst in a recorded conversation with a witness. McKee admits that the regulator never saw her as “a criminal threat,” but as an unwelcome critic. He also asks Ernst what it will take to get her to leave Alberta. Ernst replies she will gladly leave Alberta as soon as the regulator starts to do its job.
December 2007: Ernst hires lawyer Murray Klippenstein and files a $33-million lawsuit against Encana, the Alberta environment ministry and the Energy Resources Conservation Board alleging groundwater contamination was caused by the shallow fracking of coalbed methane wells in central Alberta.
Feb. 12, 2009: RCMP officers arrive at Ernst’s home without warrants to ask questions.
Oct. 24, 2009: Prime minister Stephen Harper announces the appointment of Neil Wittmann as new Alberta chief justice of the Court of Queen’s Bench.
July 19, 2010: The U.S. Congress investigates fracking practices, including the impact on drinking water. Encana is one of the companies questioned.
June 24, 2011: The Harper government appoints Barbara Veldhuis to the Court of Queen’s Bench.
Oct. 1, 2011: UNANIMA International, a U.S. NGO, presents Ernst with a Woman of Courage award in New York City.
April 26, 2012: The first hearing on the lawsuit takes place in the Court of Queen’s Bench in Drumheller. Justice Veldhuis requests a shorter statement of claim and volunteers as case manager. Energy regulator lawyer Glenn Solomon asks that the original statement of claim be removed from the court and public record. The request is denied.
Oct. 1, 2012: Defendants apply to have the case moved to Calgary during a case management call with Justice Veldhuis. Justice Wittmann later accepts the application to move the case to Calgary.
December 2012: In its legal brief filed with the court, the energy regulator changes its 2005 accusation that Ernst posed a “criminal threat” and described her as being an “eco-terrorist.”
Jan. 18, 2013: A second court hearing takes place in Calgary, where the courtroom is packed. Ernst refused to accept the change of venue and attends the Drumheller Court House with a witness. Encana does not argue to have the case struck, though the company website states that the case has no merit.
Feb. 8, 2013: The Harper government promotes Justice Veldhuis to the Alberta Court of Appeal. She advises that ruling on arguments in the Ernst case is “not an option.”
Feb. 15, 2013: During a case management call, Justice Veldhuis says Justice Wittmann has volunteered to take over the case.
Sept. 19, 2013: Justice Wittmann, despite not having presided over the original hearing, rules Ernst has a valid Charter of Rights and Freedoms claim but that the regulator is protected by legislation giving it immunity from civil litigation. He dismisses the regulator’s claim that Ernst is an “eco-terrorist” due to “the total absence of evidence.” He denies the Alberta government’s attempts to get the word “contamination” removed from Ernst’s statement of claim.
January 13, 2014: During a case management call, Justice Wittmann grants the Alberta government another chance to try to get Ernst’s case thrown out (at great cost of time and money to her). The hearing is set for April 16, 2014, and the case is moved back to Drumheller, where by law, it belongs.
Feb. 18, 2014: The Alberta government files a brief to strike the lawsuit against it. It argues the government has no duty of care to landowners and immunity. The motion comes three years after the lawsuit was launched.
March 18, 2014: Ernst responds to the government. Her lawyers argue that the approach taken by Alberta Environment is an abuse of process.
April 16, 2014: Drumheller Court of Queen’s Bench hears the Alberta government’s application to be removed from the Ernst case. Justice Wittmann orders document exchange between Ernst and Encana.
Sept. 15, 2014: The Alberta Court of Appeal rules that Alberta’s energy regulator cannot be sued by citizens even if it breaches constitutional rights.
Nov. 10, 2014: Chief Justice Wittmann rules that Alberta Environment can be sued. He orders Alberta Environment to pay Ernst “triple costs,” still less than the legal cost of protecting her case from having been thrown out.
Nov. 13, 2014: Ernst’s lawyers appeal the ruling on the regulator’s immunity to the Supreme Court of Canada.
Jan. 30, 2015: The Alberta government finally files its statement of defence.
Nov. 4, 2015: The Hamlet of Rosebud sends a petition to the Supreme Court of Canada arguing the energy regulator should not be exempt from lawsuits over Charter violations. It is rejected and not included in the docket. On a different case a letter from the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers is accepted.
Jan. 12, 2016: Supreme Court of Canada hears the case.
Jan. 7, 2017: Chief Justice Neil Wittmann announces his retirement and recommends that the parties choose a replacement case management judge together. Ernst instructs her lawyers to write, “Our client believes that case management is not in her interest and therefore requests that the matter no longer be subject to case management… Our client also does not believe that it is appropriate for the parties to play a role in selecting a case management judge.”
Jan. 13, 2017: In a split decision the Supreme Court of Canada rules that Ernst cannot sue the regulator.
Jan. 27, 2017: Encana and Alberta Environment provide their preferred judges to replace Justice Wittmann. Justice Eamon, one of their preferred judges, becomes the new case management judge.
March 29, 2017: The court orders case management to continue.
Aug. 26, 2018: Klippenstein and Wanless resign from the case.
June 30, 2019: Ernst announces that her lawyers have dropped her landmark case. To date, Encana still has not disclosed key records to Ernst, as required by Alberta’s Rules of Court and ordered by Justice Wittmann in July 2014. [Tyee]
[Tyee]
Comment (among many others) in The Tyee following Andrew`s article:
annie_fiftyseven •
"Klippenstein said he advised Ernst that she now has three options: she can transfer the case to another lawyer; continue with the lawsuit by representing herself; or let Klippenstein wind down the lawsuit 'in a way that is most advantageous or least disadvantageous to you.'"
So what's behind door number 3 Mr. Klippenstein? Settle and gag?
From Klippenstein's letter to the Law Society of Ontario published in Quillette:
"In short, I would not be the person I am without freedom of thought and expression. I will not be told what to say or what to value—especially by the regulator of what is supposed to be a body of independent lawyers. And so I have decided that I must contribute, in my little corner, in my limited way, to the defence of those freedoms. I did this knowing that taking a stand on this issue might destroy the career and law firm I had built. And it has, although it has been a disaster I have been able to manage.
Compelling speech is unconscionable regardless of the principles a person is made to parrot."
How noble, putting his business on the line to defend some "freedoms." Seems "compelling speech" is a terrible thing in Klippenstein's book - especially when it happens to him.
Klippenstein, admittedly, "would not be the person" he is "without freedom of thought and expression," so where's his outrage at the legal suppressing of those freedoms - aka gag orders? And who would he be then, with his mouth legally taped shut?
Klippenstein's made it clear he's all about defending "freedoms" as they apply to him, so I'd like to know what he thinks about reaching into the legal toolkit and pulling out the heavily-used duct tape - to suppress and kill those freedoms in others?
"She said Klippenstein told her that lawsuits like hers were usually settled with a payment and a non-disclosure agreement that silences the person who had sued 'because our legal system is set up to make that happen.'
Yeah, no shit - does Klippenstein avail himself of such a rampant set up?
October 18, 2018 - "How Non-Disclosure Agreements Have Become a Cancer on Democracy - The powerful, from churches to energy companies, pay to keep wrongdoing secret."
https://thetyee.ca/Opinion/...
"Ernst said she had always been clear that she would not accept a non-disclosure agreement. The issue of contaminated water goes beyond one household or community and the public needs to be aware, she said."
Can't thank you enough for that Ms. Ernst.
"Klippenstein also offered another reason for quitting the case, saying in an email to The Tyee that he 'had increasing concerns about Ms. Ernst’s views about the viability of her own lawsuit, in particular because of Ms. Ernst’s highly and increasingly critical views of the legal system, and of the lawyers that were a part of that system, to the point where I thought it was simply no longer viable for us to represent her going forward.'"
Good call Mr. Klippenstein, we know she won't let you gag her and kill her freedoms, and you obviously don't have what it takes to go up "against a number of very powerful, very well-resourced, and very determined opponents," so best you run along to your "little corner" now and go defend - in your "limited way," - those freedoms you feel apply to you personally.
Clearly, Jessica Ernst is looking out for the rest of us, and I sincerely hope she continues to expose and share the rampant industry, regulator and government contamination, corruption and cover-ups - as well as the goings-on of the disgusting "gag-factory" and its "workers" - as they continue to try to pass it off as a justice system in this country.
“We don’t have a justice system, but a legal system designed to serve the interests of the powerful and to employ judges and lawyers.”
~ Jessica Ernst.
ps. Please return Ms. Ernst's money to her, immediately - some of it has been donated by concerned citizens around the world - who are facing the same industry, government and regulator abuse and squashing of their freedoms - and It doesn't belong to you.
"Mr Murray Klippenstein
Klippensteins, Barristers & Solicitors
160 John Street, Suite 300
Toronto ON M5V 2E5
Dear Mr Klippenstein:
I met you several times during the 12 years of your representation of Ms Jessica Ernst of Rosebud in Alberta. I am now wondering about your withdrawal from her case after so many years as her lawyer, and so many hundreds of thousands of dollars. Your notice of withdrawal was on 26 August 2018, but she informs me that it is at present incomplete in terms of accounting, documentation, and financial return of the trust account.
The trust account of $40,000 is a very significant amount of money, especially to Ms Ernst – who is no longer able to work in her profession.
I consulted the Law Society of Ontario’s Practice Management Guidelines for Client Service and Communication, Section 2.18 Withdrawal of Services, or Otherwise Ending the Engagement. There are many references to the Rules of Professional Conduct Section 3.7 which clearly describe the obligations of a lawyer. You do not appear to have followed most. Do you intend to do so in a timely fashion?
While you claim to have minimized your office staff, it appears the physical office still exists, and you have not given up your accreditation as a lawyer in Ontario. It would therefore appear that you have obligations of some urgency to fulfill for Ms Ernst.
Your prompt attention would be appreciated by many of us who have followed her case and her website.
Yours truly,
Linde Turner
CC The Law Society of Ontario
Ms Natasha Hassan, Opinion Editor, The Globe and Mail
Mr Ossie Sheddy, Editor, The Drumheller Mail
Mr Jacques Gallant, Legal Affairs Reporter, Toronto Star
Mr Andrew Nikiforuk, Investigative Journalist
Ms Jessica Ernst"
https://www.ernstversusenca...
pps. Thank you again, Andrew Nikiforuk, for your consistent and tremendous reporting.
Thursday, August 8, 2019
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment