Since he was appointed Commissioner on July 16, 2007, Commissioner Elliott has been on the receiving end of numerous requests from British Columbia lawyer, John Carten, that the RCMP carry out a full investigation of the Water War Crimes.
Packages of documents proving criminal activity by insiders have been sent to the embattled Commissioner who is now in the middle of what the Canadian media is calling a mutiny by senior staff at RCMP Headquarters in Ottawa.
Elliott who joined the RCMP from the ranks of the Canadian civil service is suspected of deliberately blocking investigations in order to protecting civil servants and politicians whom he worked with from 1988 to 2007 when many of the crimes took place.
In the meantime, 12 persons who are linked to the Water War Crimes have died, many in circumstances that suggest murder, and in April 2010, Deputy Attorney General, John Sims, suddenly quit his very senior position, without explanation, and some are suggesting his sudden departure was motivated by fear he could be next victim.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper, disturbed with the obvious mutiny growing in the senior ranks of the RCMP, quickly appointed former CSIS Director Reid Morden to conduct and inquiry into the matter that is blamed on Elliott's abusive management style. More astute observers suggest Elliott is cracking under pressure as the death toll mounts and he increasingly realizes his tactics of stonewalling the investigation is backfiring and may implicate him in a criminal cover up.
Morden does not come to the job without baggage. As former director of CSIS, from 1988 to 1991, Morden would have been well aware of the attempt by insiders to loot Canada's water export wealth through an illegally acquired monopoly position. In addition, Morden was subsequently Canada's Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs from 1991 to 1994 and he would most likely been privy to the efforts by Canada's government to cover up the crimes.
On May 6, 2010, Glen Shortliffe, the former Clerk of the Privy Council who was in charge of Canada's civil service from 1988 to 1994 when many of the Water War Crimes took place died from what his obituary called "an unexpected sudden heart attack" and murder is suspected.
On the West Coast, Mr. Carten has filed complaint with the Commissioner for Public Complaints about the Police over the refusal of the Victoria City Police to carry out an investigation of alleged criminal activity by British Columbia lawyer, Joanne Platt who according to sworn affidavits by independent witnesses was observed attempting to secretly and improperly influence a justice during a trial where Mr. Carten was the accused and there are allegations that Ms. Platt may be a member of a cult of Freemasons - an organization with a reputation for secretly attempting to fix cases and that has recently permitted women to join as members.
In May 2010, RCMP Deputy Commissioner, Gary Bass had been asked to investigate the same crimes by lawyer Joanne Platt but he has refused to acknowledge the correspondence from Mr. Carten a matter that is now under review by the Office for Public Complaints Against the RCMP.
The RCMP has consistently stonewalled all attempts to have these crimes investigated and now 13 insiders are dead leading observers to wonder whether or not a serial killer is stalking these insiders and when he or she will strike next.
For more information visit the Water War Crimes website where the details of the extraordinary death of 12 insiders, in a little over four years, are published in greater detail. The reader can also find copies of uncanny e-mails sent to Prime Minister Harper, Justice Minister Nicholson, former Deputy Attorney General Sims and former Clerk of the Privy Council Lynch after the predicted death of Provincial Court Chief Judge Hugh Stansfield predicting "more death and destruction" and, as predicted, five more insiders died.
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