EDMONTON—Alberta Premier Danielle Smith issued a statement Wednesday accusing CBC News of publishing a “defamatory article containing baseless allegations” suggesting that staff in her office had sent multiple emails to Alberta crown prosecutors concerning ongoing legal matters.
“The CBC admitted that it had not seen any of the emails,” it added.
The defamation allegations stem from a Jan. 19 CBC article headlined, “Alberta premier’s office contacted Crown prosecution about Coutts cases: sources.” The article cites an anonymous source that alleges an unnamed staffer in the premier’s office “sent a series of emails” to the crown prosecution service regarding charges laid in connection with the protest at the Coutts border and other protests.
The article was amended after the fact by editors to clarify CBC “has not seen the emails in question.”
Smith’s statement said the CBC article was used by Alberta’s Official Opposition to “smear the reputations of the Premier, her office staff,” as well as crown prosecutors and the public service.
Second CBC Article
The same day the statement was issued, CBC ran another story headlined, “Premier pressured justice minister’s office to get rid of COVID charges, sources say.”The article cites multiple unnamed “sources familiar with the interactions,” and quotes a “source” as saying there were “inappropriate” attempts to influence cases before the court, with exchanges between the premier’s office and the office of Justice Minister Tyler Shandro.
CBC alleges the source stated, “Smith would ask for updates on cases or inquire whether it would be possible to abandon them.”
The cases in question, according to the anonymous source, related to the prosecution of Calgary pastor Artur Pawlowski and charges laid against individuals involved with the Coutts border protest in 2022.
Chuck Thompson, head of public affairs at CBC, told The Epoch Times: “We stand by the story which transparently attributes the allegations to trusted sources and provides context to the allegations. As is our practice, we gave the premier and her office an opportunity to react and we included that response prominently in the story, including the sub-headline.”
Smith said in her statement that she campaigned for seven months “on exploring ways to grant legal amnesty for individuals charged with non-violent, non-firearms, pandemic-related violations.”
Ultimately, after discussions with ministry officials and the minister of justice, Smith said she received legal advice to not proceed with “pursuing options for granting amnesty.”
“The Premier followed that legal advice,” said the statement.
“All communications between the Premier, her staff, the Minister of Justice and Ministry of Justice public servants have been appropriate and made through the proper channels,” added the statement. “The CBC’s allegations and insinuations to the contrary are, once again, baseless.”