Thursday, February 28, 2013

More Media Calls that Adrian Dix be Prosecuted

Within a few days of hte launch of this blog dedicated tro Adrian Dix - Unconvicted Criminal, a former Vancouver policeman turned journalist Leo Knight has concluded:

"Clearly a case existed against Dix and he could have, and should have, been charged criminally."

Knight also wrote:  "That he wasn’t charged with obstruction at the time speaks more to something else entirely, be it the flawed system for approving charges or possible political interference".

Click here to go to Leo Knight article

The Editors of this web page are of the opinion that Adrian Dix was not charged with a crime in 1999 due to political interference. 

The key suspects would be the Attorney General, Ujjal Dosanjh, who subsequently became NDP temporary Premier, the Deputy Attorney General, Maureen Maloney, who is the gal pal of the take over temporary Attorney General, Andrew Petter and Gillian Wallace, the crooked Assistant Deputy Attorney General, who subsequiently resigned in disgrace in 2004 when her crimes caught up to her and who later died from sudden onset cancer, in 2010, when the criminal racket that went on inside the Ministry of the Attorney General, when she was in the chain of command, was becoming notorious both online and in legal offices, in Ottawa Edmonton, Vancouver and Victoria, and the Privy Council Office and Prime Minister`s office in Ottawa.

Some people think Wallace was murdered, like former Deputy Attorney General Robert Edwards and former Attorney General senior legal counsel Jack Ebbels because, like Edwards anbd Ebbels, Wallace knew the dirty secrets inside the government and she was a threat to Dix and his pals who appear to have been engaged in criminal activity in connection with other cases.

Sunday, February 17, 2013

The Water War Crimes, Adrian Dix and Murdered Witnesses

Former Premier Glen Clark
When Adrian Dix was Chief of Staff to Premier Glen Clark between 1996 and 1999, the Premier's office was interfering in the operations of the Ministry of the Attorney General and directing that Ministry to commit the crimes of fraud, perjury and obstruction of justice in the Supreme Court of British Columbia as it related to the lawsuit brought by Snowcap Waters Ltd. and Sun Belt Water Inc.   Documents were concealed and suppressed.  False and misleading affidavits were filed in the court and the judiciary were deliberately manipulated from behind the scenes.  In short, major crimes were committed in the courts for political reasons.

In the Editors opinion, several of these crimes were directed by both Premier Glen Clark and his Chief of Staff, Adrian Dix.

Several of the inside witnesses who would now be in a position to confirm the Editors opinion and assist to put Adrian Dix and former Premier Glen Clark in jail, where they ought to be, have died over these past years and many died in suspicious circumstances.   The dead include, former Deputy Attorney General Robert Edwards, former Deputy Attorney General Gillian Wallace, former senior legal counsel Jack Ebbels, Provincial Court Chief Judge Hugh Stansfield and many others.     

The astonishing number of deaths among the witnesses and the players in the Water War Crimes proves that "Ian Waddell's book "A Thirst To Die For" was not a work of "pure fiction" but was based in the hard core political reality of the corruption surrounding bulk water exports from Canada to the United States that has resulted in several murders of lawyers, judges and political operatives by a criminal gang operating inside the government of British Columbia and other parts of Canada.  

Thursday, February 14, 2013

By His Own Admission, Adrian Dix is a criminal who has not been convicted

Adrian Dix wants to be Premier
Adrian Dix by his own admission committed a crime when he was chief of staff for Premier Glen Clark and we think he should serve time in jail, like other criminals, before he becomes Premier of the Province of British Columbia because if he is elected he is still open for a criminal prosecution and without having been punished for the crime he admits he committed then he will probably commit crimes again.  


"In early 1999, Mr. Dix made a bogus memo-to-file, an internal diary brief prepared by political handlers, for future reference, if needed. His boss, then-Premier Clark, was already under heavy fire for his relationship with one Dimitrios Pilarinos. With some others, Mr. Pilarinos had applied for a provincial casino licence in Burnaby. Allegations surfaced that Mr. Clark had received a benefit from his friend, in the form of cut-rate carpentry work at an Okanagan cottage. So here was a perceived conflict of interest, at best, and an attempted cover-up.
The Dix memo was brandished as an assurance that Mr. Clark had taken no role in the outcome of the Pilarinos casino decision. “I talked to [Michael Farnworth, then B.C.’s minister of employment and investment, and minister responsible for gambling] and told him under no circumstances was the premier to be part of any meeting on this decision,” Mr. Dix wrote. But the memo was not filed on July 17, 1998, as purported. In fact, it was written around the time the RCMP raided the homes of Messrs. Pilarinos and Clark: March 2, 1999, the day the scandal broke wide open.

In the Editors opinion, Mr. Dix was engaged in the crimes of fraud and obstruction of justice because the memo was intended to mislead the police in the course of a police investigation of his boss, Premier Glen Clark.