CHARITABLE DONATIONS TO THE UNITED WAY,
AND OTHER - GOOD WORKS - BY SNC –
WHILST PAYING OFF LAWYERS TO SCREW ME.
This happened
at various times between 1985 and 1993, as follows:-
2. In The Montreal Downtowner of
December 11th 1985 there was an article announcing how
Centraide exceeded its fund-raising campaign target of $17 million – and
another picture of Jean-Paul Gourdeau, the campaign Chairman.
3. On March
31st, 1993, there was an article in Le Journal de Montreal
announcing the launching of the 14e
campagne de la Fondation Ressources- Jeunesse. The theme was : Le
Travail, un Projet de Vie. This campaign is connected with reducing
unemployment among young people. The picture with the article shows Jean-Paul
Gourdeau, among others.
Guy Saint-Pierre:
In 1991, he sought to project
a public image as someone – quote - ...(concerned) to alleviate poverty –
unquote - as expressed in SNC s Annual
Report for 1991 ‑ in the Report to
Shareholders, co‑signed by Jean‑Paul Gourdeau who preceded him. It
mentions, among other things, that he
was co-Chairman of Centraide s 1991 fund-raising campaign – the same year when he
allowed SNC s office furniture to be seized, followed by their Royal Bank
account, for refusal to pay the Court-ordered settlement in my illegal
dismissal suit, which had been going on for the previous 8 years. (This delay
was caused by lawyers employed by him and his predecessors Alex Taylor,
Jean-Paul Gourdeau [and Camille Dagenais, O.C.] ). The office furniture seizure
and bank account seizure also coincided with SNC s take-over of Lavalin
Inc. after the latter company got into
insuperable difficulties; SNC paid a reported $90 million to the consortium of
9 banks that had seized Lavalin Inc s assets. Guy Saint-Pierre was also kept on
as a Director of the Royal Bank even after I informed its then-C.E.O. Allan
Taylor and his successor John E. Cleghorn about what was going on. In 1992 Guy Saint-Pierre became an
Officer of the Order of Canada in spite of a
written and documented objection
(ex. P6)