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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:-

 

Jean-Paul Gourdeau:

 

1. On April 26th 1985 there was a Montreal Gazette article with his picture, announcing the opening of Centraide s 1985 fund-raising  campaign and the $17 million target. It was also announced that Jean-Paul Gourdeau was to be Chairman of the campaign.      

CLICK HERE

 

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.

CLICK HERE

 

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.

CLICK HERE

 

 

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)