New twist in the deaths of Canadian billionaire couple Barry and Honey Sherman
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details have emerged of what happened days before Canadian tycoon Barry
Sherman and his wife were found dead in their mansion.
News Corp Australia NetworkDecember 21, 201711:35am
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Canadian billionaires found dead in mansion basement
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pharmaceutical tycoon Barry Sherman sought to quash an investigation
into his fundraising for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his Liberals
just days before his death, according to a report.
The 75-year-old chairman of Apotex and his 70-year-old wife Honey were found dead of strangulation in their Toronto home last week, police said.
Apotex is the largest maker of generic drugs in Canada, and the Shermans’ fortune was estimated at more than $3 billion.
Police said they were investigating the deaths as “suspicious,” but stopped short of calling them homicides, while family and friends rejected media reports that it was a murder-suicide.
According to federal court documents obtained by AFP, Sherman tried to block subpoenas of two Apotex executives issued by Karen Shepherd, Canada’s commissioner of lobbying, to compel them to speak with investigators.
The lobbying commissioner is tasked with ensuring that those who lobby public officials act transparently, are accountable and comply with a code of conduct.
The Toronto Star said the commissioner’s team sought interviews with the executives in April but they declined.
‘Fishing expedition’
A month later, Sherman launched his lawsuit, claiming the subpoenas were an “unanchored fishing expedition” and “unconstitutional.” His lawyers filed several more documents in the case days before his death. The probe into a fundraising event Sherman held for Trudeau in August 2015, during the last election campaign, was launched after complaints filed by Democracy Watch, a good-government organisation based in Ottawa.
Sherman and Apotex faced a possible five-year ban on lobbying the government if it could be proven that he ran afoul of rules that prohibit registered lobbyists, such as Sherman, from lobbying office holders they helped get elected.
A second investigation into a November 2016 fundraiser co-organised by Sherman for Trudeau and Finance Minister Bill Morneau was reportedly dropped due to a lack of evidence.
‘A sense of obligation’
But Phil McIntosh, director of investigations for the lobby commission, said in a report cited by the Toronto Star that “the directorate found evidence indicating that Mr. Sherman engaged in political activities that risk creating a sense of obligation on the part of one or more public office holders” through the August 2015 fundraiser.
Sherman and his wife had hosted between 100 and 150 people, each paying Can$1,500 ($A1,525) to attend the event with Trudeau two months before his election victory.
The
commissioner did not immediately respond to requests for comment. In an
email to AFP, Democracy Watch said Sherman’s fundraising “created
conflicts of interest not just for himself but also for Apotex,
conflicts that should result in a prohibition on Apotex lobbying the
federal government through to August 2020.” The advocacy group alleged
that Sherman’s lawsuit aimed “to try to delay the rulings” of the
commissioner until after the next election in 2019.
Trudeau, who said he was “saddened by the news of the sudden passing of Barry and Honey Sherman,” is due to attend a memorial service for the couple on Thursday.
Apotex is the largest maker of generic drugs in Canada, and the Shermans’ fortune was estimated at more than $3 billion.
Police said they were investigating the deaths as “suspicious,” but stopped short of calling them homicides, while family and friends rejected media reports that it was a murder-suicide.
According to federal court documents obtained by AFP, Sherman tried to block subpoenas of two Apotex executives issued by Karen Shepherd, Canada’s commissioner of lobbying, to compel them to speak with investigators.
The lobbying commissioner is tasked with ensuring that those who lobby public officials act transparently, are accountable and comply with a code of conduct.
The Toronto Star said the commissioner’s team sought interviews with the executives in April but they declined.
A month later, Sherman launched his lawsuit, claiming the subpoenas were an “unanchored fishing expedition” and “unconstitutional.” His lawyers filed several more documents in the case days before his death. The probe into a fundraising event Sherman held for Trudeau in August 2015, during the last election campaign, was launched after complaints filed by Democracy Watch, a good-government organisation based in Ottawa.
Sherman and Apotex faced a possible five-year ban on lobbying the government if it could be proven that he ran afoul of rules that prohibit registered lobbyists, such as Sherman, from lobbying office holders they helped get elected.
A second investigation into a November 2016 fundraiser co-organised by Sherman for Trudeau and Finance Minister Bill Morneau was reportedly dropped due to a lack of evidence.
But Phil McIntosh, director of investigations for the lobby commission, said in a report cited by the Toronto Star that “the directorate found evidence indicating that Mr. Sherman engaged in political activities that risk creating a sense of obligation on the part of one or more public office holders” through the August 2015 fundraiser.
Sherman and his wife had hosted between 100 and 150 people, each paying Can$1,500 ($A1,525) to attend the event with Trudeau two months before his election victory.
Trudeau, who said he was “saddened by the news of the sudden passing of Barry and Honey Sherman,” is due to attend a memorial service for the couple on Thursday.
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