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RCMP launch probe into Alberta health agency contracting allegations

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    RCMP launch probe into Alberta health agency contracting allegations

    RCMP launch probe into Alberta health agency contracting allegations

    [url]https://www.theglobeandmail.com/canada/alberta/article-rcmp-launch-investigation-into-alberta-health-controversy/[/url]

    Carrie Tait Alanna Smith

    The RCMP are investigating allegations of inflated contracts and inappropriate procurement procedures in Alberta’s health care system, the national police service confirmed Thursday, escalating a controversy that has already sparked an Auditor-General examination, an internal investigation, and a resignation from Premier Danielle Smith’s cabinet.

    The Mounties received a complaint Feb. 6, the day after The Globe and Mail first reported allegations of government interference, pricey contracts and procurement problems at Alberta Health Services and the province’s Ministry of Health. Those allegations are at the centre of a $1.7-million wrongful dismissal lawsuit filed last month by AHS’s former chief executive, Athana Mentzelopoulos. The RCMP previously said it was reviewing the complaint and changed the file’s status on Thursday.

    “Following a review, the RCMP has begun an investigation into the matter,” Christina Zoernig, a federal policing strategist with the Mounties, said in a statement. “As this is an ongoing investigation, no further details are available at this time.”

    Alberta fired Ms. Mentzelopoulos on Jan. 8, roughly one year into her four-year contract. She alleges that the Premier’s then-chief of staff, Marshall Smith, and other government officials exerted pressure on her to sign deals to the benefit of private businesses. Ms. Mentzelopoulos alleges that she was terminated two days before she was scheduled to meet with Alberta’s Auditor-General to discuss the investigations she launched while leading the health authority.

    Those investigations, according to allegations in her lawsuit, examined contracts and procurement tied to chartered surgical facilities (CSFs) and Alberta’s $70-million deal to import generic pain medication from Turkey.

    None of the allegations have been tested in court.

    Jessi Rampton, a spokeswoman for Health Minister Adriana LaGrange, said Thursday the government will participate in the RCMP investigation as necessary.

    “The [government of Alberta] is unaware of the identity of any party under RCMP investigation, but will provide the required cooperation to the RCMP should the government be requested to do so,” Ms. Rampton said in a statement.

    “We refer any further inquiries regarding this matter to the RCMP as it would be entirely inappropriate for the Government to comment on an ongoing police investigation.”

    Mr. Smith, who is not related to the Premier, did not acknowledge a request for comment. He previously said he would participate in the government’s internal investigation and the Auditor-General’s examination.

    Dan Scott, legal counsel for Ms. Mentzelopoulos, said his client welcomes the RCMP investigation. “She will of course co-operate,” he said in a statement.

    Mr. Scott declined to say whether she has been interviewed by the RCMP.

    Naheed Nenshi, the leader of the Alberta New Democratic Party, said the Official Opposition has faith in the RCMP’s investigation.

    “These allegations of bloated contracts are incredibly serious, and we’re glad to see them being treated as such,” he said in a statement.

    On Monday, the Premier appointed Raymond Wyant, a former chief judge of the Provincial Court of Manitoba, to lead the government’s internal investigation . His report and recommendations are due at the end of June.

    Auditor-General Doug Wylie confirmed in early February that he is examining procurement and contract practices at the provincial health authority and Ministry of Health, but added that the probe could extend to other organizations. His examination will focus on CSFs, COVID-19 personal protective equipment, and pain-relief medications from Turkey.

    Peter Guthrie resigned as Infrastructure Minister last week because he did not feel Ms. Smith and his cabinet colleagues were responding to the allegations with the necessary urgency.

    Ms. Mentzelopoulos alleges that government officials wanted her to sign deals with private surgical clinics with terms that were inflated compared with what AHS pays a private competitor in Calgary and its own internal costs. The former CEO alleges there were concerns within AHS about the true ownership and potential costs of the CSFs.

    AHS pays private companies to perform operations, such as joint replacements or cataract removals, as part of the public health care system. Chartered surgical facilities are not equipped to perform complicated operations, such as emergency procedures or major cancer surgeries.

    In 2024, AHS was negotiating a contract extension with Alberta Surgical Group and terms for new CSFs in Red Deer and Lethbridge.

    Documents obtained by The Globe reveal that some doctors in ASG’s ownership group are also part-owners or directors in the Red Deer and Lethbridge projects. Sam Mraiche, who gave luxury hockey tickets to cabinet ministers and senior staff in the Premier’s Office, is also a part-owner in the proposed CSFs.

    He owns MHCare Medical, which in 2022 facilitated the $70-million deal to import generic children’s medication from Turkey. Ms. Mentzelopoulos alleges that AHS has paid MHCare and companies affiliated with Mr. Mraiche roughly $614-million for goods and services. Her allegations lack a time frame.

    Jessie Bakker, a lawyer for Mr. Mraiche and MHCare, previously stated that “allegations or insinuations of wrongdoing on the part of MHCare Medical Corporation and/or Sam Mraiche are unwarranted and unjustified.”

    ASG said in early February that it did nothing wrong
    ?


    #2
    Oh Oh! An RCMP investigation and a lawsuit that will lead to a long and troubling investigation that will be hard for Danny and the UCP to hide from!

    A well respected CEO of the AHS was fired just before she was to take her allegations of corruption to the Auditor General!

    It looks like Danny's office and officials were pressuring the CEO to sign contracts for private surgical clinics at rates higher than existing clinics.

    The friends and supporters of Danny and the UCP looked like they were just getting on the gravy train!

    This is going to get ugly for Smith and the UCP!

    Comment


      #3
      You think she gets any egg on her face here?
      if its true ( and PROVEN) then she claims that she had no knowledge and was at armslength of any contract negotiating.
      No pain for her and someone else will fall on her sword. Then in classic alberta fashion, we will vote ucp in.. again.

      The optics alone are ... horrid.
      A bunch of ministers and such go to oiler playoff games last spring compliments of Sam mraiche... not a big big deal until you learn that he owns the company which alberta bought Turkish ( tylenot) through. 80 million was spent on 5 million bottles which was roughly 10 x more childrens tylenol was estimated to be required at a cost of 14 $/ bottle. Probably double what you would pay at a store normally.
      Of those bottles ...roughly. 1.5 million were imported which worked out to about $5800 per bottle. The bottled themselves were never properly approved by health canada due to
      unsafe dosage, childproof caps.. among other things.

      And THHENNNNN when you look at the start of the pandemic when $220 million worth of PPE was bought thru a company that brought it all in from China... and those products were so crappy they basically had to be scrapped .. ( masks which were being sold for 50 cents at acklands/ grainger were bought by UCP govt for about 72 cents from this company) ... a company owned by... you guessed it... Sam Mraiche!

      Im not saying the UCP govt are grifters and crooked as the day is long...

      But when you look at the evidence...

      Wait. Yeah. I am saying that. Danielle smith sucks donkey b holes... was never elected.. and should be run out of town.


      Next up? Coal mining on the eastern slopes.

      Comment


        #4
        Rcmp finally going to work. You guys with short memories, there were more face masks, ventilators, ect. ect. Across canada that were never received but they look at alta. Same as Chuck going after hotel rooms in sask. Millions of dollars spent nation wide on hotels for illegals, no mention of rates or political affiliation. Things that make you go hmm.

        Comment


          #5
          We need a DOGE type look at government spending at all levels.
          There has to be some type of oversite that has no connection to any government that can come in at any time with a hands on audit the books with job losses and actual legal prosecution.
          Fallow the money right to the top with names.
          Consequences have to be EXPECTED.

          Whenever there is any government manufactured crisis you can be sure all that spending is totally out of control and the taxpayers have no clue on who is getting all that money.

          Healthcare spending obviously is rife with kickbacks and favors right down to the local level. Big money means big opportunity .

          The days of the opposition party looking after the money are gone.
          No one wants to rock the boat because they want their chance.
          Last edited by shtferbrains; Mar 7, 2025, 11:25.

          Comment


            #6
            Danny Smith helped make the decision to fire the CEO of the AHS. But she says she didn't know why? Definitely something that makes you hmmm?

            Comment


              #7
              The acceptance of corruption is set by the leaders of this country, all levels of government feel they can then rise to this level. Not much investigated, start pulling a thread, who knows where it would lead. This will continue until people realize the cost to the economy and say enough, sadly being too apathetic seems to be a Canadian trait.

              Comment


                #8
                Alberta and Saskatchewan certainly have set a bad example of tolerating corruption amongst the party faithfull. And yet they claim to be so concerned about fiscal responsibility?

                Danny and the UCP sure like private for profit surgical clinics so they can sign higher priced contracts that cost taxpayers more money! For the benefit of friends, party supporters and insiders!

                That's the plan they have for the whole healthcare system.

                With no fiscal accountability!

                And when the whistleblower CEO plans to go to the auditor general she is fired!

                It's so bad the RCMP are investigating.

                Firing the whistleblower leaves Danny ultimately responsible! You can't cover it up!

                Comment


                  #9
                  Do you think the corruption in Canadian politics ends at the Alberta borders?
                  You seem singularly fixated on corruption in Alberta, and completely silent about all of the other corruption in the country.
                  I've heard a rumour that even the federal Liberals aren't completely immune to it.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Brainwashed chucks only see what they want to see

                    Comment

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