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Update: B.C. government aide gets conditional sentence in vote-getting scandal

Brian Bonney has been given a nine-month conditional sentence for using his public job to woo ethnic votes
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Former BC LIberals communications director Brian Bonney. (File photo)

A former government communications director has been given a nine-month conditional sentence for using his public job to woo ethnic votes for British Columbia鈥檚 Liberal party.

Provincial court Judge David St. Pierre said Brian Bonney made 鈥渃ertain choices鈥 that landed him in court.

Bonney鈥檚 lawyer told a sentencing hearing earlier this month that his client was an instrument of others in the scandal, including senior officials in former premier Christy Clark鈥檚 office.

St. Pierre told Bonney on Wednesday that citizens expect public servants to work for everyone, not a particular political party.

鈥淭he message in this case, at least to be passed on to other public servants in similar situations, is there might well be unfair and undeserved consequences for saying 鈥楴o鈥 to the minister but those consequences, I鈥檓 sure I hope you agree, pale in comparison to what you鈥檙e having to go through,鈥 the judge said.

The conditional sentence will be served in the community and Bonney will live under a 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew. He must also do 60 hours of community service work.

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Bonney pleaded guilty to breach of trust last October in the so-called quick wins scandal for the partisan use of taxpayer money in an attempt to attract support from minority groups.

Special prosecutor David Butcher presented a series of emails during the sentencing hearing showing Bonney used a private account to communicate with liaison workers who were tasked with gaining support from various ethnic organizations before the 2013 election.

Butcher said the plan to win ethnic votes involved a 鈥渃ynical purpose鈥 that had no aim to legitimately engage minority groups. He had asked the court to impose a 12 to 23 month community sentence.

Bonney鈥檚 lawyer, Ian Donaldson, called for a suspended sentence, saying his client crossed a line but was directed to do so.

After the scandal broke, Clark appointed her deputy minister to conduct a review and it concluded public officials misused government resources. It said Bonney was among those who spent a considerable amount of time during his workday on party activities and used private emails.

Clark apologized and the Liberals returned $70,000 of taxpayers鈥 money.

The Canadian Press

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About the Author: Ashley Wadhwani-Smith

I began my journalistic journey at Black Press Media as a community reporter in my hometown of Maple Ridge, B.C.
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