Winnipeg Free Press By: Jim Bronskill, The Canadian Press Posted:
Last Modified: 4:08 PM CST Monday, Jan. 25, 2021
OTTAWA - New documents show Canada’s cyberspy agency was so alarmed by the potential fallout from an alleged secrecy breach by a senior RCMP employee that it revised a damage assessment to “severe” from high in the days after his arrest.
Cameron Ortis, a senior intelligence official at the RCMP, leaves the courthouse in Ottawa after being granted bail, Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2019. New documents show Canada’s cyberspy agency was so alarmed by the potential fallout from an alleged secrecy breach by Ortis that it revised a damage assessment to “severe” from high in the days after his arrest. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Justin Tang
Jim Bronskill
Cameron Ortis, a senior intelligence official at the RCMP, leaves the courthouse in Ottawa after being granted bail, Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2019. New documents show Canadaâs cyberspy agency was so alarmed by the potential fallout from an alleged secrecy breach by Ortis that it revised a damage assessment to âsevereâ from high in the days after his arrest. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Justin Tang January 25, 2021 - 2:08 PM
OTTAWA - New documents show Canadaâs cyberspy agency was so alarmed by the potential fallout from an alleged secrecy breach by a senior RCMP employee that it revised a damage assessment to âsevereâ from high in the days after his arrest.