Lawyer asks if N.B. Liquor struck deal that silenced whistleblower
CBC
The lawyer for a businessman fighting N.B. Liquor in court is questioning whether the Crown corporation signed a settlement with a fired employee that would stop her from co-operating with the lawsuit as a whistleblower.
Erica Brown is demanding that the corporation's former director of finance Stacey McKinney turn over all documents related to any settlement between her and N.B. Liquor.
She says in a Nov. 11 letter filed in court that she fears McKinney and her lawyer "may have made a deal" that included her ending her co-operation with the legal case.
Brown is representing Peter Cook, a Hartland businessman seeking a judicial review of N.B. Liquor's decision to move a lucrative agency store contract to another retailer in the village.
A year ago, McKinney, who was fired by N.B. Liquor in 2020, appeared willing to testify for Cook about the Crown corporation's management practices.
According to a sworn affidavit by Cook and Brown's letter, McKinney approached them offering information about what she described as politically motivated decisions driven by N.B. Liquor board chair John Correia, a supporter of Premier Blaine Higgs.
She planned at the time to claim whistleblower status and ask the Labour and Employment Board to rule on her firing, according to her lawyer at the time.
But McKinney abruptly withdrew her complaint against N.B. Liquor this fall, according to a Nov. 2 letter from the labour board filed in court.
In an affidavit filed in Court of King's Bench on Nov. 1, McKinney said she had no information contradicting N.B. Liquor's arguments in the lawsuit by Cook, who claims he lost the contract for an agency liquor store because of political interference.
Her affidavit does not say whether she reached a settlement with the liquor corporation.
Brown responded in a Nov. 11 letter to McKinney's lawyer, John Phillips, saying when she and Cook met McKinney last year, "the information your client provided was highly relevant to my client's litigation and of a high degree of knowledge and expertise."
Brown says McKinney asked for the meeting so she could disclose her "grievances" with N.B. Liquor to Cook.
McKinney's then-lawyer Christian Michaud told a court hearing last year that she was fired from the corporation in June 2020 when she was about to reveal details of financial improprieties to the audit committee of the N.B. Liquor board of directors.
That firing took place before the Hartland agency store contract was taken away from Cook, but Michaud argued McKinney's general knowledge of N.B. Liquor management practices would support Cook's allegations.