Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Bill Majcher Demands Answers

Global is reporting that "Exclusive: Former RCMP officer cleared of allegation he helped China demands answers." It was published yesterday and is a follow up on the malicious persecution of Bill Majcher.

It's quite long and is worth a read because it dives into the back story of what happened. It's also worth reading the three part series on the case in the Asian Pacific Post. These are two different sources that aren't me that provide a lot of background information on the Bill Majcher set up. 
 
Part One was an Inside Report about Project Servo. Part Two was a Special Report on how Disclosure Cloud Hangs over RCMP's Project Servo. Part Three was an exclusive interview with Kim Marsh declaring that "Canadians deserve to know how this happened." Indeed they do. 

So once you read Global's recent article and the Asian Pacific Post's three part series, you will clearly see something shady is going on here and it needs to be addressed and I'm not the only one saying it.

If you make it through all that, you can glance at two articles I wrote showing the two big discrepancies, the RCMP's refusal to investigate Kevin Sun and the FBI's refusal to investigate Uranium One. That puts the real concerns front and centre. 

Sadly most people have a 30 second attention span and won't read all that but if you did read all that, it would be a starting point where we could begin an intelligent conversation about the problem based on fact not fiction. 

The reason I say that is because although there is some truth finally being woven into the mainstream media, their remains a constant push to divert and distract those facts with fiction. 

The malicious prosecution of Bill Majcher clearly showed us defiant corruption within CSIS and the RCMP which is very important to note when we see this new barrage of misinformation trying to divert those concerns and give CSIS more power when we should be doing the exact opposite. 

Once you make an obvious error, you need to be chastised for that. You don't need to be rewarded. That would be a very bad idea. CTV is reporting that "Should Canada’s spy agency be more like CIA, MI6?" No they should not. It really is that simple. The CIA has a long history of drug trafficking. 

Recently disclosed documents show MI5 were committing illegal acts including murdering police informants with the sole intent of promoting violence and sectarian division during the Northern Ireland conflict so once again a big no to the idea of making CSIS more like the CIA and MI6. In fact the Majcher case showed that CSIS ran an illegal op in Hong Kong under the shadow of MI6. So there already is too much going on there. 
 
City News is reporting that "The Canadian Security Intelligence Service may have run afoul of the law when it didn’t fully inform the public safety minister of potentially illegal conduct by CSIS employees, including possible Charter violations, says a newly released watchdog report."

So once again, CSIS get's caught breaking the law and breaking the Charter of Rights which is the highest law of the land, and nothing happens. No accountability and no consequences whatsoever. That is the only thing that needs to change. You don't reward them for breaking the law by giving them more power to break the law. That would be a very bad idea. 

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