Scandal rocks Canadian copyright agency

Allegations of undue influence raise eyebrows

Iain Thomson

Questions are being asked in Canada after it was revealed that the director general of copyright policy at Canadian Heritage had allegedly been in a relationship with one of Canada's leading copyright lobbyists.

The Hill Times reported that Patricia Neri has now left her job for "personal reasons" after beginning a relationship with a man believed to be Douglas Frith, who is president of the Canadian Motion Picture Distributors Association.

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Neri testified recently before the Canadian Senate on the need for a new law banning video cameras in cinemas.

"Neri's personal life is no-one's business but her own," wrote Dr Michael Geist, Canada Research Chair of Internet and E-commerce Law at the University of Ottawa in his blog.

"[But] this does raise troubling questions about the quick passage of Bill C-59, the anti-camcording legislation, since Neri appeared as a witness before a Senate hearing on the bill with the lobbyist in the room.

"The Privy Council Office places particular responsibility on public servants who appear before a Parliamentary committee, since they do so on behalf of the Minister.

"This is not an easy issue to raise, but if these reports are true it surely creates at least a perceived conflict of interest contrary to Government Ethics Guidelines on a file that is very controversial and likely to grab the spotlight this fall."

Neri is now a special advisor to Assistant Deputy Minister Jean-Pierre Blais with "duties still to be determined".

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