THE GAZETTE/Allen McinnisArthur Porter was the federally appointed chairman of Canada’s Security and Intelligence Review Committee.
Mr. Baur makes guns. Restricted firearms, including semi-automatics. Pistols, military-grade assault rifles, sniper rifles, and more. Mr. Baur says he can make just about any weapon. “Send me into the bush with a Coke can and a screwdriver, and I’ll come back with a tank,” he boasts.
He has long dreamed of taking his five-year-old company, Canstar Arms Development Corporation, “to the next level.” He wants to replace his small production facility with a state-of-the-art weapons and ammunition manufacturing plant. He says he just needs a partner, a real player. He thought he might have landed one, that summer day in 2010.
The Mercedes stopped, and the driver stepped out. He looked all business. Suit and bow tie, expensive watch. He presented himself as a globe-trotting networker and corporate executive. “He was very charming,” recalls Mr. Baur. So began his unlikely, maddening relationship with Arthur T. Porter.
Dr. Porter didn’t mention that he was, at the time, director general of the McGill University Health Centre (MUHC), one of Canada’s largest public health-care providers, Mr. Baur says. Nor did Dr. Porter reveal that he was a personal advisor to the president of Sierra Leone, and “ambassador plenipotentiary” for the African country.
http://news.nationalpost.com/2013/07/11/arthur-porter-tried-to-broker-deal-with-to-build-guns-abroad/
And Dr. Porter didn’t disclose that Prime Minister Stephen Harper had just appointed him chairman of the Security and Intelligence Review Committee, the powerful civilian body that examines the activities of the Canadian Security and Intelligence Service. Mr. Baur says he did not learn about any of that until much later
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