Jim Bronskill
Reporter for The Canadian Press
About Jim Bronskill
RCMP anti-corruption unit probes corporate corruption
RCMP anti-corruption investigators say they are probing possible shady practices by several Canadian companies operating in parts of Africa, Eastern Europe and South America.
This may be the longest wait ever for a Freedom of Information request
An Ottawa researcher is asking a judge to order Canada's national archives to speed up work on his request for old RCMP records after he was told to wait at least 80 years for a response.
Money, ego led veteran RCMP officer to spy for Moscow
A CSIS investigation concluded that money, ego and career frustrations were the likely reasons a veteran RCMP officer passed highly sensitive secrets to Russian intelligence for years, newly disclosed records reveal.
Provincial watchdogs demand U.S. firm stop using facial recognition tool
Three provincial privacy watchdogs have ordered facial recognition company Clearview AI to stop collecting, using and disclosing images of people without consent.
CSIS and RCMP don't play well together
Long-standing, systemic problems hampered co-operation between Canada's spy service and national police force on the investigation of an extremist threat, a new security watchdog report says.
Tory Senator attacks O'Toole's leadership, calls for review
Sen. Denise Batters, a vocal critic of O'Toole, says he cannot lead the party to victory in the next election campaign.
Security experts say there is no way Canada can go with Huawei
As the Liberal government prepares to unfurl its policy on next-generation mobile networks, global security experts say all signs point to the exclusion of Chinese vendor Huawei Technologies from the long-awaited blueprint.
Family of Mexican activist killed after opposing Canadian mine still pushing for investigation
Family and supporters of a Mexican activist who was killed after opposing a Canadian company's mining project are challenging a federal ombudsman's decision not to investigate the matter.
Many vendors that sell to Ottawa lack child labour prevention policies
A federally commissioned report looking at vendors who sold billions of dollars in goods to the government found the vast majority lacked adequate policies to prevent human and labour rights risks in their supply chains.