Two Biggest Criminal Organizations in Canada:
The Toronto and Catholic Children’s Aid Societies?
Two Biggest Criminal
Organizations in Canada: The Toronto and Catholic Children’s Aid Societies?
Mr. Lemay state: “The
children and families we serve have a right to privacy” The farce of the right to privacy in
Canada; It is a convenience for the government and private institutions to
commit all kinds of atrocities on defenseless families. The trafficking of children
for profit is destroying tens of thousands of children and parents annually.
Children's aid families’ names posted online
A Brockville-area children's aid society reels after names of 285 clients were posted on Facebook.
Police are investigating an unprecedented
security breach at a Brockville-area children’s aid society after an
electronic file containing the names of 285 families involved with
Family and Children’s Services of Lanark, Leeds and Grenville was made
available on Facebook.
The breach was discovered Monday at 1:42 p.m.
after both a client and a community member called the society to
complain that a link to the confidential report was posted on the
Smith’s Falls Swapshop Facebook page, executive director Ray Lemay told
the Star Monday night.
The society doesn’t know how long the link had been on the members-only page or if it has been shared more widely, he said.
“We’re looking into whether it has gone any further than that. But we are not sure at this point,” Lemay said.
Publishing or otherwise identifying families
involved with child protection agencies contravenes the provincial Child
and Family Services Act and carries fines of up to $10,000 and three
years in jail.
The names were part of a statistical report to
the society’s community board of directors on new cases between April
and November 2015, Lemay said.
A link to the report was obtained by someone —
“likely a disgruntled client” — who hacked the secure portal for board
members on the society’s website, he said. No staff or board members are
suspected of the breach, he said.
“Our suspicion, which is a fairly firm
suspicion, is that it is a current client who is very disgruntled, very
unhappy with us,” he said. “We have contacted the police. Our lawyer has
sent a letter to the website owner as well as to this individual
telling them what they are doing is, we think, illegal.”
Staff will begin calling all 285 families to tell them about the privacy breach first thing Tuesday morning, Lemay added.
“I apologize for this — we will act to ensure
that this doesn’t happen again. The children and families we serve have a
right to privacy — and they deserve respect,” Lemay said in a statement
released Monday night. “Moreover, that someone would inappropriately
obtain, then post this document on the Internet purposefully, is deeply
troubling. Furthermore, this action is likely in direct contravention to
the Child and Family Services Act and directly harms the children and
families we serve.”
“Because of the nature of our work, emotions
regarding CAS can run high,” Lemay added. “That said, there is no excuse
for a person to deliberately expose our clients in this way.”
The society also takes responsibility for the security breach.
“Obviously there was a lapse at our end. That
portal was not secure enough. The information should simply not have
been accessible,” Lemay said in an interview. “We acknowledge that.
There’s no doubt about our mistake in this, too.”
Lemay, who retired in 2014 as executive
director of the Prescott-Russell children’s aid society after 30 years
in the field, came out of retirement recently to lead the Lanark, Leeds
Grenville society.
“This is very much a first, as far as I can tell,” he said of the incident.
The Ontario Association for Children’s Aid
Societies, which represents the province’s 47 societies, said a privacy
violation of this magnitude is unprecedented.
“We can’t even acknowledge that somebody is in
our care when the media asks about it, even if it is all over social
media,” spokeswoman Caroline Newton said.
“This is totally unacceptable,” she added.
“The police are involved, as this is very serious. (The society) will be
taking steps to figure out what happened and to fix it. And they will
work with the people affected.”
Barbara Goderre, administrator for the
13,000-member Smith’s Falls Swapshop Facebook page, said she had no idea
the link was related to a confidential children’s aid report.
“If I’d have known, I would have been all over
that,” she said in an interview. “It’s awful that someone would do
something like that.”
A police spokeswoman declined to comment on the case.
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