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Tuesday, 06/22/2010 1:19:01 AM

Tuesday, June 22, 2010 1:19:01 AM

Post# of 148
P R O P E R T Y rights

FW: Letter to Dona Cadman on stolen Property rights?

From: Norris Barnes (vancouverpropertyrights@shaw.ca)
Sent: Fri 6/18/10 12:14 AM

Hi one and all:

This is an email I sent to my M.P. in Ottawa I also sent Bcc to as many news agencies I could think of.



Let’s see how they Weasel their way out of this one, and they will.



Norris Barens


From: Norris Barnes [mailto:vancouverpropertyrights@shaw.ca]
Sent: Thursday, June 17, 2010 11:55 PM
To: 'CadmaD1@parl.gc.ca'
Subject: RE:





Dear Mrs. Cadman:



Thank you for forwarding my concerns to the Attorney Generals office below is the response I received from L. Bisson in Ministerial Correspondence. In his reply Mr. Bisson suggested I contact the Attorney General of B.C.

This is the response I received from Wally Opal the Attorney General of the day.




With respect to your allegations of criminal wrongdoing, I do not authorize criminal investigations or otherwise direct the police.

Whenever an individual has reason to believe that someone has been involved in criminal activity, the proper course of action is for that individual to report his or her allegations to the police. If the police determine that an investigation is warranted, they will conduct one. They are also in the best position to determine whether a particular allegation involves a criminal matter or one to be addressed through civil law.



I would like to inform all involved in this I these correspondence that I have tried every avenue over the years, in every office and have been stonewalled passed on to every other office from the Mayors of Vancouver to M.L.A.’s

of all parties to the Commissioner that stands in front of the R.C.M.P’s headquarters in Vancouver and Vancouver’ s Police department. Attached are my correspondences with various M.L.A.’s



The police insist that theft of billions of dollars worth of “PRIVATE” property from millions of land owners in B.C., by Bureaucrats, and elected officials is a civil matter and that I should get and pay for a lawyer and spend years in court to stop the abuse of the system by those in positions of trust.



I am reporting to all concerned that I have irrefutable evidence that Municipal and Provincial governments have stolen Private Property by abusing the legislative system. I did as Mr. L. Bisson suggested only to be turned away at every instance to the benefit of prominent members of our society who are still in position of power to steal from the public with impunity. I have no reservation in naming Michael Harcourt ex Vancouver Alderman and Ex B.C. Premier as a key player in these crimes and who is still in a position of power capable of destroying many more of our rights and freedoms.



As I have tried every avenue I thought would be open for an investigation I have again come to you to impress on the Attorney General of Canada that we have a rouge Government operating here in Canada and I wish to have law and order re- established here in British Columbia and have a full public investigation into the wrong doings of our Government (or some bodies government).



I am therefore requesting that you Dona Cadman demand the Governor General and the R.C.M.P. investigate the B.C. Legislature for crimes against B.C. property owners and the abuse of the legislative process.



Yours Truly Norris Barens





From: Minister's Correspondence CD:EX [mailto:CD.4.Minister@gov.bc.ca]
Sent: Friday, January 09, 2009 8:19 AM
To: VancouverPropertyRights@shaw.ca
Cc: Minister, AG AG:EX
Subject: 129644 - RE: Vancouver and Community Charter

Ref: 129644

Mr. Norris Barens
President
B.C. Property Rights Initiative

Email: VancouverPropertyRights@shaw.ca

cc: AG.Minister@gov.bc.ca

Dear Mr. Barens:

Thank you for your emails dated July 9, October 27 and November 24, 2008, regarding your concerns about an amendment that was made to the Vancouver Charter in 1973 involving the ownership of property on which highways have been built in Vancouver. I understand that my colleague, Honourable Wally Oppal, Attorney General, responded to your first email on September 17, 2008. I apologize for the delay in responding.

As you have noted, the ownership of all local roads in the province is vested in the name of the municipality within which they are located. The locally elected municipal council is responsible for making decisions about road standards, the amount of funds required to maintain them and the level of maintenance.

Municipalities can also decide whether to close local roads to traffic and, if they are no longer required as part of their transportation network, council can decide to dispose of the lands by selling them. Usually the value of the lands at the time of sale is determined by having a professional appraisal undertaken. The proceeds from the sale are used to offset the municipality’s costs which, in turn, benefit the taxpayers.

As municipalities are public entities responsible for providing services, laws and other matters for community benefit, I fail to understand the advantages of returning lands on which local roads are located to individual owners. If you or any other individual feels that there was an error in the application of laws regarding the dedication of local roads to municipalities, the only way for this to be determined for certain is by a decision of the courts. The reason that the courts are responsible for deciding the issue is because they have the expertise to adjudicate the matter and they are removed from direct involvement. If the Province of British Columbia (Province) were to make decisions about legal issues involving local governments, people would view the process as being biased because the Province is responsible for establishing and supporting the local government system.

If you want to pursue this matter in the courts, you may want to approach one of the groups that provide free legal services. One such group is Pro Bono Law of British Columbia. It is a society formed to promote, coordinate and facilitate the delivery of free legal services in the province. The society can be reached at the following address:

Pro Bono Law of British Columbia
PO Box 103
845 Cambie Street
Vancouver, BC V6B 4Z9
Telephone: 604 893-8932
Facsimile: 604 893-8934

Thank you, again, for writing to me about this matter.

Sincerely,

Blair Lekstrom
Minister of Community Development


From: Norris Barnes [mailto:vancouverpropertyrights@shaw.ca]
Sent: Monday, November 24, 2008 6:40 AM
To: Lekstrom.MLA, Blair
Subject: Vancouver and Community Charter

Dear Mr. Lekstrom, I emailed you about a month and a half ago about some criminal activity that took place in the City of Vancouver and stretched to Victoria.

The attachment above will prove my case.

This crime of embezzlement from a trust in which all highways in municipalities are held happened in two stages. The first was in 1953 when ownership of the “soil” in highways was transferred from those that built and dedicated the highways and given to the City of Vancouver in section 289 of the Vancouver Charter after it’s transition from “THE VANCOUVER INCORPORATION ACT of 1926”. The second happened in 1973 and my attachment will show some of the organized criminals that took part in the crime.

In 2003 the Community Charter section 35 (1) and (4) the rights in the soil appear to have gone through the same first transition that happened to the Vancouver Charter.

My purpose for writing you today is to ask; will you return the stolen private land that belongs to Vancouverites by rewriting section 289 of the Vancouver Charter and section 35 of the Community Charter so as to reflect the rights in the soil of those that built and dedicated the highways in clear an unambiguous language before the next provincial election?

Today in Vancouver when highways are stopped the City sells the land back to the people that already own them. This is criminal!


Myself and 1000’s of others await your reply.

Yours truly Norris Barens
President of the B.C. Property Rights Initiative



Mr. Norris Barens
E-mail: vancouverpropertyrights@shaw.ca

Dear Mr. Barens:

Thank you for your e-mail dated July 9, 2008, concerning an amendment to the Vancouver Charter which you describe as having been made in 1973.

I note your concerns about the effect of that amendment on the ownership of property on which highways have been built in Vancouver, and your request for a legislative amendment to the Vancouver Charter to restore some language deleted pursuant to the 1973 amendment. Although this ministry is responsible for the drafting of legislation approved by Cabinet, the responsibility for individual Statutes often falls to one of my Cabinet colleagues. The Vancouver Charter and the Local Government Act fall under the jurisdiction of the Honourable Blair Lekstrom, Minister of Community Development. Therefore, I am forwarding a copy of your e-mail to Minister Lekstrom.

With respect to your allegations of criminal wrongdoing, I do not authorize criminal investigations or otherwise direct the police.
Whenever an individual has reason to believe that someone has been involved in criminal activity, the proper course of action is for that individual to report his or her allegations to the police. If the police determine that an investigation is warranted, they will conduct one. They are also in the best position to determine whether a particular allegation involves a criminal matter or one to be addressed through civil law.

If the police determine that there is sufficient evidence to warrant a criminal charge, they will forward a report to Crown counsel recommending that a charge be laid. Crown counsel review the report and decide whether the evidence will support the charge and whether a prosecution is in the public interest.

As Attorney General, I do not have a mandate to intervene in this established process. Each component of the justice system is independent of the other, in order to provide checks and balances within the system and to prevent perceived political interference.

If you need advice about your legal rights and options, you may consider contacting a lawyer in private practice. If you do not currently have a lawyer, you may wish to call the Lawyer Referral Service at:
1-800-663-1919. This service, provided by the Canadian Bar Association, can refer you to a lawyer in your area who will meet with you for up to 30 minutes for a fee of $25 plus GST and PST. Information about the Lawyer Referral Service is available from the Canadian Bar Association - British Columbia Web site at:

www.cba.org/BC/Initiatives/main/lawyer_Referral.aspx

I appreciate your taking the time to write to me.

Sincerely,


From: CadmaD1@parl.gc.ca [mailto:CadmaD1@parl.gc.ca]
Sent: Thursday, June 17, 2010 9:48 AM
To: vancouverpropertyrights@shaw.ca
Subject:



Dear Mr. Barens,



Attached are the letters that we discussed on the phone, 2 are from Ms. Cadman dated Nov.16th 2009 and Nov.23, 2009 and also the response from Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada the Honourable Rob Nicholson dated Feb.4th 2010.

I trust this information will be of assistance to you.



Sincerely,



Wendy Jones



Special Assistant to Dona Cadman, M.P.

Surrey North

9808 King George Highway, Unit 307

Surrey, British Columbia

V3T 2V6

Tel: (604) 586-2441

Fax: (604) 586-2445

Cadmad1@parl.gc.ca








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