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Pan Am senior staff did not erase hard drives to avoid accountability: watchdog

Flags of the participating countries fly in the athletes' village as the CN Tower stands in the background at the 2015 Pan American Games in Toronto on July 9, 2015.
Flags of the participating countries fly in the athletes' village as the CN Tower stands in the background at the 2015 Pan American Games in Toronto on July 9, 2015. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darren Calabrese

TORONTO – Ontario’s information and privacy commissioner says executives at Toronto’s Pan Am Games committee didn’t get rid of their hard drives in order to avoid accountability.

Brian Beamish announced in June that he would investigate after Ontario auditor general Bonnie Lysyk said the senior staff, including CEO Saad Rafi, had disposed of nine of 12 computer hard drives her office had requested.

READ MORE: Toronto Pan Am Games: Investigation launched after hard drives deleted by executives

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In a report released today, Beamish says he found “no intention by TO2015 to destroy records or withhold hard drives to mislead the auditor general or avoid accountability.”

He says that even though some documents may not have been available to the auditor general, it didn’t impede Lysyk in completing her audit.

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READ MORE: Ontario NDP, PCs want investigation of erased Pan Am Games hard drives

Beamish says TO2015 had appropriate record-keeping and record-retention policies that “focused on preserving the content of business records in a cloud-based system, rather than on hard drives or other devices.”

The opposition parties had called for Beamish to investigate, given Liberal history – two top aides of Dalton McGuinty are facing charges after hard drives in the former premier’s office were wiped clean.

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