Pubdate: Fri, 12 Sep 2008 Source: Selkirk Journal (CN MB) Copyright: 2008 The Selkirk Journal Contact: http://www.selkirkjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2165 Author: Dean Pritchard EX-ADDICTIONS FOUNDATION EXEC PLEADS GUILTY Perry Fontaine, the man at the centre of the Virginia Fontaine Addictions Foundation scandal, has pleaded guilty to charges of theft and mischief. Fontaine, the foundation's former executive director, had been set to stand trial next month, but instead entered guilty pleas to the charges. The Crown and defence will jointly recommend a sentence of between two and three years in prison. Police launched an investigation seven years ago after accusations the centre spent $115,000 to take employees on a Caribbean cruise, claiming it was a training seminar. The police probe uncovered millions of dollars in fraudulently obtained funds, kickbacks and inflated expenses. In 2005, former Health Canada director Patrick James Nottingham was sentenced to two years house arrest after pleading guilty to fraud and influence peddling. Nottingham accepted nearly $1 million in kickbacks in exchange for approving excessive funding at the Sagkeeng First Nation treatment centre and $186,000 in "hush money" once allegations of fraud and corruption surfaced. That same year, former assistant deputy health minister Paul Cochrane was sentenced to a year in jail for accepting more than $200,000 in bribes to boost funding to the centre. The Crown alleges between 1992 and 2000, at least $3.6 million in inflated funding was diverted to Fontaine, Nottingham and Cochrane, with Fontaine pocketing $2.3 million. In 2006, the federal government won a civil judgment ordering Fontaine to pay back $459,000. He will be sentenced in December. - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath