The sister of a University of Victoria co-op student who killed himself last year in the midst of a privacy-breach investigation made an emotional appeal Tuesday to the B.C. government for an apology and answers.
“He was a kind, giving man,” MacIsaac’s sister Linda Kayfish told CBC News Tuesday.
After two years in which no wrongdoing by MacIsaac has been uncovered and other members of the team have been exonerated, Kayfish is calling on the provincial government to issue a formal apology for her brother’s dismissal.
“I figured that when somebody makes a mistake and ruins people’s lives like this, they had to know there would be repercussions,” she said. “And when you do that, you have to recognize an error: stand up, and recognize that error. Apologize.”
As far as B.C. NDP leader John Horgan is concerned, the government has abused its power in this case.
“For this information to be strategically leaked to a major media outlet, and then blown up to be a horrific breach of privacy, when not one shred of data left the Ministry of Health… I don’t know what the explanation is, but I’m certainly going to find out,” he said.
The government has refused to comment on the matter.
Agencies/Canadajournal