Saturday, December 5, 2015

Introduction


Whenever we have told people our story, they find it too bizarre to believe. Sometimes I find it hard to believe myself and it’s my story. I am writing this blog to inform the general public of my experience and encounters with the rule of law in Canada. I also would like invite you to share your experiences dealing with your own legal matters. Maybe with some public help we could find some solutions on our own since in my opinion, the legal system looks mostly after its own interest and doesn’t really care about our needs for assistance and help or the law.

I will try to post our story in segments once or twice a week as time allows.          

This blog is going to be a series of segments which are documented public records as court evidence regarding our provincial and federal legal system including the enforcement practices.
 
Over the past ten years I witnessed and believe that our legal system, especially the enforcement, created a lot of questions about the Rule of Law.

My wife Ingeborg, who will also add her own comments in German, and I, Arnold Guettler immigrated from Germany over 50 years ago. We consider ourselves as self-sustaining Canadian go-getters with a positive attitude. However, the abuse and cover-up we encountered by the government agencies, their employees and professionals is terrifying. 

Over the last 4 years I have corresponded with numerous government and legal authorities and have compiled over 2000 pages of documents which will be the base for this blog.

Firstly, I need address the business related information about me posted on the internet. I was sentenced to 6 months jail on charges from the Ontario Securities Commission for procedural infractions under Ontario regulations. They were civil charges, not criminal. All of this in spite of the fact that my business employed a fulltime in-house lawyer, a patent agent and two chartered professional accountants. All legal and professional fees were paid to the “Experts” including KPMG and Ernst & Young. That is another unbelievable story for another time.

The good thing for me was that as part of their investigation, the OSC conducted a comprehensive audit and officially stated at the trial “there were no unusual transactions”.

In addition, the federal government conducted a full research and development audit (SRED) and calculated that over $2,000,000 was legally spend and eligible for $800,000 in tax credits. The $2,000,000 posted on the internet by the OSC was audited by both the OSC and the Revenue Canada and reported as legally spent for research and development by my companies and myself.

Detailed segments and over 4000 documented pages about this experience with the OSC will be posted at a later time.

Over the past 9 months I have prepared and finished 420 segments, plus compiled the relevant supporting documentation which already is mostly public records. I have also stored the paper documents on separate portable hard drives with instructions to continue this fight. I am already 75 years old and this was done as a secure backup

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