Template talk:DCSIS
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Agent Jean-Luc Marchessault, Harkat[1][2]
John Gladwin, a former CSIS operative who now runs a manufacturing company in Edmonton and who has been helping Cowan and Trosin.[3]
In Canada, news surfaced this week that a senior CSIS agent, Theresa Sullivan, was fired last year after falling in love with a source and carrying on a relationship for nearly two years. Ms. Sullivan was enjoying a stellar career until she fell in love with someone she was supposed to be spying on. She met a mysterious man -- who can only be identified to the public as "A.B." -- in 1996 while carrying out her duties for CSIS. When Ms. Sullivan's husband suddenly walked out on her in 1998, it was A.B. who sent her a sympathy card and a gold chain. During long phone calls that followed, the professional relationship grew personal. The spy and her source dated, fell in love, even began to talk about marriage. Higher-ups told Ms. Sullivan that she was getting too close to a man considered a "person of interest." But she defied them. When Ms. Sullivan and A.B. broke up in 1999, they did so only on their own terms. She had finally pulled herself together when Ward Elcock, the head of CSIS, sent a devastating letter to her. "You consciously and willfully pursued a relationship with this individual after being instructed to cease contact," Mr. Elcock wrote in firing her. "It is with deep regret that I have taken this decision, but the gravity of your actions have left me no choice in this matter." Today, Ms. Sullivan, 36, has given up ever being a spy again. But she feels that she has been judged too harshly. "We are talking about human beings and it's only human nature that things like that would happen," she said.Globe and Mail[4]
Administrative contacts including Philip Gibson
Gerald Baker, who specializes in Tamil investigations[5] Carol Ann Titus and Lisa Morawecki[6]
Bob Burgoyne. Air India.[7]
Marc Bastien, embassy[8]
Spokeswoman Campion[9]
Nick Rowe, Air India[10]
Joesph Fluke, former agent who got arrested.
Marcia Wetherup, CSIS media liason officer
Mike Pavlovic, convinced Jabarah to turn himself in while at a stripclub[11]
Peter Marwitz, "Who gives a hoot about civil rights when people are preparing to maim or murder us? It’s time for us to take the gloves off. And if we don’t, we deserve whatever we get", former agent quoted in Globe and Mail, Thursday November 14, 2002, pg. A4
Chantal-Annick Tremblay, a CSIS agent, who wanted to relocate and to protect a terrorist in Canada[12]
David B. Harris, a Canadian security analyst and senior fellow with the Canadian Coalition for Democracies in Toronto, former CSIS chief of strategic planning, appeared in Trail of a Terrorist[13][14][15][16]
Dan Lambert, appeared in Trail of a Terrorist[17]
Lynne Jarrett, Air India[18]
Alexander Gelvan[19]
Former CSIS agent Sam Porteous, now a trade consultant based in China[20]
http://www.casis.ca/english/newsletter/CASIS_newsletter_spring_2000.pdf

