Day 193 - 28 Nov 95 - Page 13
1
2 Q. You see, I have not made up what I have been putting to
3 you, Miss Inglis. These people said these things quite
4 soon after you had signed them up. You know that, do you
5 not?
6 A. No.
7
8 Q. They said them in the Labour Board letters.
9 A. They may have, but they have never said them to me.
10
11 Q. How do you explain that they said those things?
12 A. I am sorry?
13
14 Q. How do you explain that they came -----
15
16 MR. JUSTICE BELL: I am not sure that is the right way, if I may
17 say so, Mr. Rampton, because the witness does not have to
18 explain anything anyone says. What you can do is give
19 Miss Inglis an opportunity if she thinks there is some
20 explanation or knows of some explanation, but she cannot be
21 asked to explain it.
22
23 MR. RAMPTON: My Lord, perhaps not.
24
25 (To the witness): Miss Inglis do you have your written
26 statement there?
27 A. I am sorry?
28
29 Q. The written statement that you made for this case?
30 A. No. Can you tell me what binder it would be in?
31
32 MR. RAMPTON: My Lord, I am afraid I have it loose. Somebody
33 will have the reference, no doubt.
34
35 MR. JUSTICE BELL: It is volume III, and it is divider 12,
36 Miss Inglis, if you do not mind -- the pale blue one on the
37 very top.
38
39 MR. RAMPTON: Have you got it now?
40 A. We are looking at my statement?
41
42 Q. Yes.
43 A. Yes, I have.
44
45 Q. Can you turn to the second page, please, the first complete
46 paragraph? We looked at the petition yesterday. Do you
47 remember that?
48 A. Yes.
49
50 Q. "The weekend after we had filed," you write, "individuals at
51 the staff of McDonald's began telephoning people from
52 McDonald's and telling them that Cam knew who had signed
53 cards and that they had better sign the petition against
54 the union if they wanted to stay loyal to Cam."
55
56 What you are suggesting there is that the 39 people who
57 signed the petition were intimidated into signing it, for
58 fear that they would lose their jobs?
59 A. Yes.
60
