Operation Picnic was secret phone-tapping feast for RCMP, historian discovers
OTTAWA — The federal government secretly gave RCMP security officials the authority to tap telephone calls without court oversight during the Cold War, newly unearthed archival documents show.
The surveillance program, codenamed “Picnic,” began as an emergency effort during the Korean War, but federal agencies collaborated with telephone companies in 1954 to continue the wiretaps, says Dennis Molinaro, who teaches history at Ontario’s Trent University.
Molinaro’s research indicates the RCMP security branch was listening in on the embassies of East Bloc countries, “certain unfriendly organizations” and individuals suspected of disloyalty.
It has long been known the Mounties kept an eye on a wide array of people and organizations — from church and gay rights groups to Quebec separatists and Communists — in the name of national security, amassing hundreds of thousands of dossiers.


