Canadas Black Files

 

What the Canadian Government doesn't want you to know.

Copyright © Alain Vollant 1998

Proofreading by Chris L'Étoile

 

Though every government and country has their share of "Top-Secret" or "Ultra-Confidential" files, the Canadian Black Files are a recent creation going back to the aftermath of the Twilight War. At the time, the surviving Canadian Government was forced to make some controversial choices and some very questionable agreements in order to maintain a state of peace and order, relatively speaking, within its borders.

 

During that troubled period, and because every computer was non-serviceable at the time, that "sensitive" information was kept inside a black-painted filling cabinet. As time went on, The Black Files came to get a more or less "official" status.

 

Today, The Canadian Black Files are code numbered as follows:

 

2300-10-Can-1002

 

2300-10-Can-1002: represents the date when the file was opened.

 

2300-10-Can-1002: represents the number of years before the file can be disclosed to the general public. That number could go from 1 to 99 years; but could contain the following exceptions: A A - means that this file is currently open; A W - Means that this file must remind closed for 101 years minus one day and W W - Means that these files cannot be disclosed prior to 150 years, and then only after it has been reviewed by a special committee upon that occassion.

 

2300-10-Can-1002: Represents the country that is directly affected by the information contained in this file.

 

2300-10-Can-1002: represents the type of operation this file contain (1- covert Operation. 2- Secret Deal/Agreement. 3- Non-Military Classified Research project. 4- Special Investigation of a certain Personality. 5- Cover-up. 6- Sensitive Data. 7- Diplomatic Investigation. 8- Recovered Information. 9- Other Data that can be considered as a Threat).

 

2300-10-Can-1002: Represents the number of reports this files contains.

 

So, this means that the File 2300-10-Can-1002 was a covert operation that happened in 2300 ad, and probably in Canada, that this Black File contains two reports, and cannot be disclosed prior to 2310.

 

NOTE ON DISCLOSURE: When the Canadian Government has to disclose a Black File, it will usually do so by using the most discrete way possible, in order to avoid any public unrest, and always includes the complete background in which the Black File was created.

 

Black Files List

 

Adventures & Scenarios

 

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