Amaruk Wilderness: Questions raised about company

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#1 Amaruk Wilderness: Questions raised about company

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CBC
As more women who received bizarre and inappropriate responses to their job applications to wilderness company Amaruk come forward, efforts to reach the company's CEO have left CBC News questioning whether the business and its jobs even exist.

Amaruk Wilderness Corp. hit headlines this week after CBC News reported on a B.C. Human Rights Tribunal complaint, in which a Trinity Western University graduate — Bethany Paquette — claims her application to work for the company was rejected because she's Christian.

Rejected Christian job applicant was unqualified, tourism company says
Since Paquette's complaint was reported, CBC News has heard from other applicants, including Lucie Clermont, who applied to Amaruk last year for a job listed as the executive assistant to the CEO, which promised a $120,000 salary and world travel.

Job too good to be true?

Clermont's application was met with a number of emails asking awkward questions — some of them sexual — followed by more that became insulting.

Amaruk Wilderness Corp.
Questions are being raised about Amaruk, the company at the centre of an alleged anti-Christian attack, and a number of associated businesses. (CBC)

"We are very un-Canadian in the sense that we do not embrace mediocrity," one of the emails reads, apparently from Eric Teheiura, vice president South Pacific. "We are not about to hire just anybody to assist a CEO, consular official, and member of one of Europe's wealthiest families."

Sophie Waterman applied for the same job, but soon believed it sounded too good to be true. She withdrew her application after a friend in the tourism industry warned her Amaruk might not be all that it seems.

"When I cancelled the interview, I received about 15 emails in quick succession," she says. "All pretending to be from different people involved with the company, and all very litigious, accusing me and my friend of slander. My feeling is that it's all one person."

But if that's the case, who that person is remains something of a mystery.

Tracking down a CEO

Christopher Fragassi-Bjørnsen and Dwayne Kenwood -Bjørnsenare are listed as co-CEOs of Amaruk along with several other businesses, including Norealis, Spartic and Militis.

But the men do not live in Europe and they are not diplomats. And if Olaf Amundsen — the man who allegedly sent Paquette the offensive emails — is real, the picture of him on the company website is not. In fact, it's an image grabbed from social media site Pinterest.

One of the companies, Norealis, is listed as owning a male erotic website called MaleCorps.com. Many of the models found on that site can also be found in images on the other companies' websites.

The domain names of the websites for all the companies were registered in B.C. by a Christopher Fragassi, who lists a Whistler P.O. Box as his address.

Only Christopher Fragassi is named on Amaruk's B.C. corporate registry entry, though Industry Canada's website lists 217 employees and 20 company directors. Calls to several listed numbers reached no one, just a hold signal that played the song of loons down the phone line.

Guide questions aircraft claim

Experienced Yukon guide Nicolas Tilgner saw CBC News's original story about Amaruk and was reminded of the red flags raised when the company tried to join a tourism association in the north three years ago.

Amaruk Wilderness Corp
The C-130 promoted as part of Amaruk's wilderness adventures. (CBC)

"They were saying they provide a C-130 heavy aircraft, and that isn't really operated by any civilian operator anywhere in the world," Tilgner said. "We did find [that] the picture on their website they were using belongs to a military agency."

The plane pictured, it turns out, actually belongs to the New York National Guard.

Tilgner says flags were also raised over a picture purportedly of an outpost in the Yukon that does not exist, and the fact Amaruk was offering trips to Baffin Island in December, despite such trips only being allowed from the spring.

C-130
The C-130 on the New York National Guard website.

"We didn't really see any of their staff guides in the field or operating in the Whitehorse area," he notes. "They seem to be a company that existed on the web only."

CBC News sent questions to several Amaruk email addresses about these new allegations. Their lawyer says these are simply allegations. The company has not made any comment.
TLDR: Lady applies to wilderness guide job, claims not only is she rejected but is harassed for her religion. Files complaint, gets in news. More women come forth also claiming harassment, ranging from sexual to legal. However attempts to find the company itself are proving challenging as it appears that the company itself is a legal fiction.

In other words, these women may be harassed for applying to a company that doesn't exist.

And you thought you've seen everything.
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#2 Re: Amaruk Wilderness: Questions raised about company

Post by General Havoc »

The other possibility is that the entire thing is a hoax of course. In my experience it's quite common for an attack on someone for being Christian to wind up thusly, at least in the Western World.
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#3 Re: Amaruk Wilderness: Questions raised about company

Post by frigidmagi »

That wouldn't explain the other two women who are reporting different kinds of harassment and have no relationship with the Christian woman.
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#4 Re: Amaruk Wilderness: Questions raised about company

Post by General Havoc »

Possibly, but if the company doesn't even exist, then what explanation is there? Other than some internet troll making shit up for lulz, which is hardly a major revelation.
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#5 Re: Amaruk Wilderness: Questions raised about company

Post by frigidmagi »

The company is registered from Norway in Canada but no one has found any operations in Canada or elsewhere. Now it could be some shadowy Christian conspiracy to make those damn pagans look bad. But then we got an international conspiracy just to make these complaints.
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#6 Re: Amaruk Wilderness: Questions raised about company

Post by General Havoc »

You do not need a shadow conspiracy for someone to scream that they're being attacked for being _____. It happens all the time, and it tends to congregate around groups that do not have much of a history of being attacked in their particular medium. MRAs come to mind.
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