Calgary Herald

Saskatoon fraud recovery continues

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City of Saskatoon staff say $40,000 of the $1.04 million lost through an online fraud scheme has been recovered, while the majority of the funds have been legally “locked down.”

City manager Jeff Jorgenson provided additional details about the fraud and recovery efforts in an interview on Monday.

He did not specify how much of the remaining $1 million scattered among “multiple” bank accounts is under lockdown, or the country of origin of the accounts, but said the focus right now is on efforts to recover the money. The city hired an Ontario-based law firm to work with Canadian banks and issue court orders where most of the big banks are based.

There’s a chance that some might contest it.

“What I can say is the vast majority of the money has been traced and legally frozen,” Jorgenson said. He was advised not to disclose how much of it was traced by both the internal and Ontario legal teams, in part because the amount is changing “hour by hour” as the banks find more money, he said.

The money that has been located so far is in 10 to 15 accounts, Jorgenson said. After the money is frozen through the court orders, the individual bank account holders have to be informed they have the proceeds of fraud and to return the money. Jorgenson said some of the money will be returned voluntaril­y.

“There’s a chance that some might contest it, and we basically just go through the legal proceeding­s to do everything we can to get the money back,” he said.

He thinks there’s a possibilit­y some of the money has been spent, since not all of it has been frozen, he added.

The fraud was the first of its kind the City of Saskatoon has faced.

Jorgenson said the fraud came to light on Aug. 12 after it became clear to the rightful receiver, Allan Constructi­on, that the funds weren’t going to show up in its bank account.

The payment was specifical­ly related to the Sen. Sid Buckwold Bridge rehabilita­tion project, he said.

The city was initially contacted in July by someone impersonat­ing the company’s chief financial officer, Blaine Dubreuil, in an electronic communicat­ion, Jorgenson said.

On Aug. 7 or 8, the city made the payment to the account provided by the perpetrato­r. After the fraud was discovered, the city reported it to Saskatoon police.

“It’s very disconcert­ing that the perpetrato­r used my name and our company name to commit this crime,” Dubreuil said in a statement. “We have done a security assessment and are confident that our systems were not hacked or compromise­d. We’ll be working closely with the City of Saskatoon and the Saskatoon Police Service as the investigat­ion continues.”

The city made a claim to its insurer last week after it uncovered the fraud. Jorgenson said the city also immediatel­y implemente­d new controls to prevent a similar scenario from repeating in the future.

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