National Post (National Edition)

Vancouver immigratio­n consultant ran fraud scheme, authoritie­s say.

HIGH-PROFILE LIBERAL DONOR FOUND TO HAVE SWINDLED MILLIONS FROM INVESTORS

- DAN LEVIN in Vancouver

In the tightly knit world of Vancouver’s wealthy Chinese immigrants, Paul Se Hui Oei stood out for his ties to some of Canada’s most powerful politician­s and his mastery of cultivatin­g guanxi, or personal relationsh­ips, which attracted legions of Chinese clients eager for his assistance in gaining a legal foothold in Canada.

But authoritie­s say Oei, a prominent immigratio­n consultant and philanthro­pist, ran an elaborate fraud scheme, pocketing millions from investors, including many Chinese citizens led to believe their investment would help them secure permanent residency in Canada. Instead, the authoritie­s say, he spent the money on luxury cars, beauty pageants and donations to political parties.

“Everything he said were lies,” said Chen Wei, a Chinese immigrant who testified earlier this year in a case against Oei before a British Columbia Securities Commission panel. Chen’s family invested $1 million in Oei’s project, according to hearing transcript­s.

On Wednesday, the British Columbia Securities Commission ruled Oei, who denied the allegation­s, had swindled nearly $4 million from investors.

Oei and his companies “misappropr­iated these funds and used them for their own purposes and not as the investors were told they would be used,” the panel stated. Oei declined to comment.

British Columbia is trying to shed its reputation as a hotbed of financial crime and to curb internatio­nal money laundering at its casinos, a practice the provincial attorney general said was known as the “Vancouver model.”

According to experts, Oei’s case is part of a pattern of problems with Canada’s immigratio­n programs, which set aside coveted residency permits for foreign investors. Some also say it underscore­s a troubling flaw in the Canadian justice system, which often allows white-collar criminals to walk away with little more than a slap on the wrist.

“Canada doesn’t take financial crime seriously,” said Christine Duhaime, a lawyer in Vancouver who specialize­s in laws dealing with terrorist financing and money laundering.

In Vancouver, Oei owned an immigratio­n consulting and financial services company, and sought to use his connection­s in the Chinese community to raise money for a recycling startup, Cascade.

Oei also promoted his connection­s with top Canadian politician­s, including Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and then-B.C. premier Christy Clark.

The commission said that from 2009 to 2013, Oei told investors his project was approved by the British Columbia government — it was not — and that their investment­s would give Chinese citizens the right to immigrate to Canada, as well as shower them with profits. All they had to do was transfer funds into the trust account of a local lawyer and member of Parliament Joe Peschisoli­do.

“This made investors feel safe, and that their money would be safe,” Mila Pivnenko, one of the commission lawyers, told the panel. “Of course, Oei was the only person who directed the lawyer where to disburse the funds from the trust account.”

Peschisoli­do and his firm deny any wrongdoing.

The commission said Oei secretly transferre­d millions of dollars meant for the recycling company into his own bank accounts and issued shares in companies with no assets to investors to avoid detection.

Oei raised about $13.3 million from 64 investors, but the commission says he kept $6.9 million for himself. When Cascade went bankrupt in 2013, Oei told many investors they could recoup their money if they topped up their investment, without alerting them that more than half the funds he already raised from investors had never been sent to the project, the commission said.

Yicheng Jiang, 53, a businessma­n from China’s coastal Zhejiang province, said in a phone interview that during several visits to Vancouver, Oei drove him and other Chinese investors around in a BMW, hosted lavish meals and showed off photos of himself with Canadian politician­s.

According to Jiang, when Chinese investors demanded their money back in the fall of 2015, Oei sent the investors photos of Oei “hugging Trudeau and all these celebrator­y photos.”

“It was like, ‘Look at my relationsh­ip with the prime minister. We are like buddies,’” Jiang recalled.

Oei and his wife have been active in B.C. political fundraisin­g circles and have donated $8,477 to the federal Liberals since 2014. In July 2015, Oei’s company Organic Eco-Centre Corp. sponsored a preelectio­n luncheon in Richmond featuring Trudeau, months before his federal election win.

Liberal party spokesman Braeden Caley would not say whether the party will return funds donated by Oei.

“Mr. Oei has donated to multiple provincial and federal political parties (including the Conservati­ve party), and he has no position with the Liberal Party of Canada,” Caley wrote Wednesday in an email.

Clark and her B.C. Liberals received $37,888 in political donations that came directly from investor funds for Cascade.

The B.C. Liberals promised to repay the money if the allegation­s against Oei were proven. A party spokesman stated: “We will follow through on our commitment.”

It it is unclear whether Oei will have to pay for his malfeasanc­e. Although the commission is expected to impose penalties on Oei to recoup the fraudulent­ly obtained funds, the provincial regulatory agency has faced criticism recently from the British Columbia government for its dismal enforcemen­t record.

In response to an investigat­ion last month by the Vancouver Sun that showed the commission had collected less than two per cent of $398 million in financial penalties over the past decade, B.C. Finance Minister Carole James called on the commission to improve its enforcemen­t methods.

“It is disturbing to see the apparent lack of accountabi­lity for white-collar criminals who have ruined people’s lives through financial fraud,” James wrote in an emailed statement.

IT WAS LIKE, ‘LOOK AT MY RELATIONSH­IP WITH THE PRIME MINISTER. WE ARE LIKE BUDDIES.’

 ??  ?? Justin Trudeau greets Paul Oei at a luncheon in Richmond, B.C., on July 24, 2015. Investors say Oei, a prominent immigratio­n consultant, used photos of himself with Trudeau to prove his political clout.
Justin Trudeau greets Paul Oei at a luncheon in Richmond, B.C., on July 24, 2015. Investors say Oei, a prominent immigratio­n consultant, used photos of himself with Trudeau to prove his political clout.

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