National Post (National Edition)

Corruption law rarely makes it to courtrooms

Case involving SNC would be first to go to trial

- Mia rabson

OTTAWA • The criminal law at the heart of the SNC-LAVAlin saga dogging the federal Liberals has led to charges in just seven cases in 20 years, leading some to call for a review of the legislatio­n and additional resources for investigat­ors.

The Corruption of Foreign Public Officials Act made it illegal for Canadian companies and individual­s to bribe foreign public officials in business transactio­ns. The most recent report to Parliament on the law, from September 2018, showed that since the law was passed in 1999, charges had been laid against four companies and 15 individual­s, stemming from seven investigat­ions.

Of those, three companies pleaded guilty and three people were convicted, while 11 people were either acquitted or had their charges stayed. One person accused in a bribery scheme in India faces a trial later this year. The case against SNC-LAVAlin is the one outstandin­g charge against a company, and if Snc-lavalin goes to trial it will be the first company to do so.

That places Canada at the lower end of enforcemen­t among the 44 signatorie­s of the 1999 Anti-bribery Convention of the Organizati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t. Canada passed the domestic law after it signed the convention, which is aimed at recruiting richer countries to combat corruption their own citizens and businesses perpetrate in poorer ones.

The OECD raised concerns about lax enforcemen­t efforts in Canada eight years ago and Canada responded with some amendments to the law, but the number of charges and conviction­s since is small.

Patrick Moulette, the head of the anti-corruption division of the OECD, told The Canadian Press in an interview the OECD will do another review of Canada’s enforcemen­t of the bribery convention in 2021 so he can’t immediatel­y say if there has been any improvemen­t since the last review in 2011.

Canada reported to the OECD it had 35 ongoing investigat­ions of foreign bribery in 2013. In the six years since then, charges have been laid in connection to four investigat­ions.

Tr a n s p a r e n c y Internatio­nal, which works to fight global corruption, lowered Canada’s ranking from “moderate enforcemen­t” to “limited enforcemen­t” last year because only one new charge had been laid since 2016. In that case, related to the purchase of an airplane from Thailand, the charge was stayed less than a year later.

Joanna Harrington, a University of Alberta law professor, said the number of charges is not the only indication of how well a law is working, because Canada is assisting other countries to gather evidence and the law is also used to educate and deter the crimes from happening. But neverthele­ss, she said, it is time to give the whole thing a closer look.

“We’ve had 20 years of it, now’s the time to review it,” she said, noting the original law was passed with just two days of debate.

Investigat­ions under the law are handled by the RCMP, which set up a special division with units in Calgary and Ottawa in 2008. Prosecutio­ns are handled by the Public Prosecutio­n Service of Canada.

David Taylor, director of communicat­ions for Justice Minister David Lametti, said the government has “full confidence” in both to investigat­e and prosecute cases under the law.

“Canada is committed to fighting corruption and has taken significan­t steps to deter Canadian companies and persons from paying bribes to foreign public of-

WE’VE HAD 20 YEARS OF IT, NOW’S THE TIME TO REVIEW IT.

ficials in the course of business,” he said.

Harrington, however, said a review of the law is needed given the confusion around the use of the law and the addition of remediatio­n agreements to that law last year. They’re a means of heading off a prosecutio­n if a company facing charges owns up to misdeeds, makes reparation­s, and institutes consequent­ial internal reforms. If it stays clean for a period of time, the charges are dropped.

“The problem we have, as we’re seeing with the SNCLavalin case, is we have this 20-year old piece of legislatio­n and last year the government bolted on the remediatio­n agreements, and now we’re not sure how they work together,” she said.

Former attorney general Jody Wilson-raybould says Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his staff tried to get her to change her mind about refusing a remediatio­n agreement for Snc-lavalin, which was charged in 2015 with trying to bribe officials in Libya. Trudeau denies any improper influence took place.

The OECD working group on bribery issued a warning earlier this week that it is monitoring the investigat­ion of the allegation­s because it finds them concerning.

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