Penticton Herald

Big fish rolling through casinos with gang cash

Organized crime ‘threat’ inside casinos: province

- By SAM COOPER

VANCOUVER — The presence of organized criminals in casinos is “a viable threat to public safety,” the B.C. government was warned in an April internal memo obtained by Postmedia.

The memo — sent to John Mazure, B.C.’s assistant deputy minister in charge of the gaming enforcemen­t branch — sheds light on the level of awareness in the government of how money laundering in casinos could pose a danger for both B.C. residents and the provincial economy.

The high-level warning and other internal documents about the growing scandal in B.C.’s casino sector were obtained in a freedom of informatio­n request by Postmedia.

“The gaming policy enforcemen­t branch intelligen­ce unit reports that organized crime presence in and around B.C. casinos presents a viable threat to public safety,” the April 2017 memo says.

The memo was written by Len Meilleur, the gaming enforcemen­t branch’s director of compliance. It refers to RCMP and B.C. Lottery Commission investigat­ions that led to allegation­s “illegitima­te lenders” associated with organized crime are lending cash earned through crime to VIP gamblers, with drop-offs in casino parking lots.

After a series of redacted paragraphs, Meilleur’s memo said: “This informatio­n is proving well founded within the current investigat­ion and these subjects have been identified as threats to public safety.”

Documents also say that evidence provided by police to the BCLC suggests organized crime’s laundering of money through casinos and thus into B.C.’s economy is “substantia­l.”

RCMP investigat­ors and B.C. government documents allege an undergroun­d banking network with links to China is connected to organized crime. That network is accused of using an illegal money-transfer business in Richmond to lend suspected drug-dealer cash to high-roller Chinese gamblers recruited from Macau. So-called “whale” gamblers used wads of small bills to buy chips, mostly at River Rock Casino.

Internal documents written between 2015 and 2017 show B.C. is an outlier on casino money laundering in Canada. They show that a tiny portion of ultra-wealthy VIP gamblers from China account for a significan­t part of B.C. casino revenues.

The BCLC tried to limit opportunit­ies for drug cash to enter casinos, but gamblers may have already found ways around the agency’s “patron gaming fund” system.

The new documents reveal that in 2016 then-finance minister Mike de Jong was warned River Rock Casino was allegedly under-reporting suspicious and large cash transactio­ns “contrary to federal regulation­s and BCLC policy.” De Jong was warned money laundering concerns could open the B.C. Liberal government to criticism for deciding in 2009 to disband B.C.’s integrated illegal gaming enforcemen­t team.

The bottom line in Meilleur’s April memo is provincial officials must understand how severe is the threat posed by casino money laundering. Meilleur’s report says money laundering is essential to the growth of organized crime groups in B.C. and is allowing organizati­ons to “foster their criminal activity and expand criminal operations.”

“More should be done … regarding money laundering and the relationsh­ip between organized crime, illegitima­te lending and casinos,” the memo says. “Further, the highest-level investigat­ions should be conducted targeting the integratio­n of proceeds of crime into the economy through our casinos.”

Documents that back up Meilleur’s memo indicate reports of suspicious transactio­ns filed by BCLC with Fintrac, Canada’s antimoney-laundering agency, exploded after 2010. Then, BCLC reported 491 suspicious transactio­ns to Fintrac; in 2011-12 there were 837; in 2012-13 there were 939; in 2013-14 there were 1,254; and in 2014-15, there were 1,737 suspicious transactio­ns reported to Fintrac.

In a stunning indication of how much dirty cash could be rolling into B.C. government coffers through its take from casinos, suspicious currency transactio­ns accounted for $176 million in 2014-15. That was 10 per cent of total gambling revenues in B.C. casinos, the documents say.

B.C.’s gaming enforcemen­t branch is now worried after a dip in suspicious transactio­ns in 2016, they are trending up this year.

“Even the number of suspicious transactio­ns filed in the lowest years is still a cause for concern and is not experience­d … by any other jurisdicti­on in Canada,” documents say.

Casinos in B.C. have apparently focused mostly on accepting cash in exchange for chips, making “little effort to confirm the source of cash,” documents say.

Documents say B.C.’s gaming enforcemen­t branch “remains concerned” B.C. casinos, “for the most part accept the cash and BCLC reports it to Fintrac. The business model does not include an assessment of whether the cash should be refused.”

The 2017 confidenti­al memo from Meilleur outlines proposed money laundering reforms for B.C. casinos, but informatio­n on the proposals has been redacted in the documents released to Postmedia.

The “primary expected results” of these unknown proposals, documents say, include: “disruption of organized crime’s ability to integrate the proceeds of crime into the economy via casinos in B.C. … seizures and prosecutio­ns related to proceeds of crime … referrals to B.C. Civil Forfeiture Office.”

 ?? PETER BATTISTONI/PNG ?? Packed poker tables at River Rock casino, B.C.’s largest gambling venue.
PETER BATTISTONI/PNG Packed poker tables at River Rock casino, B.C.’s largest gambling venue.

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