The Daily Courier

Memo says officials doubt crooks will take over legal pot business

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OTTAWA — Federal officials see no reason why organized crime would invest in legal cannabis over any other industry, despite allegation­s shady money is already tainting the business, an internal government memo says.

Organized crime has dominated the illegal cannabis industry for decades, but public-safety and health officials do not see “strong pull factors” for criminal infiltrati­on of the legal business, the memo says. And they appear confident that existing and planned efforts to ensure corporate transparen­cy will reveal any trouble.

The documents, disclosed through the Access to Informatio­n Act, show officials from nine federal agencies became seized with the issue early this year after media reports said questionab­le foreign money was supporting legal marijuana enterprise­s.

Using offshore bank accounts for investing is not illegal, nor was there evidence such sources were being used by organized crime to profit from the legal cannabis sector, the internal notes say.

The Trudeau government recently legalized recreation­al cannabis use with the aim of denying criminals hefty profits from the illicit pot trade. The government has overseen licensing of medicinal marijuana suppliers for years.

The February memos say the legal industry’s ability to raise capital should be seen as a positive sign, as long as the money comes from legitimate sources.

“The potential for organized crime to invest in the legal cannabis market through offshore tax havens exists, but does not appear fundamenta­lly different from the potential for such investment­s in any and all sectors of the economy,” says a memo to the Public Safety Canada deputy minister, the ministry’s senior bureaucrat. “Given the government’s stated objective to strictly regulate the cannabis industry, there does not appear on the surface to be any strong pull factors for organized crime to invest in this sector, as compared to any other sectors.”

The RCMP had no active highpriori­ty investigat­ion related to organized crime’s suspected financial involvemen­t with licensed pot producers, though the police force continued to monitor the situation, the Feb. 27 memo adds.

The French-language CBC’s flagship investigat­ive program, Enquete, reported this month that the government had granted marijuana licences to companies and people with links to the criminal underworld.

Organized Crime Reduction Minister Bill Blair said Tuesday he has not seen evidence of any criminal enterprise infiltrati­ng a licensed producer. “And should I see any evidence of that, I am very confident that the RCMP and Health Canada would take all the steps necessary to protect Canadians,” he said during an appearance at the Senate’s question period.

The government is being “a little bit naive on the issue” of criminal involvemen­t, Conservati­ve Sen. Claude Carignan said in an interview.

Earlier this year, the Liberals cited privacy concerns and other challenges in rejecting a legislativ­e amendment backed by Carignan that would have created a public registry of marijuana-company investors.

Blair said Tuesday the cannabis regulation­s that did come into effect “provide for significan­t financial transparen­cy.”

The internal memos also note various federal efforts to screen foreign investment­s, fight internatio­nal tax evasion and make it clearer who owns stakes in Canadian corporatio­ns.

 ?? The Canadian Press ?? An internal government memo says federal officials see no “strong pull factors” for organized crime groups to invest in the legal cannabis sector over any other industry.
The Canadian Press An internal government memo says federal officials see no “strong pull factors” for organized crime groups to invest in the legal cannabis sector over any other industry.

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