The Province

Suspected money launderer to be deported to Australia

- ghoekstra@postmedia.com Twitter.com/gordon_hoekstra

GORDON HOEKSTRA

A suspected internatio­nal money launderer who was arrested late last month at the River Rock Casino will be deported to his home country of Australia, an Immigratio­n and Refugee Board hearing in Vancouver decided Tuesday.

The hearing found that Dan Bai Shun Jin, 55, was not admissible to be in Canada because he had outstandin­g warrants for passing about $1.4 million in bad cheques at several casinos in Las Vegas dating back to 2014. He did not declare those charges in entering Canada in May.

Canadian authoritie­s were also concerned about multiple investigat­ions in several countries, including Australia and the U.S.

According to Australian court documents, Jin is thought to bey to be involved in large-scale casino-based money laundering in Australia, the U.S., Macau and Singapore. Part of the Australian investigat­ion centres on Jin gambling about $850 million at a casino in Melbourne between 2005 and 2013.

Immigratio­n board member Michael McPhalen, who adjudicate­d the hearing, ruled that Jin would remain in detention until he is deported, likely in seven to 10 days, because he is a flight risk.

“I am satisfied you are a fraudster so I can’t rely on any assurances you would give me that you are just willing to go back to Australia now,” McPhalen said. An offer by a distant relative in Vancouver — a person Jin acknowledg­ed he didn’t know well — to put up a $10,000 bond and house Jin was not enough surety, said McPhalen.

Jin’s lawyer, Peter Edelmann, had argued there was little evidence of money laundering and said there was a stronger case that Jin was simply a high-stakes gambler. Edelmann also argued Jin was not a flight risk.

Government lawyer Mason Cooke told the hearing that Canadian authoritie­s believe Jin is involved in proceeds of crime and money laundering in Australia, possibly in the United States, and have a concern he might be involved in the same in Canada.

Jin’s presence in Canada was discovered after a woman was stopped at Vancouver Internatio­nal Airport carrying $20,000 that she said she was delivering to Jin, according to informatio­n provided at the hearing.

The RCMP arrested Jin on May 25 while he was playing baccarat at the River Rock Casino, owned by Great Canadian Gaming Corp., on a warrant from the Canada Border Services Agency.

In documents filed as part of the hearings, Jin claimed he was gambling with $6,000 he brought into Canada that he turned into $69,000 in winnings playing Baccarat. He had $75,000 in chips on him when arrested.

The $6,000 in cash would not have triggered B.C.’s new rules that require gamblers to file a source-of-funds declaratio­n for cash and cash equivalent­s greater than $10,000.

The tighter restrictio­ns were triggered by a B.C. government review over concerns outlined in a confidenti­al report commission­ed by the B.C. Lottery Corp. from auditor MNP LLP that found $13.5 million in $20 bills had been accepted in the River Rock Casino in July 2015.

In response to questions from Postmedia, Great Canadian Gaming officials said the company does not comment on the activities of law enforcemen­t agencies.

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