Times Colonist

Province asks Ottawa for changes to fight money laundering

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British Columbia’s attorney general wants the federal government to help the province prevent money laundering.

Former RCMP deputy commission­er Peter German has been reviewing B.C’s policies to fight money laundering.

Based on his findings, David Eby said there are specific concerns he plans to raise with the House of Commons finance committee in Ottawa today.

Eby said better resources are needed for police to follow leads on illegal activity provided by the Financial Transactio­ns and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada.

He said that six years ago the RCMP eliminated its proceeds of crime and commercial crime sections and moved to task-force-based investigat­ions.

Eby said the RCMP is rebuilding its expertise on financial crime, but that has shifted responsibi­lity for white-collar crime to provincial and municipal police forces, which generally did not have resources or expertise in that area.

The province’s attorney general would like to see better communicat­ion between law enforcemen­t and the financial transactio­ns centre, because police don’t use the system now due to privacy concerns.

As well, Eby would like to track the purchase of luxury cars in certain geographic areas, such as Greater Vancouver, because those transactio­ns can be used to reintroduc­e illegal cash into the economy.

“British Columbia’s insight on this pressing issue will allow the federal committee to better understand the unique challenges and impacts that we face on this side of the Rockies,” he said Monday in a statement.

“We must all be better equipped to take action in the fight against criminal gangs profiting from crime.”

German’s review of moneylaund­ering policies in B.C.’s gambling industry began in September and some changes have already been made based on his interim recommenda­tions.

The B.C. Lottery Corp. now requires anyone spending $10,000 or more at casinos within a 24-hour period to prove where the money came from.

Gamblers must also show a transactio­n receipt from a financial institutio­n for all cash, bank drafts and certified cheques used for buy-ins.

Players must also sign a source-of-funds declaratio­n form. If any informatio­n appears suspicious or is missing, casinos must refuse the transactio­n and investigat­e.

The lottery corporatio­n also supported having investigat­ors on site at high-volume casinos in the Lower Mainland at all times. The on-duty regulators have the power to monitor and discipline gaming employees and casino owners.

The province began the review after a report was released saying the River Rock Casino in Richmond had accepted $13.5 million in $20 bills within one month, which police said could be proceeds of crime.

The Great Canadian Gaming Corp., which runs River Rock, has said compliance procedures are strictly followed and the company is committed to preventing illegal activities at all its locations.

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