Man given prison sentence for role in bogus passport scheme
Fraud allegedly involved employee at Toronto office whose trial will begin this week
Aman is heading to a federal penitentiary after admitting his role in a “sophisticated” fraudulent passport scheme, allegedly involving a former federal Citizenship and Immigration employee.
Moshe Gur, 57, was set to go on trial this month but instead pleaded guilty late last year to being a party to a breach of trust and three other fraud-related charges.
His alleged accomplice, Aline Zeitoune, worked at a Toronto passport office processing applications. Zeitoune has pleaded not guilty to breach of trust and other fraud and forgery charges.
Her judge-alone trial is set to start this week in Ontario Superior Court. Gur is on the witness list.
At Gur’s sentencing hearing Friday, Justice John McMahon said Gur and Zeitoune had known each other for many years. Between June 2012 and January 2013, she processed nine bogus Canadian passport applications that he prepared, the judge said. The RCMP arrested the pair in July 2014.
“This is a sophisticated, co-ordinated plan to obtain fraudulent passports . . . it took time to set up a plan where Mr. Gur could exploit the fact that he had a contact inside the passport office,” McMahon said.
Gur’s attempt to obtain a passport for himself, under the name Michael Vangoor, was discovered by federal investigators using facial recognition technology. That passport was not issued.
But eight other fake passports were issued after Gur assembled fraudulent documents for customers, sent them to the same photography studio and instructed them to go to counter No. 4, where Zeitoune was stationed, the judge said. Gur charged at least one person $15,000. After the scheme came to light, some of the individuals who obtained fraudulent passports were charged and convicted.
The judge said he had several mitigating factors to consider when deciding punishment. Gur has had a stable job while on bail. He also took responsibility by pleading guilty, McMahon said. But there were also aggravating factors. “The integrity of the Canadian passport system is critical to the security of this country and other countries throughout the world, it is also critical to the confidence other countries can have in Canadian passports,” the judge said.
McMahon sentenced Gur to two years and six months in prison, minus six months for pretrial custody and house arrest.