Vancouver Sun

PacNet founder fights B.C.’s attempt to collect $2.5 M

- JOANNE LEE-YOUNG jlee-young@postmedia.com

The founder of PacNet Services Ltd. is fighting an attempt to collect over $2.5 million from her personally, money the province says the high-profile company owes for tax rebates it received between 2012 and 2015, but for which it no longer qualifies.

Rosanne Day is asking the B.C. Supreme Court to reverse the provincial assessment and to declare she is not personally liable for any alleged failure by PacNet to send back the money, according to documents filed in court.

Attorney-General David Eby recently cited a lawsuit against PacNet by the province’s civil forfeiture office while discussing concerns about large-scale money laundering in the real estate market. That lawsuit alleges the company was involved in “predatory mail-fraud schemes” and used illicit funds to buy properties in Vancouver, West Vancouver, Gibsons, Keats Island and Delta.

The tax fight between Day and the province involves the Finance Ministry’s internatio­nal business activity program. It provided tax incentives to businesses in B.C. conducting business internatio­nally, including PacNet. The B.C. NDP cancelled the program in 2017.

At issue is whether or not PacNet should have been considered ineligible for the program between 2012 and 2015 because of sanctions against it by the U.S. Treasury Department’s office of foreign asset control.

The U.S. alleged PacNet was a “significan­t transnatio­nal criminal organizati­on” and basically blocked the company from doing financial transactio­ns with Americans or using property in the U.S.

The U.S. Treasury dropped PacNet from its sanction list in November 2017, according to Day ’s applicatio­n to the courts.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada