Windsor Star

Canadian takes long journey to U.S. jail

Man who fled on a snowmobile gets 18 months

- The Canadian Press

BOSTON • An “almost illiterate” Nova Scotia man who made it rich in Massachuse­tts then fled across the border to Canada on a rented snowmobile to avoid criminal prosecutio­n has been jailed for 18 months.

Cyril Gordon Lunn, 69, was sentenced Wednesday in federal court in Boston on charges that he hid up to US$4 million in cash after declaring bankruptcy.

Lunn owned Cy Realty Corp., a constructi­on and developmen­t business in Pepperell, Mass. He declared bankruptcy in 2001, but failed to disclose he stashed money in Canadian banks.

In March 2005, Lunn rented a snowmobile in Presque Isle, Maine, and took a remote trail into New Brunswick. He remained a fugitive until last year.

A 2016 Nova Scotia Appeal Court ruling on his extraditio­n to the U.S. described Lunn’s remarkable life story: “At 15, he left school and his Nova Scotia home to seek a better life in Toronto. But he stayed there for just a year, convinced that, in the early 1960s, Boston was the place to be. From a financial perspectiv­e at least, he was right. Despite his lack of education, hard work and obvious intelligen­ce made him quite rich.”

Lunn’s lawyer said his client started in constructi­on, but by 1985 became wealthy through property developmen­t despite being “almost illiterate.”

Lunn declared bankruptcy in 2001, and blamed his “cunning and cutthroat common-law partner,” who was also his employee.

“He needed her entirely. She could read and write and he relied on her for everything related to his businesses,” his lawyer later told then-federal justice minister Peter MacKay in a bid to avoid deportatio­n to the U.S. “He had no idea she was embezzling from him and setting him up for future financial failure. Cyril prided himself on being able to do the work of several men. He was not interested so much in paperwork or corporate management. That, he left to his employee.”

MacKay decided to surrender Lunn to the U.S. The appeal court ruled that decision was reasonable, and Lunn pleaded guilty in January to concealing assets from his bankruptcy creditors and making a false statement under penalty of perjury.

U.S. prosecutor­s said Lunn started transferri­ng money to Canada in about 1988, and continued until at least September 2001 — a month after Cy Realty Corp. filed for bankruptcy.

In 2002, Lunn returned to Canada but was charged with smuggling cash in 2004 after $69,891 was found in his car on a trip into the U.S. He blamed a woman friend who was with him, and broke a bail condition by returning to Canada via the rented snowmobile in 2005.

In 2006, he was charged with the bankruptcy fraud counts. In 2012, the U.S. sought his extraditio­n.

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