National Post

BREAD SCANDAL

Weston, Loblaw get ‘marker’ for informing RETAIL

- Da n He aling

PRICE- FIXING PROBE PUTS FOCUS ON IMMUNITY PROGRAM. SOBEYS THREATENS TO SUE LOBLAW.

CA LGA RY • The national bread price- fixing scandal has sparked heated debate over the Competitio­n Bureau’s i mmunity granting program, with a law enforcemen­t expert defending the practice and a government accountabi­lity critic arguing it just lets offenders get away with crimes. Bakery wholesaler George Weston Ltd. and subsidiary grocer Loblaw

Cos. Ltd. were granted immunity from prosecutio­n in return for their co-operation in the price-fixing investigat­ion under a long- standing bureau program that grants freedom from sentencing to the first party in a cartel who volunteers to co-operate.

According to court documents released Wednesday, the bureau alleges that senior officers at George Weston and rival Canada Bread Co. Ltd. communicat­ed to raise prices in lockstep, then met with five national bread retailers who agreed to implement the higher prices.

“If you have an effective whistleblo­wer program and you have the resources to be doing effective best-practice inspection­s and audits, then the immunity program just amounts to letting one of the violators off the hook. And that’s a bad idea,” Duff Conacher, co- f ounder of Democracy Watch, said in an interview. Conacher said the Competitio­n Bureau’s immunity program offers an offending company an escape route if it becomes aware that its violations are about to be exposed — for example, if a disgruntle­d employee threatens to do just that.

He said the bureau would be better off if it provided sufficient compensati­on and better protection for whistleblo­wers to offset their significan­t personal risk of losing their jobs or being taken to court.

The immunity program was used in 2007 when Cadbury Adams Canada Inc. agreed to provide details of a chocolate price-fixing conspiracy in return for avoiding prosecutio­n. The investigat­ion resulted in criminal charges against three companies and three individual­s, and one of the companies, Hershey Canada Inc., subsequent­ly pleaded guilty and was fined $4 million in 2013.

“The bureau’s immunity and leniency programs offer powerful incentives for organizati­ons and individual­s to come forward and co-operate with the bureau’s i nvestigati­ons, and have proven to be among our best weapons to combat criminal cartels under the Competitio­n Act,” the bureau stated in 2015 as it announced charges had been stayed against the rest of the defendants.

Senior investigat­or Sandy Boucher of accounting firm Grant Thornton LLP said being able to offer immunity is a vital tool in crime-fighting, citing his experience in his current role, as well as during 12 years as a street cop and narcotics officer with the Hong Kong police force in the 1980s and ’90s.

“If you are trying to investigat­e and prosecute people involved in conspiracy, there really isn’t a better way to do it than to get a co- operating insider,” he said.

“And that applies to organized crime or narcotics, any kind of conspiracy. The most effective way is, No. 1, to get someone to blow the whistle ... or No. 2, to do a deal with somebody who is a member of the conspiracy.”

Boucher said he finds it frustratin­g when a member of a conspiracy or cartel gets off “scot- free” but pointed out that often, evidence of a conspiracy can only be provided by someone who was in the room when the parties were conspiring.

Conacher said Canada should emulate U. S. government agencies which reward whistleblo­wers with a percentage of recovered funds for reporting wrongdoing.

He praised the Ontario Securities Commission for its program adopted in 2016 to pay whistleblo­wers up to $ 5 million if they report informatio­n that leads to fines or voluntary payments of $ 1 million or more. But he said it’s impossible to tell if the Competitio­n Bureau’s immunity program is working because it’s unknown how many cases would have been reported anyway under a stronger whistleblo­wer program.

Boucher, however, pointed out that paying someone to provide evidence also raises ethical issues.

According to the Competitio­n Bureau’s website, an applicant under its immunity program can request an “immunity marker” as confirmati­on that it is the first party to make a request with respect to “criminal anti- competitiv­e activity” involving a product or business.

“The marker guarantees the applicant’s place at the front of the line, subject to the applicant meeting all of the other criteria of the immunity program,” the bureau says, adding only one party or one set of affiliated parties can qualify.

Once the marker is granted, the applicant has a limited period of time, usually 30 calendar days, to provide a detailed statement called a “proffer” describing the illegal activity, its effects in Canada and the supporting evidence, the bureau says.

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 ?? DOUG IVES / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Metro Inc. is one of the national retailers being accused by the Competitio­n Bureau of taking part in a Canadian bread price-fixing conspiracy.
DOUG IVES / THE CANADIAN PRESS Metro Inc. is one of the national retailers being accused by the Competitio­n Bureau of taking part in a Canadian bread price-fixing conspiracy.

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