National Post

B.C. reveals participan­ts in its money-laundering inquiry

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• British Columbia’s public inquiry into money laundering has approved the applicatio­ns of 16 of 20 government organizati­ons, gaming groups and individual­s to participat­e.

The B. C. Ministry of Finance, federal government, Canadian Gaming Associatio­n and the B. C. Lottery Corp. are among those that have been granted standing.

A report by former RCMP deputy commission­er Peter German released in June 2018 said B.C.’S gaming industry and the system intended to combat money laundering were not prepared for an onslaught of illegal cash flowing through the casinos and failed collective­ly.

The B. C. government called the inquiry in May following three independen­t reviews that concluded crime groups were funnelling billions of dollars into real estate, luxury cars and horse racing.

A final commission report is due by May 2021.

Also granted standing are the Law Society of B.C., the B. C. Civil Liberties Associatio­n and Robert Kroeker, a gaming expert who held top positions at the lottery corporatio­n, the Great Canadian Gaming Corp. and the province’s civil forfeiture office.

Commission­er Austin Cullen will hold public hearings to consider the applicatio­ns from individual­s Ross Alderson, Brad Desmarais, James Lightbody and Fred Pinnock.

The commission says in a statement that Lightbody is a former president of the lottery corporatio­n, while Alderson, Pinnock and Desmarais are all former investigat­ors who state their experience is in the gaming industry.

In its 31- page ruling, the commission says Pinnock has submitted that his role as a former RCMP unit commander of an integrated illegal gaming enforcemen­t team in the province “led him to conclude that the public was being misled as to the nature and degree of money laundering and other criminal activity taking place in the casinos.”

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