National Post (National Edition)

This really is font page news

- Tristin hopper

A bankrupt telecom executive’s fraudulent plan to shield two of his homes from creditors has been foiled because he used the wrong font.

Gerald Mcgoey, the millionair­e former CEO of Look Communicat­ions, filed for bankruptcy in December 2017.

When a bankruptcy trustee began combing through Mcgoey’s assets, the former executive provided documents purporting to shield two of his homes from creditors.

The properties, a Muskoka cottage and a Caledon farm, were allegedly held in trust for Mcgoey and his wife’s children, according to two signed declaratio­ns.

“We agree that it is our understand­ing that Ledge Lodge … will be held in trust for my three children,” reads the one-page signed document for the Muskoka cottage.

There’s just one problem: Both documents were written in typefaces that were invented long after they were allegedly created.

The Muskoka cottage document, ostensibly created in 1995, was written in Cambria, a typeface that wasn’t designed until 2002.

The Caledon farm document, dated in 2004, was written in Calibri, a typeface that wasn’t released until Windows Vista in January 2007. It is now the default typeface on most Microsoft software, including Word, Powerpoint and Outlook.

The case, heard before the Ontario Superior Court, cited the expert evidence of Thomas W. Phinney, a selfdescri­bed “font detective” and frequent expert witness on fonts, particular­ly on the developmen­t of Calibri.

“Mr. Phinney deposes that no one, other than a Microsoft employee, consultant or contract designer, could have created a document … using the Calibri typeface in March 2004,” reads the court decision.

Presented with Phinney’s evidence in court, a lawyer for the Mcgoeys “alluded to the possibilit­y that the McGoeys are simply mistaken about the dates the documents were signed.”

But Ontario Superior Court Justice Michael Penny wouldn’t have it. “The conclusion that the … trusts are shams is unavoidabl­e,” he wrote in a January decision.

Had Mcgoey used Times New Roman, a popular default Microsoft font prior to 2007, it’s possible his ruse would never have been discovered. However, Penny also noted some other “red flags” in his story, such as the fact that the Mcgoeys never mentioned the trust to anyone prior to getting into financial straits. “All the trusts appear to do is protect the assets from Mr. Mcgoey’s creditors,” wrote Penny.

This is not the first time Calibri has helped bring down a fraudulent document. The 2016 release of the Panama Papers detailed a number of offshore holdings held by the then-prime minister of Pakistan, Nawaz Sharif. This included two offshore companies which listed the beneficial owner as Sharif ’s daughter Maryam.

In response, Maryam released documents from 2006 allegedly showing her as merely a trustee, rather than the beneficial owner. However, the trust documents were written in Calibri one year before Maryam could have realistica­lly had access to the typeface.

Mcgoey was plunged into bankruptcy shortly after an earlier court case ordered him to repay $5.6 million he had collected following a court-supervised liquidatio­n of Look Communicat­ions’ assets. Along with other senior executives, Mcgoey had collected a substantia­l portion of the liquidatio­n’s proceeds by tying their compensati­on packages to a $0.40 per share price for Look, which was nowhere near the actual market value of the share.

 ??  ?? Gerald Mcgoey
Gerald Mcgoey

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