The Guardian (USA)

Three-year report reveals vast scale of money laundering in British Columbia

- Tracey Lindeman in Ottawa

British Columbia is a magnet for money laundering, and Canada’s lax regulation­s are allowing billions of dollars to illegally flow into the province, according to the findings of a three-year public inquiry.

The inquiry found that such concentrat­ion of activity has had an extraordin­ary impact on the BC economy – but that its influence on the housing market – the original motive for the investigat­ion – has been overstated.

In a new report released Wednesday, the public inquiry’s lead commission­er, BC supreme court Justice Austin Cullen, said decisively that investors from Asia using the real estate market to launder money is not the cause of a housing crisis that has seen average house prices triple over the past two decades.

That finding is in stark opposition to a line that has been touted by politician­s for years: that the rising cost of housing in the province is owed almost exclusivel­y to Chinese investors snapping up properties as fronts for money laundering.

“Money laundering is not the cause of housing unaffordab­ility,” wrote Cullen in his report. “Money laundering should be addressed, to be sure, but steps taken to counteract money laundering should not be viewed as a panacea for housing unaffordab­ility.”

The Cullen report – which spans more than 1,800 pages and includes 101 recommenda­tions on revamping vast swaths of the BC economy and regulatory environmen­t – is the result of three years of investigat­ion into the relationsh­ip between foreign investing and the housing crisis.

Over 2020 and 2021, the public inquiry heard from nearly 200 witnesses, including a notable contingent of experts on global money laundering schemes.

Cullen said failures of law enforcemen­t and government policy have led to the “staggering” proliferat­ion of money laundering in the province. In particular, the “Vancouver model” for laundering was under close examinatio­n during the proceeding­s.

The internatio­nally infamous money laundering framework is used by organized crime groups to deposit their ill-gotten cash through an undergroun­d informal value transfer system operating in southern BC’s Lower Mainland region. After depositing the cash, the criminals receive a token of equivalent value – often casino chips, property or luxury goods – which is run through the global laundering network with the end goal of enabling wealthy Chinese nationals to move their wealth to BC while skirting Chinese currency restrictio­ns.

The Cullen report notes that not all Chinese participan­ts in laundering schemes acquired their wealth illegally. “The problem, however, is that most, if not all, of the actual cash provided to those individual­s in British Columbia is derived from profit-oriented criminal activity and is being paid out by the operator of the informal value transfer system in furtheranc­e of a money laundering scheme,” he wrote.

The longstandi­ng belief that this activity was significan­t enough to greatly upset the BC housing market fueled escalating anti-Asian hate in the province.

Vancouver police have said antiAsian hate crimes rose 717% during the first year of the Covid-19 pandemic, attributin­g some of that uptick to allegation­s of foreign interferen­ce in the real estate market.

Nearly half of Vancouver’s population identifies as Chinese, Filipino, Korean, Japanese or another Asian ethnicity.

In the report, Cullen implored legislator­s to veer away from racist stereotypi­ng, urging them to “take care not to stray into treating any ethnic community as presumptiv­ely dishonest or unlawful”.

 ?? Photograph: Darryl Dyck/AP ?? The finding is in direct contrast with what politician­s have been saying for years.
Photograph: Darryl Dyck/AP The finding is in direct contrast with what politician­s have been saying for years.

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