Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

5 Things From B.C. Report On Money Laundering

The Canadian Press, 28 Jun, 2018 12:28 PM
    VANCOUVER — The B.C. government has released an independent report that says money laundering at Vancouver-area casinos fuelled the opioid crisis and the skyrocketing real-estate market. Here are five things from the "Dirty Money" report by former RCMP deputy commissioner Peter German.
     
     
    — As early as 2012, some employees within both the Gaming Policy Enforcement Branch and the British Columbia Lottery Corp., recognized the reality that small-time loan sharking had evolved into large-scale money laundering.
     
     
    — On July 22, 2015, an RCMP officer advised a BC Lottery Corp., investigator that police officers had been looking for a 'minnow' and found a 'whale.'
     
     
    — Relationships between the BC Lottery Corp. and the Gambling Policy and Enforcement Branch were described as either strained or broken by interviewees, many of whom spoke about a culture of distrust. 
     
     
    — Chinese organized crime groups function like multinational corporations, using the transportation and business networks of southern China, Hong Kong and Macau to trade commodities such as methamphetimines, precursor chemicals and counterfeit goods.
     
     
    — British Columbia's gaming legislation was updated in 2002 to remove politics from gaming: "Over the past two decades the trajectory of the gaming industry has been extraordinary, while the statute has remained static. The (act) does not mention money laundering."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Girl, 3, Required 48 Stitches After Being Bitten On Face By Dog: OPP

    Girl, 3, Required 48 Stitches After Being Bitten On Face By Dog: OPP
    Ontario Provincial Police say they are investigating an incident in which a child required 48 stitches to her face after being bitten by a dog.

    Girl, 3, Required 48 Stitches After Being Bitten On Face By Dog: OPP

    Canada's Oldest Blood Donor Says It's All Gain, No Pain After Decades Of Giving

    Canada's Oldest Blood Donor Says It's All Gain, No Pain After Decades Of Giving
    VANCOUVER — Beatrice Janyk credits vitamins, 12 hours of sleep a day and a busy mind for allowing her to donate blood regularly for most of the last 70 years.

    Canada's Oldest Blood Donor Says It's All Gain, No Pain After Decades Of Giving

    India's Image Taking A Hit As Country Of Rapes, Crimes: Bombay HC

    India's Image Taking A Hit As Country Of Rapes, Crimes: Bombay HC
    Anywhere we go, we have to answer a barrage of questions... Unfortunate that today, the image is such that those living abroad feel only rapes and crimes take place in India

    India's Image Taking A Hit As Country Of Rapes, Crimes: Bombay HC

    Still Investigating: RCMP Say Too Early To Know What Happened In Broncos Crash

    Still Investigating: RCMP Say Too Early To Know What Happened In Broncos Crash
    REGINA — Police say it's too early to say what happened in a fatal bus crash involving the Humboldt Broncos junior hockey team and whether charges will be laid.

    Still Investigating: RCMP Say Too Early To Know What Happened In Broncos Crash

    Man Accused Of Killing Abbotsford, B.C., School Girl Is Unfit For Trial: Lawyer

    Man Accused Of Killing Abbotsford, B.C., School Girl Is Unfit For Trial: Lawyer
    A defence lawyer says his client's ongoing psychosis makes him unfit to stand trial for the murder of a high school girl in Abbotsford, B.C.

    Man Accused Of Killing Abbotsford, B.C., School Girl Is Unfit For Trial: Lawyer

    B.C. Family Appeals To The Public In Decade-Old Disappearance Of Man

    B.C. Family Appeals To The Public In Decade-Old Disappearance Of Man
    SURREY, B.C. — The family of a British Columbia man missing for a decade is pleading for any help in solving what the police are treating as a homicide.

    B.C. Family Appeals To The Public In Decade-Old Disappearance Of Man