Saturday, February 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

Acceptance Of Cash Deposits Rare In Real Estate, Money Laundering Inquiry Hears

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Feb, 2020 08:20 PM

    VANCOUVER - The organization representing real estate agents in British Columbia has told a provincial inquiry into money laundering that its members have only ever accepted modest cash deposits in rare circumstances.

     

    A lawyer for the B.C. Real Estate Association says the sector struck a working group in response to two government-commissioned reports last year that found the housing market had become a hotbed for dirty money.

     

    Chris Weafer says the working group recommended that mortgage brokers and others in the real estate industry should only accept funds that are verifiable through Canadian financial institutions.

     

    However, Weafer says an analysis shows that an acceptance of cash deposits in B.C. real estate has never been common practice unless there were extenuating circumstances, and even then amounts were modest.

     

    Kevin Westell, representing the Canadian Bar Association and Criminal Defence Advocacy Society, told the inquiry today that lawyers should not be required to report to the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre, or Fintrac.

     

    He says such a requirement would violate crucial solicitor-client privilege, compromise the independence of the bar and add to a "disturbing" trend of the B.C. government undermining the work of lawyers.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Talks With Wet'suwet'en Over Pipeline 'Not Successful,' Province Says

    Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs proposed seven days of discussions to de-escalate the dispute over the construction of the Coastal GasLink pipeline through the First Nation's traditional territory near Houston.

    Talks With Wet'suwet'en Over Pipeline 'Not Successful,' Province Says

    Husband Of Iran Plane Crash Victim Seeks Answers, Justice From Investigation

    OTTAWA - The husband of one of the victims who died when a Ukrainian jetliner was shot down by the Iranian military last month wants the people he says are responsible for his wife's death to be charged and tried at the International Criminal Court.

    Husband Of Iran Plane Crash Victim Seeks Answers, Justice From Investigation

    Opponents To Ramp Up Protests Against Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion In B.C.

    VANCOUVER - Opponents of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion say they will do whatever it takes to stop the project after suffering a devastating legal blow at the Federal Court of Appeal.

    Opponents To Ramp Up Protests Against Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion In B.C.

    No End In Sight For B.C. Forestry Strike As Mediators Withdraw Services

    No End In Sight For B.C. Forestry Strike As Mediators Withdraw Services
    VANCOUVER - Efforts to end a bitter, seven-month strike by forestry workers on Vancouver Island hit another impasse as two mediators have pulled out.    

    No End In Sight For B.C. Forestry Strike As Mediators Withdraw Services

    Body Of Third Man Found After Two Others Died When Truck Swept Into Sooke River

    RCMP confirm the body of a third man has been pulled from a river on southern Vancouver Island, west of Victoria.

    Body Of Third Man Found After Two Others Died When Truck Swept Into Sooke River

    Financial Assistance Available For Victims Of B.C. Flooding

    Financial Assistance Available For Victims Of B.C. Flooding
    Disaster Financial Assistance (DFA) is now available for eligible British Columbians who may have been affected by overland flooding from heavy rains that began on Jan. 31, 2020, in the following regions:

    Financial Assistance Available For Victims Of B.C. Flooding