Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Attorney General David Eby Doesn't Name Drake, But Says Casino Rules Apply To All

The Canadian Press, 06 Nov, 2018 12:14 PM
    VICTORIA — New rules to fight money laundering at provincial casinos will apply universally, British Columbia's attorney general says.
     
     
    David Eby said Monday he can't comment on private issues that occur in casinos, but stresses there are no exceptions to rules requiring gamblers to disclose sources of cash deposits of more than $10,000.
     
     
    Canadian superstar singer Drake posted on his Instagram over the weekend that he was prevented from gambling at the Parq Vancouver casino while he was in the city to perform two concerts.
     
     
    Drake called it "the worst-run business I have ever witnessed ... profiling me and not allowing me to gamble when I had everything they originally asked me for."
     
     
    Parq Vancouver says in statements it stands against racism of any kind and always follows provincial rules.
     
     
    Eby, who didn't name Drake during his comments, said new rules to verify sources of cash at casinos have sharply cut suspicious gambling transactions.
     
     
    He said that while casino operators have expressed concerns about a financial impact on their operations, the change has resulted in a "remarkable and sharp decline in suspicious transactions, adding there's been a reduction of about 100 times from the peak of suspicious cash transactions.
     
     
    "The second component is that what we're seeing is a shift to bank drafts and other forms of negotiable instrument coming into our casinos so our gaming policy enforcement branch, our regulator, is very alive to that issue and making sure that we're addressing any issues that may be related to bank drafts as well."
     
     
    In June, Eby released an independent report saying B.C.'s casinos unknowingly served as money-laundering outlets for organized crime.
     
     
    He commissioned the report after reviewing a study that concluded the River Rock Casino in Richmond accepted $13.5 million in $20 bills over a one-month period in 2015.
     
     
    Former RCMP deputy commissioner Peter German's report said the failure of the anti-money laundering system brought the gaming industry into disrepute.
     
    The report, called "Dirty Money," outlines how cash from illicit means moved from casinos and into the province's economy.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Wigs Set Aside For BC Children's Hospital Patients Stolen In Vancouver

    Wigs Set Aside For BC Children's Hospital Patients Stolen In Vancouver
    VANCOUVER — A collection of wigs worth more than $350,000 that were intended for cancer patients at BC Children's Hospital have been stolen from a store in Vancouver.

    Wigs Set Aside For BC Children's Hospital Patients Stolen In Vancouver

    Darpan Magazine's Extraordinary Achievement Awards: Be Extraordinary

    Darpan Magazine's Extraordinary Achievement Awards: Be Extraordinary
    DARPAN is all set to present the most-exciting event of the year in Surrey – Darpan Magazine’s Extraordinary Achievement Awards 2018. 

    Darpan Magazine's Extraordinary Achievement Awards: Be Extraordinary

    Man Sends Email To 246 Women, Hoping One Of Them Is The Nicole He Met The Night Before

    Man Sends Email To 246 Women, Hoping One Of Them Is The Nicole He Met The Night Before
    A bevy of women named Nicole at the University of Calgary have united thanks to a mass email from a young man on a quest to locate his missed connection.

    Man Sends Email To 246 Women, Hoping One Of Them Is The Nicole He Met The Night Before

    Police Investigate 'Offensive' Graffiti And Symbols In Halifax Park, School

    Police Investigate 'Offensive' Graffiti And Symbols In Halifax Park, School
    Halifax police are investigating several incidents of what they say is graphic and offensive graffiti in Dartmouth.

    Police Investigate 'Offensive' Graffiti And Symbols In Halifax Park, School

    Manitoba Trucker Covered In Hot Tar In North Dakota Crash Dies In Hospital

    Manitoba Trucker Covered In Hot Tar In North Dakota Crash Dies In Hospital
    A Manitoba truck driver who was covered in hot tar when his semi truck rolled in North Dakota is being remembered as a fighter.

    Manitoba Trucker Covered In Hot Tar In North Dakota Crash Dies In Hospital

    Birthplace Doesn't Necessarily Guarantee Citizenship, Feds Tell Supreme Court

    Birthplace Doesn't Necessarily Guarantee Citizenship, Feds Tell Supreme Court
    "Indeed, no European countries, for example, grant an unqualified automatic citizenship by birth and they have no obligation to do so," the federal submission says.

    Birthplace Doesn't Necessarily Guarantee Citizenship, Feds Tell Supreme Court