Tuesday, May 7, 2024
ADVT 
National

Fraud, Money Laundering Charges Laid Against 4 Executives With Vancouver’s PacNet Services

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Jun, 2019 07:27 PM

    VANCOUVER — Four executives of a Vancouver-based payment-processing firm have been charged in what the U.S. Department of Justice says was a massive fraud scheme.


    The U.S. department announced conspiracy, fraud and money laundering charges against the partner owners and top managers of PacNet Services Ltd., alleging it was "the payment processor of choice" for companies that mailed large volumes of fake notices to lure alleged victims.


    The department says in a news release that Roseanne Day and Robert Davis were part owners and top managers of PacNet, while Genevieve Frappier and Miles Kelly worked in the marketing or compliance departments.


    Jody Hunt, the assistant attorney general for the department's civil division, says the four are charged with enriching themselves by helping those who took money from elderly and otherwise vulnerable victims.


    The indictment alleges the defendants knew that many mass-mail clients were sending fraudulent notifications to consumers in the U.S. and around the world, and that the defendants made about $15 million each in the last three years the company was in operation.


    None of the four accused or their lawyers could immediately be reached for comment


    Vancouver police say in a release that it began investigating PacNet in October 2016 after a request for assistance from U.S. law enforcement.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Judge Finds Former Winnipeg Police Officer Guilty Of Pointing Gun At Colleague

    Judge Finds Former Winnipeg Police Officer Guilty Of Pointing Gun At Colleague
    WINNIPEG — A judge has found a former Winnipeg police officer guilty on one count of pointing his gun at a female colleague.    

    Judge Finds Former Winnipeg Police Officer Guilty Of Pointing Gun At Colleague

    B.C. Imposes Interim Moratorium On Resource Development To Protect Caribou

    The British Columbia government plans to sign a caribou protection strategy while it imposes an interim moratorium on new resource development in areas where the animals are struggling for survival.  

    B.C. Imposes Interim Moratorium On Resource Development To Protect Caribou

    7th Homicide Of 2019: Man, 20, Dead After Shooting In Brampton, Peel Police Appealing For Witnesses

    On Tuesday June 18, 2019 at approximately 10:45 p.m. Peel Regional Police responded to a 911 call in the area of Orenda Court and McCallum Court in Brampton. 

    7th Homicide Of 2019: Man, 20, Dead After Shooting In Brampton, Peel Police Appealing For Witnesses

    Teen Killed By Fallen Tree At Camp In B.C., Another Person In Hospital

    SOOKE, B.C. — One teenager has died and another is in critical but stable condition after a tree fell on at least one of them at a camp near the Vancouver Island community of Sooke, B.C.

    Teen Killed By Fallen Tree At Camp In B.C., Another Person In Hospital

    Protests, Legal Challenges Planned To Block Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion

    Opponents of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion are preparing for a long summer of legal challenges and protests aimed at blocking the project from being built.

    Protests, Legal Challenges Planned To Block Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion

    B.C. Files Second Legal Challenge Against Alberta Over Turn-Off-Taps Law

    VANCOUVER — The British Columbia government has filed a second lawsuit against Alberta over its turn-off-the-taps legislation.

    B.C. Files Second Legal Challenge Against Alberta Over Turn-Off-Taps Law