Sunday, June 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Intelligence agency's case disclosures rise in fight against terror, dirty cash

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Nov, 2014 10:40 AM
  • Intelligence agency's case disclosures rise in fight against terror, dirty cash

OTTAWA — New figures show Canada's financial sleuthing agency disclosed more than 1,000 pieces of intelligence to police and security agencies last year.

The Ottawa-based Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada, known as FinTRAC, says the intelligence contributed to hundreds of police investigations.

The centre identifies cash linked to terrorism, money laundering and other crimes by sifting through millions of pieces of data annually from banks, insurance companies, securities dealers, money service businesses, real estate brokers, casinos and others.

The agency's annual report, tabled quietly this week in Parliament, says the 1,143 disclosures to law-enforcement agencies in 2013-14 were up from 919 the previous year.

While the vast majority of them involved money laundering, 234 were related to terrorist financing or threats to the security of Canada, and 64 involved all three issues.

The centre says resulting police investigations included a two-year RCMP probe of a drug-trafficking organization with alleged ties to international organized crime groups.

FinTRAC also contributed to the Mounties' probe of the International Relief Fund for the Afflicted and Needy-Canada, an outfit accused of links to terrorist organization Hamas.

"With these types of crimes, there are victims, there is often violence, and there is real social harm," the report says.

"Often based on hundreds or even thousands of financial transactions, our disclosures may show links between individuals and businesses that have not been otherwise identified in an investigation, and help investigators refine the scope of their cases or shift their sights to different targets."

The intelligence agency recently acknowledged it is helping police and spies trace money flowing into the coffers of Islamic extremists fighting overseas.

The RCMP received most of FinTRAC's disclosures last year, with the Canadian Security Intelligence Service and municipal police forces ranking second and third respectively. Foreign counterparts, the Canada Revenue Agency, the Canada Border Services Agency, provincial police and the Communications Security Establishment — Canada's electronic spy agency — also received intelligence from FinTRAC.

The agency says it has made changes to its systems and processes to address concerns raised by the federal privacy commissioner. For instance, it has made provisions to separate and destroy information received from businesses that should not be kept.

MORE National ARTICLES

Imprisoned Iranian-Canadian blogger pardoned by Iran's top leader:Report

Imprisoned Iranian-Canadian blogger pardoned by Iran's top leader:Report
TEHRAN, Iran — Iranian semi-official ISNA news agency is reporting the country's top leader has pardoned a controversial Iranian-Canadian blogger.

Imprisoned Iranian-Canadian blogger pardoned by Iran's top leader:Report

Man, 19, charged in boy's stabbing on Newfoundland soccer field fit for trial

Man, 19, charged in boy's stabbing on Newfoundland soccer field fit for trial
ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — A man charged in the stabbing of an 11-year-old boy on a soccer field in Newfoundland has been found mentally fit to stand trial after a 60-day psychiatric assessment.

Man, 19, charged in boy's stabbing on Newfoundland soccer field fit for trial

Teen who was assaulted, left for dead by river to meet men who found her

Teen who was assaulted, left for dead by river to meet men who found her
WINNIPEG — A teen who was viciously beaten, assaulted and left to die beside a Winnipeg river was planning Thursday to meet the men who rescued her.

Teen who was assaulted, left for dead by river to meet men who found her

Plane with seven people on board makes forced landing on ice near Yellowknife

Plane with seven people on board makes forced landing on ice near Yellowknife
YELLOWKNIFE — A small passenger plane with seven people on board made a forced landing in bad weather on the ice of Great Slave Lake on Thursday.

Plane with seven people on board makes forced landing on ice near Yellowknife

Watching the forest breathe: Movie inspired environmental monitoring innovation

Watching the forest breathe: Movie inspired environmental monitoring innovation
EDMONTON — Watching an old disaster movie gave a University of Alberta scientist an idea that could revolutionize environmental and climate change tracking.

Watching the forest breathe: Movie inspired environmental monitoring innovation

Condos made up more than a third of Canadian housing starts last year, CMHC

Condos made up more than a third of Canadian housing starts last year, CMHC
OTTAWA — Condominiums accounted for more than one-third of all Canadian housing starts last year, and more than half of the total in several of the country's biggest cities, the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. says.

Condos made up more than a third of Canadian housing starts last year, CMHC