Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
National

Man Who Pledged $7.5 M To Hockey Team Charged With Fraud Over Cheques To Restaurant

The Canadian Press, 14 Dec, 2017 01:10 PM
    VANCOUVER — A man who promised $7.5 million to a junior hockey team in British Columbia has been charged with forgery and fraud after a restaurant owner complained to police about an unpaid bill.
     
    Cranbrook RCMP say they began investigating Michael Lawrence Gould of Wasa, B.C., in early November after a local business owner contacted them. The owner said she'd catered a banquet for 50 people and she was paid with cheques.
     
    "When the business owner attempted to cash the cheques, she was advised that there were insufficient funds," Const. Kathy Forgeron said in a statement on Tuesday.
     
    Forgeron said Crown counsel has approved charges of forgery and fraud against Gould, who is scheduled to appear in court on Monday.
     
    Asked for his response to the allegations, Gould said he did not plan to appear on the charges.
     
    "I'm not going to court," he said.
     
    "I got no reaction. I don't have to be there. There you go. Goodbye," he said, before hanging up.
     
    In some cases, a lawyer can appear on behalf of an accused at a first appearance. Gould did not say whether he had obtained counsel.
     
    Gould, 38, promised millions to the Kimberley Dynamiters at a home game in October attended by 700 people. He said he had won a jackpot in a EuroMillions lottery, although he declined to say how much he'd won.
     
    The team's board of directors issued a statement on Nov. 13 saying it had not received the money.
     
    On Nov. 15, Gould said the team would receive the money in 10 days.  He said the delay was due to minor issues and also "with the banks," but he didn't elaborate.
     
    In an email on Wednesday, team president James Leroux said the team has not received the donation.
     
    Jolene Salanski, owner of the Northwest Grill, said Gould held a banquet at the restaurant in October to celebrate his promised donation to the team.
     
    She said he appeared to be a "very nice gentleman, very businesslike, well-mannered."
     
    The bill was close to $8,000 and he paid her in two cheques that had his stepfather's name on them, she said. Salanski said she knew the man was Gould's stepfather because he had also attended the banquet. The stepfather could not be reached for comment.
     
    The next day, Gould called her and asked her not to cash the cheques, adding he'd bring her a bank draft instead, Salanski said.
     
    "There was promise after promise," she said. "He kept telling me he'd come and then he never did."
     
    She said he gave her a gift letter with a bank's logo on it as well as other documents that he said were from the bank. She said she became suspicious and frustrated as she owed money to food vendors and employees who assisted with the event.
     
    After about a month, she took the cheques and other documents to the bank, Salanski said.
     
    "I was informed at that time that (Gould's stepfather) had no idea the cheques were written and I was to meet (him) at the RCMP station," she said, adding the bank also told her the other documents were not real.
     
    Gould has told the National Post that all the documents he has provided on financial institutions' letterheads were authentic, and repeated he plans to fulfil his promise to the Dynamiters hockey team.
     
    The Post quotes Gould as saying he asked Salanski not to cash the cheques because he didn't have access to funds to give to his stepfather to cover the payment. Gould told the newspaper he offered the gift letter to Salanski because he wanted to help her out.
     
    Salanski told The Canadian Press she turned over all the documents to police. Cranbrook RCMP did not respond to interview requests.
     
    About two weeks ago, Gould came into the restaurant and paid the bill in cash, Salanski said.
     
    "He likes to put on a show," she said. "It was right in the middle of the restaurant and he's counting out all this money on the table. ... He just made a big spectacle of it."
     
    She said the experience was extremely stressful as she just took over as owner of the restaurant in August.
     
    "This was not my dream of owning my own restaurant, put it that way," she said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Case Of B.C. Man Accused Of Disguising His Face And Threatening A Woman Delayed

    Case Of B.C. Man Accused Of Disguising His Face And Threatening A Woman Delayed
    VERNON, B.C. — The case of a British Columbia man accused of threatening a woman with a gun in the province's Interior has been put over until mid-December.

    Case Of B.C. Man Accused Of Disguising His Face And Threatening A Woman Delayed

    Colorado Child Sex Trafficker Sentenced To 472 Years In Prison

    Colorado Child Sex Trafficker Sentenced To 472 Years In Prison
    Brock Franklin was found guilty on 30 counts including human trafficking, sexual exploitation of a child, child prostitution, and kidnapping by an Arapahoe County jury in March, FOX 31 Denver reported.

    Colorado Child Sex Trafficker Sentenced To 472 Years In Prison

    In Rajasthan, Bishnoi Woman Breastfeeds Baby Deer. Respect, Tweets Chef Vikas Khanna

    In Rajasthan, Bishnoi Woman Breastfeeds Baby Deer. Respect, Tweets Chef Vikas Khanna
    As a community, the Bishnois believe strongly in protecting the environment and wildlife. Bishnoi women have been known to nurse orphaned fawns like their own children.

    In Rajasthan, Bishnoi Woman Breastfeeds Baby Deer. Respect, Tweets Chef Vikas Khanna

    Quebec Passes Motion Against Ottawa's Directive Allowing Knives On Planes Including Kirpans

    Quebec Passes Motion Against Ottawa's Directive Allowing Knives On Planes Including Kirpans
    Garneau said experts agree small knives, including kirpans — a religious and ceremonial dagger carried by some Sikh men — don't represent any danger on airplanes.

    Quebec Passes Motion Against Ottawa's Directive Allowing Knives On Planes Including Kirpans

    Kamloops, B.C., Mayor Ken Christian Says Some Residents Oppose Planned Wildfire Monument

    Kamloops, B.C., Mayor Ken Christian Says Some Residents Oppose Planned Wildfire Monument
    Kamloops Mayor Ken Christian says residents have been speaking out since the Thompson-Nicola Regional District announced last week that $100,000 will be set aside in the 2018 budget to commemorate the efforts of volunteers.

    Kamloops, B.C., Mayor Ken Christian Says Some Residents Oppose Planned Wildfire Monument

    Two Mudslides Sever Highway 1 Through B.C.'s Eastern Fraser Valley

    Two Mudslides Sever Highway 1 Through B.C.'s Eastern Fraser Valley
    VANCOUVER — It's slow going for travellers driving between British Columbia's Interior and Lower Mainland after a mudslide closed Highway 1 through the eastern Fraser Valley.

    Two Mudslides Sever Highway 1 Through B.C.'s Eastern Fraser Valley