Close X
Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Post-Secondary Schools At Risk Of Money Laundering: Minister

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 May, 2019 06:54 PM

    VICTORIA — Post-secondary institutions in British Columbia were warned Tuesday to be on the look out for possible student money launderers in the province's ongoing fight against illegal cash.


    Advanced Education Minister Melanie Mark said she has sent letters to almost 370 public post-secondary institutions and private career training institutions advising them to no longer accept large cash payments from students registering for classes and programs.


    The letter asks the institutions to share copies of their cash acceptance policies with the government. Those without a policy have been asked to develop one.


    "We need to protect post-secondary institutions as places for higher learning and skills development, not alleged places for organized crime to clean dirty money," Mark said at a news conference.


    She said a recent report on money laundering in B.C.'s real estate sector includes allegations that some students pay large sums of cash to enrol in programs only to withdraw shortly afterwards, requesting refunds by cheque.


    The report by former RCMP deputy commissioner Peter German says the cash payments and subsequent refund payments could be one of many tactics used by organized crime to launder illegal cash. A second report earlier this month by former deputy attorney general Maureen Maloney said money laundering could have amounted to $7 billion in B.C. in 2018.


    The New Democrat government announced a public inquiry into money laundering about two weeks ago.


    Mark's letter to the schools asks them to reply by June 30.


    "While I appreciate the need to accept payments in cash as a service to students, this has to be balanced by ensuring our post-secondary system not become a target for money laundering," it says.


    Attorney General David Eby said money laundering appears to have found its way into many segments of the B.C. economy.


    "You'll remember that this started in casinos," he said. "I don't think anyone thought that we would be making an announcement about post-secondary institutions, but here we are."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ontario Researchers Invent Way To Store Vaccines At Higher Temperatures

    Ontario Researchers Invent Way To Store Vaccines At Higher Temperatures
    HAMILTON — Ontario researchers say they've come up with a way to store vaccines at higher temperatures for weeks at a time.    

    Ontario Researchers Invent Way To Store Vaccines At Higher Temperatures

    Mother Manjit Kaur Deo Of Accused Charged As Accessory In 2017 Murder Of B.C. Woman Kiran Dhesi

    Mother Manjit Kaur Deo Of Accused Charged As Accessory In 2017 Murder Of B.C. Woman Kiran Dhesi
     The mother of a man accused of the second-degree murder of a British Columbia woman has been charged with accessory after the fact to murder.

    Mother Manjit Kaur Deo Of Accused Charged As Accessory In 2017 Murder Of B.C. Woman Kiran Dhesi

    Liberals Shrugging Off Concerns About Rural Crime, Opposition MPs Charge

    Liberals Shrugging Off Concerns About Rural Crime, Opposition MPs Charge
    onservative MPs say a Liberal-dominated committee's half-hearted report on the burgeoning problem of rural crime is an insult to Canadians.

    Liberals Shrugging Off Concerns About Rural Crime, Opposition MPs Charge

    Regulator Investigating High Gas Prices In B.C. Has Power To Examine Gouging

    British Columbia's independent energy regulator will have the power to call oil company representatives as witnesses into an investigation of high gasoline prices in the province.

    Regulator Investigating High Gas Prices In B.C. Has Power To Examine Gouging

    Justin Trudeau Credits Immigration For Canada’s Growing Tech Sector

    Trudeau was the first keynote speaker at the four-day conference, called Collision, which is being held in Canada for the first time.    

    Justin Trudeau Credits Immigration For Canada’s Growing Tech Sector

    Innovation Minister Navdeep Bains Outlines Digital Charter With Focus On Personal Data Control

    Bains made the commitment at Toronto's Empire Club of Canada as part of a rollout of a ten-point digital charter aimed at protecting privacy and personal control of data.

    Innovation Minister Navdeep Bains Outlines Digital Charter With Focus On Personal Data Control