Close X
Saturday, January 11, 2025
ADVT 
National

BMO CEO Defends Canadian Banking Sector's Anti-money Laundering Practices

The Canadian Press, 05 Apr, 2016 12:55 PM
  • BMO CEO Defends Canadian Banking Sector's Anti-money Laundering Practices
TORONTO — The Bank of Montreal's CEO is defending the Canadian banking sector's anti-money laundering practices following reports linking a major Canadian financial institution to a Panamanian law firm at the centre of a data leak on the use of offshore tax havens.
 
Bill Downe says Canadian banks have "dramatically" beefed up their anti-money laundering controls over the last seven to 10 years at the request of various governments around the world.
 
Downe says that if any violations do emerge from documents leaked from the law firm Mossack Fonseca, he suspects they will be in relation to business that originated a long time ago.
 
Downe made his comments in an interview following the bank's annual shareholder meeting in Toronto on Tuesday.
 
Media reports claimed the Royal Bank of Canada (TSX:RY) and its subsidiaries used the Panamanian law firm to set up more than 370 shell companies.
 
The Royal Bank said in response that it operates within the law and that it has policies in place to prevent tax evasion.

MORE National ARTICLES

One Of 66 Dogs Rescued From Langley Puppy Mill Gets New Home After Care At Shelter

One Of 66 Dogs Rescued From Langley Puppy Mill Gets New Home After Care At Shelter
The SPCA's Vancouver branch manager Charlotte Ellice says two-year-old Bania suffered from ear infections but was OK to go to his new home on Friday.

One Of 66 Dogs Rescued From Langley Puppy Mill Gets New Home After Care At Shelter

Report Says LGBT Seniors Worry About Discrimination In Retirement Housing

Report Says LGBT Seniors Worry About Discrimination In Retirement Housing
A report to be presented at a Saskatoon conference says many LGBT seniors worry about having to return to the closet if they move into retirement housing.

Report Says LGBT Seniors Worry About Discrimination In Retirement Housing

Transportation Safety Board Investigates Grounded Barges In Victoria

Transportation Safety Board Investigates Grounded Barges In Victoria
Board spokeswoman Rox-Anne D'Aoust says one barge that was loaded with a crane has been towed to shore and the other is grounded in a remote location.

Transportation Safety Board Investigates Grounded Barges In Victoria

Manitoba Backtracks On New Counting System For Children In Care

Manitoba Backtracks On New Counting System For Children In Care
Last month, the province announced its calculations would no longer include kids who are voluntarily placed in care.

Manitoba Backtracks On New Counting System For Children In Care

Two Canadians Cops Accused Of Sex Abuse During UN Missions; One Fathered A Child

Two Canadians Cops Accused Of Sex Abuse During UN Missions; One Fathered A Child
In one case, according to the report, a Canadian officer was found after a 55-day investigation to have fathered a child, pulled back from the country involved, and suspended for nine days.

Two Canadians Cops Accused Of Sex Abuse During UN Missions; One Fathered A Child

Judge Rules Foster Parents May Keep Caring For Metis Toddler On Vancouver Island

Judge Rules Foster Parents May Keep Caring For Metis Toddler On Vancouver Island
Justice Mary Newbury of the British Columbia Court of Appeal granted an interim order for the two-and-a-half-year-old girl to stay in her home until appeals in the case are decided

Judge Rules Foster Parents May Keep Caring For Metis Toddler On Vancouver Island